In the past few weeks, there have been many questions raised in the
U.S. and world press about whether George Bush knowingly presented
fraudulent evidence about the existence of a nuclear capability in
Iraq. It was on the basis of such Weapons of Mass Destruction,(WMD)
that Iraq was said to present a danger to the US. This was the U.S.
government's public justification for its war against Iraq.
Currently there are inquiries by the British, US and Australian
governments about the use of such a fraudulent case to justify war. One
of the most significant falsifications in the WMD public debate, is
Bush's reference to an alleged attempt by Iraq to buy 500 tons of
uranium oxide from the African country, Niger. In his State of the
Union address on January 28, 2003, Bush declared that, "The British
government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant
quantities of uranium from Africa."
Similar claims had been made by the CIA in their September 24, 2002
briefing to the Congress. The case for Iraq's nuclear capability was
based on documents known to be forged as of March 2002. Yet the claims
continued to be used by Bush, by the CIA, and by other administration
officials as a key component of their case for the war against Iraq.
According to several different reports, in 2001, the CIA learned of the
claims about Iraq trying to buy uranium oxide from Niger. Vice
President Dick Cheney's office raised questions about this situation in
February 2002. The CIA sent a former U.S. ambassador, one who was
respected in Africa, to Niger, to speak with government officials
there. The ambassador learned that the dates and signatures on the
documents being used to support the claim were fraudulent. He reported
his findings back to the CIA. A Washington Post article indicates
that the CIA sent the White House a report of the fraudulent nature of
the documents in March 2002. Six months later, however, in September
2002, the head of the CIA was still referring to a nuclear weapons
program in Iraq. The reports are that he referred to the Niger
information, without presenting the result of the ambassador's
investigation. A number of Congressmen say they voted to authorize a
war against Iraq based on the administration claim that Iraq had a
nuclear capability. The Democratic Party minority has now asked for a
transcript of the CIA official testimony at the September 24, 2002
Congressional hearing. They want to determine whether the CIA testimony
at the hearing presented the forged nature of the Niger documents.
Other CIA or State Department activities in 2002 and 2003 continued,
making the same case to justify a war against Iraq. For example, in
response to the Iraq weapons declaration filed with the UN on December
7, 2002, Secretary of State Colin Powell appeared before the UN
Security Council on December 19, 2002. He presented the Security
Council with a one page State Department fact sheet in response to the
Iraqi declaration. That fact sheet stated that, "The Declaration
ignores efforts to procure uranium from Niger. Why is the Iraqi regime
hiding their uranium procurement?"
After Bush's State of the Union speech, the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) requested that the U.S. government provide evidence about
the Iraqi efforts to purchase uranium oxide in Africa. On March 7,
2003, a day after the documents were finally given to the Agency, the
head of the agency, Director General Mohamed ElBaradei publicly
presented that the documents were forgeries.
On March 17, 2003, Representative Henry Waxman, a Democratic
Congressman from California, and minority Chair of the Government
Reform Committee in the U.S. House of Representatives, wrote a
letter to Bush's office asking for an explanation of how the case
for a nuclear capacity in Iraq could be built on the basis of forged
documents.
He received a response from Paul Kelly, of the State Department
legislative office. Kelly writes:
Beginning in late 2001, the United States obtained information through
several channels, including U.S. intelligence sources and overt
sources, reporting that Iraq had attempted to procure uranium from
Africa. In addition, two Western European allies informed us of similar
reporting from their own intelligence services. As you know, the UK
made this information public in its September 2002 dossier on "Iraq's
Weapons of Mass Destruction." The other Western European ally relayed
this information to us privately and said, while it did not believe any
uranium had been shipped to Iraq, it believed Iraq had sought to
purchase uranium from Niger. We sought several times to determine the
basis for the latter assessment, and whether it was based on
independent evidence not otherwise available to the U.S. Not until
March 4 did we learn that in fact the second Western European
government had based its assessment on evidence already available to
the U.S. that was subsequently discredited. -- Letter from Paul V. Kelly, Assistant Secretary of Legislative Affairs,
U.S. Dept of State, April 29, 2003
The U.S. government had used the case for Iraq's nuclear capability in
the case Powell made to the UN Security Council on December 19, 2002
and in the President's State of the Union address on January 28, 2003,
even though they knew there were forged documents as the basis for this
claim. Kelly suggests that it was all right to continue to make the
case, based on hearsay evidence from some other country, until they
learned on March 4, 2003 that the other Western European government
information was also based on forged documents. Such reasoning
continues the deception. It doesn't acknowledge the responsibility of
government officials to honest activity in the conduct of their office.
