[why is it that the US should even be allowed to join the UN human
rights organization?]

 Powell aide says torture helped build Iraq war case

May 14, 2009 -- Updated 0311 GMT (1111 HKT)

By Matt Smith, CNN

(CNN) -- Finding a "smoking gun" linking Iraq and al Qaeda became the
main purpose of the abusive interrogation program the Bush
administration authorized in 2002, a former State Department official
told CNN on Thursday. Dick Cheney's office ordered use of
"alternative" techniques against CIA's recommendations, aide says.

Dick Cheney's office ordered use of "alternative" techniques against
CIA's recommendations, aide says.

The allegation was included in an online broadside aimed at former
Vice President Dick Cheney by Lawrence Wilkerson, chief of staff for
then-Secretary of State Colin Powell. In it, Wilkerson wrote that the
interrogation program began in April and May of 2002, and then-Vice
President Cheney's office kept close tabs on the questioning.

"Its principal priority for intelligence was not aimed at preempting
another terrorist attack on the U.S. but discovering a smoking gun
linking Iraq and al Qaeda," Wilkerson wrote in The Washington Note, an
online political journal.

Wilkerson, a retired Army colonel, said his accusation is based on
information from current and former officials. He said he has been
"relentlessly digging" since 2004, when Powell asked him to look into
the scandal surrounding the treatment of prisoners at Iraq's Abu
Ghraib prison.

"I couldn't walk into a courtroom and prove this to anybody, but I'm
pretty sure it's fairly accurate," he told CNN.

Most of Wilkerson's online essay criticizes Cheney's recent defense of
the "alternative" interrogation techniques the Bush administration
authorized for use against suspected terrorists. Cheney has argued the
interrogation program was legal and effective in preventing further
attacks on Americans.

Critics say the tactics amounted to the illegal torture of prisoners
in U.S. custody and have called for investigations of those who
authorized them.

Representatives of the former vice president declined comment on
Wilkerson's allegations. But Wilkerson told CNN that by early 2002,
U.S. officials had decided that "we had al Qaeda pretty much on the
run."

"The priority had turned to other purposes, and one of those purposes
was to find substantial contacts between al Qaeda and Baghdad," he
said.

The argument that Iraq could have provided weapons of mass destruction
to terrorists such as al Qaeda was a key element of the Bush
administration's case for the March 2003 invasion. But after the
invasion, Iraq was found to have dismantled its nuclear, chemical and
biological weapons programs, and the independent commission that
investigated the 2001 attacks found no evidence of a collaborative
relationship between the two entities.

Wilkerson wrote that in one case, the CIA told Cheney's office that a
prisoner under its interrogation program was now "compliant," meaning
agents recommended the use of "alternative" techniques should stop.

At that point, "The VP's office ordered them to continue the enhanced
methods," Wilkerson wrote.

"The detainee had not revealed any al Qaeda-Baghdad contacts yet. This
ceased only after Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, under waterboarding in Egypt,
'revealed' such contacts."

Al-Libi's claim that Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's government had
trained al Qaeda operatives in producing chemical and biological
weapons appeared in the October 2002 speech then-President Bush gave
when pushing Congress to authorize military action against Iraq. It
also was part of Powell's February 2003 presentation to the United
Nations on the case for war, a speech Powell has called a "blot" on
his record.

Al-Libi later recanted the claim, saying it was made under torture by
Egyptian intelligence agents, a claim Egypt denies. He died last week
in a Libyan prison, reportedly a suicide, Human Rights Watch reported.

Stacy Sullivan, a counterterrorism adviser for the U.S.-based group,
called al-Libi's allegation "pivotal" to the Bush administration's
case for war, as it connected Baghdad to the terrorist organization
behind the 2001 attacks on New York and Washington.

And an Army psychiatrist assigned to support questioning of suspected
terrorists at the Guantanamo Bay prison camp in Cuba told the
service's inspector-general that interrogators there were trying to
connect al Qaeda and Iraq.

"This is my opinion," Maj. Paul Burney told the inspector-general's
office. "Even though they were giving information and some of it was
useful, while we were there a large part of the time we were focused
on trying to establish a link between aI Qaeda and Iraq and we were
not being successful in establishing a link between aI Qaeda and Iraq.
The more frustrated people got in not being able to establish this
link ... there was more and more pressure to resort to measures that
might produce more immediate results."

Burney's account was included in a Senate Armed Services Committee
report released in April. Other interrogators reported pressure to
produce intelligence "but did not recall pressure to identify links
between Iraq and al Qaeda," the Senate report states.

Cheney criticized Powell during a television interview over the
weekend, saying he no longer considers Powell a fellow Republican
after his former colleague endorsed Democratic candidate Barack Obama
in the 2008 presidential election.

Wilkerson said he is not speaking for his former boss and does not
know whether Powell shares his views.

-- 
Jim Devine / "If heart-aches were commercials, we'd all be on TV." -- John Prine
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