May 21, 2005
Prewar Findings Worried Analysts
By Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, May 22, 2005; A26
On Jan. 24, 2003, four days before President Bush
delivered his State of the Union address presenting the case
for war against Iraq, the National Security Council staff
put out a call for new intelligence to bolster claims that
Saddam Hussein possessed nuclear, chemical and biological
weapons or programs.
The person receiving the request, Robert Walpole, then
the national intelligence officer for strategic and nuclear
programs, would later tell investigators that "the NSC
believed the nuclear case was weak," according to a 500-page
report released last year by the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence.
It has been clear since the September report of the Iraq
Survey Group -- a CIA-sponsored weapons search in Iraq --
that the United States would not find the weapons of mass
destruction cited by Bush as the rationale for going to war
against Iraq. But as the Walpole episode suggests, it
appears that even before the war many senior intelligence
officials in the government had doubts about the case being
trumpeted in public by the president and his senior
advisers.
The question of prewar intelligence has been thrust back
into the public eye with the disclosure of a secret British
memo showing that, eight months before the March 2003 start
of the war, a senior British intelligence official reported
to Prime Minister Tony Blair that U.S. intelligence was
being shaped to support a policy of invading Iraq.
Moreover, a close reading of the recent 600-page report
by the president's commission on intelligence, and the
previous report by the Senate panel, shows that as war
approached, many U.S. intelligence analysts were internally
questioning almost every major piece of prewar intelligence
about Hussein's alleged weapons programs.
These included claims that Iraq was trying to obtain
uranium in Africa for its nuclear program, had mobile labs
for producing biological weapons, ran an active chemical
weapons program and possessed unmanned aircraft that could
deliver weapons of mass destruction. All these claims were
made by Bush or then-Secretary of State Colin L. Powell in
public addresses even though, the reports made clear, they
had yet to be verified by U.S. intelligence agencies.
For instance, Bush said in his Jan. 28, 2003, State of
the Union address that Hussein was working to obtain
"significant quantities" of uranium from Africa, a
conclusion the president attributed to British intelligence
and made a key part of his assertion that Iraq had an active
nuclear weapons program.
More than a year later, the White House retracted the
statement after its veracity was questioned. But the Senate
report makes it clear that even in January 2003, just before
the president's speech, analysts at the CIA's Weapons
Intelligence, Nonproliferation and Arms Control Center were
still investigating the reliability of the uranium
information.
Similarly, the president's intelligence commission,
chaired by former appellate judge Laurence H. Silberman and
former senator Charles S. Robb (D-Va.), disclosed that
senior intelligence officials had serious questions about
"Curveball," the code name for an Iraqi informant who
provided the key information on Hussein's alleged mobile
biological facilities.
The CIA clandestine service's European division chief had
met in 2002 with a German intelligence officer whose service
was handling Curveball. The German said his service "was not
sure whether Curveball was actually telling the truth,"
according to the commission report. When it appeared that
Curveball's material would be in Bush's State of the Union
speech, the CIA Berlin station chief was asked to get the
Germans to allow him to question Curveball directly.
On the day before the president's speech, the Berlin
station chief warned about using Curveball's information on
the mobile biological units in Bush's speech. The station
chief warned that the German intelligence service considered
Curveball "problematical" and said its officers had been
unable to confirm his assertions. The station chief
recommended that CIA headquarters give "serious
consideration" before using that unverified information,
according to the commission report.
The next day, Bush told the world: "We know that Iraq, in
the late 1990s, had several mobile weapons labs . . .
designed to produce germ warfare agents and can be moved
from place to a place to evade inspectors." He attributed
that information to "three Iraqi defectors."
A week later, Powell said in an address to the United
Nations that the information on mobile labs came from four
defectors, and he described one as "an eyewitness . . . who
supervised one of these facilities" and was at the site when
an accident killed 12 technicians.
Within a year, doubts emerged about the truthfulness of
all four, and the "eyewitness" turned out to be Curveball,
the informant the CIA station chief had red-flagged as
unreliable. Curveball was subsequently determined to be a
fabricator who had been fired from the Iraqi facility years
before the alleged accident, according to the commission and
Senate reports.
As Bush speeches were being drafted in the prewar period,
serious questions were also being raised within the
intelligence community about purported threats from
biologically armed unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).
In an Oct. 7, 2002, speech, Bush mentioned a potential
threat to the U.S. mainland being explored by Iraq through
unmanned aircraft "that could be used to disperse chemical
or biological weapons." The basis for that analysis was a
single report that an Iraqi general in late 2000 or early
2001 indicated interest in buying autopilots and gyroscopes
for Hussein's UAV program. The manufacturer automatically
included topographic mapping software of the United States
in the package.
When the list was submitted in early 2002, the
manufacturer's distributor determined that the U.S. mapping
software would not be included in the autopilot package, and
told the procurement agent in March 2002. By then, however,
U.S. intelligence, which closely followed Iraqi procurement
of such material, had already concluded as early as the
summer of 2001 that this was the "first indication that the
UAVs might be used to target the U.S."
When a foreign intelligence service questioned the
procurement agent, he originally said he had never intended
to purchase the U.S. mapping software, but he refused to
submit to a thorough examination, according to the
president's commission. "By fall 2002, the CIA was still
uncertain whether the procurement agent was lying," the
commission said. Nonetheless, a National Intelligence
Estimate in October 2002 said the attempted procurement
"strongly suggested" Iraq was interested in targeting UAVs
on the United States. Senior members of Congress were told
in September 2002 that this was the "smoking gun" in a
special briefing by Vice President Cheney and then-CIA
Director George J. Tenet.
By January 2003, however, it became publicly known that
the director of Air Force intelligence dissented from the
view that UAVs were to be used for biological or chemical
delivery, saying instead they were for reconnaissance. In
addition, according to the president's commission, the CIA
"increasingly believed that the attempted purchase of the
mapping software . . . may have been inadvertent."
In an intelligence estimate on threats to the U.S.
homeland published in January 2003, Air Force, Defense
Intelligence Agency and Army analysts agreed that the
proposed purchase was "not necessarily indicative of an
intent to target the U.S. homeland."
By late January 2003, the number of U.S. troops in the
Persian Gulf area was approaching 150,000, and the invasion
of Iraq was all but guaranteed. Neither Bush nor Powell
reflected in their speeches the many doubts that had
surfaced at that time about Iraq's weapons programs.
Instead, Bush said, "With nuclear arms or a full arsenal
of chemical and biological weapons, Saddam Hussein could
resume his ambitions of conquest in the Middle East and
create deadly havoc in that region." He added: "Secretly,
and without fingerprints, he could provide one of his hidden
weapons to terrorists, or help them develop their own."
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