SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Bush Bashers & Wingnuts -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Fangorn who wrote (248)1/8/2004 1:27:42 PM
From: laura_bush  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 1347
 
Bush Quietly Withdraws a Team of Weapons Hunters From Iraq
nytimes.com

By DOUGLAS JEHL

WASHINGTON, Jan. 7 — The Bush administration has quietly withdrawn from Iraq a
400-member military team whose job was to scour the country for military equipment,
according to senior government officials.

The step was described by some military officials as a sign that the administration might
have lowered its sights and no longer expected to uncover the caches of chemical and
biological weapons that the White House cited as a principal reason for going to war last
March.

A separate military team that specializes in disposing of chemical and biological
weapons remains part of the 1,400-member Iraq Survey Group, which has been
searching Iraq for more that seven months at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars.
But that team is "still waiting for something to dispose of," said a survey group member.

Some of the government officials said the most important evidence from the weapons
hunt might be contained in a vast collection of seized Iraqi documents being stored in a
secret military warehouse in Qatar. Only a small fraction have been translated.

A report published Wednesday in The Washington Post cited a previously undisclosed
document that suggested that Iraq might have destroyed its biological weapons as early
as 1991. The report said investigators had otherwise found no evidence to support
American beliefs that Iraq had maintained illicit weapons dating from the Persian Gulf
war of 1991 or that it had advanced programs to build new ones.

The report also documented a pattern of deceit that was found in every field of special
weaponry. It said that according to Iraqi designers and foreign investigators, program
managers exaggerated the results they could achieve, or even promised results they
knew they could not accomplish — all in an effort to appease Saddam Hussein. In some
cases, though, they simply did it to advance their careers, the report said, or preserve
jobs or even conduct intrigues against their rivals.

Senior intelligence officials acknowledged in recent days that the weapons hunters still
had not found weapons or active programs, but in interviews, they said the search must
continue to ensure that no hidden Iraqi weapons surfaced in a future attack.

"We worry about what may have happened to those weapons," Stuart Cohen, the vice
chairman of the National Intelligence Council, said in an interview broadcast late
Tuesday on the ABC News program "Nightline." "Theories abound as to what may have
happened."

The search for Iraqi weapons remains "the primary focus" of the survey group, a senior
Defense Department official said. But he acknowledged that most of the dozens of new
linguists and intelligence analysts to join the team had recently been given assignments
related to combating the Iraqi insurgency rather than to the weapons search.

David Kay, the head of the survey group, made it known last month that he might leave
his post. Government officials said Wednesday that he had not reached a decision but
that both he and his top deputy, Maj. Gen. Keith Dayton of the Defense Intelligence
Agency, were in Washington, in part to discuss what direction the hunt should take.

"I am sure that if they had found important evidence, we would know about it," said
Representative Jane Harman of California, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence
Committee, who has said the administration exaggerated the Iraqi threat.

Bill Harlow, the top spokesman for the Central Intelligence Agency, said Wednesday that
"the team needs to compete its work, and no one should jump to any conclusions before
it has an opportunity to examine all of the circumstances."

American intelligence officials who described the seized documents said they hoped the
documents might eventually help to unravel the mystery of whether Iraqi weapons
remained hidden or whether they were destroyed long before what the Bush
administration initially portrayed as a mission "to disarm Iraq."

In the television interview, Mr. Cohen, who as vice chairman of the National Intelligence
Council led the team that formally concluded in October 2002 that Iraq possessed both
chemical and biological weapons, insisted that "it is too soon to close the books on this
case."

A report to be released Thursday by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
has concluded that it was unlikely that Iraq could have destroyed, hidden or sent out of
the country the hundreds of tons of chemical and biological weapons and related
production facilities that American officials claimed were present "without the United
States detecting some sign of this activity."

Through their spokesmen, Dr. Kay and General Dayton have declined repeated requests
for interviews.

The cache of Iraqi documents cover subjects extending far beyond illicit weapons,
according to senior military officials, and are so voluminous that, if stacked, they would
rise 10 miles high, according to estimates by senior government officials.

The warehouse in Qatar has become the center of work by the Defense Intelligence
Agency to translate and analyze the documents, the officials said.

The 400-member team withdrawn from Iraq, known as the Joint Captured Matériel
Exploitation Group, was primarily composed of technical experts and was headed by an
Australian brigadier, Defense Department officials said. Its work included searching
weapons depots and other sites for missile launchers that might have been used with
illicit weapons, the officials said, and it was withdrawn "because its work was essentially
done."

"They picked up everything that was worth picking up," one official said. The weapons
disposal team still in place, known as Task Force D/E, for disablement and elimination,
has been used to collect suspicious material, although none has proved to be part of any
illicit weapons program.

In an interim report in October, Dr. Kay acknowledged that his team had failed to find
illicit weapons or active weapons programs in Iraq, but said they had discovered
evidence that Mr. Hussein intended to develop such weapons and might have retained
the capacity to do so.

Dr. Kay has not said when he intended to issue his next report, and that remains a
subject of debate within the administration, government officials said.

American intelligence officials, including Mr. Cohen, have vigorously defended their
estimates of Iraq's weapons program, saying the evidence was strong, credible and
backed up by a number of sources. But staff members of the Senate and House
intelligence agencies are preparing reports suggesting that the administration and
intelligence agencies had seriously overestimated the nature of the threat posed by illicit
Iraqi weapons.

Ms. Harman said in a telephone interview that she expected that Dr. Kay, appointed last
June 11 as a special adviser to George J. Tenet, the director of central intelligence, was
probably stepping down, a development that she said would be "very disappointing."

"I have to believe that if they were about to pounce on a large stockpile of chemical or
biological weapons, he would be there for the announcement," Ms. Harman said.



To: Fangorn who wrote (248)1/8/2004 3:10:44 PM
From: Lazarus_Long  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 1347
 
<font color=red>WILL ANYONE WHOSE CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS HAVE BEEN VIOLATED BY GWB RESPOND AND SPECIFY HOW</font>

Please specify which clause of the US Constitution was violated
law.emory.edu
and which section of US Code:
www4.law.cornell.edu