CIA
probe finds secret Pentagon group manipulated
intelligence on Iraqi threat
By Jason Leopold Online Journal Assistant Editor
July
25, 2003—A half-dozen former CIA agents investigating prewar
intelligence have found that a secret Pentagon committee, set
up by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld in October 2001,
manipulated reams of intelligence information prepared by the
spy agency on the so-called Iraqi threat and then delivered it
to top White House officials who used it to win support for a
war in Iraq.
The
former CIA agents were asked to examine prewar intelligence
last year by Rumsfeld and CIA Director George Tenet.
The former agents will present a final report on their
findings to the Pentagon, the CIA and
possibly Congress later this year. More than a dozen
calls to the White House, the CIA, the National Security
Council and the Pentagon for comment were not
returned.
The
ad hoc committee, called the Office of Special Plans, headed
by Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, Undersecretary
of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith and other Pentagon hawks,
described the worst-case scenarios in terms of Iraq's alleged
stockpile of chemical and biological weapons and claimed the
country was close to acquiring nuclear weapons, according to
four of the CIA agents, speaking on the condition of anonymity
because the information is still classified, who conducted a
preliminary review of the intelligence.
The
agents said the Office of Special Plans is responsible for
providing the National Security Council and Vice President
Dick Cheney, National Security Adviser Condoleeza Rice and
Rumsfeld with the bulk of the intelligence information on
Iraq's weapons program that turned out to be wrong. But White
House officials used the information it received from the
Office of Special Plans to win support from the public and
Congress to start a war in Iraq even though the White House
knew much of the information was dubious, the CIA agents
said.
For
example, the agents said the Office of Special Plans told the
National Security Council last year that Iraq's attempt to
purchase aluminum tubes were part of a clandestine program to
build an atomic bomb. The Office of Special Plans leaked the
information to the New York Times last September. Shortly
after the story appeared in the paper, Bush and Rice both
pointed to the story as evidence that Iraq posed a grave
threat to the United States and to its neighbors in the Middle
East, even though experts in the field of nuclear science, the
CIA and the State Department advised the White House that the
aluminum tubes were not designed for an atomic
bomb.
Furthermore, the CIA had been unable to develop any
links between Iraq and the terrorist group al-Qaeda. But under
Feith's direction, the Office of Special Plans came up with
information of such links by looking at existing intelligence
reports that they felt might have been overlooked or
undervalued. The Special Plans office provided the information
to the Pentagon and to the White House. During a Pentagon
briefing last year, Rumsfeld said he had "bulletproof"
evidence that Iraq was harboring al-Qaeda terrorists.
At a
Pentagon news conference last year, Rumsfeld said of the
intelligence gathered by Special Plans, "Gee, why don't you go
over and brief George Tenet? So they did. They went over and
briefed the CIA. So there's no there's no mystery about all
this."
CIA
analysts listened to the Pentagon team, nodded politely, and
said, "Thank you very much," said one government official,
according to a July 20 report in the New York Times. That
official said the briefing did not change the agency's
reporting or analysis in any substantial way.
Several current and former intelligence officials told
the Times that they felt pressure to tailor reports to conform
to the administration's views, "particularly the theories
Feith's group developed."
Moreover, the agents said the Office of Special Plans
routinely rewrote the CIA's intelligence estimates on Iraq's
weapons programs, removing caveats such as "likely,"
"probably" and "may" as a way of depicting the country as an
imminent threat. The agents would not identify the names of
the individuals at the Office of Special Plans who were
responsible for providing the White House with the wrong
intelligence. But, the agents said, the intelligence gathered
by the committee sometimes went directly to the White House,
Cheney's office and to Rice without first being vetted by the
CIA.
In
cases where the CIA's intelligence wasn't rewritten the Office
of Special Plans provided the White House with questionable
intelligence it gathered from Iraqi exiles from the Iraqi
National Congress, a group headed by Ahmad Chalabi, a person
who the CIA has publicly said is unreliable, the CIA agents
said.
More
than a dozen CIA agents responsible for writing intelligence
reports for the agency told the former CIA agents
investigating the accuracy of the intelligence reports they
were pressured by the Pentagon and the Office of Special Plans
to hype and exaggerate intelligence to show Iraq as being an
imminent threat to the security of the U.S.
The
White House has been dogged by questions for nearly a month on
whether the intelligence information it had relied upon was
accurate and whether top White House officials knowingly used
unreliable information to build a case for war. The furor
started when George W. Bush said in his January State of the
Union address that Iraq had tried to purchase uranium ore from
Africa. Bush credited British intelligence for the claims, but
the intelligence was based on forged documents. The Office of
Special Plans is responsible for advising the White House to
allow Bush to use the uranium claims in his speech, according
to Democratic Senators and a CIA agent who are privy to
classified information surrounding the issue.
CIA
Director George Tenet took responsibility last week for
allowing Bush to cite the information, despite the fact that
he had warned Rice's office that the claims were likely wrong.
