http://snipurl.com/ao0g
Colin Powell, 3 others resign posts in Cabinet
Total of 6 won't return for second term of Bush administration

While none of the most recent officials to resign cited policy differences
as reasons for their departure, here is a list of former insiders and
Republican allies who have:


http://www.btlonline.org/btlthosewhotold.html

Cracks in the Empire: Compilation of insiders who have taken aim at Bush's
Iraq Policy

by Anna Manzo and Scott Harris
Toward Freedom, Summer 2004

When U.S. Defense Department analyst Daniel Ellsberg leaked the "Pentagon
Papers" to the press during the Vietnam War, the 47-volume Defense
Department internal study of the U.S. role in Southeast Asian conflicts
over three decades was classified top secret. The documents chronicled the
lies and deceit employed by government officials to justify U.S. military
intervention in the region's wars. Ellsberg -- a strong supporter of the
Vietnam War who later became a committed opponent -- faced felony charges
that could have put him in prison for 115 years. Those charges were
dismissed in 1973 on grounds of governmental misconduct, which led to the
conviction of several White House aides. The targeting of Ellsberg was an
important factor in the impeachment proceedings against President Richard
Nixon.

Today, numerous Washington insiders are speaking out against what they
allege are Bush administration violations of the public trust: most
notably, the justifications cited for pre-emptive war in Iraq. In turn,
high-level officials -- former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, former White
House counter-terrorism chief Richard Clarke, former Treasury Secretary
Paul O'Neill and former United Nations weapons inspector Scott Ritter --
and others have become victims of smear campaigns reportedly directed from
the White House.

Compelling charges of secrecy and deception are leveled by former Nixon
aide John Dean. In "Worse Than Watergate: The Secret Presidency of George
W. Bush," the former counsel to the president-turned whistle-blower
reminds us that no one died in the Watergate scandal. Dean, whose
testimony helped convince the House Judiciary Committee to vote for
articles of impeachment against his former boss, charges that George Bush
is guilty of impeachable offenses.

Presented here is an alphabetical, annotated list of several prominent
government insiders -- many of them Republicans -- who have spoken out
against President Bush's decision to launch the Iraq war and his
administration's conduct in managing the conflict.

---------

Rand Beers, former anti-terrorism adviser to President George W. Bush, and
now John Kerry's homeland security adviser. He said the administration is
"underestimating the enemy;"has failed to address terrorism's root causes;
and that difficult, long-term issues at home and abroad have been avoided,
neglected or shortchanged and generally under-funded. The Iraq war created
fissures in U.S. counterterrorism alliances, he added, and could breed a
new generation of al Qaeda recruits. Source: "Former Aide Takes Aim at War
on Terror," Washington Post, June 16, 2003.

Doug Bereuter, retiring Republican Nebraska congressman who broke ranks
with his party, reversed his earlier stance, saying the military strike
against Iraq is a "mistake," and blasted a "massive failure" of
intelligence before the war. Source: "Retiring GOP congressman breaks
ranks on Iraq," CNN, Aug. 18, 2004

Robert L. Black, a retired Ohio judge of Hamilton County Common Pleas
Court and the Ohio First District Court of Appeals, stated publicly that
he believes the "Republican party candidate's record has a history not
only of repeated violations of the key principles underlying our
democracy, but of the core values of the Christian faith to which he
claims commitment." Black says he will refuse to support his lifelong
Republican party in the re-election of the incumbent president. "A
Republican Declares His Independence," The Cincinnati Enquirer, Oct. 13,
2004

Hans Blix, former U.N chief weapons inspector in Iraq and author of
"Disarming Iraq." Two weeks before attacking Baghdad, the U.S.
unsuccessfully pressured him to tell the Security Council that Iraq was
violating UN resolutions. He said that if inspections had continued, Iraq
may have proven its lack of banned weapons. He also says the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq had failed tragically in its aim of making the world a
safer place and succeeded only in stimulating terrorism. Sources: "U.N.
Inspector Writes of Pressure From U.S. on Iraq: Blix's Book Said He Was
Challenged About Arms Assessment on Eve of Last Report to Security
Council," Washington Post, March 9, 2004. "Blix Says Iraq War Stimulated
Terrorism," Reuters, Oct. 13, 2003

