If this is true... this is highly embarassing.

JDG

Analysts Say Threat Warnings Toned Down 
Guerrilla Tactics Were Predicted 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A34283-2003Mar26.html

By Walter Pincus and Dana Priest
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, March 27, 2003; Page A27 


Intelligence analysts at the CIA and Pentagon warned
the Bush administration that U.S. troops would face
significant resistance from Iraqi irregular forces
employing guerrilla tactics, but those views have not
been adequately reflected in the administration's
public predictions about how difficult a war might go,
according to current and former intelligence
officials.

CIA analysts "thought there was a good chance we would
be forced to fight our way through everything," said
one intelligence official who sat in on many
briefings. "They were much more cautious about it
being an easy situation."

With U.S. and British troops being forced to defend a
more than 200-mile supply line from the Kuwaiti border
to U.S. troops 50 miles from Baghdad and to fend off
small-scale attacks by the Iraqi irregular forces,
analysts at the CIA and the Defense Intelligence
Agency are complaining that their reports would be
softened as they moved to the White House. "The
caveats would be dropped and the edges filed off," the
intelligence official said.

"The intelligence we gathered before the war
accurately reflected what the troops are seeing out
there now," one military intelligence official said.
"The question is whether the war planners and
policymakers took adequate notice of it in preparing
the plan." At least one pre-war intelligence analysis
described potential threats of Iraqi irregular forces
mining harbors, planting bombs and firing at troops
while disguised in civilian clothes, according to one
senior intelligence official.

A CIA spokesman said the intelligence agencies
presented President Bush and senior national security
officials with "the full debate," including a National
Intelligence Estimate that analyzed the scenarios that
U.S. forces would likely encounter during a war.
"Senior intelligence officials have all had their
say," the spokesman said.

One senior administration official said the consensus
among intelligence agencies is that Saddam's Fedayeen,
a Baath Party militia commanded by President Saddam
Hussein's son Uday numbers about 25,000 members. The
force has led a series of guerrilla-style attacks on
coalition forces in southern Iraq cities.

The official said the paramilitary force is viewed as
a potential "major annoyance" to the U.S. war plan at
the moment, but one that could expand into a
significant problem. Because U.S. and other foreign
media have heavily reported the attacks, the official
said, "they could become a major factor in the public
relations battle during these early days of the war."

"We look at them as one of Saddam Hussein's tools,
particularly in his trying to lure us into urban
warfare," one senior intelligence official said
yesterday. But he added that they could become more
important than they are "if the media turns them into
the equivalent of the black pajama Vietcong,"
referring to the guerrilla force that caused many U.S.
casualties in the Vietnam War.

That view was echoed at the Pentagon yesterday by Maj.
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, who, when asked about the
firefights involving the fedayeen, described them as
"fairly limited incidents [that] take on a greater
perceived value than they are."

The fedayeen, also known as "martyrs of Saddam" or
"men of sacrifice," were organized in 1995 by Uday
Hussein. In addition to the paramilitary force, there
are an additional 3,000 in a reserve made up of Baath
Party members and some Iraqi journalists, according to
an intelligence official.

"[Policymakers] were told the fedayeen would fight
more fanatically than regular army forces, using
conventional or unconventional means," one analyst
said yesterday. "We did not predict the notoriety they
have already achieved."

Pentagon spokesmen struggled yesterday to deal with
the media focus on the irregular forces. Victoria
Clarke, the Pentagon's chief spokeswoman, described
them as "thugs" who "have done extraordinary things
which go outside all laws and norms." If captured, she
said, they would be treated as war criminals.

Brig. Gen. Vincent K. Brooks, deputy director of
operations for the U.S. Central Command, which is
running the war, described the activities of the
fedayeen who operate either in or out of uniform as
"more akin to the behaviors of global terrorists."

CIA and Pentagon analysts disagree about how long the
fedayeen and other units, such as the 15,000 members
of the Special Republican Guard and the Special
Security Organization, a force of 10,000 that enforces
Baath Party orders, would continue to fight.

CIA analysts believe these groups will fight to the
end, whether Hussein is alive or not. "This is about
surviving for them," said one former senior Iraqi
analyst who still consults with the Pentagon. "A large
percent of them acted like secret police and fear what
the Americans would do with them."

One Pentagon official said the consensus in military
intelligence is that the fedayeen will remain a threat
only so long as Hussein remains in power. So the key
to getting rid of them is getting rid of Hussein, the
official said.

"The consensus is, when the regime is gone, these guys
will be gone," he said. "They won't have any role in a
postwar Iraq."

The key, he added, is remaining focused on "breaking
the back" of the inner circle around the Iraqi
president. While U.S. forces will be advancing with
even greater caution in the face of the fedayeen
threat, he said, they will continue to move toward
Baghdad, which he described as "the center of gravity"
in Iraq.

"Once we break the back of the regime, these thugs
will become less of a threat," he said. "We need to
eliminate the perception that there is a central
governing body that is loyal to Saddam Hussein and his
regime."



� 2003 The Washington Post Company

=====
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
John D. Giorgis               -                  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Tonight I have a message for the brave and oppressed people of Iraq:
 Your enemy is not surrounding your country � your enemy is ruling your  
 country. And the day he and his regime are removed from power will be    
           the day of your liberation."  -George W. Bush 1/29/03

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