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They Knew...

Despite the whitewash, we now know that the Bush administration
was warned before the war that its Iraq claims were weak

By David Sirota and Christy Harvey, August 3, 2004

If desperation is ugly, then Washington, D.C. today is downright hideous.

As the 9/11 Commission recently reported, there was “no credible evidence” of a collaborative relationship between Iraq and al Qaeda. Similarly, no weapons of mass destruction have been found in Iraq. With U.S. casualties mounting in an election year, the White House is grasping at straws to avoid being held accountable for its dishonesty.

The whitewash already has started: In July, Republicans on the Senate Intelligence Committee released a controversial report blaming the CIA for the mess. The panel conveniently refuses to evaluate what the White House did with the information it was given or how the White House set up its own special team of Pentagon political appointees (called the Office of Special Plans) to circumvent well-established intelligence channels. And Vice President Dick Cheney continues to say without a shred of proof that there is “overwhelming evidence” justifying the administration’s pre-war charges.

But as author Flannery O’Conner noted, “Truth does not change according to our ability to stomach it.” That means no matter how much defensive spin spews from the White House, the Bush administration cannot escape the documented fact that it was clearly warned before the war that its rationale for invading Iraq was weak.

Top administration officials repeatedly ignored warnings that their assertions about Iraq’s supposed Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) and connections to al Qaeda were overstated. In some cases, they were told their claims were wholly without merit, yet they went ahead and made them anyway. Even the Senate report admits that the White House “misrepresented” classified intelligence by eliminating references to contradictory assertions.

In short, they knew they were misleading America.

And they did not care.

They knew Iraq posed no nuclear threat

There is no doubt even though there was no proof of Iraq’s complicity, the White House was focused on Iraq within hours of the 9/11 attacks. As CBS News reported, “barely five hours after American Airlines Flight 77 plowed into the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld was telling his aides to come up with plans for striking Iraq.” Former Bush counterterrorism czar Richard Clarke recounted vividly how, just after the attack, President Bush pressured him to find an Iraqi connection. In many ways, this was no surprise—as former Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill and another administration official confirmed, the White House was actually looking for a way to invade Iraq well before the terrorist attacks.

But such an unprovoked invasion of a sovereign country required a public rationale. And so the Bush administration struck fear into the hearts of Americans about Saddam Hussein’s supposed WMD, starting with nuclear arms. In his first major address on the “Iraqi threat” in October 2002, President Bush invoked fiery images of mushroom clouds and mayhem, saying, “Iraq is reconstituting its nuclear weapons program.”

Yet, before that speech, the White House had intelligence calling this assertion into question. A 1997 report by the U.N.’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)—the agency whose purpose is to prevent nuclear proliferation—stated there was no indication Iraq ever achieved nuclear capability or had any physical capacity for producing weapons-grade nuclear material in the near future.

In February 2001, the CIA delivered a report to the White House that said: “We do not have any direct evidence that Iraq has used the period since Desert Fox to reconstitute its weapons of mass destruction programs.” The report was so definitive that Secretary of State Colin Powell said in a subsequent press conference, Saddam Hussein “has not developed any significant capability with respect to weapons of mass destruction.”

Ten months before the president’s speech, an intelligence review by CIA Director George Tenet contained not a single mention of an imminent nuclear threat—or capability—from Iraq. The CIA was backed up by Bush’s own State Department: Around the time Bush gave his speech, the department’s intelligence bureau said that evidence did not “add up to a compelling case that Iraq is currently pursuing what [we] consider to be an integrated and comprehensive approach to acquiring nuclear weapons.”

Nonetheless, the administration continued to push forward. In March 2003, Cheney went on national television days before the war and claimed Iraq “has reconstituted nuclear weapons.” He was echoed by State Department spokesman Richard Boucher, who told reporters of supposedly grave “concerns about Iraq’s potential nuclear programs.”

Even after the invasion, when troops failed to uncover any evidence of nuclear weapons, the White House refused to admit the truth. In July 2003, Condoleezza Rice told PBS’s Gwen Ifill that the administration’s nuclear assertions were “absolutely supportable.” That same month, White House spokesman Scott McClellan insisted: “There’s a lot of evidence showing that Iraq was reconstituting its nuclear weapons program.”

They knew the aluminum tubes were not for nuclear weapons

To back up claims that Iraq was actively trying to build nuclear weapons, the administration referred to Iraq’s importation of aluminum tubes, which Bush officials said were for enriching uranium. In December 2002, Powell said, “Iraq has tried to obtain high-strength aluminum tubes which can be used to enrich uranium in centrifuges for a nuclear weapons program.” Similarly, in his 2003 State of the Union address, Bush said Iraq “has attempted to purchase high-strength aluminum tubes suitable for nuclear weapons production.”

But, in October 2002, well before these and other administration officials made this claim, two key agencies told the White House exactly the opposite. The State Department affirmed reports from Energy Department experts who concluded those tubes were ill-suited for any kind of uranium enrichment. And according to memos released by the Senate Intelligence Committee, the State Department also warned Powell not to use the aluminum tubes hypothesis in the days before his February 2003 U.N. speech. He refused and used the aluminum tubes claim anyway.

The State Department’s warnings were soon validated by the IAEA. In March 2003, the agency’s director stated, “Iraq’s efforts to import these aluminum tubes were not likely to be related” to nuclear weapons deployment.

Yet, this evidence did not stop the White House either. Pretending the administration never received any warnings at all, Rice claimed in July 2003 that “the consensus view” in the intelligence community was that the tubes “were suitable for use in centrifuges to spin material for nuclear weapons.”

Today, experts agree the administration’s aluminum tube claims were wholly without merit.

