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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: username who wrote (395673)4/21/2003 12:04:38 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
probably as good as this total failure and lie
Ex-Spies Slam US Over Failure to Find WMDs
Agence France-Presse

Friday 18 April 2003

WASHINGTON -- The US government should be "embarrassed" over the apparent failure to uncover
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, the main justification for going to war, retired intelligence officials
said Thursday.

"It's going to be very embarrassing when it turns out they have nothing to declare," said former
defense intelligence analyst Eugene Betit.

Another, former CIA station chief Ray Close, said: "I'm hoping they will be embarrassed into
acknowledging a role for some independent body. And who could it be but the UN?"

As the "smoking gun" continued to elude US sleuths in Iraq, chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix
called for experts to return to the country to determine whether the weapons allegations had any
foundation.

Adding to the pressure, Russia, a veto-wielding member of the UN Security Council, said it would not
support the lifting of UN sanctions against Iraq unless UN inspectors confirmed the absence of
weapons of mass destruction.

But Washington has so far rejected such calls, and US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on
Thursday sought to deflect concerns that evidence could be planted. "The (US search) teams have
been trained in chain of control, really like a crime scene," Rumsfeld told Pentagon staff Thursday.

He said: "They will have people with them who will validate things, they will have the ability to take
pictures, and to make sure that the control over any piece of evidence is as clear as it possibly can
be."

Rumsfeld warned however: "That will not stop certain countries, and certain types of people from
claiming, inaccurately, that it was planted."

Retired CIA intelligence analyst Ray McGovern told AFP: "Some of my colleagues are virtually certain
that there will be some weapons of mass destruction found, even though they might have to be
planted.

"I'm just as sure that some few will be found, but not in an amount that by any stretch would justify
the charge of a threat against the US or anyone else."

He added: "Even if the planting was discovered by and by, they'll say, 'ok, the weapons were planted -
fine.'"

McGovern said he was alluding to a remark by Secretary of State Colin Powell after it emerged that a
letter purporting to show that Iraq had sought to procure uranium from Niger - a key argument in the
case for war and cited in President George W. Bush's January 28 State of the Union address - was a
forgery.

Powell told NBC: "It was the information that we had. We provided it. If that information is inaccurate,
fine."

McGovern and 24 other former intelligence officials in the CIA, State and Defense Departments, Army
Intelligence and FBI formed a group called Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).

They made their first public statement on February 5, critiquing Powell's presentation before the UN
Security Council.

CIA spokesman Tom Crispell, asked for comment on the former officials' remarks Thursday, said:
"They're criticising policy, not intelligence."