Paul Bremer, former U.S. official appointed by Bush to govern Iraq after
the invasion said that the United States made two major mistakes: not
deploying enough troops in Iraq and then not containing the violence and
looting immediately after the ouster of Saddam Hussein. Source: "Bremer
Criticizes Troop Levels," Washington Post, Oct. 5, 2004

John Brown, foreign service officer in Eastern Europe and Moscow, was the
second career U.S. diplomat who resigned to protest the Bush
administration's Iraq policies. The 22-year veteran said the Bush
administration is pursuing a narrow-minded strategy, jeopardizing
relationships with long-time allies around the world. Source: "Second
Foreign Service officer resigns in protest over Iraq," The Government
Executive, March 12, 2003.

Vince Cannistraro, former CIA head of counter-terrorism and member of the
National Security Council under Ronald Reagan. He said, "These have been
an extraordinary four years for the CIA and the political pressure to come
up with the right results has been enormous, particularly from Vice
President Cheney. I'm afraid that the agency is guilty of bending over
backwards to please the administration. George Tenet was desperate to give
them what they wanted and that was a complete disaster." Source: "The CIA
'Old Guard' Goes to War with Bush," The Telegraph/UK, Oct. 11, 2004

Richard A. Clarke, former White House counter-terrorism chief. Clarke
helped shape U.S. policy on terrorism under President Reagan and the first
President Bush, then served under President Clinton and the current
President Bush. He said that in the aftermath of Sept. 11, President Bush
ordered him to look for a link between Iraq and the attacks on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon, despite being told there didn't seem to be
one. His book, "Against All Enemies," is critical of the administration's
early emphasis on removing Saddam Hussein from power; downplaying of al
Qaeda's threat prior to 9/11; and diverting military resources to a war in
Iraq, instead of fighting al Qaeda in Afghanistan. In response, the
administration called the career public servant an "opportunist." Sources:
"Clarke's Take on Terror," 60 Minutes, March 30, 2004; "A White House
Adept at Revenge," The Associated Press, March 27, 2004.

Robin Cook, a former British foreign minister under Tony Blair. Resigned
and wrote a book saying the threat of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction
was over-exaggerated. Source: "Cook Denies Saddam was Threat," The
Guardian/UK, June 17, 2003

John Dean, former counsel to President Nixon, dared to tell him in 1973
that the web of lies surrounding the Watergate break-in of the Democratic
Party headquarters had formed "a cancer on the presidency." Dean sees a
worse scenario in the Bush White House. Sources: "Bush Puts a 'Cancer on
the Presidency' - Watergate Insider calls this White House 'Scary'" Los
Angeles Times, March 30, 2004; "Ex-Nixon Aide John Dean Tells Bill Moyers
that Bush Should be Impeached," NOW with Bill Moyers, April 2, 2004

Marie deYoung, a former Army chaplain who audited accounts for
Halliburton's subsidiary Kellogg, Brown and Root. After complaining of
waste and fraud to her superiors to no avail, she says there was no effort
to hold down costs because all expenses were passed directly on to
taxpayers. DeYoung produced documents detailing alleged waste on routine
services: $50,000 a month for soda, at $45 a case; $1 million a month to
clean clothes - or $100 for each 15-pound bag of laundry. Source: "New
Halliburton Waste Alleged," MSNBC, July 1, 2004

Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change, 27 retired diplomats and
generals -- including Arthur Hartman, former ambassador to the Soviet
Union; Admiral Stansfield Turner, former director of the CIA; and General
William Crowe, one-time chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff -- have
signed a statement declaring that George W. Bush's foreign policy has
harmed U.S. national security and that his administration must be defeated
in the 2004 presidential election. Many served under Republican Presidents
Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. Source: "Diplomats & Military
Commanders for Change," www.diplomatsforchange.com