They knew the Iraq-uranium claims were not supported

In one of the most famous statements about Iraq’s supposed nuclear arsenals, Bush said in his 2003 State of the Union address, “The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.” The careful phrasing of this statement highlights how dishonest it was. By attributing the claim to an allied government, the White House made a powerful charge yet protected itself against any consequences should it be proved false. In fact, the president invoked the British because his own intelligence experts had earlier warned the White House not to make the claim at all.

In the fall of 2002, the CIA told administration officials not to include this uranium assertion in presidential speeches. Specifically, the agency sent two memos to the White House and Tenet personally called top national security officials imploring them not to use the claim. While the warnings forced the White House to remove a uranium reference from an October 2002 presidential address, they did not stop the charge from being included in the 2003 State of the Union.

Not surprisingly, evidence soon emerged that forced the White House to admit the deception. In March 2003, IAEA Director Mohammed El Baradei said there was no proof Iraq had nuclear weapons and added “documents which formed the basis for [the White House’s assertion] of recent uranium transactions between Iraq and Niger are in fact not authentic.” But when Cheney was asked about this a week later, he said, “Mr. El Baradei frankly is wrong.”

Bush and Rice both tried to blame the CIA for the failure, saying the assertion “was cleared by the intelligence services.” When the intelligence agency produced the memos it had sent to the White House on the subject, Rice didn’t miss a beat, telling Meet The Press “it is quite possible that I didn’t” read the memos at all—as if they were “optional” reading for the nation’s top national security official on the eve of war. At about this time, some high-level administration official or officials leaked to the press that Ambassador Joseph Wilson’s wife was an undercover CIA agent—a move widely seen as an attempt by the administration to punish Wilson for his July 6, 2003 New York Times op-ed that stated he had found no evidence of an Iraqi effort to purchase uranium from Niger.

In recent weeks, right-wing pundits have pointed to new evidence showing the Iraq uranium charge may have flirted with the truth at some point in the distant past. These White House hatchet men say the administration did not manipulate or cherry-pick intelligence. They also tout the recent British report (a.k.a. The Butler Report) as defending the president’s uranium claim. Yet, if the White House did not cherry-pick or manipulate intelligence, why did the president trumpet U.S. intelligence from a foreign government while ignoring explicit warnings not to do so from his own? The record shows U.S. intelligence officials explicitly warned the White House that “the Brits have exaggerated this issue.” Yet, the administration refused to listen. Even The Butler Report itself acknowledges the evidence is cloudy. As nonproliferation expert Joseph Cirincione of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace recently pointed out, “The claim appears shaky at best—hardly the stuff that should make up presidential decisions.”

But now, instead of contrition, Republicans are insisting the White House’s uranium charge was accurate. Indeed, these apologists have no option but to try to distract public attention from the simple truth that not a shred of solid evidence exists to substantiate this key charge that fueled the push for war.

They knew there was no hard evidence of chemical or biological weapons

In September 2002, President Bush said Iraq “could launch a biological or chemical attack in as little as 45 minutes after the order is given.” The next month, he delivered a major speech to “outline the Iraqi threat,” just two days before a critical U.N. vote. In his address, he claimed without doubt that Iraq “possesses and produces chemical and biological weapons.” He said that “Iraq has a growing fleet of manned and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) that could be used to disperse chemical or biological weapons” and that the government was “concerned Iraq is exploring ways of using these UAVs for missions targeting the United States.”

What he did not say was that the White House had been explicitly warned that these assertions were unproved.

As the Washington Post later reported, Bush “ignored the fact that U.S. intelligence mistrusted the source” of the 45-minute claim and, therefore, omitted it from its intelligence estimates. And Bush ignored the fact that the Defense Intelligence Agency previously submitted a report to the administration finding “no reliable information” to prove Iraq was producing or stockpiling chemical weapons. According to Newsweek, the conclusion was similar to the findings of a 1998 government commission on WMD chaired by Rumsfeld.

Bush also neglected to point out that in early October 2002, the administration’s top military experts told the White House they “sharply disputed the notion that Iraq’s Unmanned Aerial Vehicles were being designed as attack weapons.” Specifically, the Air Force’s National Air and Space Intelligence Center correctly showed the drones in question were too heavy to be used to deploy chemical/biological-weapons spray devices.

Regardless, the chemical/biological weapons claims from the administration continued to escalate. Powell told the United Nations on February 5, 2003, “There can be no doubt that Saddam Hussein has biological weapons and the capability to rapidly produce more, many more.” As proof, he cited aerial images of a supposed decontamination vehicle circling a suspected weapons site.

According to newly released documents in the Senate Intelligence Committee report, Powell’s own top intelligence experts told him not to make such claims about the photographs. They said the vehicles were likely water trucks. He ignored their warnings.

On March 6, 2003, just weeks before the invasion, the president went further than Powell. He claimed, “Iraqi operatives continue to hide biological and chemical agents.”

To date, no chemical or biological weapons have been found in Iraq.

They knew Saddam and bin Laden were not collaborating

In the summer of 2002, USA Today reported White House lawyers had concluded that establishing an Iraq-al Qaeda link would provide the legal cover at the United Nations for the administration to attack Iraq. Such a connection, no doubt, also would provide political capital at home. And so, by the fall of 2002, the Iraq-al Qaeda drumbeat began.

It started on September 25, 2002, when Bush said, “you can’t distinguish between al Qaeda and Saddam.” This was news even to members of Bush’s own political party who had access to classified intelligence. Just a month before, Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.), who serves on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said, “Saddam is not in league with al Qaeda ‚Ķ I have not seen any intelligence that would lead me to connect Saddam Hussein to al Qaeda.

