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Yes, Bush lied (WND'S Title)
WorldNetDaily ^ | Oct 6, 2003 | Paul Sperry

Posted on 10/07/2003 1:59:03 AM PDT by UncleJeff

WASHINGTON – A year ago, on Oct. 1, one of the most important documents in U.S. history was published and couriered over to the White House.

The 90-page, top-secret report, drafted by the National Intelligence Council at Langley, included an executive summary for President Bush known as the "key judgments." It summed up the findings of the U.S. intelligence community regarding the threat posed by Iraq, findings the president says formed the foundation for his decision to preemptively invade Iraq without provocation. The report "was good, sound intelligence," Bush has remarked.

Most of it deals with alleged weapons of mass destruction.

But page 4 of the report, called the National Intelligence Estimate, deals with terrorism, and draws conclusions that would come as a shock to most Americans, judging from recent polls on Iraq. The CIA, Defense Intelligence Agency and the other U.S. spy agencies unanimously agreed that Baghdad:

had not sponsored past terrorist attacks against America,

was not operating in concert with al-Qaida,

and was not a terrorist threat to America.

"We have no specific intelligence information that Saddam's regime has directed attacks against U.S. territory," the report stated.

However, it added, "Saddam, if sufficiently desperate, might decide that only an organization such as al-Qaida could perpetrate the type of terrorist attack that he would hope to conduct."

Sufficiently desperate? If he "feared an attack that threatened the survival of the regime," the report explained.

"In such circumstances," it added, "he might decide that the extreme step of assisting the Islamist terrorists in conducting a CBW [chemical and biological weapons] attack against the United States would be his last chance to exact vengeance by taking a large number of victims with him."

In other words, only if Saddam were provoked by U.S. attack would he even consider taking the "extreme step" of reaching out to al-Qaida, an organization with which he had no natural or preexisting relationship. He wasn't about to strike the U.S. or share his alleged weapons with al-Qaida – unless the U.S. struck him first and threatened the collapse of his regime.

Now turn to the next page of the same NIE report, which is considered the gold standard of intelligence reports. Page 5 ranks the key judgments by confidence level – high, moderate or low.

According to the consensus of Bush's intelligence services, there was "low confidence" before the war in the views that "Saddam would engage in clandestine attacks against the U.S. Homeland" or "share chemical or biological weapons with al-Qaida."

Their message to the president was clear: Saddam wouldn't help al-Qaida unless we put his back against the wall, and even then it was a big maybe. If anything, the report was a flashing yellow light against attacking Iraq.

Bush saw the warning, yet completely ignored it and barreled ahead with the war plans he'd approved a month earlier (Aug. 29), telling a completely different version of the intelligence consensus to the American people. Less than a week after the NIE was published, he warned that "on any given day" – provoked by attack or not, sufficiently desperate or not – Saddam could team up with Osama and conduct a joint terrorist operation against America using weapons of mass destruction.

"Iraq could decide on any given day to provide a biological or chemical weapon to a terrorist group or individual terrorists," Bush said Oct. 7 in his nationally televised Cincinnati speech. "Alliance with terrorists could allow the Iraqi regime to attack America without leaving fingerprints." The terrorists he was referring to were "al-Qaida members."

By telling Americans that Saddam could "on any given day" slip unconventional weapons to al-Qaida if America didn't disarm him, the president misrepresented the conclusions of his own secret intelligence report, which warned that Saddam wouldn't even try to reach out to al-Qaida unless he were attacked and had nothing to lose – and might even find that hard to do since he had no history of conducting joint terrorist operations with al-Qaida, and certainly none against the U.S.

If that's not lying, I don't know what is.

What's worse, the inconvenient conclusions about Iraq and al-Qaida were withheld from the unclassified version of the secret NIE report that Bush authorized for public release the day before his Cincinnati speech, as part of the launch of the White House's campaign to sell the war. The 25-page white paper, posted on the CIA website, focused on alleged weapons of mass destruction, and conveniently left out the entire part about Saddam's reluctance to reach out to al-Qaida. Americans also didn't see the finding that Saddam had no hand in 9-11 or any other al-Qaida attack against American territory. That, too, was sanitized.

Over the following months, in speech after speech, Bush went right on lying with impunity about the Iraq-al-Qaida threat, all the while flouting the judgments of his own intelligence agencies.

Even after the war, Bush continued the lie. "We have removed an ally of al-Qaida," he said May 1 from the deck of the USS Lincoln. "No terrorist network will gain weapons of mass destruction from the Iraqi regime."

In the glaring absence of any hard proof of either those alleged weapons or al-Qaida links, the White House press corps has finally put down their stenographer's pads and started asking tough questions, forcing the president to at least level with the American people about Saddam's assumed role in 9-11.

"We have no evidence that Saddam Hussein was involved with the Sept. 11" attacks, Bush confessed last month, finally repeating for the public what his own intelligence services had told him a year earlier.