Fifty-two former diplomats signed a letter to British Prime Minister Tony
Blair regarding their deepening concern with the policies which have
followed on the Arab-Israel problem and Iraq, in close cooperation with
the U.S.. Signers included Francis Cornish (ambassador to Israel
1998-2001); Sir James Craig (ambassador to Saudi Arabia 1979-84); Richard
Muir (ambassador to Kuwait 1999-2002); Sir Crispin Tickell (British
permanent representative to the UN 1987-90); Sir Harold Walker (ambassador
to Iraq 1990-91). Source: "Doomed to failure in the Middle East: A letter
from 52 former senior British diplomats to Tony Blair," The Guardian,
April 27, 2004

Charles Duelfer, chief U.S. weapons inspector with the Iraq Survey Group,
reported that Iraq had no stockpiles of biological, chemical or nuclear
weapons before the March 2003 U.S.-led invasion and that Iraq's nuclear
capability had decayed, not grown since the 1991 war. Source: "Report
concludes no WMD in Iraq," BBC News, Oct. 7, 2004.

Sibel Edmonds, former FBI translator. Told the 9/11 commission that well
before Sept. 11, 2001, the bureau had detailed information that terrorists
were likely to attack the U.S. with airplanes. Sources: "We Should Have
Had Orange or Red-Type of Alert in June/July of 2001," www.Salon.com,
March 26, 2004; "Lawyers Try to Gag FBI Worker over 9/11," Independent/UK,
April 26, 2004

Environmental Protection Agency Office of the Inspector General. In the
aftermath of the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center, the White House
instructed the agency to give the public misleading information, telling
New Yorkers it was safe to breathe despite other data indicating homes and
offices near ground zero had higher than safe levels of asbestos and lead.
Source: "EPA Misled Public on 9/11 Pollution," Newsday, Aug. 23, 2003

Jay Garner, the U.S. general abruptly dismissed as Iraq's first occupation
administrator after a month in the job. Garner said he fell out with
Bush's circle because he wanted free elections and rejected an imposed
privatization program: "My preference was to put the Iraqis in charge as
soon as we can, and do it with some form of elections ... I just thought
it was necessary to rapidly get the Iraqis in charge of their destiny."
Source: "General Sacked by Bush Says He Wanted Early Elections,"
Guardian/UK, March 18, 2004

Katharine Gun, a British government linguist who leaked an e-mail
purportedly from U.S. intelligence services asking for help to spy on U.N.
ambassadors. She faced a two-year prison term for charges filed under the
British Official Secrets Act; the charges were dismissed. Sources: "GCHQ
Translator Cleared Over Leak," BBC, Feb. 25, 2004; "U.S. Stars Hail Iraq
War Whistleblower," Observer/UK, Jan. 18, 2004

Chuck Hagel, Republican senator of Nebraska, criticized the GOP party line
of "staying the course in Iraq." He said that "crisp, sharp analysis of
our policies is required" to avert a prolonged engagement similar to
Vietnam. He said in a CBS "Face the Nation" interview, "We're in deep
trouble in Iraq" and that it would take "probably two years" to get an
Iraqi army and police force up to speed to secure the country. He said in
2002 that he could think of no historical case where the U.S. succeeded in
an enterprise of such gravity and complexity as regime change in Iraq
without the support of a regional and international coalition. Sources:
"Republican discord in the Senate," The Boston Globe, Sept. 22, 2004; "CIA
Analysis Holds Bleak Vision for Iraq's Future," The Seattle
Post-Intelligencer, Sept. 16, 2004

Bill Harlow, former CIA spokesman who resigned with former director George
Tenet, acknowledged that recent CIA leaks had been made from within the
agency to undermine the Bush administration with a battery of damaging
leaks and briefings about Iraq. "The intelligence community has been made
the scapegoat for all the failings of Iraq. It deserves some of the blame,
but not all of it. People are chafing at that." Source: "The CIA 'Old
Guard' Goes to War with Bush," The Telegraph/UK, Oct. 11, 2004

David Kay, former Bush administration chief weapons inspector sent to Iraq
to find evidence of weapons of mass destruction. Resigned saying he didn't
believe Saddam Hussein's government had large-scale weapons production
programs in the 1990s. Source: "Ex-Arms Hunter Kay Said No WMD Stockpiles
in Iraq," Reuters, Jan. 23, 2004.