To no surprise, the day after Bush’s statement, USA Today reported several intelligence experts “expressed skepticism” about the claim, with a Pentagon official calling the president’s assertion an “exaggeration.” No matter, Bush ignored these concerns and that day described Saddam Hussein as “a man who loves to link up with al Qaeda.” Meanwhile, Rumsfeld held a press conference trumpeting “bulletproof” evidence of a connection—a sentiment echoed by Rice and White House spokesman Ari Fleischer. And while the New York Times noted, “the officials offered no details to back up the assertions,” Rumsfeld nonetheless insisted his claims were “accurate and not debatable.”

Within days, the accusations became more than just “debatable”; they were debunked. German Defense Minister Peter Stuck said the day after Rumsfeld’s press conference that his country “was not aware of any connection” between Iraq and al Qaeda’s efforts to acquire chemical weapons. The Orlando Sentinel reported that terrorism expert Peter Bergen—one of the few to actually interview Osama bin Laden—said the connection between Iraq and al Qaeda are minimal. In October 2002, Knight Ridder reported, “a growing number of military officers, intelligence professionals and diplomats in [Bush’s] own government privately have deep misgivings” about the Iraq-al Qaeda claims. The experts charged that administration hawks “exaggerated evidence.” A senior U.S. official told the Philadelphia Inquirer that intelligence analysts “contest the administration’s suggestion of a major link between Iraq and al Qaeda.”

While this evidence forced British Prime Minister Tony Blair and other allies to refrain from playing up an Iraq-al Qaeda connection, the Bush administration refused to be deterred by facts.

On November 1, 2002, President Bush claimed, “We know [Iraq has] got ties with al Qaeda.” Four days later, Europe’s top terrorism investigator Jean-Louis Bruguiere reported: “We have found no evidence of links between Iraq and al Qaeda. ‚Ķ If there were such links, we would have found them. But we have found no serious connections whatsoever.” British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, whose country was helping build the case for war, admitted, “What I’m asked is if I’ve seen any evidence of [Iraq-al Qaeda connections]. And the answer is: ‘I haven’t.’ ”

Soon, an avalanche of evidence appeared indicating the White House was deliberately misleading America. In January 2003, intelligence officials told the Los Angeles Times that they were “puzzled by the administration’s new push” to create the perception of an Iraq-al Qaeda connection and said the intelligence community has “discounted—if not dismissed—information believed to point to possible links between Iraq and al Qaeda.” One intelligence official said, “There isn’t a factual basis” for the administration’s conspiracy theory about the so-called connection.

On the morning of February 5, 2003, the same day Powell delivered his U.N. speech, British intelligence leaked a comprehensive report finding no substantial links between Iraq and al Qaeda. The BBC reported that British intelligence officials maintained “any fledgling relationship [between Iraq and al Qaeda] foundered due to mistrust and incompatible ideologies.” Powell, nonetheless, stood before the United Nations and claimed there was a “sinister nexus between Iraq and the al Qaeda.” A month later, Rice backed him up, saying al Qaeda “clearly has had links to the Iraqis.” And in his March 17, 2003, speech on the eve of war, Bush justified the invasion by citing the fully discredited Iraq-al Qaeda link.

When the war commenced, the house of cards came down. In June 2003, the chairman of the U.N. group that monitors al Qaeda told reporters his team found no evidence linking the terrorist group to Iraq. In July 2003, the Los Angeles Times reported the bipartisan congressional report analyzing September 11 “undercut Bush administration claims before the war that Hussein had links to al Qaeda.” Meanwhile, the New York Times reported, “Coalition forces have not brought to light any significant evidence demonstrating the bond between Iraq and al Qaeda.” In August 2003, three former Bush administration officials came forward to admit pre-war evidence tying al Qaeda to Iraq “was tenuous, exaggerated, and often at odds with the conclusions of key intelligence agencies.”

Yet, the White House insisted on maintaining the deception. In the fall of 2003, President Bush said, “There’s no question that Saddam Hussein had al Qaeda ties.” And Cheney claimed Iraq “had an established relationship to al Qaeda.” When the media finally began demanding proof for all the allegations, Powell offered a glimmer of contrition. In January 2004, he conceded that there was no “smoking gun” to prove the claim. His admission was soon followed by a March 2004 Knight Ridder report that quoted administration officials conceding “there never was any evidence that Hussein’s secular police state and Osama bin Laden’s Islamic terror network were in league.”

But Powell’s statement was the exception, not the norm. The White House still refuses to acknowledge wrongdoing, and instead resorts to the classic two-step feint, citing sources but conveniently refusing to acknowledge those sources’ critical faults.

For instance, Cheney began pointing reporters to an article in the right-wing Weekly Standard as the “best source” of evidence backing the Saddam-al Qaeda claim, even though the Pentagon had previously discredited the story. Similarly, in June, the Republican’s media spin machine came to the aid of the White House and promoted a New York Times article about a document showing failed efforts by bin Laden to work with Iraq in the mid-’90s against Saudi Arabia. Not surprisingly, the spinners did not mention the article’s key finding—a Pentagon task force found that the document “described no formal alliance being reached between Mr. bin Laden and Iraqi intelligence.”

When the 9/11 Commission found “no credible evidence” of a collaborative relationship between Iraq and al Qaeda, the White House denials came as no surprise. Cheney defiantly claimed there was “overwhelming evidence” of a link, provided no evidence, and then berated the media and the commission for having the nerve to report the obvious. Bush did not feel the need to justify his distortions, saying after the report came out, “The reason I keep insisting that there was a relationship between Iraq and Saddam and al Qaeda is because there was a relationship between Iraq and al Qaeda.”

That was the perfect answer from an administration that never lets the factual record impinge on what it says to the American public.

