http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/0619-04.htm
Saddam/Al Qaeda Link: Bush Team Tries to Brazen It Out

''The reason I keep insisting that there was a relationship between Iraq
and Saddam and al-Qaeda'', U.S. President George W Bush told reporters
Thursday, is ''because there was a relationship between Iraq and
al-Qaeda''.

This is what logicians call a tautology -- a ''useless repetition'' is how
the dictionary defines it -- but it is also an indication of how the Bush
administration is defending itself against a growing number of scandals
and deceptions in which it is enmeshed.

[...]

"Bush insisted ''this administration never said that the 9/11 attacks were
orchestrated between Saddam and al-Qaeda. We did say there were numerous
contacts between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda.'  That rendition, of course,
raises a host of questions, among them definitional -- does the existence
of 'numerous contacts' amount to a 'relationship,' particularly when one
side fails to respond to the other?

' When I was 15 and kept asking Mary Beth for a date, and she would always
politely refuse, I think I would have been hard put to describe that as a
'relationship' as much as I wanted to brag about one,' suggested one
congressional aide this week."

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http://snipurl.com/77dx

June 19, 2004
Leaders of 9/11 Panel Ask Cheney for Reports
By PHILIP SHENON and RICHARD W. STEVENSON

WASHINGTON, June 18 — The leaders of the Sept. 11 commission called on
Vice President Dick Cheney on Friday to turn over any intelligence reports
that would support the White House's insistence that there was a close
relationship between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda.

The commission's chairman, Thomas H. Kean, and its vice chairman, Lee H.
Hamilton, said they wanted to see any additional information in the
administration's possession after Mr. Cheney, in a television interview on
Thursday, was asked whether he knew things about Iraq's links to
terrorists that the commission did not know.

"Probably," Mr. Cheney replied.

Mr. Kean and Mr. Hamilton said that, in particular, they wanted any
information available to back Mr. Cheney's suggestion that one of the
hijackers might have met in Prague in April 2001 with an Iraqi
intelligence agent, a meeting that the panel's staff believes did not take
place. Mr. Cheney said in an interview with CNBC on Thursday that the
administration had never been able to prove the meeting took place but was
not able to disprove it either.

"We just don't know," Mr. Cheney said.

Mr. Kean and Mr. Hamilton made the requests in separate interviews with
The New York Times as the White House continued to question the findings
of a staff report the commission released on Wednesday and to take
exception to the way the report was characterized in news accounts. The
report found that there did not appear to have been a "collaborative
relationship" between Iraq and the terrorist network.

That finding appeared to undermine one of the main justifications cited by
Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney for invading Iraq and toppling Mr. Hussein.

Mr. Cheney has also continued to cite a disputed report that Mohamed Atta,
a ringleader of the hijacking plot, met in April, 2001, in Prague with a
senior Iraqi intelligence officer, raising the possibility of a direct tie
between Iraq and the Sept. 11 attacks, a tie that the commission's staff
report found no evidence to support.

Mr. Cheney also said in the television interview that after Osama bin
Laden had requested "terror training from Iraq, the Iraqi intelligence
service responded; it deployed a bomb-making expert, a brigadier general."
The commission's report concluded that Mr. bin Laden's requests went
unanswered.

"It sounds like the White House has evidence that we didn't have," Mr.
Hamilton said in an phone interview. "I would like to see the evidence
that Mr. Cheney is talking about."

Mr. Kean, a former Republican governor of New Jersey, said in a phone
interview that he was surprised by Mr. Cheney's comments and would be
"very disappointed" if the White House had not shared intelligence
information about Al Qaeda with the commission, especially about the
purported meeting in Prague.

Mr. Cheney's spokesman, Kevin Kellems, declined to comment on the request
by Mr. Kean and Mr. Hamilton. Trent D. Duffy, a spokesman for the White
House, said, "This White House and this administration have cooperated
fully with the commission and have provided unprecedented access to some
of the most classified information, including the Presidential Daily
Brief. The president wants the commission to have the information it needs
to do its job."

