-Caveat Lector-

http://www.antiwar.com/orig/leopold11.html

A half-dozen former CIA agents investigating prewar
intelligence have found that a secret Pentagon
committee, set up by Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld in October 2001, manipulated reams of
intelligence information prepared by the spy agency on
the so-called Iraqi threat and then delivered it to
top White House officials who used it to win support
for a war in Iraq.

More than a dozen calls to the White House, the CIA,
the National Security Council and the Pentagon for
comment were not returned.

The ad-hoc committee, called the Office of Special
Plans, headed by Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul
Wolfowitz, Undersecretary of Defense for Policy
Douglas Feith and other Pentagon hawks, described the
worst-case scenarios in terms of Iraq's alleged
stockpile of chemical and biological weapons and
claimed the country was close to acquiring nuclear
weapons, according to four of the CIA agents, speaking
on the condition of anonymity because the information
is still classified, who conducted a preliminary view
of the intelligence.

The agents said the Office of Special Plans is
responsible for providing the National Security
Council and Vice President Dick Cheney, National
Security Adviser Condoleeza Rice and Rumsfeld with the
bulk of the intelligence information on Iraq's weapons
program that turned out to be wrong. But White House
officials used the information it received from the
Office of Special Plans to win support from the public
and Congress to start a war in Iraq even though the
White House knew much of the information was dubious,
the CIA agents said.

For example, the agents said the Office of Special
Plans told the National Security Council last year
that Iraq's attempt to purchase aluminum tubes were
part of a clandestine program to build an atomic bomb.
The Office of Special Plans leaked the information to
the New York Times last September. Shortly after the
story appeared in the paper, Bush and Rice both
pointed to the story as evidence that Iraq posed a
grave threat to the United States and to its neighbors
in the Middle East, even though experts in the field
of nuclear science, the CIA and the State Department
advised the White House that the aluminum tubes were
not designed for an atomic bomb.

Furthermore, the CIA had been unable to develop any
links between Iraq and the terrorist group al-Qaeda.
But under Feith's direction, the Office of Special
Plans came up with information of such links by
looking at existing intelligence reports that they
felt might have been overlooked or undervalued. The
Special Plans office provided the information to the
Pentagon and to the White House. During a Pentagon
briefing last year, Rumsfeld said he had "bulletproof"
evidence that Iraq was harboring al-Qaeda terrorists.

At a Pentagon news conference last year, Rumsfeld said
of the intelligence gathered by Special Plans: "Gee,
why don't you go over and brief George Tenet? So they
did. They went over and briefed the CIA. So there's no
there's no mystery about all this."

CIA analysts listened to the Pentagon team, nodded
politely, and said, "Thank you very much," said one
government official, according to a July 20 report in
the New York Times. That official said the briefing
did not change the agency's reporting or analysis in
any substantial way.

Several current and former intelligence officials told
the Times that they felt pressure to tailor reports to
conform to the administration's views, "particularly
the theories Feith's group developed."

Moreover, the agents said the Office of Special Plans
routinely rewrote the CIA's intelligence estimates on
Iraq's weapons programs, removing caveats such as
"likely," "probably" and "may" as a way of depicting
the country as an imminent threat. The agents would
not identify the names of the individuals at the
Office of Special Plans who were responsible for
providing the White House with the wrong intelligence.
But, the agents said, the intelligence gathered by the
committee sometimes went directly to the White House,
Cheney's office and to Rice without first being vetted
by the CIA.

In cases where the CIA's intelligence wasn't rewritten
the Office of Special Plans provided the White House
with questionable intelligence it gathered from Iraqi
exiles from the Iraqi National Congress, a group
headed by Ahmad Chalabi, a person whom the CIA has
publicly said is unreliable, the CIA agents said.

More than a dozen CIA agents responsible for writing
intelligence reports for the agency told the former
CIA agents investigating the accuracy of the
intelligence reports said they were pressured by the
Pentagon and the Office of Special Plans to hype and
exaggerate intelligence to show Iraq as being an
imminent threat to the security of the U.S.

The White House has been dogged by questions for
nearly a month on whether the intelligence information
it had relied upon was accurate and whether top White
House officials knowingly used unreliable information
to build a case for war. The furor started when
President Bush said in his January State of the Union
address that Iraq had tried to purchase uranium ore
from Africa. Bush credited British intelligence for
the claims, but the intelligence was based on forged
documents. The Office of Special Plans is responsible
for advising the White House to allow Bush to use the
uranium claims in his speech, according to Democratic
Senators and a CIA agent who are privy to classified
information surrounding the issue.