They knew there was no Prague meeting

One of the key pillars of the Iraq-al Qaeda myth was a White House-backed story claiming 9/11 hijacker Mohammed Atta met with an Iraqi spy in April 2001. The tale originally came from a lone Czech informant who said he saw the terrorist in Prague at the time. White House hawks, eager to link al Qaeda with Saddam, did not wait to verify the story, and instead immediately used it to punch up arguments for a preemptive attack on Iraq. On November 14, 2001, Cheney claimed Atta was “in Prague in April of this year, as well as earlier.” On December 9, 2001, he went further, claiming without proof that the Atta meeting was “pretty well confirmed.”

Nine days later, the Czech government reported there was no evidence that Atta met with an Iraqi intelligence agent in Prague. Czech Police Chief Jiri Kolar said there were no documents showing Atta had been in Prague that entire year, and Czech officials told Newsweek that the uncorroborated witness who perpetuated the story should have been viewed with more skepticism.

By the spring of 2002, major news publications such as the Washington Post, the New York Times, Newsweek and Time were running stories calling the “Prague connection” an “embarrassing” mistake and stating that, according to European officials, the intelligence supporting the claim was “somewhere between ‘slim’ and ‘none’.” The stories also quoted administration officials and CIA and FBI analysts saying that on closer scrutiny, “there was no evidence Atta left or returned to the United State at the time he was supposed to be in Prague.” Even FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III, a Bush political appointee, admitted in April 2002, “We ran down literally hundreds of thousands of leads and checked every record we could get our hands on, from flight reservations to car rentals to bank accounts,” but found nothing.

But that was not good enough for the administration, which instead of letting the story go, began trying to manipulate intelligence to turn fantasy into reality. In August 2002, when FBI case officers told Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz that there was no Atta meeting, Newsweek reported Wolfowitz “vigorously challenged them.” Wolfowitz wanted the FBI to endorse claims that Atta and the Iraqi spy had met. FBI counterterrorism chief Pat D’Amuro refused.

In September 2002, the CIA handed Cheney a classified intelligence assessment that cast specific, serious doubt on whether the Atta meeting ever occurred. Yet, that same month, Richard Perle, then chairman of the Bush’s Defense Policy Board, said, “Muhammad Atta met [a secret collaborator of Saddam Hussein] prior to September 11. We have proof of that, and we are sure he wasn’t just there for a holiday.” In the same breath, Perle openly admitted, “The meeting is one of the motives for an American attack on Iraq.”

By the winter of 2002, even America’s allies were telling the administration to relent: In November, British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said he had seen no evidence of a meeting in Prague between Atta and an Iraqi intelligence agent.

But it did not stop. In September 2003, on “Meet the Press,” Cheney dredged up the story again, saying, “With respect to 9/11, of course, we’ve had the story that’s been public out there. The Czechs alleged that Mohammed Atta, the lead attacker, met in Prague with a senior Iraqi intelligence official five months before the attack.” He provided no new evidence, opted not to mention that the Czechs long ago had withdrawn the allegations, and ignored new evidence that showed the story was likely untrue.

Even today, with all of the intelligence firmly against him, Cheney remains unrepentant. Asked in June about whether the meeting had occurred, he admitted, “That’s never been proven.” Then he added, “It’s never been refuted.” When CNBC’s Gloria Borger asked about his initial claim that the meeting was “pretty well confirmed,” Cheney snapped, “No, I never said that. I never said that. Absolutely not.”

His actual words in December 2001: “It’s been pretty well confirmed that [Atta] did go to Prague and he did meet with a senior official of the Iraqi intelligence service.”

In other words, Cheney hit a new low. He resorted not only to lying about the story, but lying about lying about the story.

Conclusion: They knew they were misleading America

In his March 17, 2003 address preparing America for the Iraq invasion, President Bush stated unequivocally that there was an Iraq-al Qaeda nexus and that there was “no doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess and conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever devised.”

In the context of what we now know the White House knew at the time, Bush was deliberately dishonest. The intelligence community repeatedly told the White House there were many deep cracks in its case for war. The president’s willingness to ignore such warnings and make these unequivocal statements proves the administration was intentionally painting a black-and-white picture when it knew the facts merited only gray at best.

That has meant severe consequences for all Americans. Financially, U.S. taxpayers have shelled out more than $166 billion for the Iraq war, and more will soon be needed. Geopolitically, our country is more isolated from allies than ever, with anti-Americanism on the rise throughout the globe.

And we are less secure. A recent U.S. Army War College report says “the invasion of Iraq was a diversion from the more narrow focus on defeating al Qaeda.” U.N. envoy Lakhdar Brahimi put it this way: “The war in Iraq was useless, it caused more problems than it solved, and it brought in terrorism.”

These statements are borne out by the facts: The International Institute of Strategic Studies in London reports al Qaeda is now 18,000 strong, with many new recruits joining as a result of the war in Iraq. Not coincidentally, the White House recently said the American homeland faces an imminent threat of a terrorist attack from a still-active al Qaeda operation in Afghanistan. Yet, the administration actually moved special forces out of Afghanistan in 2002 to prepare for an invasion of Iraq. Because of this, we face the absurd situation whereby we have no more than 20,000 troops in Afghanistan hunting down those who directly threaten us, yet have 140,000 troops in Iraq—a country that was not a serious menace before invasion.

Of course, it is those troops who have it the worst. Our men and women in uniform are bogged down in a quagmire, forced to lay down life and limb for a lie.

To be sure, neoconservative pundits and Bush administration hawks will continue to blame anyone but the White House for these deceptions. They also will say intelligence gave a bit of credence to some of the pre-war claims, and that is certainly true.