Earlier this week, Stephen Hadley, an aide to Rice, said he
received two memos from the CIA last year, before Bush's State
of the Union address, alerting him to the fact that the
uranium information should not be included in the State of the
Union. Hadley, who also took responsibility for failing to
remove the uranium reference from Bush's speech, said he
forgot to advise Bush about the CIA's warnings.
Hawks in the White House and the Pentagon seized upon
the uranium claims before and after Bush's State of the Union
address, telling reporters, lawmakers and leaders of other
nations that the only thing that can be done to disarm Saddam
Hussein is a preemptive strike against his country.
The
only White House official who didn't cite the uranium claim is
Secretary of State Colin Powell. According to Greg Thielmann,
who resigned last year from the State Department's Bureau of
Intelligence and Research—whose duties included tracking
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programs—he personally told
Powell that the allegations were "implausible" and the
intelligence it was based upon was a "stupid piece of
garbage."
Patrick Lang, the former head of worldwide human
intelligence gathering for the Defense Intelligence Agency,
which coordinates military intelligence, said the Office of
Special Plans "cherry-picked the intelligence stream" in a bid
to portray Iraq as an imminent threat. Lang said in interviews
with several media outlets that the CIA had "no guts at all"
to resist the allegedly deliberate skewing of intelligence by
a Pentagon that he said was now dominating U.S. foreign
policy.
Vince Cannistraro, a former chief of CIA
counter-terrorist operations, said he has spoken to a number
of working intelligence officers who blame the Pentagon for
playing up "fraudulent" intelligence, "a lot of it sourced
from the Iraqi National Congress of Ahmad Chalabi."
In
an October 11, 2002 report in the Los Angeles Times, several
CIA agents "who brief Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz on Iraq routinely
return to the agency with a long list of complaints and
demands for new analysis or shifts in emphasis."
"There is a lot of unhappiness with the analysis,"
usually because it is seen as not hard-line enough, one
intelligence official said, according to the paper.
Another government official said CIA agents "are
constantly sent back by the senior people at Defense and other
places to get more, get more, get more to make their case,"
the paper reported
Now,
as U.S. military casualties have surpassed that of the first
Gulf War, Democrats in the House and Senate are starting to
question whether other information about the Iraqi threat
cited by Bush and his staff was reliable or part of a
coordinated effort by the White House to politicize the
intelligence to win support for a war.
The
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence is investigating the
issue but so far neither the Senate intelligence committee nor
any Congressional committee has launched an investigation into
the Office of Special Plans. But that may soon
change.
Based on several news reports into the activities of
the Office of Special Plans, a number of lawmakers have called
for an investigation into the group. Congresswoman Ellen
Tauscher, D-California, who sits on the House Armed Services
Committee, wrote a letter July 9 to Congressman Duncan Hunter,
R-California, chairman of the Armed Services committee,
calling for an investigation into the Office of Special
Plans.
The
Office of Special Plans should be examined to determine
whether it "complemented, competed with, or detracted from the
role of other United States intelligence agencies respecting
the collection and use of intelligence relating to Iraqi
weapons of mass destruction and war planning. I also think it
is important to understand how having two intelligence
agencies within the Pentagon impacted the Department of
Defense's ability to focus the necessary resources and
manpower on pre-war planning and post-war operations,"
Tauscher's letter said.
Congressman David Obey, D-Wisconsin, also called for a
widespread investigation of the Office of Special Plans to
find out whether there is any truth to the claims that it
willfully manipulated intelligence on the Iraqi threat. During
a July 8 congressional briefing, Obey described what he knew
about Special Plans and why an investigation into the group is
crucial.
"A
group of civilian employees in the Office of the Secretary of
Defense, all of whom are
political employees have long been dissatisfied with
the information produced by the established intelligence
agencies both inside and outside the department. That was
particularly true, apparently, with respect to the situation
in Iraq," Obey said. "As a result, it is reported that they
established a special operation within the Office of the
Secretary of Defense, which was named the Office of Special
Plans. That office was charged with collecting, vetting, and
disseminating intelligence completely outside the normal
intelligence apparatus. In fact, it appears that the
information collected by this office was in some instances not
even shared with the established intelligence agencies and in
numerous instances was passed on to the National Security
Council and the president [sic] without having been vetted
with anyone other than [the Secretary of Defense]."
"It
is further alleged that the purpose of this operation was not
only to produce intelligence more in keeping with the pre-held
views of those individuals, but to intimidate analysts in the
established intelligence organizations to produce information
that was more supportive of policy decisions which they had
already decided to propose."
Jason Leopold spent two years covering California's
electricity crisis as bureau chief of Dow Jones Newswires. He
has written more than 2,000 news stories on the issue and was
the first journalist to report that energy companies were
engaged in manipulative practices in California's newly
deregulated electricity market. Mr. Leopold is also a regular
contributor to CNBC and National Public Radio and has been the
keynote speaker at more than two-dozen energy industry
conferences around the country. |