The Phony ‘Bad Intel’ Defense on Iraq
Jeb Bush’s stumbling start to his presidential bid has refocused attention on
Official Washington’s favorite excuse for the illegal, aggressive and disastrous
war in Iraq – that it was just a case of “bad intelligence.” But that isn’t what
the real history shows, as ex-CIA analyst Ray McGovern recalls.
By Ray McGovernMay 16, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortium
News" - Presidential aspirant Jeb Bush this week
may have
damaged his chances by flubbing the answer to an entirely predictable
question about his big brother’s decision to attack Iraq.
On Monday, Fox’s Megyn Kelly asked the former Florida
governor: “Knowing what we know now, would you have authorized the
invasion?” Jeb Bush answered, “I would’ve. And so would’ve Hillary Clinton, just
to remind everybody, and so would’ve almost everybody who was confronted with
the intelligence they got.”
Kelly: “You don’t think it was a mistake.”
Bush: “In retrospect, the intelligence that everyone saw —
that the world saw, not just the United States — was faulty.”
After some backfilling and additional foundering on Tuesday
and Wednesday, Bush apparently memorized the “correct” answer. So on Thursday,
he proceeded to ask the question himself: “If we’re all supposed to answer
hypothetical questions: Knowing what we now know, what would you have done? I
would not have engaged. I would not have gone into Iraq.”
It is a safe bet that, by Thursday, Iraq War champion Paul
Wolfowitz, now a senior adviser to Jeb Bush, had taken him to the woodshed,
admonishing him along these lines: “Jeb, you remembered to emphasize the
mistaken nature of pre-war intelligence; that’s the key point; that’s
good. But then you need to say that if you knew how mistaken the
intelligence was, you would not have attacked Iraq. Got it?”
It was then-Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz —
together with his boss Donald Rumsfeld, Vice President Dick Cheney and a string
of neocon advisers — who exploited the tragedy of 9/11 to make war on Iraq,
which they had been itching for since the 1990s. They tried mightily (and
transparently) to link Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to the Sept. 11
attacks. Following their lead, the fawning corporate media played up this bum
rap with such success that, before the attack on Iraq, polls showed that almost
70 percent of Americans believed that Saddam Hussein played some kind of role in
9/11.
Not so, said honest intelligence analysts who, try as they
might, could find no persuasive evidence for Hussein’s guilt other than the
synthetic kind in Wolfowitz’s purposively twisted imagination. Yet the pressure
on the analysts to conform was intense. CIA’s ombudsman commented publicly that
never in his 32-year career with the agency had he encountered such “hammering”
on CIA analysts to reconsider their judgments and state that there were
operational ties between Iraq and al-Qaeda
The pressure was reflected in pronouncements at the highest
levels. A year after 9/11, President Bush was still saying, “You cannot
distinguish between al-Qaeda and Saddam when you talk about the war on terror.”
Defense Secretary Rumsfeld was more direct, claiming that the evidence tying
Iraq to al-Qaeda was “bulletproof.”
But Brent Scowcroft, national security advisor to President
George H.W. Bush and Chairman of George W. Bush’s President’s Foreign
Intelligence Advisory Board, supported honest analysts in CIA and elsewhere,
stating publicly that evidence of any such connection was “scant.”
There was the looming danger of a principled leak, or possibly
even an insurrection of some kind on the part of those opposed to creating
pretexts for war. And so the administration chose to focus first and foremost on
“weapons of mass destruction” (WMD).
It would be an easier – and scarier – sell a claim that Iraq
had chemical, biological and perhaps nuclear weapons and that the Iraqis could
give them to “terrorists” for another attack on the “homeland” (introducing a
term that both the Nazis and the Soviets used to good effect in whipping up
nationalistic fervor in wartime).
Brimming with WMD
Unable to get honest intelligence analysts to go along with
the carefully nurtured “noble lie” that Iraq played a role in 9/11, or even that
operational ties existed between Iraq and al-Qaeda, the administration ordered
up a separate but related genre of faux intelligence – WMD. This PR offensive
was something of a challenge, for in the months before 9/11, Condoleezza Rice
and then-Secretary of State Colin Powell had insisted publicly that Saddam
Hussein posed no security threat. You don’t remember?
On Feb. 24, 2001, Powell had said, “Saddam Hussein has not
developed any significant capability with respect to weapons of mass
destruction. He is unable to project conventional power against his neighbors.”
