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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend.... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (9041)4/1/2005 7:07:00 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
The media's curveball

Power Line

The Robb-Silverman Commission report to the president on WMD intelligence is more than 600 pages long and too rich to digest quickly. However, the New York Sun's Eli Lake has picked up a few points of current interest: "Libya may be hiding germs, chemicals, report warns."

The report's key conclusion regarding Iraq is this: "We conclude that it was the paucity of intelligence and poor analytical tradecraft, rather than political pressure, that produced the inaccurate pre-war intelligence assessments." Apart from the headlined item, this point related to the underlying intelligence failure is of special interest:


<<<

In one area, the report partially exonerates the Iraqi National Congress, a frequent target of war critics who said that the organization's intelligence was foisted upon the CIA - leading to the inaccurate assessment of Iraq's weapons programs.

The report also clears the Iraqi National Congress of charges leveled in the press that a defector code named "Curveball" was put up by the organization to influence America's assessment that Iraq had mobile biological weapons labs
. "The CIA's post-war investigations were unable to uncover any evidence that the INC or any other organization was directing Curveball to feed misleading information to the Intelligence Community," the report states. "Instead, the post-war investigations concluded that Curveball's reporting was not influenced by, controlled by, or connected to, the INC."

In a statement yesterday, INC leader Ahmad Chalabi said, "We welcome this report as a vindication of the INC. We have consistently stated that the INC played a very small role in U.S. intelligence reporting on Saddam's WMDs and the report proves that."
>>>

The Wall Street Journal expands on this point in an editorial (subscribers only) titled "A media intelligence failure":

<<<

We'll need time to dig through the details in the 600-plus-page Robb-Silberman report on intelligence that was released yesterday. But one important conclusion worth noting, even on a quick reading, is that the report blows apart the myth that intelligence provided by Iraqi politician and former exile Ahmed Chalabi suckered the U.S. into going to war.

That myth was a media and antiwar favorite last year
, before the U.S. and Iraq elections, and when all of Washington thought President Bush was a one-termer. CIA and State Department sources peddled the idea that an Iraqi defector code-named "Curveball" had planted bad information about Saddam's WMD. "Curveball" was widely broadcast as an agent of Mr. Chalabi and the Iraqi National Congress, with the not-so-subtle implication that his intelligence was used by the Pentagon to deceive Mr. Bush into going to war.

The promoters of some version of this theory included Senator Ted Kennedy and Democrats on the Senate Intelligence Committee, as well as such prominent journalists as NBC's Tim Russert, reporters at the Los Angeles Times, Joe Klein of Time, and Evan Thomas and Mark Hosenball of Newsweek
.
"The ideologues at the Defense Department were warned by doubters at the State Department and CIA that Chalabi was peddling suspect goods," declared Newsweek. "Even so, the Bushies were bamboozled by a Machiavellian con man for the ages."

Yesterday's bipartisan report shows that these writers were "bamboozled" by their own U.S. sources. "Post-war investigations concluded that Curveball's reporting was not influenced by, controlled by, or connected to, the INC," says the Robb-Silberman report. (INC refers to the Iraqi National Congress.) And: "Over all, CIA's post-war investigations revealed that INC-related sources had a minimal impact on pre-war assessments."

The report's larger conclusion is that the CIA's intelligence on Iraq was faulty almost from start-to-finish, never mind "Curveball." The attempt to finger Mr. Chalabi and "the ideologues" in the Pentagon was an exercise in blame-shifting to deflect attention from that enormous failure. It was also intended to tarnish Mr. Bush as he attempted to win re-election while also trying to defeat an insurgency that the CIA had never predicted.

Mr. Chalabi's vindication comes as he is playing a prominent role in negotiations to form a new Iraqi government. As for the media, we await their reports into how their own trusted, if usually anonymous, sources could have given them so much bad intelligence.

>>>

See also Clarice Feldman's "Chalabi's INC cleared on WMDs" at The American Thinker.
americanthinker.com

Posted by The Big Trunk

powerlineblog.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9041)4/1/2005 7:47:27 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
A sobering intelligence report

The Washington Times:
Opinion/Editorial

Although the mainstream media remains fixated on the failure to find Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, yesterday's report from the presidential Commission on the Intelligence Capabilities of the United States contains some important findings, including the intelligence community's underestimation of al Qaeda's WMD programs.