But nothing can negate the clear proof that President Bush and other administration official officials vastly overstated the intelligence they were given. They engaged in a calculated and well-coordinated effort to turn a war of choice in Iraq into a perceived war of imminent necessity.

And we are all left paying the price.

Reader Comments

This is one of those brilliant articles that makes you wonder why it hasn’t been written before.  Thank you for your work, I’m pointing it out to everyone I know, and many that I don’t.

If you ever decide to do a sequel regarding 9/11, I’ve been looking into what Bush knew about planes used as weapons at the Genoa G8 Summit in July, 2001.  I’m including my brief work below:


The Bush Administration would like us to believe that the August 6, 2001 memo entitled “Bin Laden Determined to Strike in US” was not itself an “inkling” of warning.  Fine then, let’s forget about the memo for one moment.

Let us never forget, and in fact let us remind the public as often as possible, that Bush himself admitted prior knowledge of the terrorist plot to fly jetliners into buildings. 

In his prime time news conference disaster of March 6, 2003, Bush referred to intel he received before the G8 Summit in Genoa, Italy:

“Ed, I asked for the briefing. And the reason I did is because there had been a lot of threat intelligence from overseas. And so—part of it had to do with Genoa, the G8 conference that I was going to attend. And I asked, at that point in time, let’s make sure we are paying attention here at home, as well.

“The report, itself, I’ve characterized as mainly history, and I think when you look at it you’ll see that it was talking about ‘97 and ‘98 and ‘99. It was also an indication, as you mentioned, that bin Laden might want to hijack an airplane, but as you said, not to fly into a building, but perhaps to release a person in jail. In other words, serve it as a blackmail.”

This, like the majority of his utterances, was a lie.  The threat was specific: al Qaida operatives might hijack aircraft and assassinate Bush and other foreign leaders by crashing them into the meeting itself.  This is why, as mulitple news sources reported, anti-aircraft guns were stationed strategically throughout Genoa during the conference.  (Think about it: why would you use anti-aircraft battery to prevent blackmail?) Additionally, Bush stayed on an aircraft carrier and other leaders slept on luxury cruise liners.  The Italian government closed off local air space and had fighter jets patrolling the skies during the summit. (http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0406-11.htm) Security measures were unprecedented and underreported.

These events took place in July of 2001.  If the Bush Administration dares to suggest that they had no warning of the kind of attack that took place on September 11, we must conclude that they are dangerously incompetent in forgetting the G8 warnings and the August 8 memo, and not making the elementary connections between the two before and during September 11.  Or they are lying.

Posted by Fred Maske on August 3, 2004 at 11:18 AM

Ow.  Someone did their homework.

Posted by Justin on August 3, 2004 at 11:26 AM

Another vote of thanks for an excellent article.

It is this calculated use of deception and falsehood that we should fear, more even than the wrongheaded policy.  When our leaders cease to know the difference between the truth and a lie, the nation is headed for disaster. 

If I may shamelessly flog two articles on this topic: 

http://www.americanpolitics.com/20020405Utwater.html

http://www.americanpolitics.com/20020426Utwater.html

Posted by Charles on August 3, 2004 at 12:06 PM

Dear David and Christy,
Thank you for this awesome piece of investigative journalism, and thanks as well for your work with Air America.

As a side question, what really is going on with mainstream media? Tens of millions of people are unaware that they are constantly lied to. They come home to a sofa and a cold beer, and suck this misinformation in. Part of the problem is their lack of curiosity, yet most Americans have been taught to have faith in this system.

What we are witnessing is a collapse of the 4th Branch of government.

Thanks again for all your dedication to democracy.
Scott

Posted by Scott Goold on August 3, 2004 at 2:01 PM

It’s alarming that a generation of people that did not trust their government in their youth can be so complacent about it in their adulthood.

I agree with Charles.  The “calculated use of deception and falsehood” is the single most dangerous weapon a government can wield against it people.

Posted by Luis on August 3, 2004 at 2:32 PM

This article contains much pertinent information that should be broadcast across America.  I would love to show this to my conservative friend, but I know she wouldn’t even read it.  Or she would just think that I don’t get it.  How can we get through to them? If the media reported the truth, they wouldn’t be able to escape it. I am not against republicans or conservatives (in theory), but I am against losing our democracy.  It’s like a certain portion of Americans have forgotten what our veterans have died for, and for what our troops are fighting (and dying) for, and what our founding fathers’ vision of our country was.  It’s inspiring to know that there is a growing majority of people who can see through the corporate fog-and who will hopefully vote accordingly. Thank you.

Posted by Jess Muir on August 3, 2004 at 2:53 PM

A very informative article, for those that have been in the dark and not keeping up with the 9/11 Commission, this article is well written and factual.

It saddens me that we are so far ahead (at least I believed that) and that at this time and day it is still possible for someone like George W. Bush to be President.

To think that Clinton almost got impeached for a Cuban Cigar and yet Bush has lied, openly lied to a Nation and he is on the ballot for November.

((shakes head in disgrace))

Posted by Liz on August 3, 2004 at 2:57 PM

The more you read the more weary you become at the continued signs of journalistic laziness.  As an example, newspapers are now carrying stories claiming that Bush supports a new intelligence chief as recommended by the 9/11 commission, but differs only on whether the post should be inside or outside the White House.

Josh Marshall (http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com) today matched what Bush is really saying about the commission’s plan and what he really plans to do if such a post is created, and discovers that in fact, Bush’s plan would create an essentially powerless post with no budgetary authority.  If Josh, who is a trusted journalist who writes for a number of respected publications, can discover this in less than 24 hours, why can’t the brains at the NY Times do likewise?

