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Politics : Bush-The Mastermind behind 9/11? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (796)6/12/2003 7:26:30 PM
From: jlallen  Respond to of 20039
 
LOL!

Hey Raybo.....how you doing!!!



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (796)6/13/2003 3:00:49 AM
From: Don Earl  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20039
 
Here's one with a little less spin:

story.news.yahoo.com

The CIA (news - web sites) rejected any
blame on Thursday for the use of a faulty intelligence report by President
Bush (news - web sites) as he built his case for war against Iraq (news -
web sites).

A spokesman, Bill Harlow, voiced confidence
that "a careful reading" of documents supplied
to congressional oversight committees would
show the spy agency "did not withhold
information from appropriate officials" about
Iraq's purported attempt to buy uranium in
Niger.

The Central Intelligence Agency (news - web
sites), he said, had shared hundreds of pages
of material with the panels looking into
charges, from lawmakers and others, that the
administration and the intelligence community
oversold the weapons threat to foster public
support for ousting President Saddam Hussein
(news - web sites).

The latest challenge to the CIA involved a claim
in Bush's State of the Union address that
Saddam had been trying to buy "significant
quantities of uranium from Africa."

Bush aides have given somewhat conflicting
accounts of how this claim made it into the
speech. White House spokesman Ari Fleischer
(news - web sites) said intelligence officials
declared the charge incorrect "as the
information was received."

On Sunday, national security adviser
Condoleezza Rice (news - web sites) said
"someone may have known" the information
was false 11 months before Bush's speech, but
the White House believed it to be true at the time.

But she said the claim, attributed in the speech to the British government,
was what "the intelligence community said we could say."

CIA MISSION

The uranium tale had been disputed by a CIA-directed mission to Niger early
last year, the Washington Post reported in its Thursday edition.

The CIA did not pass on the results of this mission to the White House or
other government officials, the Post reported, citing unnamed senior
administration officials and a former government official.

Any such CIA failure to share fully what it knew would have helped keep the
uranium story alive until the eve of the March invasion of Iraq.

The supposed uranium quest in Africa first surfaced in a now widely
contested Sept. 24, 2002, report on Iraq released by British Prime Minister
Tony Blair (news - web sites). The claim was quickly embraced by the Bush
administration, though many mid-level intelligence officials knew it was
bogus, several people with first-hand knowledge told Reuters.

"I remember being told to discount the information about uranium purchases
in Africa in our own assessments of Iraq's nuclear weapons capabilities,"
said David Albright, a nuclear physicist and former U.N. nuclear weapons
inspector in Iraq who heads the Washington-based Institute for Science and
International Security.

He said he had been told the story was wrong in late September by people
who had access to classified intelligence information.

The CIA declined comment on the Washington Post report, which said the
spy agency sent a retired U.S. ambassador to investigate in February 2002
the purported Iraqi bid to buy uranium in Niger.

After returning, the envoy reported to the CIA the uranium purchase attempt
story was false, based on talks with Niger officials purportedly involved, said
the Post.

Thirteen months later, on March 7, Mohamed El Baradei, head of the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), told the Security Council his
agency had reached the same conclusion and that the underlying
documents were "not authentic," an assessment that U.S. officials have not
disputed.

But the spy agency put out the denials by Niger officials in a March 2002
intelligence report that was "widely disseminated throughout the U.S.
government," a U.S. intelligence official, who asked not to be named, told
Reuters.

Rep. Henry Waxman (news, bio, voting record), a California Democrat
seeking to pin down why Bush cited forged evidence about Iraq, said: "We
must find out whether the CIA deceived the president ... or whether it is
deceiving the public now to protect the president and the vice president."