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http://snipurl.com/dw27

New York Times
April 3, 2005

Curveball the Goofball
By MAUREEN DOWD

WASHINGTON - I had an editor once whose wife was in the Audubon Society.
There were a lot of articles about birds in that newspaper.

I had an editor once who loved fishing. There were a lot of articles about
fish in that newspaper.

Organizations organically respond to please the boss. Bosses naturally
surround themselves with people who tell them what they want to hear.

When King Lear's favorite daughter spoke frankly to him, and refused to
fawn like her sisters, she was instantly banished. Insincerity pays.

It is absurd to have yet another investigation into the chuckleheaded
assessments on Saddam's phantom W.M.D. that intentionally skirts how the
$40 billion-a-year intelligence was molded and manufactured to fit the
ideological schemes of those running the White House and Pentagon.

As the commission's co-chairman, Laurence Silberman, put it: "Our
executive order did not direct us to deal with the use of intelligence by
policy makers, and all of us were agreed that that was not part of our
inquiry."

Huh? That's like an investigation into steroids in baseball that looks
only at the drug companies, not the players who muscled up.

We don't need a 14-month inquiry producing 601 pages at a cost of $10
million to tell us the data on arms in Iraq was flawed. We know that. When
we got over there, we didn't find any.

This is the fourth exhaustive investigation that has not answered the
basic question: How did the White House and Pentagon spin the information
and why has no one gotten in trouble for it? If your kid lied and hid
stuff from you to do something he thought would be great, then wouldn't
admit it and blamed someone else, he'd be punished - even if his adventure
worked out all right for him.

When the "values" president and his aides do it, they're rewarded.
Condoleezza Rice was promoted to secretary of state. Stephen Hadley,
Condi's old deputy, was promoted to national security adviser. Bob Joseph,
a national security aide who helped shovel the uranium hooey into the
State of the Union address, is becoming an under secretary of state. Paul
Wolfowitz, who painted the takeover of Iraq as such a cakewalk that our
troops went in without the proper armor or backup, will run the World
Bank. George Tenet, who ran the C.I.A. when Al Qaeda attacked and when
Saddam's mushroom cloud gained credibility, got the Medal of Freedom.

Then the president appoints a compliant Democrat and a complicit
conservative judge to head an inquiry set up to let the president off the
hook.

Please, no more pantomime investigations. We all know what happened. Dick
Cheney and the neocons had a fever to sack Saddam. Mr. Cheney and Rummy
persuaded W., "the Man," that it was the manly thing to do. Everybody
feigned a 9/11 connection. Ahmad Chalabi conned his neocon pals, thinking
he could run Iraq if he gave the Bush administration the smoking gun it
needed to sell the war.

Suddenly Curveball appeared, the relative of an aide to Mr. Chalabi, to
become the lone C.I.A. source with the news that Iraq was cooking up
biological agents in mobile facilities hidden from arms inspectors and
Western spies. Curveball's obviously sketchy assertions ended up in Mr.
Tenet's October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate and Colin Powell's
U.N. speech in February 2003, laying the groundwork for an invasion of
Iraq.

Curveball's information was used to justify the war even though it was
clear Curveball was a goofball. As the commission report notes, a Defense
Department employee at the C.I.A. met with him and "was concerned by
Curveball's apparent 'hangover' during their meeting" and suspicious that
Curveball spoke excellent English, even though the Foreign Service had
told U.S. intelligence officials that Curveball did not speak English.

By early 2001, the C.I.A. was receiving messages from our Foreign Service,
reporting that Curveball was "out of control" and off the radar. A foreign
intelligence service also warned the C.I.A. in April 2002 that it had
"doubts about Curveball's reliability" and that elements of the tippling
tipster's behavior "strike us as typical of individuals we would normally
assess as fabricators."

But Curveball's crazy assertions had traction because they were what the
White House wanted to hear.

The report warns the president to watch out for the "headstrong"
intelligence agencies. If only the commission had concerned itself with
headstrong officials at a higher level. Then its 601 pages would be worth
reading.

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