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View Full Version : CIA Warned Bush Of No WMD In Iraq



ocean
04-25-2006, 08:11 PM
by Maxim Kniazkov
Washington (AFP) Apr 24, 2006
The Central Intelligence Agency warned US President George W. Bush before the Iraq war that it had reliable information the government of Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction, a retired CIA operative disclosed.

But the operative, Tyler Drumheller, said top White House officials simply brushed off the warning, saying they were "no longer interested" in intelligence and that the policy toward Iraq had been already set.

The disclosure, made in an interview with CBS's "60 Minutes" program due to be broadcast late Sunday, adds to earlier accusations that the Bush administration used intelligence selectively as it built its case for the March 2003 invasion of Iraq and the toppling of Saddam's regime. The administration claimed in the run-up to the war that Baghdad had extensive stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons and was working clandestinely to build a nuclear arsenal, therefore, presenting a threat to the world.

An extensive CIA-led probe undertaken after the US military took control of Iraq failed to turn up any such weapons. But Bush and other members of his administration have blamed the fiasco on a massive intelligence failure and vehemently denied manipulating information they had been provided.

However, Drumheller, who was a top CIA liaison officer in Europe before the war, insisted Bush had been explicitly warned well before an invasion order was given that the United States may not find the suspected weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

The information about the absence of the suspected weapons in Iraq, according to excerpts of Drumheller's remarks, was clandestinely provided to the United States by former Iraqi foreign minister Naji Sabri, who doubled as a covert intelligence agent for Western services. Then-CIA director George Tenet immediately delivered this report to Bush, Vice President **** Cheney and other high-ranking administration officials, but the information was dismissed, Drumheller said.

"The group that was dealing with preparation for the Iraq war came back and said they were no longer interested," the former CIA official recalled. "And we said 'Well, what about the intel?' And they said 'Well, this isn't about intel anymore. This is about regime change.'" Drumheller said the White House did not want any additional data from Sabri because, as he pointed out, "the policy was set."

"The war in Iraq was coming and they were looking for intelligence to fit into the policy," he argued.

The CIA declined to comment on the disclosure.

Drumheller admitted that Sabri was just one source, but pointed out that the administration would not shy away from other single-source information if it suited its policy goals. "They certainly took information that came from single sources on the yellowcake story and on several other stories with no corroboration at all," he complained.

The White House had embraced a British report that Iraq had purchased 500 tons of uranium from the African nation of Niger, allegedly to restart its nuclear weapons program. A special CIA envoy Joseph Wilson, who made a secret trip to Niger in late 2002 to verify the report, dismissed it as unfounded -- much to the displeasure of the White House.

Drumheller, who retired from the agency last year, is the second high-ranking ex-CIA official to criticize the administration's use of intelligence in months leading up to the war. Paul Pillar, who was the national intelligence officer for the Near East and South Asia from 2000 to 2005, wrote in the March-April issue of Foreign Affairs magazine that the White House was "cherry-picking" information and that "intelligence was misused publicly to justify decisions already made."

There was no immediate reaction from the White House to the latest charges.


Source: Agence France-Presse

priccobe
04-25-2006, 09:04 PM
His source, Sabri also said that Iraq had stockpiled 500 tons of chemical weapons (see this story (http://msnbc.msn.com/id/11927856/page/2/) from March 20th).
So, either the reporter or Drumheller (or both) are being dishonest here and leaving out some VERY key info.

However, Drumheller, who was a top CIA liaison officer in Europe before the war, insisted Bush had been explicitly warned well before an invasion order was given that the United States may not find the suspected weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. EXCEPT the 500 tons of Chemical weapons that his source, Sabri, stated that Iraq had.... How many times is the media going to continually rehash the same BS stories with a new spin?

GhOsT_TaLoN
04-25-2006, 10:47 PM
i am so tired of hearing about this s***! we are at war so lets stop thinking all that stuff and concentrate on getting the job done

ABNINF
04-25-2006, 11:36 PM
There's always going to be the reports that say, "I warned of this before it happened...." Somebody in the CIA is probably writing a report right now, saying, "Iran does not have a Nuclear weapons program, and furthermore I don't feel that Iran poses any real threat to the US or the Western world..."