And just six weeks before 9/11, Condoleezza Rice told CNN:
“let’s remember that his [Saddam’s] country is divided, in effect. He does not
control the northern part of his country. We are able to keep his arms from him.
His military forces have not been rebuilt.” Obligingly, the compliant U.S. media
pressed the delete button on those telling statements.
How many times have we heard that, after 9/11, “everything
changed.” Well, we were soon to observe a major attempt to apply this adage to
Saddam’s inventory of WMD that Rice and Powell had said did not exist. The world
was being asked to believe that, almost immediately, hundreds of stealth WMD had
wafted down like manna from the heavens for a soft landing on the sands of Iraq.
Just days after the Sept. 11 attacks, Defense Secretary
Rumsfeld began promoting the notion that Iraq might have weapons of mass
destruction and that “within a week, or a month, Saddam could give his WMD to
al-Qaeda.” This was an early articulation of the bogus “conjunction of terrorism
and WMD,” now immortalized in what is the most damning, first-hand, documentary
evidence of U.S./U.K. collusion in launching a war of aggression on false
pretenses and how it was to be “justified.”
This
evidence was contained in the “Downing Street Memorandum,” written on
July 23, 2002, though not published until May 1, 2005, by The London Times
(discussed in more detail below). The goal was to systematically conflate Iraq’s
supposed stockpiles of WMD with al-Qaeda and 9/11, as a kind of subliminal
fear/revenge message to the American public.
It was not long before the agile Rice did a demi-pirouette of
180 degrees, claiming that Saddam had suddenly become “a danger in the region
where the 9/11 threat emerged.” By the summer of 2002, the basic decision for
war having been taken, something persuasive had to be conjured up to get
Congress to authorize it. Weapons of mass deception, as one wag called them,
together with warnings about “mushroom clouds” were just what the Doctor Rice
ordered.
Sadly, CIA’s malleable director George Tenet followed orders
to conjure up WMD in a deceitful National Intelligence Estimate issued on Oct.
1, 2002. The NIE’s main purpose was to deceive Congress into authorizing war on
Iraq, which Congress did just ten days later.
Amid the media din about WMD, and with Rep. Barbara Lee,
D-California, the sole exception, no legislator proved willing to risk being
seen as “weak on terrorism” as the mid-term elections approached in November,
the disinformation operation was – well, you might say a “cakewalk.” Tenet and
his deputy John McLaughlin satisfied President Bush they could fashion the
evidence into a “slam dunk,” and then fed the cooked intelligence to Secretary
of State Colin Powell to use at the U.N.
Riding High, Wolfowitz Slips
Basking in the glory of “Mission Accomplished” after Baghdad
fell in April 2003, Wolfowitz succumbed to a brief bout of hubris-induced
honesty. He openly admitted that the Bush administration had focused on weapons
of mass destruction to justify war on Iraq “for bureaucratic reasons.” It was,
he explained, “the one reason everyone could agree on” – meaning, of course, the
one that could successfully sell the war to Congress and the American people.
As for the real reasons, Wolfowitz again let his guard drop at
about the same time. When asked in May 2003 why North Korean WMD were being
treated differently from those claimed to exist in Iraq, he responded, “Let’s
look at it simply. … [Iraq] swims on a sea of oil.”
Other usually circumspect senior officials have had unguarded
moments of candor. In another moment of unusual frankness – this one before the
war – Philip Zelikow, a member of the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory
Board from 2001 to 2003, spilled the other key reason. Discounting any real
danger to the U.S. from Iraq, Zelikow pointed rather to the threat he said Iraq
posed to Israel as “the unstated threat.” It was a threat, he added, that dared
not speak its name – because it was so politically sensitive.
Are you getting the picture why the Bush administration didn’t
want to level with the American people who might have viewed the war very
differently if the real motives and the nagging doubts had been expressed
frankly and bluntly?
The force with which CIA analysts were pressed to manufacture
intelligence to serve the cause of war was unprecedented in CIA history and
included personal visits by Vice President Cheney to make sure the intelligence
analysts knew what was wanted. That many of my former colleagues in the Analysis
Directorate took willing part in this unconscionable charade was hard to
believe. But they did.
At about this time, an anonymous White House official –
believed to be George W. Bush’s political adviser Karl Rove – reportedly
boasted, “We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And
while you’re studying that reality — judiciously, as you will — we’ll act again,
creating other new realities.”