Once forged documents are recognized, and Kelly acknowledges the
recognition of the forgery, there is no basis to continue to make a
case. There is the responsibility to challenge any other documents
which make a similar case.
While such an excuse for including discredited information in an
important speech like the President's State of the Union speech appears
flimsy at best, yet another explanation has been given by National
Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice when she appeared on Sunday
television talk shows on June 8, 2003. She said that the President's
Office didn't know that the CIA had judged the Niger story to be based
on forged documents.
In a letter to Rice on June 10, Waxman quotes her comments. She
says:
..I will tell you that when this issue was raised with the
intelligence community...the intelligence community did not know at
that time, or at levels that got to us, that there were serious
questions about this report.
Disputing Rice's claim that the State Department did not know of the
forgeries, Greg Thielmann describes how his office conveyed this
information to the Department of the Secretary of State well before the
State of the Union address. As Director of the State Department Bureau
of Intelligence and Research (INR) until Fall 2002, he explains that
the Niger documents were judged to be "garbage" by his office. He
reports that this judgement was conveyed at that time to the Office of
the U.S. Secretary of State, Colin Powell. Thielmann has been quoted in
newspaper and magazine accounts and has appeared on television
interviews refuting that the State Department did not know of the
forgeries.
Whether or not the Bush administration recognized the fraudulent nature
of the Niger documents as the case for Iraq's possession of nuclear
weapons before the first week in March 2003, however, still does not
relieve them of a responsibility regarding the discrepancy between the
nature of their case for war and the evidence they provided for that
case. Kelly admits that by March 4, 2003 the forgery was known. There
was still plenty of time for George Bush to reverse the decision to go
to war against Iraq. He didn't reverse it. No other reliable evidence
was presented at the time of any Iraqi nuclear capacity. Yet on March
19, 2003, George Bush announced the beginning of a war against
Iraq, claiming that the purpose of the war was to" disarm Iraq and
to...defend the world from grave danger."
One conclusion that can be drawn is that it didn't matter to George
Bush that the reasons given to the public to go to war against Iraq
were based on fraudulent evidence. Whether the public was behind Bush's
march to war or not, was unimportant to Bush. He couldn't know that
unless an honest case was made to the public about the reasons for
going to war.
What is the effect of having presented a fraudulent case to the U.S.
Congress, the U.S. public, the U.N. Security Council, and the world
about the reasons for a war against Iraq? John W. Dean, former Counsel
to the Nixon White House, recently reminded the public that the abuse
of U.S. government processes by the President and other offices of
government is a crime of the highest order. Though Dean doesn't mention
the fraudulent nature of the U.S. government claims about Iraq's
nuclear capability, he does explain that lies by government officials
regarding WMD in Iraq are a challenge to the integrity of the U.S.
government. Waging war against a sovereign nation based on fraudulent
claims and misrepresentations like those presented about the existence
of WMD in Iraq, is a challenge to any pretense of democratic processes.
How can people oversee what their government officials are doing if the
government officials openly lie to them? How can there be any pretense
of constitutional processes where sovereignty resides with the people
if they are not allowed to know what government officials are doing?
This is a serious challenge to the nature and future of law and
government. Whether this challenge can be taken up or not is an
important question for our times.
Ronda Hauben (ronda@panix.com) is the co-author, with Michael Hauben, of
the book "Netizens: On the History and Impact
of Usenet and the Internet" published online
in 1994 and in a print edition in 1997. She writes
for Telepolis and Circleid.
Copyright © 1996-2003 . Alle Rechte vorbehalten
Heise Zeitschriften Verlag, Hannover
###