John Brady Kiesling, a former political counselor at the U.S. embassy in
Athens, Greece, and first career U.S. diplomat to resign in protest of the
Bush administration's Iraq policies. He wrote, "We have begun to dismantle
the largest and most effective web of international relationships the
world has ever known. Our current course will bring instability and
danger, not security." Source: "Diplomatic Offensive," TomPaine.com, March
14, 2003.

Karen Kwiatkowski, a retired lieutenant colonel formerly assigned to the
Pentagon's Office of Special Plans. Wrote an article revealing how
"Defense Department extremists suppressed information and twisted the
truth to drive the country to war" in a plan that was never made public.
Source: "The New Pentagon Papers" Salon.com, March 10, 2004

Larry Johnson, former CIA analyst and State Department Office of
Counterterrorism official, also a registered Republican who contributed
financially to the 2000 Bush campaign. Said the White House smear
campaigns against former officials -- Army Chief of Staff Gen. Eric
Shinseki, Ambassador Joseph Wilson, and Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill --
were mild compared to the vicious assault against Clarke. Source: "The War
on Clarke," TomPaine.com, March 29, 2004

Richard Lugar, Indiana Republican senator and chairman of the Foreign
Relations Committee, said so little Iraq reconstruction money has been
spent due to the "incompetence in the administration." He said at a
hearing, "Our committee heard blindly optimistic people from the
administration prior to the war and people outside the administration --
what I call the 'dancing in the street crowd' -- that we just simply will
be greeted with open arms. The nonsense of all that is apparent. The lack
of planning is apparent." Sources: "Republican discord in the Senate," The
Boston Globe, Sept. 22, 2004; "CIA Analysis Holds Bleak Vision for Iraq's
Future," The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Sept. 16, 2004

Tom Maertens, former U.S. State Department deputy coordinator for
counterterrorism. Described the Bush administration smear campaign against
Clarke and confirmed Clarke's charges that the Bush administration ignored
the threat from al Qaeda and instead chose to fight "the wrong war" by
attacking Iraq. Source: "Clarke's Public Service," by Tom Maertens, Star
Tribune, March 28, 2004

John McCain, Arizona Republican senator, who on a Fox Network interview,
criticized the serious mistakes of not having enough ground troups sent
into Iraq and said that Bush perhaps is not as straight with the American
people "as we'd like to see." Source: "Republican discord in the Senate,"
The Boston Globe, Sept. 22, 2004

Ray McGovern, a retired CIA analyst. Said outgoing CIA Director George
Tenet took the fall for faulty intelligence on Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction, the motivation behind Bush's Iraq war policy. The policy was
predicated on a neoconservative strategy to use military force to gain
dominant influence over oil-rich Iraq and to eliminate any possible threat
to Israel's security. He also described how former Ambassador Joseph
Wilson's public denouncement of Bush administration claims that Iraq had
attempted to buy uranium from the African nation Niger for their nuclear
weapons, led to the White House outing of Wilson's wife as a CIA
operative. The public disclosure is a felony. Sources: "Taking the Fall
for Iraq," Miami Herald, June 7, 2004; "Critics Question Credibility of
FBI Investigation into White House Leak Exposing CIA Operative," Between
The Lines, Week Ending Oct. 17, 2003. (Needs RealPlayer)

Roger Morris, a retired diplomat who quit over Nixon's invasion of
Cambodia, sent out a call to Americans on the front lines of the Foreign
Service, asking them to resign from the Bush administration, which Morris
describes as "the worst regime by far in the history of the republic."
Source: "A Call to Conscience," Common Dreams.org, May 25, 2004

National Intelligence Council, said Bush disregarded intelligence reports
that prior to the invasion of Iraq a war could unleash a violent
insurgency and rising anti-U.S. sentiment in the Middle East. Sources:
"Bush Ignored Warnings on Iraq Insurgency Threat Before Invasion:
Intelligence suggested country faced years of tumult," the Guardian/UK,
Sept. 29, 2004; "CIA Analysis Holds Bleak Vision for Iraq's Future," The
Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Sept. 16, 2004

