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US intelligence is being scapegoated because it got it right on Iraq!

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  • US intelligence is being scapegoated because it got it right on Iraq!

    Bush's other war

    US intelligence is being scapegoated for getting it right on Iraq

    Sidney Blumenthal
    Saturday November 1, 2003
    The Guardian

    In Baghdad, the Bush administration acts as though it is astonished by the postwar carnage. Its feigned shock is a consequence of Washington's intelligence wars. In fact, not only was it warned of the coming struggle and its nature - ignoring a $5m state department report on The Future of Iraq - but Bush himself signed another document in which that predictive information is contained.
    According to the congressional resolution authorising the use of military force in Iraq, the administration is required to submit to the Congress reports of postwar planning every 60 days. The report, bearing Bush's signature and dated April 14 - previously undisclosed but revealed here - declares: "We are especially concerned that the remnants of the Saddam Hussein regime will continue to use Iraqi civilian populations as a shield for its regular and irregular combat forces or may attack the Iraqi population in an effort to undermine Coalition goals." Moreover, the report goes on: "Coalition planners have prepared for these contingencies, and have designed the military campaign to minimise civilian casualties and damage to civilian infrastructure."

    Yet, on August 25, as the violence in postwar Iraq flared, the secretary of defence, Donald Rumsfeld, claimed that this possibility was not foreseen: "Now was - did we - was it possible to anticipate that the battles would take place south of Baghdad and that then there would be a collapse up north, and there would be very little killing and capturing of those folks, because they blended into the countryside and they're still fighting their war?"

    "We read their reports," a senate source told me. "Too bad they don't read their own reports."

    In advance of the war, Bush (to be precise, **** Cheney, the de facto prime minister to the distant monarch) viewed the CIA, the state department and other intelligence agencies not simply as uncooperative, but even disloyal, as their analysts continued to sift through information to determine what exactly might be true. For them, this process is at the essence of their professionalism and mission. Yet the strict insistence on the empirical was a threat to the ideological, facts an imminent danger to the doctrine. So those facts had to be suppressed, and those creating contrary evidence had to be marginalised, intimidated or have their reputations tarnished.

    Twice, in the run-up to the war, Vice-president Cheney veered his motorcade to the George HW Bush Center for Intelligence in Langley, Virginia, where he personally tried to coerce CIA desk-level analysts to fit their work to specification.

    If the CIA would not serve, it would be trampled. At the Pentagon, Rumsfeld formed the Office of Special Plans, a parallel counter-CIA under the direction of the neoconservative deputy secretary of defence, Paul Wolfowitz, to "stovepipe" its own version of intelligence directly to the White House. Its reports were not to be mingled or shared with the CIA or state department intelligence for fear of corruption by scepticism. Instead, the Pentagon's handpicked future leader of Iraq, Ahmed Chalabi of the Iraqi National Congress, replaced the CIA as the reliable source of information, little of which turned out to be true - though his deceit was consistent with his record. Chalabi was regarded at the CIA as a mountebank after he had lured the agency to support his "invasion" of Iraq in 1995, a tragicomic episode, but one which hardly discouraged his neoconservative sponsors.

    Early last year, before Hans Blix, chief of the UN team to monitor Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, embarked on his mission, Wolfowitz ordered a report from the CIA to show that Blix had been soft on Iraq in the past and thus to undermine him before he even began his work. When the CIA reached an opposite conclusion, Wolfowitz was described by a former state department official in the Washington Post as having "hit the ceiling". Then, according to former assistant secretary of state James Rubin, when Blix met with Cheney at the White House, the vice-president told him what would happen if his efforts on WMDs did not support Bush policy: "We will not hesitate to discredit you." Blix's brush with Cheney was no different from the administration's treatment of the CIA.

    Having already decided upon its course in Iraq, the Bush administration demanded the fabrication of evidence to fit into an imminent threat. Then, fulfilling the driven logic of the Bush doctrine, preemptive action could be taken. Policy a priori dictated intelligence á la carte.

    In Bush's Washington, politics is the extension of war by other means. Rather than seeking to reform any abuse of intelligence, the Bush administration, through the Republican-dominated senate intelligence committee, is producing a report that will accuse the CIA of giving faulty information.

    W hile the CIA is being cast as a scapegoat, FBI agents are meanwhile interviewing senior officials about a potential criminal conspiracy behind the public identification of a covert CIA operative - who, not coincidentally, happens to be the wife of the former US ambassador Joseph Wilson, author of the report on the false Niger yellowcake uranium claims (originating in the Cheney's office). Wilson's irrefutable documentation was carefully shelved at the time in order to put16 false words about Saddam Hussein's nuclear threat in the mouth of George Bush in his state of the union address.

