11/23/05 - THE CHARLES GOYETTE SHOW...
Sen. Bob Graham "What I Knew Before the Invasion"
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-11-23-Charles-02.mp3
Sen. Bob Graham "What I Knew Before the Invasion"
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/18/AR2005111802397.html
What I Knew Before the Invasion
By Bob Graham
Sunday, November 20, 2005; Page B07
In the past week President Bush has twice attacked
Democrats for being hypocrites on the Iraq war. "More
than 100 Democrats in the House and Senate, who had
access to the same intelligence, voted to support
removing Saddam Hussein from power," he said.
The president's attacks are outrageous. Yes, more than
100 Democrats voted to authorize him to take the nation
to war. Most of them, though, like their Republican
colleagues, did so in the legitimate belief that the
president and his administration were truthful in their
statements that Saddam Hussein was a gathering menace --
that if Hussein was not disarmed, the smoking gun would
become a mushroom cloud.
The president has undermined trust. No longer will the
members of Congress be entitled to accept his veracity.
Caveat emptor has become the word. Every member of
Congress is on his or her own to determine the truth.
As chairman of the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence during the tragedy of Sept. 11, 2001, and
the run-up to the Iraq war, I probably had as much
access to the intelligence on which the war was
predicated as any other member of Congress.
I, too, presumed the president was being truthful --
until a series of events undercut that confidence.
In February 2002, after a briefing on the status of the
war in Afghanistan, the commanding officer, Gen. Tommy
Franks, told me the war was being compromised as
specialized personnel and equipment were being shifted
from Afghanistan to prepare for the war in Iraq -- a war
more than a year away. Even at this early date, the
White House was signaling that the threat posed by
Saddam Hussein was of such urgency that it had priority
over the crushing of al Qaeda.
In the early fall of 2002, a joint House-Senate
intelligence inquiry committee, which I co-chaired, was
in the final stages of its investigation of what
happened before Sept. 11. As the unclassified final
report of the inquiry documented, several failures of
intelligence contributed to the tragedy. But as of
October 2002, 13 months later, the administration was
resisting initiating any substantial action to
understand, much less fix, those problems.
At a meeting of the Senate intelligence committee on
Sept. 5, 2002, CIA Director George Tenet was asked what
the National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) provided as the
rationale for a preemptive war in Iraq. An NIE is the
product of the entire intelligence community, and its
most comprehensive assessment. I was stunned when Tenet
said that no NIE had been requested by the White House
and none had been prepared. Invoking our rarely used
senatorial authority, I directed the completion of an
NIE.
Tenet objected, saying that his people were too
committed to other assignments to analyze Saddam
Hussein's capabilities and will to use chemical,
biological and possibly nuclear weapons. We insisted,
and three weeks later the community produced a
classified NIE.
There were troubling aspects to this 90-page document.
While slanted toward the conclusion that Hussein
possessed weapons of mass destruction stored or produced
at 550 sites, it contained vigorous dissents on key
parts of the information, especially by the departments
of State and Energy. Particular skepticism was raised
about aluminum tubes that were offered as evidence Iraq
was reconstituting its nuclear program. As to Hussein's
will to use whatever weapons he might have, the estimate
indicated he would not do so unless he was first
attacked.
Under questioning, Tenet added that the information in
the NIE had not been independently verified by an
operative responsible to the United States. In fact, no
such person was inside Iraq. Most of the alleged
intelligence came from Iraqi exiles or third countries,
all of which had an interest in the United States'
removing Hussein, by force if necessary.
The American people needed to know these reservations,
and I requested that an unclassified, public version of
the NIE be prepared. On Oct. 4, Tenet presented a
25-page document titled "Iraq's Weapons of Mass
Destruction Programs." It represented an unqualified
case that Hussein possessed them, avoided a discussion
of whether he had the will to use them and omitted the
dissenting opinions contained in the classified version.
Its conclusions, such as "If Baghdad acquired sufficient
weapons-grade fissile material from abroad, it could
make a nuclear weapon within a year," underscored the
White House's claim that exactly such material was being
provided from Africa to Iraq.
From my advantaged position, I had earlier concluded
that a war with Iraq would be a distraction from the
successful and expeditious completion of our aims in
Afghanistan. Now I had come to question whether the
White House was telling the truth -- or even had an
interest in knowing the truth.
On Oct. 11, I voted no on the resolution to give the
president authority to go to war against Iraq. I was
able to apply caveat emptor. Most of my colleagues could
not.
The writer is a former Democratic senator from Florida.
He is currently a fellow at Harvard University's
Institute of Politics.
Guest: U S Senator Bob Graham, Bob Graham, Carole
Mckenna, James Bamford
Subject: Peace Rally, John Rendon, The Man Who Sold The
War, Rolling Stone Magazine, Iraq War Propaganda, Bob
Graham
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/index.cgi?2005-11-23-Charles
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 1 (9.88 MB)
James Bamford washauthor@aol.com Rolling Stone Magazine
- "The Man Who Sold the War - Meet John Rendon, Bush's
general in the propaganda war.
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-11-23-Charles-01.mp3
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 2 (9.69 MB)
Sen. Bob Graham "What I Knew Before the Invasion"
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-11-23-Charles-02.mp3
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 3 (8.63 MB)
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-11-23-Charles-03.mp3
PLEASE NETWORK FOR FAMILY DISCUSSION THIS HOLIDAY
WEEKEND!