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Revealed:
How the road to war was paved with lies Intelligence agencies
accuse Bush and Blair of distorting and fabricating evidence
in rush to war
By Raymond Whitaker
The case for invading Iraq to remove its weapons of mass
destruction was based on selective use of intelligence, exaggeration,
use of sources known to be discredited and outright fabrication,
The IIndependent on Sunday can reveal.
A high-level UK source said last night that intelligence
agencies on both sides of the Atlantic were furious that briefings
they gave political leaders were distorted in the rush to
war with Iraq. “They ignored intelligence assessments
which said Iraq was not a threat,” the source said.
Quoting an editorial in a Middle East newspaper which said,
“Washington has to prove its case. If it does not, the
world will for ever believe that it paved the road to war
with lies”, he added: “You can draw your own conclusions.”
UN inspectors who left Iraq just before the war started were
searching for four categories of weapons: nuclear, chemical,
biological and missiles capable of flying beyond a range of
93 miles. They found ample evidence that Iraq was not co-operating,
but none to support British and American assertions that Saddam
Hussein’s regime posed an imminent threat to the world.
On nuclear weapons, the British Government claimed that the
former regime sought uranium feed material from the government
of Niger in west Africa. This was based on letters later described
by the International Atomic Energy Agency as crude forgeries.
On chemical weapons, a CIA report on the likelihood that
Saddam would use weapons of mass destruction was partially
declassified. The parts released were those which made it
appear that the danger was high; only after pressure from
Senator Bob Graham, head of the Senate Intelligence Committee,
was the whole report declassified, including the conclusion
that the chances of Iraq using chemical weapons were “very
low” for the “foreseeable future”.
On biological weapons, the US Secretary of State, Colin Powell,
told the UN Security Council in February that the former regime
had up to 18 mobile laboratories. He attributed the information
to “defectors” from Iraq, without saying that
their claims ? including one of a “secret biological
laboratory beneath the Saddam Hussein hospital in central
Baghdad” ? had repeatedly been disproved by UN weapons
inspectors.
On missiles, Iraq accepted UN demands to destroy its al-Samoud
weapons, despite disputing claims that they exceeded the permitted
range. No banned Scud missiles were found before or since,
but last week the Secretary of State for Defence, Geoff Hoon,
suggested Scuds had been fired during the war. There is no
proof any were in fact Scuds.
Some American officials have all but conceded that the weapons
of mass destruction campaign was simply a means to an end
? a “global show of American power and democracy”,
as ABC News in the US put it. “We were not lying,”
it was told by one official. “But it was just a matter
of emphasis.” American and British teams claim they
are scouring Iraq in search of definitive evidence but none
has so far been found, even though the sites considered most
promising have been searched, and senior figures such as Tariq
Aziz, the former Deputy Prime Minister, intelligence chiefs
and the man believed to be in charge of Iraq’s chemical
weapons programme are in custody.
Robin Cook, who as Foreign Secretary would have received
high-level security briefings, said last week that “it
was difficult to believe that Saddam had the capacity to hit
us”. Mr Cook resigned from the Government on the eve
of war, but was still in the Cabinet as Leader of the House
when it released highly contentious dossiers to bolster its
case.
One report released last autumn by Tony Blair said that Iraq
could deploy chemical and biological weapons within 45 minutes,
but last week Mr Hoon said that such weapons might have escaped
detection because they had been dismantled and buried. A later
Downing Street “intelligence” dossier was shown
to have been largely plagiarised from three articles in academic
publications. “You cannot just cherry-pick evidence
that suits your case and ignore the rest. It is a cardinal
rule of intelligence,” said one aggrieved officer. “Yet
that is what the PM is doing.” Another said: “What
we have is a few strands of highly circumstantial evidence,
and to justify an attack on Iraq it is being presented as
a cast-iron case. That really is not good enough.”
Glen Rangwala, the Cambridge University analyst who first
pointed out Downing Street’s plagiarism, said ministers
had claimed before the war to have information which could
not be disclosed because agents in Iraq would be endangered.
“That doesn’t apply any more, but they haven’t
come up with the evidence,” he said. “They lack
credibility.”
Mr Rangwala said much of the information on WMDs had come
from Ahmed Chalabi’s Iraqi National Congress (INC),
which received Pentagon money for intelligence-gathering.
“The INC saw the demand, and provided what was needed,”
he said. “The implication is that they polluted the
whole US intelligence effort.”
Facing calls for proof of their allegations, senior members
of both the US and British governments are suggesting that
so-called WMDs were destroyed after the departure of UN inspectors
on the eve of war ? a possibility raised by President George
Bush for the first time on Thursday.
This in itself, however, appears to be an example of what
the chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix called “shaky
intelligence”. An Iraqi scientist, writing under a pseudonym,
said in a note slipped to a driver in a US convoy that he
had proof information was kept from the inspectors, and that
Iraqi officials had destroyed chemical weapons just before
the war.
Other explanations for the failure to find WMDs include the
possibility that they might have been smuggled to Syria, or
so well hidden that they could take months, even years, to
find. But last week it emerged that two of four American mobile
teams in Iraq had been switched from looking for WMDs to other
tasks, though three new teams from less specialised units
were said to have been assigned to the quest for “unconventional
weapons” ? the less emotive term which is now preferred.
Mr Powell and Mr Bush both repeated last week that Iraq had
WMDs. But one official said privately that “in the end,
history and the American people will judge the US not by whether
its officials found canisters of poison gas or vials of some
biological agent [but] by whether this war marked the beginning
of the end for the terrorists who hate America”.
Source: <http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politics/story.jsp?story=400805>
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