The bipartisan panel, co-chaired by Judge Laurence Silberman, a Republican, and former Sen. Charles Robb, a Democrat, and including members such as Republican Sen. John McCain and noted Democrats like Lloyd Cutler and Judge Patricia Wald, found no evidence that the intelligence community, under pressure from the Bush administration, exaggerated the truth about Iraqi WMD: "After a thorough review, the commission found no indication that the Intelligence Community distorted the evidence regarding Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. What intelligence professionals told you about Saddam Hussein's programs was what they believed. They were simply wrong."

Along these lines, the commission implicitly rebutted one charge that has repeatedly been made about Vice President Dick Cheney's visits to CIA headquarters before the Iraq war: that pressing the intelligence community for more information and better analysis is somehow evidence of an effort to twist intelligence for political reasons. In fact, the panel appears to suggest that future policy-makers should emulate Mr. Cheney's actions. "Analysts must be pressed to explain why they don't have better information on key topics," the commission said. "While policy-makers must be prepared to credit intelligence that doesn't fit their preferences, no important intelligence assessment should be accepted without sharp questioning that forces the community to explain how it came to that assessment and what alternatives might also be true. This is not 'politicization'; it is a necessary part of the intelligence process. And in the end, it is the key to getting the best from an Intelligence Community."

With regard to Iraq, the U.S. intelligence community overestimated its WMD capabilities, but the Silberman-Robb report concluded that it made the opposite mistake with regard to al Qaeda's WMD programs -- greatly underestimating them. In fact, from reading the report, it appears that U.S. intelligence, which failed to penetrate the al Qaeda network, had virtually no idea what WMD programs al Qaeda had prior to September 11. Although much of the specific intelligence information on this subject remains classified, the panel found that al Qaeda's biological- weapons program was further along than pre-war intelligence indicated, and that after the war in Afghanistan began in October 2001, new evidence of al Qaeda WMD efforts was uncovered. One of the bipartisan panel's most worrisome findings is its conclusion that although the new intelligence-reform legislation is supposed to improve information sharing between intelligence agencies, it has created a confusing new job structure at the top of the intelligence community; the commission even hints that new legislation may be needed to fix the problem.

All in all, the Silberman-Robb panel's findings are very sobering indeed.


washtimes.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9041)4/2/2005 12:34:21 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
No Political Influence On Intelligence Process

Blogs for Bush

A popular insinuation of the left and liberal media is that there was political influence on the intelligence process, the commission report on weaponds of mass destruction specifically found there was no political influence at all.

WMD Commission Co-Chairmen, Former Senator Chuck Robb and Judge Laurence Silberman, were on CNN's Wolf Blitzer Reports yesterday, and had this to say on that issue:


<<<

BLITZER: Well, I'm still a little confused. Were these analysts influenced by the political rhetoric that was coming out of the administration?

SILBERMAN: We did not find a shred of indication that that was true.

ROBB: The question that we investigated -- and we investigated it very carefully, because we were very much aware of the importance of this particular question -- is, did any member of the intelligence community make any changes, yield to any demands by the executive branch or anyone in a policy-making position, to change their views, their conclusions, their findings, whatever the case may be?

Did anyone from the executive branch or any organization outside of the intelligence community request that changes be made? And, in each case, we followed every lead that we had, including all those that have been reported. And the answer in each and every case was no.


transcripts.cnn.com
>>>

Will this silence the left and the mainstream media from believing there was influence? I would guess not.