The president's spokespeople say they're shocked, shocked, to learn that seven in 10 Americans tell pollsters they blame Saddam Hussein for the 9-11 attacks. Gee, they pondered, wherever did they get such an idea?

Oh, maybe from all the president's speeches and remarks suggesting Saddam was to blame for 9-11, starting with this one:

"Prior to Sept. 11, we thought two oceans would protect us," President Bush said about Iraq in an Oct. 14 speech in Michigan. "After Sept. 11, we've entered into a new era in a new war.

"This is a man that we know has had connections with al-Qaida," he continued, referring to Saddam. "This is a man who, in my judgment, would like to use al-Qaida as a forward army. And this is a man that we must deal with for the sake of peace."

Or this one:

"Saddam Hussein and his weapons are a direct threat to this country," Bush said March 6 in a White House news conference. "The attacks of Sept. 11 showed what the enemies of America did with four airplanes. We will not wait to see what terrorists or terrorist states could do with weapons of mass destruction."

Or this:

"Used to be that we could think that you could contain a person like Saddam Hussein, that oceans would protect us from his type of terror," he said at the same press conference. "Sept. 11 should say to the American people that we're now a battlefield, that weapons of mass destruction in the hands of a terrorist organization could be deployed here at home."

In that press conference, Bush mentioned the Sept. 11 attacks nine times, Saddam 40 times, and Osama zero, effectively morphing Osama into Saddam, as I pointed out in a column just before the war.

During the war, Bush said he couldn't leave "enemies free to plot another Sept. 11 – this time, perhaps, with chemical, biological or nuclear terror."

In that April 5 radio address, he added: "We'll remove weapons of mass destruction from the hands of mass murderers."

Even when we found no weapons to remove, he continued to distort the truth about Iraq and 9-11.

"We will not wait for known enemies to strike us again," he said Aug. 26 in an American Legion speech, rationalizing his Iraq attack. "We will strike them before they hit more of our cities and kill more of our citizens."

The juxtaposition was no accident. Just as it was no accident that the White House timed the media rollout of its war campaign for the first 9-11 anniversary.

No wonder 71 percent of Americans told University of Maryland pollsters after the war that they believe the "Bush administration implied that Iraq under Saddam Hussein was involved in the Sept. 11 attacks." A more recent Washington Post poll, as well as other polls, came up with roughly the same number.

Sadly, it's the small minority of respondents who said they saw no connection at all who most accurately reflect the views of the U.S. intelligence community, proving again the power of unfiltered propaganda.

A smoking gun found now wouldn't even undo the lies. It wouldn't negate the fact that the president had no such evidence before the war when he claimed Saddam and Osama were thick as thieves, contradicting the intelligence community's threat assessment. He simply turned around and told the public a whopper.

Forget that Bush lied about the reasons for putting our sons and daughters in harm's way in Iraq; and forget that he sent 140,000 troops there with bull's-eyes on their backs, then dared their attackers to "bring it on."

It was the height of irresponsibility to have done so in the middle of a war on al-Qaida, the real and proven threat to America. Bush diverted those troops and other resources – including intelligence assets, Arabic translators and hundreds of billions of tax dollars – from the hunt for Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaida leaders along the Afghan-Pakistani border. And now they've regrouped and are as threatening as ever.

That's inexcusable, and Bush supporters with any intellectual honesty and concern for their own families' safety should be mad as hell about it – and that's coming from someone who voted for Bush.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: nie; paulsperry; wmd
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To: Quilla
good response Quilla

Prairie
41 posted on 10/07/2003 6:48:36 AM PDT by prairiebreeze (I'm a monthly donor to FR. And proud of it!)
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To: dogbyte12; Amelia; UncleJeff
This is the source of his information.
42 posted on 10/07/2003 7:34:53 AM PDT by Egregious Philbin
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To: UncleJeff
Um...It seems that there has developed a consensus of opinion that our pre-war Iraq intelligence SUCKED? Now I'm to understand that everything sucked EXCEPT the CIA analysis of the potential for a Saddam/AlQaeda alliance which could have been written in stone?

Perhaps PRUDENCE mandated that due consideration be given to the DOWNSIDE of a wrong assessment of Hussein/AlQaeda ties from intelligence estimates that were, by no means, definitive?

And, I agree, the bigger story here is HOW WND got hold of that "REPORT" in the first place.

43 posted on 10/07/2003 7:55:22 AM PDT by JakeINJoisey
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To: JakeINJoisey
this sounds like CIA propaganda to me.
44 posted on 10/07/2003 8:00:53 AM PDT by MuchoMacho
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To: UncleJeff
Sorry, Paul, you can't ignore Saddam's history of mass-murder against his own people using chems or his absolute intent to buy long range missiles and continue efforts to create chem and bioweapons. We know all this from the Kay report and many, many other reports before it.

