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Another
CIA Attack on Bush
Agenda politics making the CIA even less relevant...
[Roger
Aronoff] 3/16/06
Paul Pillar
is the latest former official to seize the media spotlight
by attacking the Bush Administration's reasons for going to
war in Iraq. He claims the Bush administration deliberately
cherry-picked the evidence from the Intelligence buffet of
facts, potential scenarios and best-evidence findings.
On the surface,
it seems like Pillar should know. He was, after all, in the
CIA for 28 years until his recent retirement, and from 2000
to 2005 was the national intelligence officer for the Near
East and South Asia.
In a carefully orchestrated unveiling, the Washington
Post on
February 10 broke the story of his then-soon-to-be-released article in
Foreign Affairs, the publication of the Council on Foreign Relations.
His charges gained immediate traction. Pillar went on CNN with
Wolf Blitzer, and later on C-SPAN. According to the Post, "Pillar's
critique is one of the most severe indictments of White House
actions by a former Bush official since Richard C. Clarke, a
former National Security Council staff member."
But when pressed, Pillar corroborates the Senate
Intelligence Committee report, the Robb Silverman WMD Report,
and the Iraq
Survey Group report. The bottom line is that there was no pressuring
of any analysts to give the Bush administration the "evidence" it
wanted. He claimed the politicization was subtle, and in his
article wrote that "It was clear that the Bush administration
would frown on or ignore analysis that called into question a
decision to go to war and welcome analysis that supported such
a decision."
To his credit, Wolf Blitzer pointed out that
Pillar was the person responsible for putting together the
National Intelligence
Estimate (NIE) and asked him if he believed that Saddam possessed
WMD. "There was a strong consensus," said Pillar, "not only here
in the United States but overseas, that there were weapons of
mass destruction in Iraq."
In fact, Bush was more skeptical than the CIA.
As we know from Bob Woodward's book, Plan of Attack, after
hearing the CIA's
best case in December 2002 from director George Tenet and his
deputy, John McLaughlin, Bush asked, "This is the best we've
got?" That's when Tenet
assured him it was a "slam-dunk."
It's just a short jump from Pillar's rather vague
accusations to popular conspiracy theories about why Bush went
to war. You
pick it-oil, World Dominance; Skull & Crossbones; neoconservatives
looking out for Israel or bent on a mission of democratization
of the Middle East; or Bush standing up for his Dad?
The fact remains that, unlike then-president Clinton, who led
a military action against Serbia without seeking or acquiring
congressional approval, President Bush sought the approval of
Congress and got it. And this was after Congress passed-and Clinton
had signed-a policy seeking regime change in Iraq.
After getting congressional approval, the U.S. took the matter
to the United Nations, where it got a unanimous Security Council
resolution, 1441, to give Iraq one last chance to come clean
on its weapons of mass destruction programs. The clear implication
was that if Iraq didn't cooperate, the next step would be military
action. Some conservatives have argued that the Bush administration
wasted precious time going to the UN for approval of the war
in the first place.
Hans Blix, who led the UN inspectors back into
Iraq in November of 2002, returned after 60 days to tell the
world body and the
world that "Iraq appears not to have come to a genuine acceptance,
not even today, of the disarmament which was demanded of it and
which it needs to carry out to win the confidence of the world
and to live in peace." It was clear by that point that the war
had become inevitable. And yet Bush presented Saddam Hussein
with a final ultimatum, another chance to prevent the war. When
he refused to come clean, the Bush administration did try to
get another UN resolution, though it didn't believe it was necessary.
Still, 50 nations signed on to the use of force against Iraq,
including the overwhelming majority of European countries. Those
that didn't support it, France, and Germany, along with Russia,
had massive financial ties to the Iraqi regime. Thirty nations
sent personnel to Iraq.
In the face of all of this comes Paul Pillar,
another disgruntled former CIA official. According to Guillermo
Christensen, writing
in the Wall Street Journal, "it is hard to think of anyone in
the government who was more directly involved in reaching the
wrong conclusions about what was going on in Iraq than Mr. Pillar
himself."
Christensen was a CIA intelligence officer for
15 years, and is currently with the Council on Foreign Relations.
He says Pillar
was in the best position of anyone to draft a National Intelligence
Estimate, "recording for all what was going on in Iraq." He says
Pillar has a political agenda, against this administration, and "made
no bones about it in discussions with think-tank audiences long
before he left the agency." He accuses Pillar of "violating his
confidences" and causing damage to the CIA. "For a CIA officer
to discard this neutral role and to inject himself in the political
realm is plain wrong," wrote Christensen. "It will end up making
the CIA even less relevant than it is today, if that is possible." -one-
copyright
2006 Accuracy in Media
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