As exemplified by Jeb Bush’ memorized lines this past week,
there continues to be a huge premium among disciples of Rovian historiography,
to “create new reality,” blaming “mistaken intelligence” for the debacle in Iraq
and the ensuing chaos throughout the region. The intelligence was wrong; but it
was not mistaken; it was out-and-out fraud.
This had become so clear, yet so little known, that ten years
ago this month I was finishing a draft for a chapter I called “Sham Dunk:
Cooking Intelligence for the President” to appear in
Neo-CONNED Again! Hypocrisy, Lawlessness, and the Rape of Iraq.
I was just finishing the draft when a deus ex machina
arrived in the form of a major leak to the London Times of official minutes of a
briefing of then British Prime Minister Tony Blair at 10 Downing Street on July
23, 2002, eight months before the war on Iraq, and three days after visiting CIA
Director George Tenet to confirm for Blair exactly what Bush and Cheney were
planning. The Downing Street document destroyed the argument, already being
promoted in 2005 by those responsible for the fraud, that intelligence mistakes
were to blame for the war in Iraq.
The Downing Street Memorandum
I would like to draw from the first couple of paragraphs of
the chapter, since, sadly, they seem relevant today as the historical rewrite
about “intelligence errors” is recurring now at the start of Campaign 2016. But
first, here is the text of the most damaging part of the Downing Street Memo as
“C” — Richard Dearlove, the head of British intelligence – reported on recent
talks in Washington:
“There was a perceptible shift in attitude. Military action
was now seen as inevitable. Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military
action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But the
intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy. The NSC
had no patience with the UN route, and no enthusiasm for publishing material on
the Iraqi regime’s record. There was little discussion in Washington of the
aftermath after military action.” (emphasis added)
Following is the
introduction to my chapter:
“Let’s review. It was bad intelligence that forced an
unwitting president to invade Iraq, right? The sad fact that so many Americans
believe this myth is eloquent testimony to the effectiveness of the White House
spin machine. The intelligence was indeed bad — shaped that way by an
administration determined to find a pretext to effect ‘regime change’ in Iraq.
“Senior administration officials — first and foremost Vice
President Dick Cheney — played a strong role in ensuring that the intelligence
analysis was corrupt enough to justify, ex post facto, the decision to
make war on Iraq. It is not altogether clear how witting President George W.
Bush was of all this, but there is strong evidence that he knew chapter and
verse. Had he been mousetrapped into this ‘preemptive’ war, one would expect
some heads to roll. None have. And where is it, after all, that the buck is
supposed to stop?
“The intelligence-made-me-do-it myth has helped the Bush
administration attenuate the acute embarrassment it experienced early last year
[2004] when the casus belli became a casus belly laugh. When U.S.
inspector David Kay, after a painstaking search to which almost a billion
dollars and many lives were given, reported that there had been no weapons of
mass destruction in Iraq since 1991, someone had to take the fall.
“Elected was CIA director George Tenet, the backslapping
fellow from Queens always eager to do whatever might be necessary to play with
the bigger kids. For those of you just in from Mars, the grave danger posed by
Iraqi weapons of mass destruction was what President Bush cited as the casus
belli for invading Iraq. It was only after Kay had the courage to tell the
truth publicly that Bush fell back on the default rationale for the war; namely,
the need to export democracy, about which we are hearing so much lately.
“Not surprisingly, the usual suspects in the mainstream media
that played cheerleader for the war are now helping the president (and the
media) escape blame. Flawed intelligence that led the United States to invade
Iraq was the fault of the US intelligence community, explained the Washington
Times last July 10 [2004], after regime loyalist Senator Pat Roberts (R-Kan.),
chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, released his
committee’s findings.
“Nine months later, after publication of similar findings by a
commission handpicked by the president, the Washington Post’s lead headline was
‘Data on Iraqi Arms Flawed, Panel Says.’ The date was, appropriately, April
Fools Day, 2005. In a word, they are playing us for fools. The remarkable thing
is that most folks don’t seem able, or willing, to recognize that – or even to
mind.
“On May 1, 2005, a highly sensitive document published by The
Sunday Times of London provided the smoking gun showing that President Bush had
decided to make war on Iraq long before the National Intelligence Estimate was
produced to conjure up ‘weapons of mass destruction’ there and mislead Congress
into granting authorization for war.
