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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group

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To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (219329)2/18/2007 8:00:10 PM
From: epicure  Read Replies (1) of 281500
 
Read this:

A former Bush Administration intelligence official recalled a case in which Chalabi’s group, working with the Pentagon, produced a defector from Iraq who was interviewed overseas by an agent from the D.I.A. The agent relied on an interpreter supplied by Chalabi’s people. Last summer, the D.I.A. report, which was classified, was leaked. In a detailed account, the London Times described how the defector had trained with Al Qaeda terrorists in the late nineteen-nineties at secret camps in Iraq, how the Iraqis received instructions in the use of chemical and biological weapons, and how the defector was given a new identity and relocated. A month later, however, a team of C.I.A. agents went to interview the man with their own interpreter. “He says, ‘No, that’s not what I said,’ ” the former intelligence official told me. “He said, ‘I worked at a fedayeen camp; it wasn’t Al Qaeda.’ He never saw any chemical or biological training.” Afterward, the former official said, “the C.I.A. sent out a piece of paper saying that this information was incorrect. They put it in writing.” But the C.I.A. rebuttal, like the original report, was classified. “I remember wondering whether this one would leak and correct the earlier, invalid leak. Of course, it didn’t.”

newyorker.com

I imagine the work with the exiles was like the work with this defector. That the CIA may have occasionally been fooled by people they did not trust from the beginning (and who it turns out were actually untrustworthy in many cases) makes them more creditable than the DIA which just swallowed much that it was told. IMO, of course.
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