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Arab News
WASHINGTON, 23 June 2003 — A Democratic presidential hopeful
yesterday accused President George W. Bush of misleading the country
about Iraq’s possession of unconventional weapons.
“We were misled. The question is, did the president do that on
purpose or was he misled by his own intelligence people ... Or did
he in fact know what the truth was and tell us something
different,” former Vermont Governor Howard Dean told NBC’s
“Meet the Press” program.
“We essentially went to war ... based on facts that turned out
not to be accurate. I think that’s pretty serious, and I think the
American people are entitled to know why that was,” he said.
“This president told us that we were going into Iraq because
they might have atomic weapons and that turned out not to be so,”
he said.
“The secretary of defense told us that he knew where there were
weapons of mass destruction around Tikrit and around Baghdad.
We’ve been in control of Iraq for 50 days and we haven’t been
able to find any such thing.”
The Washington Post said yesterday, citing intelligence and
congressional sources that Bush brushed aside important caveats in
intelligence reports linking Iraq to the Al-Qaeda network.
Bush appeared before the US public in a nationally broadcast
address in October, declaring that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
was a threat to the United States, in part because of ties he
asserted Baghdad maintained with Al-Qaeda.
But sources with access to classified materials told The Post
that “a still-classified national intelligence report circulating
within the Bush administration at the time ...portrayed a far less
clear picture about the link between Iraq and Al-Qaeda than the one
presented by the president.”
The classified National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iraq,
which represented the consensus of the US intelligence agencies,
contained cautionary language and warnings about the reliability of
information from Iraqi defectors and Al-Qaeda captives.
“There has always been an internal argument within the
intelligence community about the connections between Saddam Hussein
and Al-Qaeda. The NIE had alternative views,” one senior
intelligence official told the paper.
The Post also raised doubts about Bush’s assertion in his State
of the Union address in January that Iraq had sought to buy uranium
in Africa to relaunch a nuclear weapons program. Ten months earlier,
the Central Intelligence Agency sent a former diplomat to Niger to
investigate the claim, the paper said. That country’s officials
said documents alleging the sale were forged, it added.
Details of the probe were not shared with the White House, the
paper said.
Meanwhile, some US experts believe that two Iraqi
tractor-trailers that the Bush administration said were mobile
biological weapons laboratories were in fact designed for
manufacturing hydrogen for weather balloons, The Los Angeles Times
reported yesterday. The newspaper said that although some US
officials have described this theory as far-fetched, the US Army has
its own fleet of vehicles designed for precisely the same purpose.
They are Humvees with a large container and refrigerator-sized
generator where a gun or troop transport shell should be, the report
said.
In a report released last month, the CIA said the two trailers
discovered in northern Iraq in April and May were some of the mobile
biological weapons laboratories mentioned by US Secretary of State
Colin Powell in his speech before the UN Security Council in
February.
But some analysts involved in the examination of the vehicles
reject that conclusion, pointing out that thorough inspections have
failed to find any traces of anthrax, smallpox, tularemia or any
other known pathogens inside the trucks, according to The Times. One
intelligence official in Iraq said he was convinced that the seized
trailers were indeed designed to produce hydrogen gas to fill
weather balloons that were routinely used by Iraqi field artillery
batteries, the paper said.
Bush has faced mounting criticism over the intelligence
information he used to justify the war in Iraq. Two congressional
committees have launched closed-door hearings into whether Bush
hyped intelligence regarding Iraq’s alleged nuclear and biological
weapons program, which could prove damaging to Republicans in the
2004 election campaign.
But a senior senator said yesterday Congress’s review of US
pre-war intelligence on Iraq may take “months.” Members of the
Senate Intelligence Committee and their staff members are pouring
over “thousands and thousands of pages” of classified documents
delivered to the panel by the CIA, said Sen. Jay Rockefeller, the
top Democrat on the committee.
The task of reviewing the contents of those files will occupy the
committee “for the next, I would assume, couple of months,” said
Rockefeller, a Democrat from West Virginia. The committee’s
chairman, Republican Senator Pat Roberts of Kansas, said the
senators face the daunting task of reviewing “voluminous material
from the ceiling to the floor.”
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