Ex-CIA director says administration stretched facts on Iraq

Wed Jun 18, 7:28 AM ET  

John Diamond USA TODAY 

WASHINGTON -- Former CIA (news - web sites) director Stansfield Turner
accused the Bush administration Tuesday of ''overstretching the facts''
about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction in making its case for invading
that country. 


Turner's broadside adds the retired admiral's name to a list of former
intelligence professionals concerned that the CIA and its intelligence
reports were manipulated to justify the war. Since Baghdad fell April 9,
U.S. forces have been unable to find chemical and biological weapons the
White House said were in Iraq (news - web sites).


Turner, who headed the CIA under President Carter, paused for a long
moment when asked by reporters whether current CIA Director George Tenet
should resign. ''That's a tough one,'' Turner said. The problem did not
appear to lie with the CIA, he said, but Tenet should consider resigning
if he lost the confidence of President Bush (news - web sites) or the
American people. A CIA spokesman declined to comment.


Turner suggested Tenet should tread cautiously because CIA directors
''can be made the fall guy'' by administrations when policy judgments
based on intelligence go wrong.


Turner said, ''There is no question in my mind (policymakers) distorted
the situation, either because they had bad intelligence or because they
misinterpreted it.''


Public criticism of an administration's handling of intelligence is rare
from former CIA directors, who typically give the benefit of the doubt
to those with full access to classified information.


President Bush has given no indication he is having second thoughts
about his decision to invade Iraq.


''We made it clear to the dictator of Iraq that he must disarm,'' Bush
said in a speech Tuesday at Northern Virginia Community College in
Annandale. ''He chose not to do so, so we disarmed him. And I know
there's a lot of revisionist history now going on, but one thing is
certain. He is no longer a threat to the free world.''


Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein (news - web sites) was known to have
chemical and biological weapons in the early and mid-1990s. Late last
year, Iraq claimed to have none left, though it offered no proof of
having disposed of them. At the White House, spokesman Ari Fleischer
(news - web sites) called it ''fanciful'' and ''a fit of imagination''
to believe that Saddam would have destroyed his arsenal but neglected to
tell the world. Seeking to counter partisan criticism about the
intelligence used to justify war, Fleischer said Democrats, including
President Clinton (news - web sites), flatly asserted that Iraq had
weapons of mass destruction in the late 1990s.


''The president has every confidence in the intelligence and that
weapons will be found,'' Fleischer said. ''The president has full faith
in Director Tenet.''


British Prime Minister Tony Blair (news - web sites) has been battling
similar criticism about alleged misuse of intelligence. Robin Cook, who
resigned from Blair's Cabinet on the eve of the U.S.-British invasion of
Iraq, said Tuesday that searchers in Iraq had found no sign either of
equipment or a workforce for making weapons of mass destruction.


''It is inconceivable that both could have been kept concealed for the
two months we have been in occupation of Iraq,'' Cook told a
parliamentary inquiry into Iraq intelligence matters.


Turner's comments come a month after a group of retired U.S.
intelligence officers wrote President Bush to ''express deep concern''
over alleged misuse of intelligence to justify the war.


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