“The British document is classified ‘SECRET AND STRICTLY
PERSONAL – U.K. EYES ONLY.’ And small wonder. It contains an official account of
Prime Minister Tony Blair’s meeting with top advisers on July 23, 2002, at which
Sir Richard Dearlove, head of MI6 (the U.K. equivalent to the CIA), simply ‘C’
in the written document, reported on talks he had just held in Washington with
top U.S. officials. Blair has now acknowledged the authenticity of the document.
“As related in the document, Dearlove told Blair and the
others that President Bush wanted to remove Saddam Hussein through military
action, that this ‘was seen as inevitable,’ and that the attack would be
‘justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD.’ He continued: ‘… but the
intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.’
“Dearlove tacked on yet another telling comment: ‘There was
little discussion in Washington of the aftermath after military action.’ British
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw concurred that Bush had made up his mind to take
military action, but noted that finding justification would be challenging, for
‘the case was thin.’ Straw pointed out that Saddam was not threatening his
neighbors, and his WMD capability was less than that of Libya, North Korea, or
Iran.
“As head of MI6, Dearlove was CIA Director George Tenet’s
British counterpart. We Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS)
have been saying since January 2003 that the two intelligence chiefs’ marching
orders were to ‘fix’ the intelligence around the policy. It was a no-brainer.
“Seldom, however, does one acquire documentary evidence that
this – the unforgivable sin in intelligence analysis – was used by the most
senior U.S. government leaders as a way to ‘justify’ a prior decision for war.
There is no word to describe our reaction to the fact that the two intelligence
chiefs quietly acquiesced in the corruption of our profession on a matter of
such consequence. ‘Outrage’ doesn’t even come close.”
Challenging Rumsfeld
A year later in Atlanta, I had an unusual chance to publicly
challenge then Defense Secretary Rumsfeld – no stranger to the dissembling about
WMD – about his earlier claims saying he knew were the WMD were in Iraq, and
knew of ties between Iraq and al-Qaeda. My question grew into a mini-debate of
four minutes, during which he lied, demonstrably, on both issues. As luck would
have it, May 4, 2006 was a very slow news day, and our mini-debate took place in
early afternoon, enabling serious journalists like Keith Olbermann to
perform a
“fact-check.”
Finally, on June 5, 2008, then-chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee Jay Rockefeller made some remarkable comments that got
sparse attention in U.S. media. Announcing the findings of a bipartisan report
of a five-year study on misstatements on prewar intelligence on Iraq,
Rockefeller said:
“In making the case for war, the Administration repeatedly
presented intelligence as fact when in reality it was unsubstantiated,
contradicted, or even non-existent. As a result, the American people were led to
believe that the threat from Iraq was much greater than actually existed.”
Anyone know what “non-existent” intelligence looks like?
What has become painfully clear since the trauma of 9/11 is
that most of our fellow citizens have felt an overriding need to believe that
administration leaders are telling them the truth and to ignore all evidence to
the contrary. Many Americans seem impervious to data showing that it was the
administration that misled the country into this unprovoked war and that the
“intelligence” was conjured up well after the White House decided to effect
“regime change” in Iraq (or introduce democracy, if you favor the default
rationale) by force of arms.
I have been asking myself why so many Americans find it so
painful to delve deeper. Why do they resist letting their judgment be influenced
by the abundance of evidence, much of it documentary, exposing how little or no
evidence there was to support what was a most consequential fraud? Perhaps it is
because they know that responsible citizenship means asking what might seem to
be “impertinent” questions, ferreting out plausible answers, and then, when
necessary, holding people accountable, rectifying the situation, and ensuring it
does not happen again.
Resistance, however, remains strong. At work – in all of us to
some degree – is the same convenient denial mechanism that immobilized so many
otherwise conscientious German citizens during the 1930s, enabling Germany to
launch its own unprovoked wars and curtail civil liberties at home. Taking
action, or just finding one’s voice, entails risk; denial is the more
instinctive, easier course.
But it is too late for denial. We might take to heart Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr.’s warning: “… there is such a thing as being too late. …
Life often leaves us standing bare, naked and dejected with a lost opportunity.
Over the bleached bones and jumbled residue of numerous civilizations are
written the pathetic words: ‘Too late.’”
Ray McGovern works with
Tell the Word, a
publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city
Washington. He served for 27 years in CIA’s Analysis Directorate, coming “out of
retirement” when he saw his former profession being corrupted to “justify” a war
of aggression. At that point he joined with others to create Veteran
Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) in an attempt to hold former
colleagues accountable.