Posted by Matt

blogsforbush.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9041)4/3/2005 6:30:09 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
WMD Intel Not 'Dead Wrong'

National Review Online
James S. Robbins

On February 15, 1898, the USS Maine blew up in Havana harbor in Spanish Cuba, taking down over 250 sailors. In March, a naval court of inquiry began an investigation, and after 18 days of proceedings, including examining the wreck, hearing from specialists, and interviewing survivors and witnesses, court determined that the USS Maine had been sunk by a mine. All the experts agreed. The court also said it could not fix blame for the mine. One anonymous source blamed Spain. An ultimatum soon followed, and within weeks the two countries were at war. Main combat operations ended in three months, but an insurgency continued in the Philippines for four years, resulting in an additional 4,200 dead Americans. But the question remained: Did Spain blow up the Maine? In 1911 a War Department investigation posited that an internal explosion that set off the magazines caused the sinking. This raised a ruckus, and the Navy Department insisted that the cause was an external mine. A joint Army-Navy board eventually affirmed the original explanation, but since then the accident theory has gained acceptance.

So does that discredit the entire war?

When the issue resurfaced in 1911 the Washington Post opined, "Whatever may have been the cause of the wreck of the battleship Maine, whether an exterior or interior explosion, the people of the United States may reflect with a clean conscience that this was but one of the many causes of the Spanish American war. ...At any rate the war has been fought and is over."

I thought about this in relation to the release of the 600-page report from the Commission on the Intelligence Capabilities of the United States Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction.
There is a lot to learn from it. The commissioners employed a very straightforward methodology, comparing prewar intelligence reports and estimates with information obtained during and after the war, looking for gaps, as well as successes, and figuring out how we got it wrong or right. The latter half of the report discusses needed reforms in the intelligence community, and does so in a more sophisticated way than the higher profile 9/11 Commission Report. The continuing salience of the WMD issue requires renewed attention to strengthening intelligence capabilities. Not surprisingly, the report's first section ends with a discussion of the two most prominent WMD threats, Iran and North Korea. Of course, the analysis does not benefit from documents showing the true extent of their weapons programs -- no "post conflict" with them yet. Moreover, the findings in those sections are classified. But it shows that the commissioners were seized of the issue and their focus was forward, not backward.

The report was wide ranging, looking at a variety of current and former WMD threats, including Libya and various terrorist groups. One intriguing intelligence failure cited in the report was misestimation of al Qaeda's WMD program -- that is, it was taken too lightly. The report states that analysts failed to note how strongly bin Laden to acquire and use radiological weapons, and underestimated the scope of the active bioweapons program. Al Qaeda was more dangerous than we thought.

However, the Iraq chapter made the headlines. The WMD intelligence that supported the war rationale was "dead wrong."

We now get to enjoy another round of the press and other critics flogging the administration. Progress in Iraq be damned, since a large-scale functional WMD program wasn't discovered the war was illegitimate. A Washington Post poll released March 15 showed 53 percent now believing the war was not worth fighting (down from 56 percent in December). Of course, like the war with Spain there were other reasons for the conflict, primarily three -- human rights, international aggression, and Iraqi links to terrorism. In 2003, Deputy Defense Secretary Wolfowitz said that the decision to emphasize WMDs over these other factors was a political call. The WMD issue allowed the U.N. to be invoked more easily. Of course, one could also have used enforcement of the Oil-for-Food provisions in UNSCR 1360 as a rational for intervention, and that would have been hailed a great victory since it turned out the corruption in that program was much greater than anticipated (it was suggested here in November 2001 - nationalreview.com; But the intelligence community said they had the goods, and the WMD argument moved forward.

Ultimately the Iraq Survey Group did not find as much evidence of WMD programs as expected. But note -- the same Post poll cited above found that 56 percent of Americans still believe Saddam Hussein had WMDs before the war that have not been found. The Fall 2004 Duelfer report concluded that Saddam had intended to reconstitute his WMD program after sanctions were lifted, and desired to maintain the expertise necessary to do so.

And it is still fair to ask, if Saddam was not trying to acquire WMDs, what was he doing? The Duelfer report notes the following changes in Iraq's Military Industrialization Commission (MIC), Saddam's secret organization in charge of WMD development, in the years leading up to the war:

<<<

Between 1996 and 2002, the overall MIC budget increased over forty-fold from ID 15.5 billion to ID 700 billion. By 2003 it had grown to ID 1 trillion. MIC's hard currency allocations in 2002 amounted to approximately 364 million. MIC sponsorship of technical research projects at Iraqi universities skyrocketed from about 40 projects in 1997 to 3,200 in 2002. MIC workforce expanded by fifty percent in three years, from 42,000 employees in 1999 to 63,000 in 2002.
>>>

So the MIC enjoyed a budget increase from fifteen billion to one trillion Dinars over seven years for nothing? MIC technical research projects increased 80-fold for no particular reason?