And has also been noted, someone should clearly have called Bush on his claim that he wants the post to be OUTSIDE the White House “so it won’t be subject to undue influence.”

Given the clear evidence of how the Bush Administration badgered and circumvented our traditional intelligence channels with its own Special Office on Intelligence in the Pentagon and then went around the CIA to present its patently flawed (and now proven false) claims of WMD directly to the President, one should begin laughing out loud if it weren’t so tragic.

Posted by Dweb on August 3, 2004 at 7:26 PM

Well done!  I knew most of the bits and pieces but appreciate your pulling them all together in one comprehensive narrative.

Posted by Dave Hollander on August 3, 2004 at 7:54 PM

Q.E.D.

Posted by Mike Dallos on August 3, 2004 at 8:01 PM

Q.E.D.

Outstanding.........provocative.........so true!!

Posted by Meehowski on August 3, 2004 at 8:18 PM

.........and, THANK YOU!!

Posted by Meehowski on August 3, 2004 at 8:20 PM

The article is great, but isn’t this just kicking
a dead horse? GWB said in his terrornews conference
yesterday that, he would have attacked Iraq, even
knowing what he knows today. So he has indeed made
a mea culpa that he was hell bent on invading Iraq,
no matter what the CIA or NSA told him early in 2003.
All of the wmd talk was just that, talk for
the masses and the history books. Now the situation
is so grave in Iraq, that the press hardly ever gives a true picture of events.
It is worse than VietNam, because if we tried to retreat back to the
Kuwaiti frontier, we would be ambused from all sides.
I for one believe that we are on the verge of a total defeat in Iraq.
It isn’t over, by far.
The worst is yet to come. We have 6 million
Shia’s between Bagdad, and Kuwait. If we start
a pull out, would they not draw as much blood as
they could? Think about it.

Posted by blixxx on August 4, 2004 at 12:17 AM

The great thing about this article is about how it has resources for the readers to view if they are skeptic and is very thorough on its information than other Bush pre war articles which ridicule him on the basis of their opinion; not facts. I knew this from the beginnign and im glad that it’s published.

Posted by Greg on August 4, 2004 at 12:31 AM

Thank you for a factual article!
The truth eventually comes out, but who pays for the errors?

Posted by Abbey on August 4, 2004 at 5:22 AM

Great article. I would just add that the paleocons have been pointing out that these guys were lying for months now. Here’s the former editor of the Washington Times, Arnaud de Borchgrave:
http://washingtontimes.com/commentary/20040209-090308-2 2252r.htm


There is still time to remind ourselves WMDs were not the principal reason for going to war against Saddam Hussein’s Iraq; they were the pretext. And that’s why irrefutable evidence was not the standard. Axis of evil regime change was the lodestar.
When this writer first heard from prominent neoconservatives in April 2002 that war was no longer a question of “if” but “when,” the casus belli had little to do with WMDs. The Bush administration, they explained, starkly and simply, had decided to redraw the geopolitical map of the Middle East....
The liberation of Iraq, in the neocon scenario, would be followed by a democratic Iraq that would quickly recognize Israel. This, in turn, would “snowball” — the analogy only works in the Cedar Mountains of Lebanon — through the region, bringing democracy from Syria to Egypt and to the sheikhdoms, emirates and monarchies of the Gulf.
All these new democracies would then embrace Israel and hitch their backward economies to the Jewish state’s advanced technology. And Israel could at long last lower its guard and look forward to a generation of peace. That was the vision.


And here’s Bob Novak:
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/robertnovak/rn200304 407.shtml


The real reason for attacking the Iraqi regime always has been disconnected from its public rationale. On the day after the U.S. launched the military strike that quickly liberated Afghanistan from the Taliban, my column identified Iraq as the second target in President Bush’s war against terrorism. I did not write one word about weapons of mass destruction because not one such word was mentioned to me in many interviews with Bush policymakers.
The subsequent debate over WMD ensued when Secretary of State Colin Powell, over Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s objections, talked the president into seeking United Nations sanction for military action. Pre-emptive elimination of Hussein would not win over the U.N. Security Council, which had to be convinced the Iraqi dictator was a present danger.

Posted by Ann Onemas on August 4, 2004 at 5:42 AM

Actually part of the Czech government took back it’s contrition that the meeting never happened. I heard there was even a correction published in the NY Times following an article they did pointing out their denial. Someone once told me that last bit was found by way of a Lexis Nexus search for the article, sorry I can’t remember the date. I don’t have LN so I can’t confirm it.

see Slate below
http://slate.msn.com/id/2070410/

Other than that I think it was a great article.

Posted by justpassingthru on August 4, 2004 at 7:49 AM

Great work.  I would like to see Saddam Hussein’s offer to go into exile included in the timeline.  Bob Woodward in “Plan of Attack” indicates that the Bush Administration (I think GW himself) was called by Pres Hosne Mubarak of Egypt to negotiate this very deal.  There were no weapons to capture and they new that, so why not? 

Wouldn’t that have got them the holy grail?  A peaceful transition to democracy--or any new peaceful government--rather than trying to reconstruct bombed out infrastructure and overcoming the massive civilian casualties that would surely result from the bombing, invasion and occupation of an Arab country.  Nevermind the PR fallout, both there and worldwide. 

I’d love to know that answer to that one.

Posted by punch o'reilly on August 4, 2004 at 8:07 AM

These bastards should be impeached and put into jail. If the Dems had won the Senate in ‘02, Bush, Cheney, Rumsfield and Rice would be in the process of being impeached. The harm these arrogant fools have done to this country goes beyond belief. Let’s hope that Bush goes away on Nov 2. If he doesn’t, I fear for the future of America.

