William Rivers PittThe Dubious Suicide of CIA Director George TenetMon Jul 14 19:00:09 2003208.152.73.247 The Dubious Suicide of George Tenet By William Rivers Pitt t r u t h o u t | Perspective http://www.truthout.org/docs_03/071403A.shtml Monday 14 July 2003 Things have reached a pretty pass indeed when you apologize for making a mistake, butnobody believes your apology. So it is today with CIA Director Tenet, and by proxy GeorgeW. Bush and his administration. On Friday evening, CIA Director Tenet publicly jumped on the Niger evidence handgrenade, claiming the use in Bush's State of the Union Address in January 2003 of datafrom known forgeries to support the Iraq war was completely his fault. He never toldBush's people that the data was corrupted, and it was his fault those "sixteen words"regarding Iraqi attempts to procure uranium from Niger for a nuclear program made it intothe text of the speech. Problem solved, right? Condoleezza Rice and Don Rumsfeld had been triangulating onTenet since Thursday, claiming the CIA had never informed the White House about thedubious nature of the Niger evidence. Tenet, like a good political appointee, fell on hissword and took responsibility for the error. On Saturday, White House spokesman AriFleischer told the press corps that Bush had "moved on" from this controversy. Not so fast, said the New York Times editorial board. The paper of record for theWestern world published an editorial on Saturday entitled "The Uranium Fiction." The lasttime the Times editors used language this strong was when Bush, in a moment of seeminglyderanged hubris, tried to nominate master secret-keeper Henry Kissinger to chair the 9/11investigation: "It is clear, however, that much more went into this affair than the failure of theC.I.A. to pounce on the offending 16 words in Mr. Bush's speech. A good deal ofinformation already points to a willful effort by the war camp in the administration topump up an accusation that seemed shaky from the outset and that was pretty welldiscredited long before Mr. Bush stepped into the well of the House of Representativeslast January. Doubts about the accusation were raised in March 2002 by Joseph Wilson, aformer American diplomat, after he was dispatched to Niger by the C.I.A. to look into theissue. Mr. Wilson has said he is confident that his concerns were circulated not onlywithin the agency but also at the State Department and the office of Vice President DickCheney. Mr. Tenet, in his statement yesterday, confirmed that the Wilson findings had beengiven wide distribution, although he reported that Mr. Bush, Mr. Cheney and other highofficials had not been directly informed about them by the C.I.A." The sun came up over Washington DC on Sunday and shined on copies of the WashingtonPost which were waiting patiently to be read. The lead headline for the Sunday editionread, "CIA Got Uranium Reference Cut in October." The meat of the article states: "CIA Director George J. Tenet successfully intervened with White House officials tohave a reference to Iraq seeking uranium from Niger removed from a presidential speechlast October, three months before a less specific reference to the same intelligenceappeared in the State of the Union address, according to senior administration officials. "Tenet argued personally to White House officials, including deputy national securityadviser Stephen Hadley, that the allegation should not be used because it came from only asingle source, according to one senior official. Another senior official with knowledge ofthe intelligence said the CIA had doubts about the accuracy of the documents underlyingthe allegation, which months later turned out to be forged." What do we have here? Here is CIA Director Tenet arguing in October of 2002 against the use of the Nigerevidence, stating bluntly that it was useless. He made this pitch directly to the WhiteHouse. These concerns were brushed aside by Bush officials, and the forged evidence wasused despite the warnings in the State of the Union address. Now, the administration istrying to claim they were never told the evidence was bad. Yet between Tenet's personalappeals in 2002, and Ambassador Wilson's assurances that everyone who needed to know wasin the know regarding Niger, it appears the Bush White House has been caught red-handed ina series of incredible falsehoods. There are two more layers on this onion to be peeled. The first concerns Secretary ofState Powell. One week after the Niger evidence was used by Bush in the State of the Unionaddress, Powell presented to the United Nations the administration's case for war. TheNiger evidence was notably absent from Powell's presentation. According to CBS News,Powell said, "I didn't use the uranium at that point because I didn't think that wassufficiently strong as evidence to present before the world." What a difference a week makes. The White House would have us believe they wereblissfully unaware of the forged nature of their war evidence when Bush gave his State ofthe Union address, and yet somehow the Secretary of State knew well enough to avoid usingit just seven days later. The moral of the story appears to be that rotten war evidence isnot fit for international consumption, but is perfectly suitable for delivery to theAmerican people. The second layer to be peeled deals with the administration's newest excuse for usingthe forged Niger evidence to justify a war. They are claiming now that they used itbecause the British government told them it was solid. Yet there was the story publishedby the Washington Post on July 11 with the headline, "CIA Asked Britain to Drop IraqClaim." The article states: "The CIA tried unsuccessfully in early September 2002 to persuade the Britishgovernment to drop from an official intelligence paper a reference to Iraqi attempts tobuy uranium in Africa that President Bush included in his State of the Union address fourmonths later, senior Bush administration officials said yesterday. 