Someone's been doing a serious number on the world that a man who used to care about truth and honor would write this unworthy and inaccurate piece.

 THE CRUELEST COVER-UP 
 
 STATEMENT BY DAVID KAY ON THE INTERIM PROGRESS REPORT

Case closed. If anything, the President didn't tell the world enough about Saddam's evil past and his willingness to mass-murder innocents for power's sake - both neighbors and neighboring nations.

45 posted on 10/07/2003 8:29:49 AM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl ("This isn't a game." <> "This is our lives." ~ Iraqi victim of Saddam to war critics who say "QUIT")
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To: stradivarius
Good points!
46 posted on 10/07/2003 8:37:53 AM PDT by Robert A Cook PE (I can only support FR by donating monthly, but ABBCNNBCBS continue to lie every day!)
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To: UncleJeff
Yes, Bush lied

Depends on what the definition of is, is.

47 posted on 10/07/2003 8:51:26 AM PDT by varon
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To: Egregious Philbin
Thanks for the link to the report. I guess it's been declassified.

The report had High Confidence that SH was violating the terms of his cease-fire agreement with the U.S., and also high confidence that SH was continuing his WMD program and was working to obtain nukes within the near future.

Post 911, why wait until SH already has nukes and is undeterrable, when we had just cause to remove him for violating his cease-fire obligations now?

The U.N. was useless, and so were the economic sanctions against Iraq and constant "containment", which was even more worrisome (why did SH refuse to cooperate with inspections and willingly endure crippling sanctions if he had no WMD programs?)

Sperry's got a strange agenda... what's up with his distortions? He sounds just like a mentally-challenged Leftist. And what's up with Farah???

Confidence Levels for Selected Key Judgments in This Estimate

High Confidence:

•Iraq is continuing, and in some areas expanding its chemical, biological, nuclear and missile programs contrary to UN resolutions.

•We are not detecting portions of these weapons programs.

•Iraq possesses proscribed chemical and biological weapons and missiles.

•Iraq could make a nuclear weapon in months to a year once if acquires sufficient weapons-grade fissile material.

Moderate Confidence:

•Iraq does not yet have a nuclear weapon or sufficient material to make one but is likely to have a weapon by 2007 to 2009. (See INR alternative view, page 84).

Low Confidence:

•When Saddam would use weapons of mass destruction.

•Whether Saddam would engage in clandestine attacks against the US Homeland.

•Whether in desperation Saddam would share chemical or biological weapons with al-Qa'ida. { p.6 }

48 posted on 10/07/2003 8:54:52 AM PDT by stradivarius
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To: joesbucks
The writer is an ultra conservative writer.

...who happens to agree with my ultra liberal relatives that Bush just attacked Iraq to take over the oil fields.

49 posted on 10/07/2003 5:16:13 PM PDT by Amelia
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To: Amelia
but he was a very powerful anti clinton voice.
50 posted on 10/07/2003 5:59:22 PM PDT by joesbucks
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To: UncleJeff; billbears; mr.pink; sheltonmac; ex-snook
Sperry has played the loyal dissenter throughout. His cache on the right I see is not holding sway with the newbies who were not with us during the Clinton Era, but this is an important broadside in rightwing media coverage of this President.

WND is an arm of Scaife publishing, a loyal funder of the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy.


51 posted on 10/08/2003 6:15:59 AM PDT by JohnGalt (Attn Pseudocons: Wilsonianrepublic.com is still available.)
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To: JohnGalt
Bush has neo-conned America.
52 posted on 10/08/2003 7:57:04 AM PDT by ex-snook (Americans needs PROTECTIONISM - military and economic.)
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To: ex-snook
There is still time for Bush to 'end' some careers but me thinks the neocons will take Bush down with them.

(See L'Affair Wilson.)
53 posted on 10/08/2003 8:03:51 AM PDT by JohnGalt (Attn Pseudocons: Wilsonianrepublic.com is still available.)
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To: dogbyte12
The bigger story here is why WND? Is WND starting to turn away from Bush, if so, why?

Perhaps because as Bush continues his move to the left and the growing influence of the neocons to continue this hunt for weapons that probably haven't been there in ten plus years, conservative magazines are beginning to point out fact instead of covering for an administration that doesn't actually stand for anything conservative? I don't know, just thinking out loud

54 posted on 10/08/2003 5:54:29 PM PDT by billbears (Deo Vindice)
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To: Cindy
Thanks for the latest cover articles Cindy. Nice to read how it's going in Wonderland. Except now Kay says the WMDs were moved to Syria. Guess ol' Dave got his latest update from Wolfowitz the past few days on who the Armed Forces are going to needlessly attack next
55 posted on 10/08/2003 5:56:30 PM PDT by billbears (Deo Vindice)
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To: billbears
Well Vince. Syria is old news.

Speaking of "Wonderland"; where do you get your news from?
56 posted on 10/08/2003 9:40:19 PM PDT by Cindy
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