La Repubblica's Scoop, Confirmed
Italy's intelligence chief met with Deputy National Security
Adviser Stephen Hadley just a month before the Niger forgeries
first surfaced.
By Laura Rozen
Web Exclusive: 10.25.05
http://www.prospect.org/web/printfriendly-view.ww?id=10506
With Patrick Fitzgerald widely expected to announce indictments
in the CIA leak investigation, questions are again being raised
about the intelligence scandal that led to the appointment of
the special counsel: namely, how the Bush White House obtained
false Italian intelligence reports claiming that Iraq had tried
to buy uranium "yellowcake" from Niger.
The key documents supposedly proving the Iraqi attempt later
turned out to be crude forgeries, created on official stationery
stolen from the African nation's Rome embassy. Among the most
tantalizing aspects of the debate over the Iraq War is the
origin of those fake documents -- and the role of the Italian
intelligence services in disseminating them.
In an explosive series of articles appearing this week in the
Italian newspaper La Repubblica, investigative reporters Carlo
Bonini and Giuseppe d'Avanzo report that Nicolo Pollari, chief
of Italy's military intelligence service, known as Sismi,
brought the Niger yellowcake story directly to the White House
after his insistent overtures had been rejected by the Central
Intelligence Agency in 2001 and 2002. Sismi had reported to the
CIA on October 15, 2001, that Iraq had sought yellowcake in
Niger, a report it also plied on British intelligence, creating
an echo that the Niger forgeries themselves purported to amplify
before they were exposed as a hoax.
Today's exclusive report in La Repubblica reveals that Pollari
met secretly in Washington on September 9, 2002, with
then–Deputy National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley. Their
secret meeting came at a critical moment in the White House
campaign to convince Congress and the American public that war
in Iraq was necessary to prevent Saddam Hussein from developing
nuclear weapons. National Security Council spokesman Frederick
Jones confirmed the meeting to the Prospect on Tuesday.
Pollari told the newspaper that since 2001, when he became
Sismi's director, the only member of the U.S. administration he
has met officially is his former CIA counterpart George Tenet.
But the Italian newspaper quotes a high-ranking Italian Sismi
source asserting a meeting with Hadley. La Repubblica also
quotes a Bush administration official saying, "I can confirm
that on September 9, 2002, General Nicolo Pollari met Stephen
Hadley."
The paper goes on to note the significance of that date,
highlighting the appearance of a little-noticed story in
Panorama a weekly magazine owned by Italian Prime Minister and
Bush ally Silvio Berlusconi, that was published three days after
Pollari's meeting with Hadley. The magazine's September 12,
2002, issue claimed that Iraq's intelligence agency, the
Mukhabarat, had acquired 500 tons of uranium from Nigeria
through a Jordanian intermediary. (While this September 2002
Panorama report mentioned Nigeria, the forgeries another
Panorama reporter would be proferred less than a month later
purportedly concerned Niger.)
The Sismi chief's previously undisclosed meeting with Hadley,
who was promoted earlier this year to national security adviser,
occurred one month before a murky series of events culminated in
the U.S. government obtaining copies of the Niger forgeries.
The forged documents were cabled from the U.S. embassy in Rome
to Washington after being delivered to embassy officials by
Elisabetta Burba, a reporter for Panorama. She had received the
papers from an Italian middleman named Rocco Martino. Burba
never wrote a story about those documents. Instead her editor,
Berlusconi favorite Carlo Rossella, ordered her to bring them
immediately to the U.S. embassy.
Although Sismi's involvement in promoting the Niger yellowcake
tale to U.S. and British intelligence has been previously
reported, the series in La Repubblica includes many new details,
including the name of a specific Sismi officer, Antonio Nucera,
who helped to set the Niger forgeries hoax in motion.
What may be most significant to American observers, however, is
the newspaper's allegation that the Italians sent the bogus
intelligence about Niger and Iraq not only through traditional
allied channels such as the CIA, but seemingly directly into the
White House. That direct White House channel amplifies questions
about a now-infamous 16-word reference to the Niger uranium in
President Bush's 2003 State of the Union address -- which
remained in the speech despite warnings from the CIA and the
State Department that the allegation was not substantiated.
Was the White House convinced that the Niger yellowcake report
was nevertheless true because the National Security Council was
getting its information directly from the Italian source?
Following the exposure of the discredited Niger allegations in
the summer of 2003 by former Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV,
White House officials at first sought to blame the CIA for the
inclusion of the controversial "16 words" in the president's
speech. Although then–National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice
and her deputy Hadley eventually accepted some responsibility
for the mistake, the White House undertook a covert campaign to
discredit Wilson and exposed the CIA affiliation of his wife,
Valerie Plame Wilson.
