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Dems
Scrap Plans To Look Into Claims
White
House Manipulated Intel On Iraqi Threat
by
Jason Leopold
September
13, 2003
Democrats
in Congress have abandoned their efforts to investigate the White House’s use
of questionable intelligence information about Iraq’s alleged stockpile of
weapons of mass destruction, saying the issue has been "eclipsed" by
President Bush’s request for $87 billion from Congress to continue funding the
war there.
David
Helfert, a spokesman for Congressman David Obey, D-Wisconsin, who criticized
the White House for relying too heavily on murky intelligence to get support
for the war, said Friday that Congressional Democrats would no longer pursue
hearings on the intelligence matter.
"We’re
past that," Helfert said, referring to the intelligence issue. "Those
questions were eclipsed by the supplemental request by President Bush for $87
billion" to fund the Iraq war. "Congress if focusing on asking
questions about the $87 billion, what it will be used for and whether it’s
worth it. It would be a good characterization to say that the intelligence
questions on Iraq and how the President came to believe that it had weapons of
mass destruction are no longer an issue."
No
weapons of mass destruction have been found in Iraq since Bush declared an end
to major combat in May.
Obey,
who this week called for the resignation of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
and Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, wrote a letter to the General
Accounting Office last month to try and get the agency to investigate a secret
Pentagon committee known as the Office of Special Plans. The Special Plans
Office, headed by Wolfowitz and other hawks in the Bush administration,
cherry-picked intelligence, much of which was gathered by unreliable Iraqi
defectors, to make a stronger case for war in Iraq, according to four
intelligence officials with knowledge of the inner workings of the group.
After
collecting the intelligence data, the Office of Special Plans then sent the
information it gathered directly to Vice President Dick Cheney’s office and to
the office of National Security Adviser Condoleeza Rice without first vetting
the information through the CIA, the intelligence officials said.
Several
other Democrats in Congress, including Ellen Tauscher, D-California, called for
an investigation into the Office of Special Plans to find out whether the group
knowingly used and supplied the White House with unreliable intelligence
information to win support for the war, but their efforts were thwarted by the
Republican controlled Congress.
In
July, a month before Congress took off for a month-long summer recess, Bush and
senior officials in the White House took a beating in the press for what looked
like an attempt by the administration to manipulate prewar intelligence on the
threat Iraq posed to the U.S. and its neighbors in the Middle East in order to convince
Congress and the public to support a preemptive strike against Iraq.
For
weeks, the White House was dogged by questions of its use of intelligence
information on the so-called Iraqi threat, most notably the 16-word statement that
made its way into Bush’s January State of the Union speech claiming Iraq had
sought large quantities of yellowcake uranium from Niger to build a nuclear
bomb. It has since been revealed that the uranium claim was based on forged
documents. The White House then admitted that the statement should never have
been included in Bush’s State of the Union address.
The
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence held a closed-door hearing in July,
questioning CIA Director George Tenet and other officials with the spy agency
about the intelligence information collected by the CIA about Iraq’s weapons of
mass destruction. It was Tenet who, after National Security Adviser Rice blamed
the CIA director, took the fall for Bush when questions were asked about why
the White House allowed the uranium claims to be used in Bush’s State of the
Union address even though there were uncertainties about its authenticity. But
it was later revealed that Tenet had warned Stephen Hadley, an aide to Rice, in
a memo that the statements about Iraq’s attempts to purchase uranium from Niger
should not be included in Bush’s speech because it was not true. Hadley said he
"forgot" to advise Bush and Rice about the CIA’s warnings.
Still,
with the media keeping the pressure on Bush and his use of faulty intelligence,
Democrats in both houses continued to ask tough questions and appeared to be
close to getting some answers. But then came the summer recess, ending the
debate for good.
Meanwhile,
in Britain, a Parliamentary committee launched a full-scale investigation last
summer into Prime Minister Tony Blair’s government and whether he or his
advisers falsified intelligence on the Iraqi threat. The committee, which
wrapped up its probe Thursday, concluded that Blair did not falsify intelligence
but failed to disclose to the public the uncertainty surrounding Iraq’s weapons
of mass destruction and questioned the claims used by Blair that Iraq could
deploy missiles in 45 minutes and that Iraq was a threat to Britain.
But
here in the United States, it appears all but likely that Congress will never
direct the same questions Parliament compelled Tony Blair to answer toward
Bush. In his televised speech Sunday, Bush shifted his rationale for the war in
Iraq, saying it was now the central front on the war on terror and less about
weapons of mass destruction, which was the reasons he cited as starting the war
in the first place.
Halfert,
Congressman Obey’s spokesman, said because there are now "cracks in Bush’s
armor" because of the tough questions he was asked about his use of
intelligence, it will be easier for Democrats to ask even tougher questions
about how the administration will spend the $87 billion to continue funding the
war.
"These
are now the important questions that have to be asked and answered,"
Halfert said.
Let’s
hope we get some answers before Congress takes off for the winter.
Jason Leopold, formerly the bureau chief of Dow Jones Newswires, is a
freelance journalist based in California. He is currently finishing a book on
the California energy crisis. He can be contacted at jasonleopold@hotmail.com.
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