CIA Director George Tenet took responsibility last
week for allowing Bush to cite the information,
despite the fact that he had warned the Rice's office
that the claims were likely wrong. Earlier this week,
Stephen Hadley, an aide to Rice, said he received two
memos from the CIA last year and before Bush's State
of the Union address alerting him to the fact that the
uranium information should not be included in the
State of the Union address. Hadley, who also took
responsibility for failing to remove the uranium
reference from Bush's speech, said he forgot to advise
the President about the CIA's warnings.

Hawks in the White House and the Pentagon seized upon
the uranium claims before and after Bush's State of
the Union address, telling reporters, lawmakers and
leaders of other nations that the only thing that can
be done to disarm Saddam Hussein is a preemptive
strike against his country.

The only White House official who didn't cite the
uranium claim is Secretary of State Colin Powell.
According to Greg Thielmann, who resigned last year
from the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and
Research – whose duties included tracking Iraq's
weapons of mass destruction programs – he personally
told Powell that the allegations were "implausible"
and the intelligence it was based upon was a "stupid
piece of garbage."

Patrick Lang, the former head of worldwide human
intelligence gathering for the Defense Intelligence
Agency, which coordinates military intelligence, said
the Office of Special Plans "cherry-picked the
intelligence stream" in a bid to portray Iraq as an
imminent threat. Lang said in interviews with several
media outlets that the CIA had "no guts at all" to
resist the allegedly deliberate skewing of
intelligence by a Pentagon that he said was now
dominating U.S. foreign policy.

Vince Cannistraro, a former chief of CIA
counter-terrorist operations, said he has spoken to a
number of working intelligence officers who blame the
Pentagon for playing up "fraudulent" intelligence, "a
lot of it sourced from the Iraqi National Congress of
Ahmad Chalabi."

In an October 11, 2002 report in the Los Angeles
Times, several CIA agents "who brief Rumsfeld and
Wolfowitz on Iraq routinely return to the agency with
a long list of complaints and demands for new analysis
or shifts in emphasis."

"There is a lot of unhappiness with the analysis,"
usually because it is seen as not hard-line enough,
one intelligence official said, according to the
paper.

Another government official said CIA agents "are
constantly sent back by the senior people at Defense
and other places to get more, get more, get more to
make their case," the paper reported.

Now, as U.S. military casualties have surpassed that
of the first Gulf War, Democrats in Congress and the
Senate are starting to question whether other
information about the Iraqi threat cited by Bush and
his staff was reliable or part of a coordinated effort
by the White House to politicize the intelligence to
win support for a war.

The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence is
investigating the issue but so far neither the Senate
intelligence committee nor any Congressional committee
has launched an investigation into the Office of
Special Plans. But that may soon change.

Based on several news reports into the activities of
the Office of Special Plans, a number of lawmakers
have called for an investigation into the group.
Congresswoman Ellen Tauscher, D-California, who sits
on the House Armed Services Committee, wrote a letter
July 9 to Congressman Duncan Hunter, R-California,
chairman of the Armed Services committee, calling for
an investigation into the Office of Special Plans.

The Office of Special Plans should be examined to
determine whether it "complemented, competed with, or
detracted from the role of other United States
intelligence agencies respecting the collection and
use of intelligence relating to Iraqi weapons of mass
destruction and war planning. I also think it is
important to understand how having two intelligence
agencies within the Pentagon impacted the Department
of Defense's ability to focus the necessary resources
and manpower on pre-war planning and post-war
operations," Tauscher's letter said.

Congressman David Obey, D-Wisconsin, also called for a
widespread investigation of the Office of Special
Plans to find out whether there is any truth to the
claims that it willfully manipulated intelligence on
the Iraqi threat. During a Congressional briefing July
8, Obey described what he knew about Special Plans and
why an investigation into the group is crucial.

"A group of civilian employees in the Office of the
Secretary of Defense, all of whom are political
employees have long been dissatisfied with the
information produced by the established intelligence
agencies both inside and outside the Department. That
was particularly true, apparently, with respect to the
situation in Iraq," Obey said. "As a result, it is
reported that they established a special operation
within the Office of the Secretary of Defense, which
was named the Office of Special Plans. That office was
charged with collecting, vetting, and disseminating
intelligence completely outside the normal
intelligence apparatus. In fact, it appears that the
information collected by this office was in some
instances not even shared with the established
intelligence agencies and in numerous instances was
passed on to the National Security Council and the
President without having been vetted with anyone other
than (the Secretary of Defense)."

"It is further alleged that the purpose of this
operation was not only to produce intelligence more in
keeping with the pre-held views of those individuals,
but to intimidate analysts in the established
intelligence organizations to produce information that
was more supportive of policy decisions which they had
already decided to propose."

Jason Leopold is the former Los Angeles bureau chief
of Dow Jones Newswires. He is currently finishing a
book on the California energy crisis.




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