Paul O'Neill, former Bush administration treasury secretary. He said in
his book, "The Price of Loyalty," that 10 days after the inauguration --
eight months before 9/11 -- there was a "conviction" in the administration
that Saddam Hussein was a "target" for removal. Source: "Bush Sought 'Way'
To Invade Iraq," by CBS News, Jan. 11, 2004

Kevin Phillips, a one-time Republican strategist. Wrote in his book,
"American Dynasty," that "[T]he Bush family has used all its resources to
create a political dynasty that has gained the White House to further its
family and ideological agenda, which would have horrified America's
founding fathers. They, after all, led a revolution against a succession
of royal Georges." Phillips also discusses the involvement of Prescott
Bush and his father-in-law with Nazi-era German holding companies and how
they became useful resources for the CIA during the Cold War. Source:
"American Dynasty: Aristocracy, Fortune and the Politics of Deceit in the
House of Bush," Viking, 2004

"What Powers the Bush Clan?" book review by William O'Rourke, Sun-Times,
Jan. 18, 2004. O'Rourke's review describes Phillips shock over the Bush
family's associations and political actions: "The result is an unusual and
unflattering portrait of a great family (in power, not morality) that has
built a base over the course of the twentieth century in the back
corridors of the new military-industrial complex and in close association
with the growing national security establishment. In doing so, the family
has threaded its way through damning political and armaments scandals and,
since the 1980s, faint hints, never more, of acts that in another climate
might have led to presidential impeachment. Phillips also discusses the
involvement of Prescott Bush and his father-in-law with Nazi-era German
holding companies and how they became useful resources for the CIA during
the Cold War."

Scott Ritter, the former lead inspector for the U.N. Special Commission
(UNSCOM) Concealment and Investigations team in Iraq for seven years and a
registered Republican. He opposed the war before it was launched, saying
Iraq posed no threat to the U.S. He also said Saddam Hussein's secular
government was the antithesis of an Islamic fundamentalist, anti-American
regime and had no links to the Sept. 11 attack. He blames senior officials
in the Bush administration -- ideologues in pursuit of global hegemony --
for a war in Iraq that the "president elected to fight under false
pretense." Source: "The Iraq War and The Bush Administration's Pursuit of
Global Domination," Counterpoint, WPKN Radio, Sept. 15, 2003. (Needs
RealPlayer)

Michael Scheuer (originally "Anonymous,") a 22-year veteran CIA official,
serving in a senior counterterrorism post and who headed the special
office to track Osama bin Laden and his followers from 1996 to 1999. He
has written a book, "Imperial Hubris," in which he warns that the U.S. is
losing the war against radical Islam and that the Iraq invasion has played
into the enemy's hands. Sources: "Book by C.I.A. Officer Says U.S. is
Losing Fight Against Terror," New York Times, June 23, 2004; "Bush told he
is playing into Bin Laden's hands," The Guardian/UK, June 29, 2004; "CIA
Felt Pressure to Alter Iraq Data, Author Says Agency analysts were
repeatedly ordered to redo their studies of Al Qaeda ties to Hussein
regime, a terrorism expert charges," the Los Angeles Times, July 1, 2004;
"Boston Phoenix' IDs 'Anonymous' CIA Officer," Editor & Publisher, June
30, 2004

Security Scholars for a Sensible Foreign Policy,a nonpartisan group of
experts in the field of national security and international politics. Over
725 foreign affairs specialists in the United States and allied countries
have signed an open letter opposing the Bush administration's foreign
policy and calling urgently for a change of course.
www.sensibleforeignpolicy.net

Gen. Eric Shinseki, former Army chief of staff. He was criticized by
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Deputy Defense Secretary Paul
Wolfowitz after he told Congress in February 2003 that the occupation
could require "several hundred thousand troops." Sources: "Ex-Army Boss:
Pentagon Won't Admit Reality in Iraq," U.S.AToday, June 3, 2003; "The High
Costs of War with Iraq: The Administration Plays Russian Roulette with Our
Economy," CommonDreams.org, March 1, 2003.

