March 18, 2003
MEMORANDUM FOR: The President
FROM: Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
SUBJECT: Forgery, Hyperbole, Half-Truth: A Problem
We last wrote you immediately after Secretary of State Powell's UN speech on
February 5, in an attempt to convey our concerns that insufficient attention
was being given to wider intelligence-related issues at stake in the conflict
with Iraq. Your speech yesterday evening did nothing to allay those
concerns. And the acerbic exchanges of the past few weeks have left
the
United States more isolated than at any time in the history of the republic
and the American people more polarized.
Today we write with an increased sense of urgency and responsibility.
Responsibility, because you appear to be genuinely puzzled at the widespread
opposition to your policy on Iraq and because we have become convinced that
those of your advisers who do understand what is happening are reluctant to
be up front with you about it. As veterans of the CIA and other intelligence
agencies, the posture we find ourselves in is as familiar as it is
challenging. We feel a continuing responsibility to "tell it like it
is"-
or at least as we see it-without fear or favor. Better to hear it from
extended family than not at all; we hope you will take what follows in that
vein.
We cannot escape the conclusion that you have been badly
misinformed.
It was reported yesterday that your generals in the Persian Gulf area have
become increasingly concerned over sandstorms. To us this is a
metaphor for
the shifting sand-type "intelligence" upon which your policy has been built.
Worse still, it has become increasingly clear that the sharp drop in US
credibility abroad is largely a function of the rather transparent abuse of
intelligence reporting and the dubious conclusions drawn from that
reporting- the ones that underpin your decisions on Iraq.
Flashback to Vietnam
Many of us cut our intelligence teeth during the sixties. We
remember
the arrogance and flawed thinking that sucked us into the quagmire of
Vietnam. The French, it turned out, knew better. And they looked on
with
wonderment at Washington's misplaced confidence-its single-minded hubris, as
it embarked on a venture the French knew from their own experience could only
meet a dead end. This was hardly a secret. It was widely known that
the
French general sent off to survey the possibility of regaining Vietnam for
France after World War II reported that the operation would take a
half-million troops, and even then it could not be successful.
Nevertheless, President Johnson, heeding the ill-informed advice of
civilian leaders of the Pentagon with no experience in war, let himself get
drawn in past the point of no return. In the process, he played fast
and
loose with intelligence to get the Tonkin Gulf resolution through Congress so
that he could prosecute the war. To that misguided war he mortgaged
his
political future, which was in shambles when he found himself unable to
extricate himself from the morass.
Quite apart from what happened to President Johnson, the Vietnam War was
the most serious US foreign policy blunder in modern times.until now.
Forgery
In your state-of-the-union address you spoke of Iraq's pre-1991 focus on how
to "enrich uranium for a bomb" and added, "the British government has
learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium
from Africa." No doubt you have now been told that this information
was
based on bogus correspondence between Iraq and Niger. Answering a
question
on this last week, Secretary Powell conceded-with neither apology nor
apparent embarrassment-that the documents in question, which the US and UK
had provided to the UN to show that Iraq is still pursuing nuclear weapons,
were forgeries. Powell was short: "If that information is
inaccurate,
fine."
But it is anything but fine. This kind of episode inflicts serious
damage
on US credibility abroad-the more so, as it appears neither you nor your
advisers and political supporters are in hot pursuit of those
responsible.
Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Pat Roberts has shown little
enthusiasm for finding out what went awry. Committee Vice-Chairman,
Jay
Rockefeller, suggested that the FBI be enlisted to find the perpetrators of
the forgeries, which US officials say contain "laughable and child-like
errors," and to determine why the CIA did not recognize them as
forgeries.
But Roberts indicated through a committee spokeswoman that he believes it is "
inappropriate for the FBI to investigate at this point." Foreign
observers
do not have to be paranoid to suspect some kind of cover-up.
Who Did It? Who Cares!
Last week Wisconsin Congressman Dave Obey cited a recent press report
suggesting that a foreign government might be behind the forgeries as part of
an effort to build support for military action against Iraq and asked
Secretary Powell if he could identify that foreign government. Powell
said
he could not do so "with confidence." Nor did he appear in the
slightest
interested.
We think you should be. In the absence of hard evidence one looks for
those
with motive and capability. The fabrication of false documentation,
particularly what purports to be official correspondence between the agencies
of two governments, is a major undertaking requiring advanced technical
skills normally available only in a sophisticated intelligence service. And
yet the forgeries proved to be a sloppy piece of work.