'We consulted about thepaper and recommended against using that material,' a senior administration officialfamiliar with the intelligence program said." We are supposed to believe that the Bush administration was completely unaware thattheir Niger evidence was fake. We are supposed to believe George Tenet dropped the ball.Yet the CIA actively intervened with the British government in September of 2002, tellingthem the evidence was worthless. The CIA Director personally got the evidence strickenfrom a Bush speech in October of 2002. Intelligence insiders like Joseph Wilson and GregThielmann have stated repeatedly that everyone who needed to know the evidence was bad hadbeen fully and completely informed almost a year before the data was used in the State ofthe Union address. In an interesting twist, the profoundly questionable nature of Tenet's confession hasreached all the way around the planet to Australia. I spoke on Sunday to Andrew Wilkie, aformer senior intelligence analyst for the Office of National Assessments, the seniorAustralian intelligence agency which provides intelligence assessments to the Australianprime minister. Mr. Wilkie notes the following: "In the last week in Australia, the Defense Intelligence Organization has admittedthey had the information on the Niger forgeries and says they didn't tell the DefenseMinister. The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs has admitted they had theinformation on the Niger forgeries and didn't tell the Foreign Minister. The place I usedto work, the Office of National Assessments, has admitted publicly that they knew theNiger evidence was fake and didn't tell the Prime Minister about it. "You've got three intelligence organizations in Australia, the intelligenceorganizations in the US, and every one is saying they knew this was bad information, butnot one political leader reckons they were told. All three organizations have said theydidn't give this information to their political leaders. It is unbelievable to the pointof fantasy." I also spoke on Sunday with Ray McGovern, a 27-year veteran of the CIA who wasinterviewed by truthout on these matters on June 26 2003. Mr. McGovern is not buying whatthe White House is trying to sell. "Tenet's confession is designed to take the heat off," says McGovern, "to assign someresponsibility somewhere. It's not going to work. There's too much deception here. Forexample, Condoleezza Rice insisted that she only learned on June 8 about Former AmbassadorWilson's mission to Niger back in February 2002. That means that neither she nor her staffreads the New York Times, because Nick Kristof on May 6 had a very detailed explication ofWilson's mission to Niger. In my view, it is inconceivable that her remark this week -that she didn't know about Joe Wilson's mission to Niger until she was asked on a talkshow on June 8 - that is stretching the truth beyond the breaking point." Andrew Wilkie crystallized the issue at hand by stating, "Remember that the sourcingof uranium from Niger was the only remaining pillar of the argument that Iraq was tryingto reconstitute its nuclear program. By this stage, the aluminum tubes story about Iraq'snuclear program had been laughed out of the room. That had been laughable since 2001,leaving the sourcing of uranium as the last key piece of evidence about Iraqreconstituting a nuclear program. It's not just sixteen words. "It is just downright mischievous to hear Condoleezza Rice on CNN this morningsaying it was just sixteen words. It was worth a hell of a lot more than sixteen words. Ican remember that October speech by Bush where he talked about "mushroom clouds" fromIraq. The nuclear story was always played up as the most emotive and persuasive theme. Itwasn't just sixteen words." A page on the White House's own website describes the Bush administration's centralargument for war in Iraq. The Niger evidence is featured prominently, along with claimsthat Iraq was in possession of 26,000 liters of anthrax, 38,000 liters of botulinum toxin,500 tons of sarin, mustard and VX nerve agents, almost 30,000 munitions capable ofdelivering chemical agents, and several mobile biological weapons labs. The Niger evidencehas been destroyed, and the 'mobile weapons labs' have been shown to be weather balloonlaunching platforms. The vast quantities of anthrax, botulinum toxin, sarin, mustard gasand VX, along with the munitions to deliver them, have completely failed to show up. Many people quail at the idea that the President and his people could have lied soegregiously. What was in it for them? Besides the incredible amounts of money to be madefrom the war by oil and defense corporations like Halliburton and United Defense, twocompanies with umbilical ties to the administration, there was an "ancillary benefit toall this," according to Ray McGovern. "Not only did the President get an authorization tomake war, but there was an election that next month, the November midterms. The electionsturned out surprisingly well for the Bush administration because they were able to usecharges of being 'soft on Saddam' against those Democratic candidates who voted againstthe war." As Andrew Wilkie says, this issue is not about sixteen words in a speech. It is aboutlies and American credibility. "All of this breaking news is actually distracting us fromthe core issue," says Wilkie. "The core issue is the credibility gap. We were sold thiswar on the promise that Iraq had this massive WMD arsenal. Of course that hasn't beenfound, and whatever might be found now is not going to satisfy in any way that descriptionof the 'massive' arsenal, the 'imminent threat,' and all those great words used in Britainand Australia and Washington. We've got to be careful that, in debating the details on theissue of Tenet and Niger, we are not distracted from that core issue which is still leftto be resolved."William Rivers Pitt william.pitt@mail.truthout.org is the Managing Editor oftruthout.org. He is a New York Times best-selling author of two books - "War On Iraq"available now from Context Books, and "The Greatest Sedition is Silence," now availablefrom Pluto Press at www.SilenceIsSedition.com . © : t r u t h o u t 2003
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