Posted by ROBERT E. MORAN on August 4, 2004 at 9:11 AM

Thank you for a great article—I’m sending it to everyone of voting age that I know.  I am amazed that there are citizens that will actually vote for Bush in November.  If he is re-elected, I am afraid of what the next 4 years would bring and the effects that Bush policy will have for years to come, both nationally and internationally.  I am not a wealthy person but I am sending every extra dollar I have to Kerry and the DNC.  For the future of my sons and for the future of this country.

Posted by Diana on August 4, 2004 at 9:47 AM

http://www.sass.caltech.edu/events/ritter.shtml has a copy online of a good talk at Cal Tech, with questions and answers, given by an ex UN Inspector that was an ex US Marine and is an ex Bush voter a Christian and Republican.

This was the most clear headed description, of the long term Iraq conflict, that I have heard or seen, so far.  He predicted on 13 November 2002, that Bush would go to war, no matter what.

It would be wise for people, that really want to know, what has actually been happening, to listen to what he said then, or to find a printed copy.

It would be wise for people, that really want to preserve, protect and defend our Constitution, from enemies both foreign and domestic, to hold our leaders accountable, for not leading with very much wisdom.

Then in March 2003 Ritter predicted that they would find no WMD’s.
check it out:
http://www.dangerouscitizen.com/downloads/418.aspx
“audio recording of
“war on iraq: how did we get here?”
presentation by scott ritter, former un weapons inspector, march 18, 2003, chapman university, orange, ca.”

the truth about the wmd’s. really neat talk on our constitution and how to do inspections in spite of iraq, un and us, and how ignorant bush was about wmd’s. all they had to do is ask scott and or his technical team. it was an accounting problem, not a clear and present threat. us had unilateral policy of regime change that was not un sanctioned. us did not cooperate with inspectors because the president did not really want disarmament. israel did want disarmament. he straight out said that there were no wmd’s and why there were no wmd’s! no wonder blix thought he could finish up in 90 days!
listening to scott, this thought came to me:
even if, there really were tons of wmd’s, bush made it even more risky for us citizens because:
1. it was not risky in the first place because osama and saddam were enemies and saddam would never have let any loose and have them used on himself.
2. if tons of wmd’s were left unguarded in the chaos of war, some could have been stolen and sold to osama’s troops.
3. “bush light” on his troops attack without the recommended troop level to provide order after the main battles created chaos and the risk of letting those tons of wmd’s loose. we are still destroying their conventional weapons. they are still using rpg’s and explosives from shells.
4. bush was creating more enemies, that want to use wmd’s on us.

Posted by Robert Michael Foster, MA on August 4, 2004 at 10:07 AM

Hi

I would like to have the footnotes for the work supporting this article. It is great work.

cliff

Posted by cliff virgil on August 4, 2004 at 10:29 AM

Thanks for putting the pieces together for me, I knew he was a liar, but he more the facts are there to back it up (and throw light on every gruesome detail) the better. This entire situation and the people behind it sicken me. How can people be so slimy and false? Our pres manages to make Saddam look like a victim more than anything. How was this able to happen? Why didn’t somebody stand up and expose them? Lots of people knew…
So many people all over the world are hurting because of what this administration has done, isn’t doing, and is rightly afraid will happen if Bush stays in office...I dont’ know, maybe this will teach us a lesson...vote, challenge the government, don’t be intimidated by fear tactics and propoganda...no, that’s bs, we shouldn’t have to babysit our government...but we do! They apparently can’t be trusted.

Posted by howdidthishappen on August 4, 2004 at 10:30 AM

This article proves our assertion that the web of deception and scandalous manipulation has gotten so complicated that it’s made it impossible for any of them individually to be brought into focus on the nightly news and the nightly talking-head fests.  Taken individually, any one of these deceptions could be grounds for the type of media focus and legal scrutiny that accompanied a lie about private adult sexual activity in the previous administration.  But the noise created by trying to give each one of them the coverage it deserves serves to drown out any attempt at significant, easy-to-follow reporting on any one of them individually.  It’s much easier for the average hard-working busy family to follow a story about “sex” than, say, a story about undermining national security by treasonously exposing the identity of an undercover CIA employee, thus endangering the lives of people working to make the U.S. safer.

http://www.worse-than-watergate.com

Posted by Worse-Than-Watergate.com on August 4, 2004 at 11:52 AM

This article proves our assertion that the web of deception and scandalous
manipulation has gotten so complicated that it’s made it impossible for any
of them individually to be brought into focus on the nightly news and the
nightly talking-head fests.  Taken individually, any one of these deceptions
could be grounds for the type of media focus and legal scrutiny that
accompanied a lie about private adult sexual activity in the previous
administration.  But the noise created by trying to give each one of them
the coverage it deserves serves to drown out any attempt at significant,
easy-to-follow reporting on any one of them individually.  It’s much easier
for the average hard-working busy family to follow a story about “sex” than,
say, a story about undermining national security by treasonously exposing
the identity of an undercover CIA employee, thus endangering the lives of
people working to make the U.S. safer.

http://www.worse-than-watergate.com

Posted by Worse-Than-Watergate.com on August 4, 2004 at 12:04 PM

Creating another position of Intellegence Chief in or outside the Whitehouse just evades the question.  The President should be the Intelligence Chief. Along with his National Security Advisor he should be consolidating intelligence from all sources and digesting it in order to make the correct decisions.  Of course, if he did this, he would have to accept responsibility for the outcome.