Chalk it up to professional pride by (past) association, but unless the CIA's
capabilities have drastically eroded over recent years, the legendary
expertise of CIA technical specialists, combined with the crudeness of the
forgeries, leave us persuaded that the CIA did not craft the bogus documents.
Britain's MI-6 is equally adept at such things. Thus, except in the
unlikely event that crafting forgery was left to second-stringers, it seems
unlikely that the British were the original source.
We find ourselves wondering if amateur intelligence operatives in the
Pentagon basement and/or at 10 Downing Street were involved and need to be
called on the carpet. We would urge you strongly to determine the
provenance. This is not trivial matter. As our VIPS colleague (and
former
CIA Chief of Station) Ray Close has noted, "If anyone in Washington
deliberately practiced disinformation in this way against another element of
our own government or wittingly passed fabricated information to the UN, this
could do permanent damage to the commitment to competence and integrity on
which the whole American foreign policy process depends."
The lack of any strong reaction from the White House feeds the suspicion that
the US was somehow involved in, or at least condones, the forgery. It
is
important for you to know that, although credibility-destroying stories like
this rarely find their way into the largely cowed US media, they do grab
headlines abroad among those less disposed to give the US the benefit of the
doubt. As you know better than anyone, a year and a half after 9/11
the
still traumatized US public remains much more inclined toward unquestioning
trust in the presidency. Over time that child-like trust can be
expected to
erode, if preventive maintenance is not performed.and hyperbole shunned.
Hyperbole
The forgery aside, the administration's handling of the issue of whether Iraq
is continuing to develop nuclear weapons has done particularly severe damage
to US credibility. On October 7 your speechwriters had you claim that
Iraq
might be able to produce a nuclear weapon in less than a year. Formal
US
intelligence estimates, sanitized versions of which have been made public,
hold that Iraq will be unable to produce a nuclear weapon until the end of
the decade, if then. In that same speech you claimed that "the
evidence
indicates that Iraq is reconstituting its nuclear weapons program"-a claim
reiterated by Vice President Cheney on Meet the Press on March 16.
Reporting to the UN Security Council in recent months, UN chief nuclear
inspector Mohammed ElBaradei has asserted that the inspectors have found no
evidence that Iraq has reconstituted its nuclear weapons program. Some
suspect that the US does have such evidence but has not shared it with the UN
because Washington has been determined to avoid doing anything that could
help the inspections process succeed. Others believe the "evidence" to
be
of a piece with the forgery-in all likelihood crafted by Richard Perle's Pentagon Plumbers. Either way, the US takes a large black eye in
public
opinion abroad.
Then there are those controversial aluminum tubes which you have cited in
major speeches as evidence of a continuing effort on Iraq's part to produce
nuclear weapons. Aside from one analyst in the CIA and the people
reporting
to Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, there is virtually unanimous agreement within
the intelligence, engineering, and scientific communities with ElBaradei's
finding that "it was highly unlikely" that the tubes could have been used to
produce nuclear material. It is not enough for Vice President Cheney
to
dismiss ElBaradei's findings. Those who have followed these issues
closely
are left wondering why, if the vice president has evidence to support his own
view, he does not share it with the UN.
Intelligence Scant
In your speech yesterday evening you stressed that intelligence "leaves no
doubt that the Iraqi regime continues to possess and conceal some of the most
lethal weapons ever devised." And yet even the Washington Post, whose
editors have given unswerving support to your policy on Iraq, is awash with
reports that congressional leaders, for example, have been given no specific
intelligence on the number of banned weapons in Iraq or where they are
hidden. One official, who is regularly briefed by the CIA, commented
recently that such evidence as does exist is "only circumstantial."
Another said he questioned whether the administration is shaping intelligence
for political purposes. And, in a moment of unusual candor, one senior
intelligence analyst suggested that one reason why UN inspectors have had
such trouble finding weapons caches is that "there may not be much of a
stockpile."
Having backed off suggestions early last year that Iraq may already have
nuclear weapons, your administration continues to assert that Iraq has
significant quantities of other weapons of mass destruction. But by
all
indications, this is belief, not proven fact. This has led the likes
of
Thomas Powers, a very knowledgeable author on intelligence, to conclude that " the plain fact is that the Central Intelligence Agency doesn't know what Mr.
Hussein has, if anything, or even who knows the answers, if anyone."