Then there was the very well-chronicled systematic deception campaign that U.N. inspectors encountered every time they went into Iraq
. In more than one case inspectors would pull up to a site and be halted; surveillance would pick up vehicles being loaded in the back and hurrying away; inspectors would then be allowed in. What was being carted away so quickly? If nothing was there, what was going on?

One theory behind the deception campaign was that it was itself a deception -- it was not so much that Saddam had something to hide, but rather he wanted to make us think he had something to hide in order to deter us from attacking him. That rationale was clearly too clever by half if true, at least judging by the results. (It is better to act like North Korea and say you have nuclear weapons whether you do or not.)

But I don't buy that explanation. The deception campaign was too systematic, too thorough, in ways that went well beyond what would be necessary simply to generate suspicion. This activity continued during and after the war when it would make no difference.

One case in point
-- an exploitation team went to check out an apartment in an otherwise unexceptional residential area that was allegedly being used as a WMD site. They arrived to find the apartment stripped. The floor tiles were missing, the walls cleaned, the plumbing fixtures gone, the pipes under the floors ripped out.

This was not the result of looting -- the apartment had been sanitized, disinfected. How many such sites could there have been in Iraq? Were they all found and checked?

Strains of biological organisms that could be weaponized were found in a scientist's home refrigerator -- how much such dispersal took place? Not to mention allegations that critical nuclear and chemical program components were taken to Syria, Iran, or Russia
.

There is no doubt that the intelligence system needs reform to help it fulfill its role in providing strategic information necessary to support high-level policymakers. That is the most significant aspect of the new report. Maybe the WMD war rationale will be like the sinking of the Maine, always open to debate. It would be easiest to agree with the Post that whatever the answer Americans "may reflect with a clean conscience that this was but one of the many causes" of the war in Iraq. And it is worth remembering Secretary Rumsfeld's aphorism, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.


James S. Robbins is senior fellow in national-security affairs at the American Foreign Policy Council and an NRO contributor.

cbsnews.com

Duelfer report
cia.gov



To: Sully- who wrote (9041)4/5/2005 8:34:05 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
INTEL INCOMPETENCE

NY Post
April 5, 2005

Not surprisingly, much of the media is bellyaching over the refusal of a bi partisan presidential panel to affirm Democratic charges that pre-war intelligence on Iraq's WMD capabilities was dictated by the White House.

"We did not see any evidence of false intelligence being injected by any policymaker into the intelligence community," said federal Judge Lawrence Silberman, who co-chaired the commission with former Democratic Sen. Charles Robb.

Indeed, the commission — which included such prominent Democrats as Clinton-era White House Counsel Lloyd Cutler — concluded that: "What intelligence professionals told you [President Bush] about Saddam Hussein's [WMD] programs was what they believed. They were simply wrong."

It's become a Democratic article of faith that U.S. intelligence was more than inept — that, as Sen. Ted Kennedy puts it
, "any failure in the intelligence itself is dwarfed by the administration's manipulation in making the case for war."

Sorry, Teddy, wrong again: It just didn't happen that way.

Nor is this the first panel probing intelligence failures to say so. The evidence seems abundantly clear: No one "lied" America into making war on Iraq. To the extent that WMDs were the issue, bad intelligence drove the politics.

Not the other way around.

So: Enough with the endless quest — by the Michael Moore wing of the Democratic Party — for a smoking gun on Iraq that simply isn't there. This report raises some real worries.

Confirmation that our intelligence agencies screwed up so badly, for so long, is scary enough. Worse, the report also concludes that the new intelligence-reform bill passed by Congress is failing in its objective.

Worse still, the intelligence-sharing problems that plagued U.S. spy agencies when it came to both Iraq and al Qaeda still exist.

Those are sobering estimates of U.S. capabilities, post-9/11 — issues that deserve the focus of Democrats and Republicans alike.


nypost.com