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


To: Hope Praytochange who wrote (534147)2/2/2004 1:02:47 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
even CNN can't believe the Bull from this LYING WHITE HOUSE!!!!. the panel won't report until 05???????WHAT, ANOTHER JOKE ON THE AMERICAN PEOPLE FROM THE LIARS

Bush to Pick Panel for WMD Inquiry,Official Says Bush will set a deadline for the investigation of sometime in
early to mid-2005

WASHINGTON -- President Bush will name members of a commission to
review prewar U.S. intelligence about Iraq's weapons programs, a senior
administration official said Monday.

The senior official said the president consulted some "appropriate"
lawmakers about the appointments for a bipartisan, independent
commission.

Many such previous panels have involved compromises in which the
president names some members and congressional leaders select others.

Bush could name the appointments as soon as Monday, but they also
could come in a few days as the White House scrambles to arrange
security clearances and other procedures for the panel members,
administration sources said.

The intelligence to be reviewed was used to justify the U.S.-led war in
Iraq, the first under Bush's national security strategy calling for
pre-emptive attacks against terrorist groups and nations that possess or
are developing weapons of mass destruction.

David Kay, the former U.S. chief weapons inspector in Iraq, told a
Senate panel last week that his group did not find such weapons and that
he didn't believe stockpiles of banned weapons would turn up either.

"It turns out we were all wrong, and that is most disturbing," Kay said at
a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing during which he called for
an independent probe of the apparent intelligence failure.

Initially, the White House rejected calls from Kay and lawmakers for an
independent review of prewar intelligence on Iraq. But with political
pressure mounting, Vice President Dick Cheney began making calls last
week to key members of Congress to explore potential compromises.

The president is expected to sign an executive order creating the
commission.

White House staff have been told to review procedures for staffing and
sharing information with the panel -- an issue that has caused conflict
with the commission studying intelligence lapses before the attacks of
September 11, 2001.

The panel also will be charged with exploring the quality of intelligence
gathering relating to the challenges of weapons proliferation and "outlaw
regimes" that preside over closed societies, sources said.

"[The president] wants it to be more broad than Iraq," the senior official
said. "The president's view is there are a number of challenges for our
intelligence community on the issues of weapons of mass destruction, and
we need to look at the broader issue of closed societies and outlaw
regimes and our capabilities to gather necessary intelligence."

Bush will set a deadline for the investigation of sometime in early to
mid-2005, the sources said. The panel is likely to have nine members,
the sources said.

The British government is expected to announce soon whether it will
order an inquiry into why no weapons of mass destruction have been
found in Iraq, according to the office of Prime Minister Tony Blair.

The White House sources spoke about the Iraq inquiry after a week in
which Kay and congressmen from both parties called for an independent
investigation into why U.S. intelligence appeared to be wrong.

"It's important that it be outside the normal political process so it can
have the maximum credibility," Kay told CNN.

"This is important for domestic support of the intelligence community and
of our foreign policy. It's important for national security, and it's certainly
important for our ability to lead other countries in the future against
threats that we may think threaten us."

Kay said the United States was not alone in its prewar interpretation of
Iraq's weapons capability. Although other countries' intelligence agencies
differed on how serious the threat from Iraq was and what course of
action to take to mitigate it, "there was very little difference around the
world on the issue of 'Does [Saddam Hussein] have weapons?' " Kay
told CNN. " ' Yes, he did,' was the consensus."

In the National Intelligence Estimate, which was declassified in October
2002, the U.S. State Department said it could not find a compelling case
that Iraq was developing nuclear weapons. But the administration never
cited that report in making the public case to go to war.

"There are caveats that clearly dropped out, dissenting opinions that
clearly dropped out, as you moved higher up and people read the
headline summaries," Kay said. "I think this is something that needs to be
investigated and looked at."

Kay said Bush's policy of pre-emptive war cannot survive intact unless
the quality of U.S. intelligence-gathering and analysis is improved.

"If you cannot rely on good, accurate intelligence that is credible to the
American people and to others abroad, you certainly can't have a policy
of pre-emption," he said on "Fox News Sunday."

Hagel: 'America's credibility is at stake'

U.S. officials may have misused what intelligence they did have,
suggested Sen. Joseph Biden, a Delaware Democrat who sits on the
Foreign Relations Committee. He accused Cheney of making inaccurate
statements about Iraq's weapons capabilities before the war.

Biden cited comments Cheney made before the war such as a March
appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press" in which the vice president said,
"We believe Saddam has reconstituted nuclear weapons."

Biden said he had seen no such evidence.

"No intelligence person ever said that, that I'm aware of, and the vice
president went ahead and blandly and boldly stated it," Biden said. "It
was not accurate. So one of the things we have to look at is not just
whether there was pressure but whether the information given the
administration was properly used."

Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, has been calling for a probe since last
summer, when discrepancies emerged about Bush's 2003 State of the
Union assertion that Iraq had tried to buy uranium in Africa.

Sen. Chuck Hagel, R- Nebraska, of the Foreign Relations and
Intelligence committees agreed that an investigation is needed.

"We need to open this up in a very nonpartisan, outside commission to
see where we are," Hagel said. "I don't think there's any way around it.
... America's credibility is at stake."

Copyright 2004 CNN