This does not inspire confidence. What is needed is candor-candor of
the
kind you used in one portion of your speech on October 7. Just two p
aragraphs before you claimed that Iraq is "reconstituting" its nuclear
weapons program, you said, "Many people have asked how close Saddam Hussein
is to developing a nuclear weapon. Well, we don't know exactly, and
that's
the problem."
True, candor can weaken a case that one is trying to build. We are
reminded
of a remarkable sentence that leapt out of FBI Director Mueller's testimony
to the Senate Intelligence Committee on February 11-a sentence that does
actually parse, but nonetheless leaves one scratching one's head.
Mueller: "
The greatest threat is from al-Qaeda cells in the US that we have not yet
identified."
This seems to be the tack that CIA Director Tenet is taking behind closed
doors; i.e., the greatest threat from Iraq is the weapons we have not yet
identified but believe are there.
It is not possible to end this section on hyperbole without giving Oscars to
Secretaries Rumsfeld and Powell, who have outdone themselves in their zeal to
establish a connection between Iraq and al-Qaeda. You will recall that
Rumsfeld described the evidence-widely recognized to be dubious-as " bulletproof," and Powell characterized the relationship as a "partnership!"
Your assertion last evening that "the terrorist threat to America and the
world will be diminished the moment that Saddam Hussein is disarmed" falls
into the same category. We believe it far more likely that our country
is in for long periods of red and orange color codes.
Half-Truth
Here we shall limit ourselves to one example, although the number that could be adduced is legion.
You may recall that a Cambridge University analyst recently revealed that a major portion of a British intelligence document on Iraq had been plagiarized from a term paper by a graduate student in California—information described by Secretary Powell to the UN Security Council as “exquisite” intelligence. That same analyst has now acquired from the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) the transcript of the debriefing of Iraqi Gen. Hussein Kamel, son-in-law of Saddam Hussein, who defected in 1995.
Kamel for ten years ran Iraq’s nuclear, chemical, biological, and missile development programs, and some of the information he provided has been highly touted by senior US policymakers, from the president on down. But the transcript reveals that Kamel also said that in 1991 Iraq destroyed all its chemical and biological weapons and the missiles to deliver them. This part of the debriefing was suppressed until Newsweek ran a story on it on February 24, 2003.
We do not for a minute take all of what Kamel said at face value. Rather we believe the Iraqis retain some chemical and biological warfare capability. What this episode suggests, though, is a preference on the part of US officials to release only that information that supports the case they wish to make against Iraq.
In Sum
What conclusions can be drawn from the above? Simply that forgery, hyperbole, and half-truths provide a sandy foundation from which to launch a major war.
Equally important, there is danger in the temptation to let the conflict with Iraq determine our attitude toward the entire gamut of foreign threats with which you and your principal advisers need to be concerned. Threats to US security interests must be prioritized and judged on their own terms. In our judgment as intelligence professionals, there are two are real and present dangers today.
1-- The upsurge in terrorism in the US and against American facilities and personnel abroad that we believe would inevitably flow from a US invasion of Iraq. Concern over this is particularly well expressed in the February 26 letter from FBI Special Agent Coleen Rowley to Director Mueller, a letter well worth your study.
2-- North Korea poses a particular danger, although what form this might take is hard to predict. Pyongyang sees itself as the next target of your policy of preemption and, as its recent actions demonstrate, will take advantage of US pre-occupation with Iraq both to strengthen its defenses and to test US and South Korean responses. Although North Korea is economically weak, its armed forces are huge, well armed, and capable. It is entirely possible that the North will decide to mount a provocation to test the tripwire provided by the presence of US forces in South Korea. Given the closeness of Seoul to the border with the North and the reality that North Korean conventional forces far outnumber those of the South, a North Korean adventure could easily force you to face an abrupt, unwelcome decision regarding the use of nuclear weapons—a choice that your predecessors took great pains to avoid.
We suggest strongly that you order the Intelligence Community to undertake, on an expedited basis, a Special National Intelligence Estimate on North Korea, and that you defer any military action against Iraq until you have had a chance to give appropriate weight to the implications of the challenge the US might face on the Korean peninsula.
/s/
Richard Beske, San Diego
Kathleen McGrath Christison, Santa Fe
William Christison, Santa Fe
Patrick Eddington, Alexandria, VA
Raymond McGovern, Arlington, VA
Steering Group
Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
Ray McGovern of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity can be reached at: rmcgovern@slschool.org
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