    When it comes to responsibility for the degradation of intelligence in developing rationales for the war, Bush is energetically trying not to get the bottom of anything. While he has asserted the White House is cooperating with the investigation into the felony of outing Mrs Wilson, his spokesman has assiduously drawn a fine line between the legal and the political. After all, though Karl Rove - the president's political strategist and senior adviser, indispensable to his re election campaign - unquestionably called a journalist to prod him that Mrs. Wilson was "fair game", his summoning of the furies upon her apparently occurred after her name was already put into the public arena by two other unnamed "senior administration officials".

    Rove is not considered to have committed a firing offence so long as he has merely behaved unethically. What Bush is not doing - not demanding that his staff sign affidavits swearing their innocence, or asking his vice-president point-blank what he knows - is glaringly obvious. Damaging national security must be secondary to political necessity.

    "It's important to recognise," Wilson remarked to me, "that the person who decided to make a political point or that his political agenda was more important than a national security asset is still there in place. I'm appalled at the apparent nonchalance shown by the president."

    Now, postwar, the intelligence wars, if anything, have got more intense. Blame shifting by the administration is the order of the day. The Republican senate intelligence committee report will point the finger at the CIA, but circumspectly not review how Bush used intelligence. The Democrats, in the senate minority, forced to act like a fringe group, held unofficial hearings this week with prominent former CIA agents: rock-ribbed Republicans who all voted for and even contributed money to Bush, but expressed their amazed anger at the assault being waged on the permanent national security apparatus by the Republican president whose father's name adorns the building where they worked. One of them compressed his disillusionment into the single most resonant word an intelligence agent can muster: "betrayal".

    · Sidney Blumenthal is former assistant and senior adviser to president Clinton and author of The Clinton Wars. He has been a staff writer on the New Yorker, Washington Post and New Republic. He will be writing a regular column on US politics from Washington
    Wtf!!? Yep, more arse-backwards crap from the Bush administration - do your job properly for your country and get bumf*cked for the effort...

    Oh sorry - Guardian story! None of this is true - nothing to see here...
    Is it me, or is MOBIUS a horrible person?

  • #2
    Clearly it's biased leftist garbage. After all, it's praising that ultra-leftist organization the CIA.
    "Beware of the man who works hard to learn something, learns it, and finds himself no wiser than before. He is full of murderous resentment of people who are ignorant without having come by their ignorance the hard way. "
    -Bokonon

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    • #3
      It is an open secret that intelligence has been manipulated in order to justify the war. What will the Guardian report next? That the Bushies have actually lied to justify their splendid little war? I don't think I'll hear the news without a heart attack
      "I have been reading up on the universe and have come to the conclusion that the universe is a good thing." -- Dissident
      "I never had the need to have a boner." -- Dissident
      "I have never cut off my penis when I was upset over a girl." -- Dis

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      • #4
        Politicians ass**** their intel boys as much as they ass**** their uniformed services. Are you actually surprised by any of this?

        Since you and I are such Cheney fans, here's one for you from his first days as SecDef under George I:

        Gen. Larry Welch was the chief of staff of the US Air Force, and a veteran of 137 combat missions over North Vietnam, primarily over Thud Ridge, which was the hairiest tactical combat flying in the war.

        He had been in some JCS and AFCS briefings with Cheney on procurement in general and the USAF wish lists, typical first weeks on the job stuff for the new administration. The following week after these meetings, one morning, Welch goes over to Capitol Hill to drop some papers off to the House Armed Services Committee about a totally unrelated subject that had been going on for months. While there, Welch dropped by a couple of committee member's offices for informal chats of a few minutes, again, totally unrelated to anything discussed with Cheney.

        Welch gets back to the Pentagon in time for lunch, goes to one of the dining areas in the center of the Pentagon to have lunch with another general buddy of his. Cheney heard from some snitches somewhere that Welch was on Capitol Hill. So he goes over to Welch (with a bunch of generals and senior field grade officers around within earshot) and loudly and publicly reams Welch about "freelancing" on DoD procurement issues and going to Capitol Hill without advance permission (****ing O10 service chiefs need a potty pass from the hall monitor now? ) Everyone in earshot is looking the other way, embarassed, because it's a basic principle that you don't publicly ream senior officers in front of subordinates, but Cheney didn't know or care.

        Welch tried to explain civilly what he did there and why, and who requested it, and pointed out that he wasn't "freelancing" he was simply paying a social call on a couple of House members, not even on the Armed Services Committee, that Welch had known for years when they served together. Welch keeps his voice low, so nobody can hear, and Cheney can be spared the humiliation of showing his ass right off the bat. So Cheney then gets pissed off because Welch is standing up to him, and Cheney's totally in the wrong. So he raises his voice even more "Well, don't do it again!" and storms off without finishing lunch.

