<< "What's 'right' is relative," Mr. [Daniel] Gallington said. "We always
have to go with the most dangerous possible scenario with these guys. The
one that troubles me most is that Saddam did know we were going to invade
and he sent [weapons material] to possibly Syria. So, if you can't find it
in country and you can't figure out how or where he disposed of it, then we
should be looking elsewhere. It is extremely dangerous that we can't
precisely account for any of it, at all. This is the point that all the
commentators, in and out of government, seem to be missing." >>

The Washington Times
February 9, 2004
Intelligence hit mark on nuclear ambitions
By Rowan Scarborough

U.S. intelligence agencies may have wrongly estimated Iraqi weapons
stockpiles, but on other key assessments--such as Saddam Hussein's nuclear
ambitions--the CIA was right, say current and former government officials.

Proponents of ousting the Iraqi dictator say the fact Saddam was actively
seeking an atomic bomb and operating chemical and biological programs were
sufficient reasons to go to war.

The main benchmark for judging the CIA is a National Intelligence
Estimate (NIE) completed in October 2002 and partially declassified by
the White House in July.

The NIE--which is a consensus, but not a unanimous finding--by the CIA and
other intelligence agencies, offered several main points: that Iraq
possessed stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons; that it was
reconstituting its nuclear-bomb research and that Saddam still wanted atomic
weapons; that it was producing missiles beyond the range allowed by United
Nations resolutions; and that research continued into chemical and
biological agents.

On the first point, David Kay, who resigned last month as chief CIA
weapons inspector in Iraq, concluded the Bush administration was wrong.
He said the group he ran, the Iraq Survey Group, found no evidence of
stockpiles of chemical or biological weapons since the 1990s. (CIA
Director George J. Tenet says inspections continue and that the jury is
still out.)

But on the nuclear issue, Mr. Kay said the CIA was right on some
important points. The NIE said: "If Baghdad acquires sufficient fissile
material from abroad, it could make a nuclear weapon within several
months to a year."

Mr. Kay, at a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing, said: "If they
managed to acquire a sufficient amount of plutonium or high-enriched
uranium from a place like the former Soviet Union stockpile, how long
would it take to fashion that into a nuclear explosive device? And I
think that estimate was actually fairly conservative."

He added, "Fortunately, from my point of view, Operation Iraqi Freedom
intervened, and we don't know how or how fast that would have gone ahead."

The NIE stated that "reconstruction is under way" of the Iraq nuclear
program.

Mr. Kay seemed to side with this view. "It was in the early stages of
renovating the program, building new buildings," he said. "It was not a
reconstituted, full-blown nuclear program."

In addition to beginning the construction of sites to build atomic
bombs, Iraq had brought together nuclear scientists who were already
working together and conducting experiments.

In 1991, Iraqi officials since have acknowledged, Baghdad was perhaps
less than a year away from producing sufficient fissile material to
produce Saddam's first nuclear bomb. The Desert Storm air war, and
subsequent U.N. inspectors, foiled those plans.

"Given their history," Mr. Kay said, "it was certainly an emerging
program that I would not have looked forward to their continuing to
pursue. It was not yet up as a full nuclear-production site again."

The NIE also stated, "Iraq is continuing, and in some areas expanding,
its chemical, biological, nuclear and missile programs contrary to U.N.
resolutions."

On the missile issue, Mr. Kay found the NIE was correct.

"The missile program was actually moving ahead," he testified. "I think
you will have ... pretty compelling evidence that Saddam had the
intention of continuing the pursuit of [weapons of mass destruction]
when the opportunity arose, and that the first start on that, the long
pole in the tent, was this restart of the long-range missile program."

Mr. Kay, while not finding stockpiles, found proof that Saddam had
programs in place to restart production of chemical and biological
weapons. For example, Mr. Kay discovered a program to find a substitute
for a precursor for deadly VX nerve agent. And there was research into
the deadly anthrax germ. "That's WMD-related work," he said.

All such work violated U.N. resolutions.

Daniel Gallington, an analyst at the conservative Potomac Institute and
former counsel to the Senate Intelligence Committee, said Baghdad became
skilled in the 1990s at counterintelligence that kept the CIA from
developing spies.

"What's 'right' is relative," Mr. Gallington said. "We always have to go
with the most dangerous possible scenario with these guys. The one that
troubles me most is that Saddam did know we were going to invade and he
sent [weapons material] to possibly Syria. So, if you can't find it in
country and you can't figure out how or where he disposed of it, then we
should be looking elsewhere. It is extremely dangerous that we can't
precisely account for any of it, at all. This is the point that all the
commentators, in and out of government, seem to be missing."

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