-Caveat Lector-

>From Capitol Hill Blue
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/article_1587.shtml
CHB Investigates. . .
Role reversal: Bush wants war, Pentagon urges caution
By DOUG THOMPSON
Jan 22, 2003, 01:18

Senior Pentagon officials are quietly urging President George W. Bush to
slow down his headlong rush to war

with Iraq, complaining the administration�s course of action represents too
much of a shift of America�s longstanding �no first strike� policy and that
the move could well result in conflicts with other Arab nations.

�We have a dangerous role reversal here,� one Pentagon source tells
Capitol Hill Blue. �The civilians are urging war and the uniformed officers
are urging caution.�

Capitol Hill Blue has learned the Joint Chiefs of Staff are split over plans to
invade Iraq in the coming weeks. They have asked Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumseld to urge Bush to back down from his hard line stance until
United Nations weapons inspectors can finish their jobs and the U.S. can
build a stronger coalition in the Middle East.

�This is not Desert Storm,� one of the Joint Chiefs is reported to have told
Rumseld. �We don�t have the backing of other Middle Eastern nations. We
don�t have the backing of any of our allies except Britain and we�re
advocating a policy that says we will invade another nation that is not
currently attacking us or invading any of our allies.�

Intelligenced sources say some Arab nations have told US diplomats they
may side with Iraq if the U.S. attacks without the backing of the United
Nations. Secretary of State Colin Powell agrees with his former colleagues
at the Pentagon and has told the President he may be pursuing a
"dangerous course."

An angry Rumsfeld, who backs Bush without question, is said to have told
the Joint Chiefs to get in line or find other jobs. Bush is also said to be
�extremely angry� at what he perceives as growing Pentagon opposition to
his role as Commander in Chief.

�The President considers this nation to be at war,� a White House source
says,� and, as such, considers any opposition to his policies to be no less
than an act of treason.�

But conversations with sources within the Bush administration, the
Pentagon, the FBI and the intelligence community indicate a deepening
rift between the professionals who wage war for a living and the
administration civilians to want to send them into battle.

Sources say the White House has ordered the FBI and CIA to �find and
document� links between Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden, the
mastermind of the 9-11 terrorist attacks.

�The implication is clear,� grumbles one longtime FBI agent. �Find a link,
any link, no matter how vague or unproven, and then use that link to
justify action against Iraq.�

While Hussein and Iraq have been linked to various terrorist groups in the
past, U.S. intelligence agencies have not been able to establish a provable
link with bin Laden�s al Qaeda forces.

�There may be one,� says another FBI source. �There should be one. All
logic says there has to be one, but we haven�t established it as a fact. Not
yet.�

Pentagon planners privately refer to the pending Iraq conflict as a �Bush
league war,� something that may be fought more for political gain than
anything else.

�During Desert Storm, the line officers wanted to finish the job, wanted to
march into Iraq and take out Hussein and his government, but President
Bush and JOC Chairman (Colin) Powell pulled the plug on the operation,�
says one Pentagon officer. �We had our chance. We had the justification.
We had the support. We don�t have it now.�

Some Pentagon staffers point to last weekend�s antiwar rally in
Washington, where they say the  crowd included many veterans of Desert
Storm.

�This wasn�t just a bunch of tree huggers and longhairs marching,� says
Arnold Giftos of Huntington, West Virginia, who served in Desert Storm and
who came to march. �Go to any meeting of veterans groups in this country
and you will see serious discussion on whether or not we should be
getting into this war.�

Reporters covering the marches on Saturday and Sunday say they counted
about 500 marchers among the 30,000 who carried signs or other items
identifying themselves as veterans.

�I served in Vietnam,� said Robert Brighton of Detroit, who marched in
Washington. �I supported Desert Storm. I don�t support this. It�s madness.�

In addition, Capitol Hill Blue has learned that both House Speaker Dennis J.
Hastert and Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist have told the White House
that they have �increasing� numbers of Republicans in both Houses raising
doubts about the war.

�Nobody in the party wants to come out publicly and tell the President
he�s wrong,� says one Hill source close to the GOP leadership, �but we
don�t have the kind of unity we need on this thing. It could blow apart on
us at any time.�

Public support for a war with Iraq is also slipping. In November of 2001, just
two months after the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, 78
percent of Americans favored military action against Iraq. That support has
slipped to as low as 52 percent in January polls. A Washington Post-ABC
news poll taken last week shows Americans evenly split over Bush's
handling of the crisis with Iraq.

Spokesmen for the White House, Pentagon and Congressional leadership
offices would not comment on the record for this report.

� Copyright 2003 Capitol Hill Blue
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