These reports are always going to be there, somebody's always going to try and say "I warned you". I'm tired or hearing about it.

baker
04-26-2006, 07:58 AM
i am so tired of hearing about this s***! we are at war so lets stop thinking all that stuff and concentrate on getting the job done

Would you say the same, when you are going to war again for some ****ty reason?
Hmm, even it something like that happens again? I think it is important for your country to know if it was betrayed to pretend things like that in the future.

C3F
04-26-2006, 08:09 AM
I'm always amazed at how the ENTIRE media and people opposed to the war continually bring this subject up, and continually and completely ignore the chemical weapons (CW) storage facilities throughout Iraq????? These storage facilities CURRENTLY HOLD CHEMIICAL WEAPONS!!! Granted, the storage facilities hold IRAN/IRAQ war era CW but, they are CW none the less. These bunkers hold a variety of CONFIRMED warheads, rockets, drums and other nefarious materials. I'm confused? If they are "older" CW, they don't exist or they don't count???

I'm not going to nominate exactly where they are but there are numerous individuals in the media, ALL the members of the U.S. congress and even John Kerry are aware of them. Every international coalition partner knows about them. Vladimir Putin can tell anyone exactly where they are at!!

What part of physically seeing them, testing them, examining them is the "they don't exist" part???????

What am I missing???????????????????????????????

Dronetek
04-26-2006, 08:27 AM
Presidents get told a lot of things. Their job is to pick one and press forword. You are looking at this from a hindsight point of view...





What am I missing???????????????????????????????

Not to mention incidents like these, spanning almost a decade:
http://www.un.org/Depts/unscom/Chronology/chronologyframe.htm



I think it is important for your country to know if it was betrayed to pretend things like that in the future.

No, it’s your opinion. Some of us are grown up and realize that a leader doesn’t have clairvoyance and has to make decisions. I fully supported war in Iraq before Bush was even elected. I didn’t support Clinton, but when he was about to go in to Iraq and passed the Iraqi Liberation Act I was onboard. It really disappointed me that he left it for another president to do.

Hiroshima
04-26-2006, 10:22 AM
Hey, we'll hear this stuff as long as someone somewhere maintains that there were such things...Best way to handle it is just to ignore it unless you perfer the Stalin way of things: If there's no man, there's no problem.

constantinople
04-26-2006, 10:33 AM
I've got it..... President Bush and the rest of his goon squad made a mistake. The mistake was the last letter of the country they were going to invade. Iraq/Iran. They are so silly! :) Now I can see what really happened. wow a typeo can really do some damage.

Hiroshima
04-26-2006, 10:37 AM
I've got it..... President Bush and the rest of his goon squad made a mistake. The mistake was the last letter of the country they were going to invade. Iraq/Iran. They are so silly! :) Now I can see what really happened. wow a typeo can really do some damage.


I salute your sense of humor! Though in all honesty we should have taken out North Korea instead...

James
04-26-2006, 02:37 PM
Hey, 2004 called. It wants it's argument back.

Baboonass
04-26-2006, 02:42 PM
Hey, 2004 called. It wants it's argument back.

Ba da bump..CRASH!

Belrick
04-26-2006, 04:41 PM
Old news.
People either already know that the WMD tales were pure propaganda to cover hidden agenda's or they think like this guy...

http://www.natural-health-information-centre.com/image-files/head-in-sand.jpg

Baboonass
04-26-2006, 04:49 PM
Old news.
People either already know that the WMD tales were pure propaganda to cover hidden agenda's or they think like this guy...




And that is because you are in the loop and know about this knowledge first hand, right?



Propaganda says what?

renegade
04-27-2006, 12:36 PM
Old news.
People either already know that the WMD tales were pure propaganda to cover hidden agenda's or they think like this guy...


I like the way we now equate a 55 gallon drum of CS/CN gas to a 10 megaton MIRV warhead.