In Moscow, President Vladimir Putin of Russia said Friday that his country
gave intelligence reports to the Bush administration after the Sept. 11
attacks suggesting that Saddam Hussein's government was preparing
terrorist attacks in the United States or against American targets
overseas. It is not clear whether Mr. Cheney was referring to those
reports in citing intelligence that the commission was not aware of.

Mr. Hamilton, a former Democratic House member from Indiana and former
chairman of the House intelligence committee, said the commission has
found evidence of repeated contacts between Iraqi officials and the Qaeda
terrorists and may describe those contacts in greater detail in its final
report next month. But he said the panel had been unable to document any
"collaborative relationship" between Iraq and the terror network — against
the United States or any other target.

While characterizing any differences between the commission and the White
House on the issue as largely semantic, he said that the committee had no
credible evidence "of any collaborative relationship — period."

Other commission officials disclosed on Friday that the White House had
sent a letter to the commission — stamped "secret" — on the eve of this
week's hearings that demanded a variety of changes in its staff reports
this week. But the officials said the White House letter did not seek any
changes in the portions of the report that dispute any relationship
between Iraq and Al Qaeda.

That portion of the report said there was "no credible evidence that Iraq
and Al Qaeda cooperated on attacks against the United States" and that
Iraq had rebuffed or ignored Qaeda's requests for help from Baghdad in the
1990's.

"There have been reports that contacts between Iraq and Al Qaeda also
occurred after Bin Laden had returned to Afghanistan, but they do not
appear to have resulted in a collaborative relationship," it said.

Dan Bartlett, the White House communications director, said the
administration's early review of the commission report did not set off any
alarm bells "because it was not inconsistent with what we've been saying"
about the ties between Al Qaeda and Iraq. The White House has repeatedly
said the commission's findings back its assertions that Iraq had regular
contacts with and provided support or refuge to Al Qaeda.

Commission members said Friday that as result of the furor created by that
portion of the report, they may rewrite it significantly in preparation of
the panel's final report, which is expected to be released next month.

Mr. Kean suggested that the commission may want to limit the scope of the
conclusion about ties between Al Qaeda and Iraq to only what is known
about any possible collaboration between them on terrorist attacks against
the United States, not against other targets.

"That's our mandate," he said. "This was a staff statement, and we've had
commissioners who have disagreed occasionally with the staff statements,
and this may be one of those occasions," he said.

Mr. Bush continued to press his case on Friday that there were substantial
links between Al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein's government, although less
directly than he did earlier in the week.

During a speech at Fort Lewis, Wash., he called Iraq under Mr. Hussein "a
regime that sheltered terrorist groups," and he pointed to the capture by
Iraqi authorities of suspected terrorists, including one with ties to Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian militant said by the White House to be an
"associate" of Al Qaeda who has lived in Iraq.

Advisers to the White House said Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney would continue to
be aggressive in countering the commission's conclusions — or in the White
House's official view, the misinterpretation by the news media of the
commission's conclusions — because failing to do so would undermine their
credibility and their rationale for taking the country to war.

The Bush campaign and the Republican National Committee sent e-mail
messages to supporters highlighting comments by Mr. Kean and Mr. Hamilton
on Thursday suggesting that they saw no big gulf between the White House's
position and the commission. Mr. Bartlett said Mr. Bush had no specific
plans at the moment to revisit the issue in a speech, but that he would
raise it when he had the opportunity in coming weeks.

"We'll continue to talk about how Saddam Hussein was a threat, and his
ties to terrorism, and we will not give an inch on what we've said in the
past," Mr. Bartlett said.

One outside adviser to the White House said the administration expected
the debate over Iraq's ties to Al Qaeda to be "a regular feature" of the
presidential campaign.

"They feel it's important to their long-term credibility on the issue of
the decision to go to war," the adviser said. "It's important because it's
part of the overall view that Iraq is part of the war on terror. If you
discount the relationship between Iraq and Al Qaeda, then you discount the
proposition that it's part of the war on terror. If it's not part of the
war on terror, then what is it — some cockeyed adventure on the part of
George W. Bush?"

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