This article originally provided by The Telegraph
July 11, 2004
Fury over Pentagon cell that
briefed White House on Iraq's 'imaginary' al-Qaeda links
By Julian Coman in Washington
(Filed: 11/07/2004)
A Senior Pentagon policy maker created an unofficial
"Iraqi intelligence cell" in the summer of 2002 to
circumvent the CIA and secretly brief the White House on
links between Saddam Hussein and al-Qa'eda, according to the
Senate intelligence committee.
The allegations about Douglas Feith, the number three at
the Department of Defence, are made in a supplementary
annexe of the committee's review of the intelligence leading
to war in Iraq, released on Friday.
According to dramatic testimony contained in the annexe,
Mr Feith's cell undermined the credibility of CIA judgments
on Iraq's alleged al-Qa'eda links within the highest levels
of the Bush administration.
The cell appears to have been set up by Mr Feith as an
adjunct to the Office of Special Plans, a Pentagon
intelligence-gathering operation established in the wake of
9/11 with the authority of Paul Wolfowitz. Its focus quickly
became the al-Qa'eda-Saddam link.
On occasion, without informing the then
head of the CIA, George Tenet, the group gave
counter-briefings in the White House. Sen Jay Rockefeller,
the most senior Democrat on the committee, said that Mr
Feith's cell may even have undertaken "unlawful"
intelligence-gathering initiatives.
The claims will lead to calls by Democrats for the
resignation of Mr Feith, the third-ranking civilian at the
Department of Defence and a leading "neo-con"
hawk. "Tenet fell on his sword," said one Democrat
official, "even though it's clear that he was placed
under tremendous pressure to come up with the 'right'
intelligence product for the administration on Iraq.
"The testimony to the committee on Feith and other
Pentagon officials shows just what kind of pressure was
being exerted. And when that didn't work, the Pentagon was
just coming up with its own answers and feeding them to the
White House. And on al-Qa'eda they got it all wrong."
Last night a senior Pentagon adviser confirmed that Mr
Feith was being targeted by senators unhappy that the
administration has so far escaped censure for its use of
intelligence.
"There are senators who are clearly gunning for
Douglas Feith now. This is turning into a classic conspiracy
investigation. They want to get Feith and see if, through
Feith, they can go up the ladder to even bigger fish."
Mr Feith's role is to be examined further in the second
phase of the Senate committee's investigations, which will
deal with the Bush administration's use of the intelligence
it received. The report by the Republican-dominated
committee lambasted the CIA for intelligence failures while
concluding that there was no evidence that the Bush
administration tried to coerce officials to adapt their
findings.
Yet the annexe - written by three leading Democratic
senators - contains the strongest evidence yet that Pentagon
hardliners sought to sideline the CIA during a drive to talk
up a connection between Saddam and Osama bin Laden.
After the September 11 attacks, tension had grown between
Pentagon officials and CIA agents, who suspected the
Department of Defence of relying too heavily on dubious
testimony from Iraqi defectors in order to justify a war
against Iraq.
The CIA's investigation of links between Iraq and al-Qa'eda
was almost the only aspect of the agency's
intelligence-gathering to escape severe censure in the
511-page report. Sen Rockefeller, the senator for West
Virginia, said: "Our report found that the intelligence
community's judgments were right on Iraq's ties to
terrorists. There was no evidence of the formal
relationship, however you want to describe it, between Iraq
and al-Qa'eda, and no evidence that existed of Iraq's
complicity or assistance in al-Qa'eda's terrorist
attacks."
Pentagon officials who appeared before the Senate
committee testified that Mr Feith and others believed that
the CIA was not sufficiently aggressive in its investigation
of links between Saddam and al-Qa'eda. During the summer of
2002, administration hardliners believed that evidence of a
connection between Iraq and the terrorist organisation would
provide a clinching argument for war.
After the publication in June 2002 of a cautious report
by the CIA entitled Iraq and al-Qa'eda: A Murky
Relationship, Mr Feith passed on a written verdict to the
defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, that the report should
be read "for content only - and CIA's interpretation
should be ignored".
In August 2002, Mr Feith's cell gave a briefing to Mr
Rumsfeld and his deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, which included a
stinging condemnation of the CIA's intelligence assessment
techniques.
In sharp contrast to the Senate intelligence committee's
criticisms of "over-reaching" and
"exaggeration" by CIA agents, the Pentagon
briefing criticised the agency for requiring "juridical
evidence" for its findings and for the "consistent
underestimation" of the possibility that Iraq and al-Qa'eda
were attempting to conceal their collaboration.
In another incident, Mr Feith's Pentagon cell postponed
the publication of a CIA assessment of Iraq's links to
terrorism after a visit to CIA headquarters at which
"numerous objections" were made to a final draft.
In particular, Pentagon officials insisted that more
should be made of an alleged meeting between the September
11 hijacker Mohammed Atta and an Iraqi official in Prague in
April 2001. The CIA judged reports of the meeting not to be
credible, a verdict vindicated on Friday by the Senate
committee report.
Most remarkably, on September 16, 2002, two days before
the CIA was to produce its postponed assessment, Mr Feith's
cell went directly to the White House and gave an
alternative briefing to Vice-President Dick Cheney's chief
of staff, and to the National Security Adviser Condoleezza
Rice's deputy.
The briefing contained the section alleging
"fundamental problems" with CIA
intelligence-gathering. It also gave a detailed breakdown of
the alleged meeting between Atta and an Iraqi agent.
The following week, senior Bush officials made confident
statements on the existence of a link between Saddam and al-Qa'eda.
Mr Tenet would learn of the secret briefing only in March
2004.
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