        Afterwards, a couple of buddies of Welch ask him how he's doing, and Welch replied "I've been shot at by professionals. Getting shot at by an amateur is nothing."

        Cheney, ever the ass, then tried to institute a formal policy where service chiefs and their senior staff officers had to personally clear visits to Capitol Hill or any other meetings with members of Congress. Powell talked him out of that one, but why would anyone think Cheney has grown up or gotten a clue in the meantime?
        When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."

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        • #5
          Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat Are you actually surprised by any of this?
          Not really.

          But what really pisses me off is that these people (Cheney, Bush, Blair) are actually in charge of our countries and are able to get away with this criminal BS in broad daylight without any comeback whatsoever!

          Worse still are all the misguided people in the world that still actually support these people!

          There should be some kind of accountability where if a politician does things like lying to their nation in order to start a war killing thousands of innocent people on false grounds, they should get their asses kicked!

          I mean, what Blair and Bush have done is effectively a 'War Crime'.
          Is it me, or is MOBIUS a horrible person?

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          • #6
            Not to worry. This is the future of US "intelligence":

            He describes taking photographs during a helicopter tour before leaving Mogadishu, Somalia, and then finding an unexplained black mark on the developed pictures, which he explains as a manifestation of evil. "Ladies and gentlemen, this is your enemy," he tells the Good Shepherd audience. "It is not Osama bin Laden, it is the principalities of darkness. It is a spiritual enemy that will only be defeated if we come against them in the name of Jesus and pray for this nation and for our leaders."


            "Whether you realize it or not, I believe there were at least two more airplanes that were headed for major installations in this country. I believe that there was one headed for the White House, and there was one headed for the Capitol, but they were thwarted by the hand of God."




            So not to worry, Dubya's old pal Jesus will take care of that. Maybe he could also turn some iraqi oil into Niger Uranium. You gotta have faith!
            “Now we declare… that the law-making power or the first and real effective source of law is the people or the body of citizens or the prevailing part of the people according to its election or its will expressed in general convention by vote, commanding or deciding that something be done or omitted in regard to human civil acts under penalty or temporal punishment….” (Marsilius of Padua, „Defensor Pacis“, AD 1324)

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            • #7

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              • #8
                Why eek? It's so much more effective. Instead of forging evidence for WMD, for example, you simply say "Jesus told me - hallelujah".
                “Now we declare… that the law-making power or the first and real effective source of law is the people or the body of citizens or the prevailing part of the people according to its election or its will expressed in general convention by vote, commanding or deciding that something be done or omitted in regard to human civil acts under penalty or temporal punishment….” (Marsilius of Padua, „Defensor Pacis“, AD 1324)

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                • #9
                  yeah I know hersh, papers are filled with analysis of the two religious fundamentalists. Bush-Osama. Still it's something else seeing it.

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                  • #10
                    Well, people like that freak may act as a hint to certain people why there is a little scepticism about Bush and his ilk turning Iraq into a happy little tree-hugging democracy...
                    “Now we declare… that the law-making power or the first and real effective source of law is the people or the body of citizens or the prevailing part of the people according to its election or its will expressed in general convention by vote, commanding or deciding that something be done or omitted in regard to human civil acts under penalty or temporal punishment….” (Marsilius of Padua, „Defensor Pacis“, AD 1324)

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                    • #11
                      Btw, there was a story in haaretz that Bush said that God had told him to invade Iraq. At least it's not implausible.
                      “Now we declare… that the law-making power or the first and real effective source of law is the people or the body of citizens or the prevailing part of the people according to its election or its will expressed in general convention by vote, commanding or deciding that something be done or omitted in regard to human civil acts under penalty or temporal punishment….” (Marsilius of Padua, „Defensor Pacis“, AD 1324)

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                      • #12
                        MtG, if your story about Cheney is true, I think we need a new VP.
                        http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

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                        • #13
                          I understand the Repubs in Congress are gunning for Tenet for having misled Bush. In conducting a review of the intelligence leading up to the Iraqi Freedom, Congress never talked to Tenet or to any senior advisors. Apparently Tenet still defends the CIA analysis.
                          http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Ned
                            MtG, if your story about Cheney is true, I think we need a new VP.
                            You mean nothing he's done since then has made you consider that posibility...?

                            As for Bush, do you think we need a new 'P'?
                            Is it me, or is MOBIUS a horrible person?

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Ned
                              I understand the Repubs in Congress are gunning for Tenet for having misled Bush.
                              Having misled? Or are they looking for another goat?
                              I'm consitently stupid- Japher
                              I think that opinion in the United States is decidedly different from the rest of the world because we have a free press -- by free, I mean a virgorously presented right wing point of view on the air and available to all.- Ned

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