Clare Short, Britain's former international development secretary. She
resigned from Prime Minister Tony Blair's government in protest after the
Iraq invasion, and said she saw transcripts of conversations clandestinely
recorded in UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's office. Source: "UK Spies
Bugged UN Chief, Claims Short," The Independent/UK, Feb. 26, 2004

Tami Silicio, and her husband, David Landry, employees of Pentagon
contractor Maytag Aircraft. They were fired because they "violated
Department of Defense and company policies by photographing and releasing
for publication, images of the flag-draped caskets of American servicemen
and women being returned to the United States," defying a Bush
administration ban on public dissemination of such photos. Source: "Bush
Afraid to Let American People See Deadly Reality of Needless War," Niagara
Falls Reporter, April 27, 2004

Greg Thielmann, former chief of the U.S. State Department's bureau of
intelligence and research (INR) and aide to Secretary of State Colin
Powell. He told journalist Sydney Blumenthal, "Everyone in the
intelligence community knew that the White House couldn't care less about
any information suggesting that there were no WMDs or that the UN
inspectors were very effective." Source: "How Bush Misled the World," by
Sydney Blumenthal, The Age, Feb. 6, 2004

Mike West, a Halliburton labor foreman in Iraq, was paid $82,000 a year
but claims he never had any laborers to supervise. "They said just log 12
hours a day and walk around and look busy," he said. "OK, so we did."
Source: "New Halliburton Waste Alleged," MSNBC.com, July 1, 2004

Thomas White, former Army secretary. He said in May 2003 that senior
defense officials "are unwilling to come to grips" with the scale of the
postwar U.S. obligation in Iraq. A series of public feuds with Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld led to his firing. Source: "Ex-Army Boss:
Pentagon Won't Admit Reality in Iraq," U.S.AToday, June 3, 2003

Andrew Wilkie: former Australian Office of National Assessments
intelligence analyst. He resigned, arguing that based on U.S. and other
intelligence information he saw, there was no justification for war on
Iraq. Source: "Australian Government Rocked by Resignation of Anti-War
Official," InterPress Service, March 12, 2003

Joseph Wilson, a former U.S. ambassador. He investigated and refuted the
White House claim that Iraq tried to buy uranium in Niger for a nuclear
weapons program, and later publicly accused the White House of ignoring
his findings. His wife, Valerie Plame, was then outed by columnist Robert
Novak as a covert CIA operative, reportedly by a White House leak. Wilson
believes the case, now before a grand jury, will reveal that the White
House exposed his wife's identity to punish him and intimidate other
critics from going public. Sources: "CIA Leak is Big Trouble for Bush,"
The Nation, Sept. 29, 2003; "Former Envoy Talks in Book About Source of
C.I.A. Leak," New York Times, April 30, 2004.

Ann Wright, a career Foreign Service officer and Army Reserves colonel.
The day of the invasion of Iraq, Wright resigned from the State Department
in protest over several foreign and domestic Bush administration policies.
She accused the administration of shunning the need for international
cooperation on the Iraq issue and of "leaving the organizations
[particularly the United Nations] in tatters that we have helped build."
Wright also criticized the curtailment of civil liberties in the U.S.
since the Sept. 11 attacks. Source: "Diplomat Resigns to Protest War,"
www.govexec.com, March 21, 2003

Anthony Zinni, former commander-in-chief of U.S. Central Command, has
co-written a book with Tom Clancy, "Battle Ready." He criticizes the
handling of postwar Iraq and the abuses of the U.S. military: "In the
lead-up to the Iraq War and its later conduct, I saw at a minimum, true
dereliction, negligence, and irresponsibility, at worse, lying,
incompetence and corruption." Sources: "Chaos Under Heaven, and More to
Come," Inter Press Service, Jan. 25, 2004; "Battle Ready" book review,
Publisher's Weekly.


Others:

"Uncovered: The Whole Truth About the Iraq War" documentary by Robert
Greenwald, features 23 former CIA and other defense intelligence agents
who are speaking out about the Bush White House's justification for the
Iraq invasion.

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