-Caveat Lector-

http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=2854519

U.S. Insiders Say Iraq Intel Deliberately Skewed
Fri May 30, 2003 07:15 PM ET

By Jim Wolf
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A growing number of U.S. national security
professionals are accusing the Bush administration of slanting the facts and
hijacking the $30 billion intelligence apparatus to justify its rush to war
in Iraq.

A key target is a four-person Pentagon team that reviewed material gathered
by other intelligence outfits for any missed bits that might have tied Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein to banned weapons or terrorist groups.

This team, self-mockingly called the Cabal, "cherry-picked the intelligence
stream" in a bid to portray Iraq as an imminent threat, said Patrick Lang, a
former head of worldwide human intelligence gathering for the Defense
Intelligence Agency, which coordinates military intelligence.

The DIA was "exploited and abused and bypassed in the process of making the
case for war in Iraq based on the presence of WMD," or weapons of mass
destruction, he added in a phone interview. He said the CIA had "no guts at
all" to resist the allegedly deliberate skewing of intelligence by a
Pentagon that he said was now dominating U.S. foreign policy.

Vince Cannistraro, a former chief of Central Intelligence Agency
counterterrorist operations, said he knew of serving intelligence officers
who blame the Pentagon for playing up "fraudulent" intelligence, "a lot of
it sourced from the Iraqi National Congress of Ahmad Chalabi."

The INC, which brought together groups opposed to Saddam, worked closely
with the Pentagon to build a for the early use of force in Iraq.

"There are current intelligence officials who believe it is a scandal," he
said in a telephone interview. They believe the administration, before going
to war, had a "moral obligation to use the best information available, not
just information that fits your preconceived ideas."

CHEMICAL WEAPONS REPORT 'SIMPLY WRONG'

The top Marine Corps officer in Iraq, Lt. Gen. James Conway, said on Friday
U.S. intelligence was "simply wrong" in leading military commanders to fear
troops were likely to be attacked with chemical weapons in the March
invasion of Iraq that ousted Saddam.

Richard Perle, a Chalabi backer and member of the Defense Policy Board that
advises Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, defended the four-person unit in
a television interview.

"They established beyond any doubt that there were connections that had gone
unnoticed in previous intelligence analysis," he said on the PBS NewsHour
Thursday.

A Pentagon spokesman, Marine Lt. Col. David Lapan, said the team in question
analyzed links among terrorist groups and alleged state sponsors and shared
conclusions with the CIA.

"In one case, a briefing was presented to Director of Central Intelligence
Tenet. It dealt with the links between Iraq and al Qaeda," the group blamed
for the Sept. 2001 attacks on the United States, he said.

Tenet denied charges the intelligence community, on which the United States
spends more than $30 billion a year, had skewed its analysis to fit a
political agenda, a cardinal sin for professionals meant to tell the truth
regardless of politics.

"I'm enormously proud of the work of our analysts," he said in a statement
on Friday ahead of an internal review. "The integrity of our process has
been maintained throughout and any suggestion to the contrary is simply
wrong."

Tenet sat conspicuously behind Secretary of State Colin Powell during a key
Feb. 5 presentation to the U.N. Security Council arguing Iraq represented an
ominous and urgent threat -- as if to lend the CIA's credibility to the
presentation, replete with satellite photos.

Powell said Friday his presentation was "the best analytic product that we
could have put up."

SHAPED 'FROM THE TOP DOWN'

Greg Thielmann, who retired in September after 25 years in the State
Department, the last four in the Bureau of Intelligence and Research working
on weapons, said it appeared to him that intelligence had been shaped "from
the top down."

"The normal processing of establishing accurate intelligence was
sidestepped" in the runup to invading Iraq, said David Albright, a former
U.N. weapons inspector who is president of the Institute for Science and
International Security and who deals with U.S. intelligence officers.

Anger among security professionals appears widespread. Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity, a group that says it is made up mostly of CIA
intelligence analysts, wrote to U.S. President George Bush May 1 to hit what
they called "a policy and intelligence fiasco of monumental proportions."

"In intelligence there is one unpardonable sin -- cooking intelligence to
the recipe of high policy," it wrote. "There is ample indication this has
been done with respect to Iraq."

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