This article originally provided by Knight Ridder
October 5, 2004
CIA review finds no evidence Saddam had ties to Islamic
terrorists
By Warren P. Strobel, Jonathan S.
Landay and John Walcott
WASHINGTON - A new CIA assessment undercuts the White
House's claim that Saddam Hussein maintained ties to al-Qaida,
saying there's no conclusive evidence that the regime
harbored Osama bin Laden associate Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
The CIA review, which U.S. officials said Monday was
requested some months ago by Vice President Dick Cheney, is
the latest assessment that calls into question one of
President Bush's key justifications for last year's U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq.
The new assessment follows the independent Sept. 11
commission's finding that there was no "collaborative
relationship" between the former Iraqi regime and bin
Laden's terrorist network.
While intelligence officials cautioned that information
about al-Zarqawi remains incomplete, Bush, Cheney and other
top officials have publicly made al-Zarqawi the linchpin of
their contention that Saddam's Iraq had ties to al-Qaida.
Questions about whether the president and other officials
overstated the intelligence about Iraq and omitted
contradictory information and analysis are now at the center
of the campaign debate over Iraq policy.
Since the Sept. 11 commission's judgment in June, Bush
and Cheney have repeatedly said that al-Zarqawi was an
associate of bin Laden and received safe haven from Saddam.
But Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld backed away Monday
from such claims, apparently as a result of the new CIA
assessment.
Bush and Cheney have charged that Saddam's regime allowed
al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian native, to travel to Baghdad and to
set up cells of his Islamic terrorist network in the Iraqi
capital. Al-Zarqawi is now a major figure who's directing
part of the anti-U.S. insurgency in Iraq. He has appeared in
videos in which U.S. and other hostages are executed, often
by beheading.
"Zarqawi's the best evidence of connection to al-Qaida
affiliates and al-Qaida. He's the person who's still
killing. He's the person, remember the e-mail exchange
between al-Qaida leadership and he himself about how to
disrupt the progress toward freedom," Bush said in the
Rose Garden in June.
Al-Zarqawi "was in and out of Baghdad. He ordered
the killing of an American citizen from Baghdad - (U.S.
Agency for International Development official Laurence)
Foley," Bush said Saturday in Ohio. "This is
before ... we went in. Saddam Hussein had used weapons of
mass destruction. I understood - I understand today that the
connection between weapons of mass destruction and the
terrorist network is the biggest threat we face."
According to a senior administration official and
intelligence officials familiar with the review, at Cheney's
request CIA analysts spent several months reviewing new
material gathered since Baghdad fell last year and
re-examining earlier intelligence.
A U.S. official familiar with the new CIA assessment said
intelligence analysts were unable to determine conclusively
the nature of the relationship between al-Zarqawi and
Saddam.
"It's still being worked," he said. "It
(the assessment) ... doesn't make clear-cut, bottom-line
judgments" about whether Saddam's regime was aiding al-Zarqawi.
He said the report contained new details of al-Zarqawi 's
prewar activities in Iraq, including the arrests in late
2002 or early 2003 of three of his "associates" by
the regime.
"This was brought to Saddam's attention and he
ordered one of them released," he said, providing no
further details.
"What is indisputable is that Zarqawi was operating
out of Baghdad and was involved in a lot of bad
activities," he said, including ordering Foley's
killing.
The report didn't conclude that Saddam's regime had
provided "aid, comfort and succor" to al-Zarqawi,
a senior administration official said.
He added that there are now questions about earlier
administration assertions that al-Zarqawi received treatment
at a Baghdad hospital in May 2002.
"The evidence is that Saddam never gave Zarqawi
anything," another U.S. official said.
A congressional official said members of Congress had
received an intelligence report in late August containing
similar findings.
The officials who described the new assessment spoke on
condition of anonymity because the matter is classified and
because, as one put it, "I don't want to get caught in
the crossfire" between the White House and the CIA.
A CIA spokesman, Mark Mansfield, declined to comment on
the subject or to confirm the existence of the new analysis.
The findings - delivered to Cheney last week - appear to
put the Bush administration and the CIA on a collision
course again over intelligence regarding Iraq.
They could provide an early test of whether new CIA
Director Porter Goss, a former Republican congressman, will
protect his analysts when they give conclusions that
conflict with White House views or administration policy. In
the past, some political appointees have been angered by
intelligence assessments that they thought undercut
administration policy.
Rumsfeld appeared to refer to the new assessment during a
public appearance Monday at which he also backed away from
the administration's broader claims that Saddam and al-Qaida
were linked.
"To my knowledge, I have not seen any strong, hard
evidence that links the two," Rumsfeld said during an
appearance at the Council on Foreign Relations, a Washington
research center.
In September 2002, before the war, Rumsfeld had said the
U.S. intelligence community had "bulletproof"
evidence of such links.
Apparently referring to al-Zarqawi, the defense secretary
said Monday: "I just read an intelligence report
recently about one person who's connected to al-Qaida who
was in and out of Iraq and there's the most tortured
description of why he might have had a relationship and why
he might not have had a relationship."
Officials said the highly classified document on al-Zarqawi
was delivered to Bush, Cheney, National Security Adviser
Condoleezza Rice and her deputy, Stephen Hadley.
There's no dispute that al-Zarqawi spent time in Iraq
before the U.S. invasion, but virtually all that time was in
a portion of northeastern Iraq that wasn't under Saddam's
control.
Some officials believe that Saddam's secular regime kept
an eye on al-Zarqawi, an Islamic extremist, but didn't
actively assist him.
Al-Zarqawi 's ties to al-Qaida are in dispute. While he
clearly shares much of al-Qaida's violent ideology and ran
an al-Qaida camp in Afghanistan, the Jordanian has his own
organization, acts independently and hasn't sworn fealty to
bin Laden.
Secretary of State Colin Powell, in his Feb. 5, 2003,
presentation on Iraq to the U.N. Security Council, said al-Zarqawi
went to Baghdad in May 2002 for medical treatment and stayed
two months, during which time nearly two dozen extremists
converged on the Iraqi capital and established a base there.
Al-Zarqawi originally was reported to have had a leg
amputated, a claim that officials now acknowledge was
incorrect.
Much of the prewar intelligence on al-Zarqawi is reported
to have come from eavesdropping by Jordan's security
services.
The Bush administration has clashed repeatedly with the
CIA and other intelligence community agencies over Iraq and
terrorism.
Soon after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks,
Pentagon civilians set up a small intelligence cell whose
mission was to prove that there were links between al-Qaida
and secular Arab regimes such as Saddam's.
The group's analysis was presented to then-CIA Director
George Tenet and his analysts, who rejected it.
In recent weeks, administration partisans have sharply
criticized the U.S. intelligence community for a new
analysis that offers a pessimistic outlook on Iraq's future.
They've attacked one of the report's authors, National
Intelligence Council official Paul Pillar, by name and
accused the CIA of trying to undermine the president.
Bush called the report, known as a National Intelligence
Estimate, a "guess," but later amended his remarks
to call it an "estimate."
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