-Caveat Lector-

NY TIMES
July 31, 2004
PREWAR INTELLIGENCE
High Qaeda Aide Retracted Claim of Link With Iraq
By DOUGLAS JEHL

ASHINGTON, July 30 - A senior leader of Al Qaeda who was captured in Pakistan
several months after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks was the main source for
intelligence, since discredited, that Iraq had provided training in chemical and
biological weapons to members of the organization, according to American
intelligence officials.

Intelligence officials say the detainee, Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, a member of
Osama bin Laden's inner circle, recanted the claims sometime last year, but not
before they had become the basis of statements by President Bush, Vice President
Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Colin L. Powell and others about links between
Iraq and Al Qaeda that involved poisons, gases and other illicit weapons.

Mr. Libi, who was captured in Pakistan in December 2001, is still being held by
the Central Intelligence Agency at a secret interrogation center, and American
officials say his now-recanted claims raise new questions about the value of the
information obtained from such detainees.

A report in Newsweek magazine several weeks ago first identified Mr. Libi's role
in the episode. And the fact that "an Al Qaeda operative" who had provided the
most detailed information alleging such ties had backed away from many of his
claims was mentioned by the Sept. 11 commission in a brief footnote to the
report it issued this month.

The American officials now say still-secret parts of the separate report by the
Senate Intelligence Committee, which was released in early July, discuss the
information provided by Mr. Libi in much greater detail. The Senate report
questions whether some versions of intelligence reports prepared by the C.I.A.
in late 2002 and early 2003 raised sufficient questions about the reliability of
Mr. Libi's claims.

Separate from the question of Mr. Libi's account, an internal C.I.A. review of
its prewar intelligence on Iraq is still under way, continuing a push to
evaluate the information used as a rationale for war. The strongest White House
assertions of ties between Iraq and Al Qaeda that involved illicit weapons were
made beginning in October 2002, when Mr. Bush said in a speech in Cincinnati
that "we've learned that Iraq has trained Al Qaeda members in bomb making and
poisons and gases."

In the prelude to the American invasion in March 2003, those claims were echoed
often by Mr. Bush and his top advisers, but they have not repeated that
allegation for at least six months.

Intelligence officials declined to say precisely when Mr. Libi changed his
account, and they cautioned that they still did not know for sure which account
was correct. They said they would not speculate as to whether he might have been
seeking to deceive his interrogators or to please them by telling them what he
thought they wanted to hear.

But the intelligence officials said Mr. Libi had backed away from many of his
earlier claims after American interrogators presented him with conflicting
information. Both Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and Abu Zubaydah, two other
high-ranking Qaeda operatives now in American custody, have told interrogators
that Al Qaeda had no substantive relationship with the Iraqi government,
according to the Senate report.

Neither the Senate committee nor the Sept. 11 commission have found evidence of
a collaborative relationship between Iraq and Al Qaeda on any matter, much less
illicit weapons, which have not been found in Iraq despite more than a year of
intensive searching.

Mr. Libi's reversal was reported to senior administration officials in an
intelligence document that was circulated on Feb. 14, 2004, the intelligence
officials said.

The Senate report says that a highly classified report prepared by the C.I.A. in
September 2002 on "Iraqi Ties to Terrorism" described the claims that Iraq had
provided "training in poisons and gases" to Qaeda members, but that it cautioned
that the information had come from "sources of varying reliability."

By contrast, it noted that unclassified testimony to Congress in February 2003
from George J. Tenet, then the director of central intelligence, had not
included any caveats and thus "could have led the recipients of that testimony
to interpret that the C.I.A. believed the training had definitely occurred."

Most public statements by Mr. Bush and other administration officials on the
matter described the assertions as matters of fact.

At the time of his capture, Mr. Libi, a Libyan, was the highest-ranking Qaeda
leader in American custody. He had worked closely with Abu Zubaydah at the
group's Khalden terrorist camp in Afghanistan, and was believed to have detailed
knowledge of the terrorist network's plans.

In an address to the United Nations Security Council in February 2003, Mr.
Powell referred at length to Mr. Libi's account of an Iraqi role in illicit
weapons training, though he did not identify him. He attributed the account to a
"senior Al Qaeda terrorist" who "was responsible for one of Al Qaeda's training
camps in Afghanistan."

The support by Iraq included "offering chemical or biological weapons training
for two Al Qaeda associates beginning in December 2000," Mr. Powell said in his
speech, adding that a militant known as Abu Abdullah al-Iraqi had described as
"successful" a relationship in which he was sent to Iraq several times between
1997 and 2000 "for help in acquiring poisons and gases."

In recent months, Mr. Powell has spoken publicly of his frustration that some of
the central assertions he made in that speech, particularly claims that Iraq
possessed illicit weapons, have not been borne out by the facts, despite
assurances from Mr. Tenet and the C.I.A. that they were based on solid
intelligence.

People close to Mr. Powell say he is less troubled about the episode involving
Mr. Libi, believing that the C.I.A. reported his claims in good faith.
Similarly, Congressional officials said, the Senate Intelligence Committee did
not criticize the C.I.A., even in the classified section of its report, over the
Libi matter.

Intelligence officials said Friday that John E. McLaughlin, the acting
intelligence chief, was reviewing a 20-page report by Richard J. Kerr, a former
deputy director of central intelligence, that constitutes the agency's most
extensive internal review of its handling of prewar intelligence on Iraq. The
report by Mr. Kerr, which was submitted to Mr. McLaughlin on Thursday, is not
expected to be made public, a senior intelligence official said.



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