See also Neocons See Iran Behind Shi'ite Uprising September Surprise by Bill Berkowitz, September 5, 2003 http://www.tompaine.com/feature2.cfm/ID/8791 Last May, President Bush made his now-famous -- and outrageously false -- statement to a Polish television station: "We found the weapons of mass destruction. We found biological laboratories.... But for those who say we haven't found the banned manufacturing devices or banned weapons, they're wrong, we found them." In fact, of course, we hadn't found anything of the sort -- and pretty soon that'll be official. David Kay, the man in charge of the WMD search in Iraq, is expected to release a report this month on what the more than 1,200-member Iraq Survey Group has turned up. And the fact that the count still stands at zero won't stop Kay from trying to paint the search as a success. Kay
is the perfect yes-man. Not only did he head up the U.N. Special Commission
(UNSCOM) nuclear search team in Iraq in the early nineties, he has
deep roots in the defense industry and is well connected to corporate
media. When the president needed someone to hawk his "Iraq's
WMD are an imminent threat to homeland security" thesis to the
American So it came as no surprise when Kay traded in his pundit's garb in early June to step in as Special Advisor for Strategy. Appointed by CIA Director George Tenet, Kay was given the responsibility of "refining the overall approach" for the weapons search. "Kay's experience and background make him the ideal person for this new role," Tenet said when he announced the appointment. "His understanding of the history of the Iraqi programs and knowledge of past Iraqi efforts to hide WMD will be of inestimable help in determining the current status of Saddam Hussein's illicit weapons." Kay's no stranger to the CIA. In fact, he was fired from his position as deputy director of UNSCOM's Iraq Action Team in the early 1990s because of his contacts with the U.S. intelligence community, according to Gordon Prather, the army's chief scientist during the Reagan years. It's
not something he's ashamed to talk about. In an interview with PBS'
Frontline, Kay spoke with surprising candidness: Kay is also involved with one of the nation's major defence contractors, serving as a senior vice president for the San Diego-based Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), which received about two-thirds of its $6 billion revenue last year from the U.S. Treasury, according to a report by Katrin Dauenhauer and Jim Lobe in Asia Times. Aside
from homeland security projects, SAIC has already won several reconstruction
contracts in Iraq, and Kay along with other former company employees
are firmly planted in country. The company has headed up the Iraqi
Reconstruction and Development Council (IRDC) since the Pentagon established
the body was in February, according to the Asia So David Kay has some personal interest in keeping up U.S. appearances in Iraq, including the image that we invaded the country for legitimate reasons. That and his die-hard loyalty to the Bush administration means he'll be spinning the upcoming report as hard and as positively as he can. Unfortunately for him, he may not have much to work with. Scott Ritter, a former U.N. weapons inspector in Iraq and the author of Frontier Justice: Weapons of Mass Destruction and the Bushwhacking of America, claims looters destroyed or stole Iraq's weapons-program records when they ransacked the Iraqi National Monitoring Directorate after the United States took Baghdad. The Directorate, Ritter explained recently in The New York Times, was the government agency coordinating U.N. inspection teams' missions and monitoring Iraq's infrastructure to ensure the country complied with Security Council resolutions. As such, it was the repository for records on weapons programs, as on dozens of "dual-use" industrial sites, that is, structures that could be modified to manufacture illegal materials. While
these archives might have led inspectors down some blind alleys, Ritter
says, "seizing the directorate archive would have been a top
priority for the coalition forces -- at least as important as the
Iraqi Oil Ministry or the National Museum. And it seems highly unlikely
that Whatever
they knew, the Directorate lies in shambles, which boosts the chances
that Kay's search will prove fruitless. But fruitless isn't an acceptable
answer for the White House - and anyone paying attention knows it.
Conservative columnist Robert Novak recently indicated that Kay's
upcoming report will aim to take the heat off the administration: Pentagon officials are beginning to spread the word that Kay's team is prepared to claim that the Hussein regime purposefully "spread nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons plans and parts throughout the country to deceive the United Nations," according to The Boston Globe. Citing senior Bush administration and intelligence officials, the Globe predicts Kay will argue that after hoodwinking the U.N. inspectors, Hussein would quickly reassemble all the information and materials and "manufacture substantial quantities of deadly gases and germs." After four months of intense searching, no hard evidence of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction has yet been found. And while David Kay's pre-war predictions about the existence of WMD now appear less reliable than the insights of Johnny Carson's Karnak the Magnificent, the Bush administration is counting on Kay to bring home the bacon. The loyal Mr. Kay, in turn, appears poised to hand in a report marked by speculation, innuendo and circumstantial evidence. Kay's September surprise: He morphs into a weapon of mass deception. Published: Sep 05 2003 |