Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Ex-Analyst Tells a Tale of Twisted Iraq Intelligence
Paul Pillar lived through the quirks of the Reagan administration, when Soviet bogeymen were thought to lurk behind most Third World uprisings.Yet in nearly 28 years as a CIA uber-analyst, he says he never saw the kind of politicking with raw intelligence as under President Bush and Vice President Cheney.
In the lead-up to war in Iraq, a stream of questions and data requests were coming out of the vice president's office, and out of other offices at the White House and Pentagon, said Pillar.
But they weren't for just the facts, please.
The questions were slanted to cull intelligence to "sell" the idea of war with Iraq, says Pillar, interviewed Thursday at Kent State University after a symposium.
They were not, "Where does al-Qaida get its strength?' " says Pillar, "but rather, What can you tell me about any links between Saddam's regime and al-Qaida?'-- which is a different sort of question."
Pillar first went public with his criticisms early last year, shortly after leaving the agency. He wrote a scathing article for Foreign Affairs magazine, accusing the Bush administration of "cherry-picking" its Iraq intelligence.
Some on the right pilloried him for "cherry-picking" his critique for political reasons. Yet Pillar's allegations parallel similar charges about the Iraq war selling job now being made by ex-CIA Director George Tenet.
After a tour in Vietnam and a doctorate in political science, Pillar spent nearly his whole career at the CIA.
By the time of the Iraq war, he was the U.S. intelligence community's national intelligence officer for the Near East and South Asia. In that position, he would have been involved in any major U.S. intelligence assessments concerning a post-Saddam Iraq.
"And there were never any [such] requests by the administration," says Pillar, barking a short, incredulous laugh. "We, on our own initiative, offered exactly such assessments."
In January 2003, two months before the Iraq attack, the U.S. intelligence community produced two still-classified "key intelligence community assessments" on challenges that would face whoever ran Iraq after an overthrow, Pillar says. The grim predictions were ignored.
Parts of those findings have since been leaked, but Pillar says he eagerly awaits the day when the reports become public, "because I think they will be shown to be pretty much on the mark."
He may not have long to wait.
Wendy Morigi, spokeswoman for Sen. Jay Rockefeller, Democratic chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, says the declassified reports could be released by month's end. They form an addendum to the committee's next installment in its Phase II examination of possible political interference in pre-Iraq war intelligence efforts, Morigi said. This installment deals with prewar intelligence predictions.
Still to come is the explosive final Phase II report, a dissection of key officials' statements in the run-up to war and how they accorded with the intelligence. In August 2002, for instance, Vice President Cheney said Saddam had reconstituted his nuclear weapons program -- an issue upon which the intelligence community was divided.
Pillar "eschews" the word "lie" to describe such comments, but seems to acknowledge they were purposely tailored to mislead.
"The main dynamic that was occurring here was not so much a specific factual assertion that was knowingly false, which I think most of us, all would agree, is a lie, but rather the construction of bits and pieces of reporting of varying credibility with the express and obvious purpose of creating an impression that was incorrect."
Trying to link Saddam to 9/11 was the most obvious such effort, he said.
It wasn't said right out. Yet, after a plethora of hints, suggestions and a "steady drumbeat of Iraq, 9/11, al-Qaida," the desired conclusion of collusion was successfully implanted in the public's mind, says Pillar.
Through it all, Cheney became the most powerful vice president in U.S. history, according to Pillar, with a staff of advisers and analysts who dwarfed the president's own security advisers, in terms of influence and reach.
Pillar contends Cheney's staff actually "supplanted the regular National Security Council staff in terms of driving policy on these key points of interest, above all, the Iraq war."
Sullivan is The Plain Dealer's foreign-affairs columnist and an associate editor of the editorial pages.
© 2007 The Plain Dealer



8 Comments so far
Show AllCheney has always been more important to the Republican machine than the ignorant frontman Shrub. On 9/11, who was immediately sequestered in a vast underground bunker and who was left for over 15 minutes listening to children read? Because it was Bush, I didn't really give a hoot, but it seems to me the Secret Service was criminally negligent in not rushing the President of the US to safety immediately, like they did with Cheney.
Bu$h and Cheney committed war crimes, which is what happens when you go to war without just cause. Just cause has six conditions, I can't remember them all, but number 1 is defense from immediate attack. An immediate attack could never happen because even if Iraq had some weapons, it had no way of delivering them. These fuckers are war criminals. Mother Jones Magazine reported all this shit three years ago.
Anyone who has not seen "The Corporation", please do so on YouTube or other site.
Elizabeth Sullivan -
***In the lead-up to war in Iraq, a stream of questions and data requests were coming out of the vice president's office, and out of other offices at the White House and Pentagon, said Pillar.
But they weren't for just the facts, please.***
Not too much unlike the covert operations operated from the basement, under Major Patriot, barking dog, Oliver North and CIA Chief William Casey. Casey, of course, conveniently expired at the height of the Contra inquiry, before he could spill all the beans. Today, Ollie's covert nest has simply migrated upstairs into the office of greater Vice.
Maat, Best Wishes and Hope
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk1vEuhBuEU
The data didn't match the accusations before he launched a pre-emptive strike against Iraq! If most American had bothered to get information from both sides of the aisle they would have known what Bush was doing! So most of what has come out about the prewar intelligence is no surprise to a lot of us. But, at the time people in this country were in the 'war mode'! They wanted to tromp anyone who got in their way. He worked them into a frenzy with made up intelligence. Anyone who wasn't for the war was 'UnAmerican' and ' unpatriotic'! I know I was called that a few times for opposing the war! To be honest about it, American's were sucked in by a con artist! Most 'never do well' people like Bush are first class con artist's! That's how they manage to get through life until they are finally exposed. His daddy's money and influence didn't hurt any.
"Pillar spent nearly his whole career at the CIA."
It is sad to imagine this.
Just for the record: Cheney did, in fact, explicitly say, over and over again, that he had intelligence that linked Saddam to 9/11. Pilar has been in government too long. The lies are clear enough -- as they were to the House and Senate Intelligence Committees before the war! It's time not just to speak out but to point the finger at all the folks responsible for this war -- Republicans and Democrats, bureaucrats and pols -- and demand a reckoning.
Countless people in positions to know attempted to tell the world that Bush & Cheney were lying... or at least twisting their wording to sell the war on false pretenses.
Most of the American Press refused to hear it.
"60 Minutes" ran a fascinating story entitled "Selling the War" on February 10, 2003... amazingly, Scott Pelley showed interviews with several high ranking officials who said the information being spread about Iraq was wrong.
Congressman Ron Paul, Republican from Texas was one of the loudest voices in Congress that was pointing out the distortions... on September 10th, 2002, Paul listed 34 questions from the floor of the House that pointed up the lies. He was called a terrorist-sympathyzer.
Congressman Paul is now running for President and no one is paying any attention now either.
Cheney knew just exactly how to discredit anyone who spoke up against his lies... just call them a traitor.