Posted by Eugene Hokanson on August 4, 2004 at 12:31 PM

There’s even a House, Committee On Governmental Reform, sponsored publication that consolidates and sumarizes all the misstatements that prove unequivocably that the White House was NOT misled by bad intelligence.

http://www.house.gov/reform/min/pdfs_108_2/pdfs_inves/p pdf_admin_iraq_on_the_record_rep.pdf

Posted by kevin on August 4, 2004 at 2:29 PM

Of course they knew. Anyone with just an average degree of awareness in the 18 months before March 2003 knows very well that the current
“administration” was determined to effect regime change in Iraq irrespective of terrorism or WMD, and that the latter was simply a flimsy pretext that insults the intelligence of any thinking American.

Posted by Wes Gordon on August 4, 2004 at 2:35 PM

Thanks for doing all this work.  We knew, but we didn’t have it documented.  Very well done.

Posted by Ian Welsh on August 4, 2004 at 4:05 PM

Actually, Bush buddie Richard Perle basically confessed on the Charlie Rose show way back in (January 04?) He said that they never wanted to include WMD in the argument because they knew it was a lame claim, but that the lawyers “made” them do it, to secure legal legitimacy to the case. I was flabergasted to hear it, and watched and recorded the shows later re-play just to make sure I had heard it right. I was surprised no one picked up on it.

Posted by bossbuster on August 4, 2004 at 5:17 PM

All this points very well to the fact that the President and his supporters are playing on a different field and listening to a different drummer.  I can’t escape the intuition that the drumbeat is the fantasy world of the “Left Behind” series, which plays “good” against “great evil” in “Babylon,” whose historical location is 50 miles from Baghdad.

Consciously or not?  Epic power and primal urgings are often entwined.

Thanks for the facts.

Posted by Maggie Hettinger on August 4, 2004 at 5:45 PM

Someone needs to print this article out, drop it on every Bush Administration desk and say “Spin THIS.”

Nobody wants to believe that their president and his handlers (which, in the case of a real presidency are called advisers) could so blatantly betray the people’s trust. But the truth is the truth, and no matter how ugly it gets, it cannot be changed. We must, as a nation, deal with the lies accordingly and send the liars packing in November. The longer we wait to take our country back, the harder it will be to do.

Thank you so much for your excellent work!

READ MORE TRUTH HERE

Posted by John Schneider on August 4, 2004 at 6:09 PM

Thank you.  Finally something well researched and factual to share with those blinded by the right.

Posted by The Princess on August 4, 2004 at 6:58 PM

Thanks for a great report.  You’ve performed an
invaluable service in bringing all this data
together in one place.

At the time all these things were happening,
I was dismayed that the press was not taking
take greater notice of “clues” that the administration was fudging.  All the data was
right there on the Internet.  But unfortunately
the press, like many others, were blinded by fear.

I’ll pass along a note about your report to the
peace e-mail networks I subscribe to.

Posted by Roy Lipscomb on August 4, 2004 at 7:25 PM

Uh...great article but, am I missing something here or was the following quote just a typo?  Wasn’t Rommel the “Desert Fox” ,in WWII of course, and bushleague I’s adventure in imperialism in Iraq “Desert Storm?” And, why does the left continually, and quite correctly, berate the bush regime for obvious pathological lies regarding it’s twisted excuses for a totally unwarranted invasion of a soveriegn country and yet seems to buy it’s equally, if not more so, false explanation for 9/11?  True or false:  did or did not one of Bush’s evil cronies say after they cooked up the Project for a New American Century, but well before bushleague II stole power, “what we need is another Pearl Harbor?” Uh, duh...wouldn’t you say?  Complacency in 9/11?  How about creation?  The bush regime from top to bottom are low life traitors...the writer of the following may not be clairvoyant or a prophet, however, you surely remember, loosely paraphrasing, “...it doesn’t take a weatherman to know which way the wind blows...”

“We do not have any direct evidence that Iraq has used the period since Desert Fox to reconstitute its weapons of mass destruction programs.”

Posted by dany on August 4, 2004 at 11:00 PM

Please keep in mind that any writer pretending to put things in ‘black and white’ is doing their readers a disservice.  Though I would strongly agree about the complacency on behalf of the public, and the media in terms of the current administration, replacing their views with polar opposites (yes with some ‘supporting’ evidence) is every bit as misguided.  The only person who has the answers, is the one who says there are none.

Posted by Anon on August 4, 2004 at 11:23 PM

Great article!

I would like to point out that like Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld was also caught on camera lying to the american people. In an interview with “Meet the Press” Rumsfeld said that “...you and a few other critics are the only people I’ve heard use the phrase ‘immediate threat’, I didn’t, the president didn’t… and it’s become kind of folklore that that’s what happened”. He was then confronted with his own words: “No terror state poses a greater or more ‘immediate threat’ to the security of our people and the stability of our world than the regime of Sadam Hussein in Iraq”. To see the video go to:
http://www.moveon.org/censure/caughtonvideo/

Posted by Paul Herrera on August 4, 2004 at 11:56 PM

the only sad thing about this article is that the people who need to read it won’t. If by some miracle
one or more of those that need to did find the curiosity and courage to make an attempt at some form of enlightenment i’m sure they would find some way to offend the truth and infuriate free speech.

Posted by marv on August 5, 2004 at 12:10 AM

How will the white house be held accountable for its dishonesty? The elites are so elite that they are omitted from court appearances, local and international. Not getting elected again is bullshit and not enough.

Posted by Jay on August 5, 2004 at 1:07 AM

Great work. If only Kerry would piece it together like that. It seems that the Bush administration has been taking notes from the Hitler/Goebbels (sic) Propaganda Playbook. Is there anyway you could sneak this onto the Fox news web site?

Posted by Charles on August 5, 2004 at 2:04 AM

To read the full posting - Page 1 of 4 pages  1 2 3 4

http://www.inthesetimes.com/site/main/article/they_knew_0802/

 

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