Yet if anyone knew who was actually responsible for the White
House's trumpeting of the Niger claims, it would seem from the
Repubblica report that Hadley did. He also knew that the CIA,
which had initially rejected the Italian claims, was not to
blame. Hadley's meeting with Pollari, at precisely the time when
the Niger forgeries came into the possession of the U.S.
government, may explain the seemingly hysterical White House
overreaction to Wilson's article almost a year later.
While the Niger yellowcake claims have provoked much drama in
American politics, their provenance is decidedly Italian. The
Repubblica investigation offers new insights into what motivated
the Berlusconi government and its intelligence chief Pollari to
go to so much trouble to bring those claims to the attention of
their allies in Washington.
For Berlusconi and Pollari, according to La Repubblica, the
overriding motive was a desire to win more appreciation and
prestige from the Americans, who were seen as eager for help in
making their sales pitch for war. On Monday, the newspaper
described the atmosphere in 2002: "Berlusconi wants Sismi to be
big players on the international security scene, to prove
themselves to their ally, the United States, and the world.
Washington is looking for proof of Saddam's involvement … and
wants info immediately."
For the Italian middleman Rocco Martino, who acquired the
documents from a Sismi mole at the Niger embassy in Rome, the
motive described by La Repubblica is primarily mercenary. He
wanted to be paid for the forgeries.
According to the Repubblica account, Martino was a former
carabinieri officer and later a Sismi operative who by 1999 was
making his living based in Luxembourg, selling information to
the French intelligence services for a monthly stipend. The
story goes on to explain how Martino renewed his contacts with
Sismi officer Antonio Nucera, an old friend and former
colleague, who was a Sismi vice-captain working in the
intelligence agency's eighth directorate, with responsibilities
involving weapons of mass destruction and counter-proliferation.
Precisely how Nucera, Martino, and two employees of the Niger
embassy in Rome came together sometime between 1999 and 2000 to
hatch the Niger forgeries plan is still somewhat mysterious. The
newspaper's reports that Nucera introduced Martino to a longtime
Sismi asset at the Niger embassy in Rome, a 60 year-old Italian
woman described in La Repubblica only as "La Signora." Sismi
chief Pollari, who granted the newspaper an interview (as he
tends to do when he fears that breaking news could taint his
agency), suggests that Nucera simply wanted to help out Martino,
his old friend and colleague.
But as the Italian reporters suggest, that sounds like a very
convenient excuse for the chief of an agency that was engaged in
promoting the bogus Niger claims from their inception, all the
way to the White House. The picture that emerges of Sismi's
relationship with Martino is that the agency used him as a
"postman" -- a cut-out to sell the bogus intelligence to allied
intelligence services. At the same time, Sismi possessed enough
information about Martino to claim that he was simply a rogue
agent on the French payroll.
La Repubblica's noirish portrait of Martino as a convenient
vehicle for plausible deniability is given further resonance by
the recent news that a Roman prosecutor has ended his
investigation into Martino's role in the Niger hoax without
filing any charges or issuing any report.
Although Berlusconi's government clearly sought deniability
while pushing the Niger uranium claims, the Bush White House
went still further by trying to blame its citation of
exaggerated and discredited Iraq WMD claims on the CIA, the very
same agency that consistently discounted the Niger claims. The
White House's war on the CIA and on the Wilsons --the extent of
which has been revealed in recent news reports emerging from the
Fitzgerald investigation -- has always had an excessive and
almost hysterical quality. Why was the White House so worked up
over Wilson and the Niger hoax, when there was so much evidence
that the administration had based its drive for war on claims
that were so thoroughly discredited from top to bottom? Why did
Wilson and his CIA wife become the primary targets, when Wilson
was hardly alone in pointing out that the White House should
have known better about the Niger claims?
News of the secret meeting between the Italian Sismi chief and
the White House deputy national security adviser -- during the
period when the White House was assembling its flawed case for
war -- provides an important new piece of that puzzle.
Laura Rozen reports on foreign-policy and national-security
issues from Washington, D.C., as a senior correspondent for The
American Prospect, a contributor to The Nation and other
publications, and for her blog, War and Piece. A translation of
excerpts from the La Repubblica story can be read here.
Copyright © 2005 by The American Prospect, Inc. Preferred
Citation: Laura Rozen, "La Repubblica's Scoop, Confirmed", The
American Prospect Online, Oct 25, 2005. This article may not be
resold, reprinted, or redistributed for compensation of any kind
without prior written permission from the author. Direct
questions about permissions to permissions@prospect.org.
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The Forgetters by Michael Tomasky
Kristof and Tierney have a point. But there’s an obvious
counterpoint that everyone seems to have forgotten. [1:44 PM,
10/25/05]
http://www.prospect.org/web/view-web.ww?id=10507
http://www.prospect.org/web/index.ww
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