The White House used false intel — which they knew was false

We’ve been waiting for the Senate Intelligence Committee to report on the misuse of pre-war intelligence for so long, it’s easy to forget what a debacle the endeavor really is.

Here’s a quick primer. The Intelligence Committee began a comprehensive investigation nearly five years ago. Initially, the committee was prepared to release one authoritative document on the Iraq intelligence, what it said, and how it was handled. With the 2004 presidential election looming, then-Intelligence Committee Chairman Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) split the report in two — one on how wrong the intelligence community and agencies were (released before the ’04 election) and another on how the White House used/misused/abused the available information (to be released after the ’04 election).

Roberts played fast and loose for years. First he said publicly that he’d “try” to have Phase II available to the public before the 2004 election. He didn’t. Roberts then gave his word, in writing, that members of the Senate Intelligence Committee would have a draft report on controversial “public statements” from administration officials by April 2006. That didn’t happen, either. Then he indicated that he wanted to give up on the second part of the investigation altogether. (In January, we learned that the investigation was impeded by the Vice President.)

Today, the wait is over. And you’ll never guess what investigators found.

A long-awaited Senate Select Intelligence Committee report made public Thursday concludes that President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney made public statements to promote an invasion of Iraq that they knew at the time were not supported by available intelligence.

In a statement, Intelligence Committee Chairman John Rockefeller (D- W. Va.) said, “There is no question we all relied on flawed intelligence. But, there is a fundamental difference between relying on incorrect intelligence and deliberately painting a picture to the American people that you know is not fully accurate.”

Key points from the report, by way of Rockefeller’s office:

* Statements and implications by the President and Secretary of State suggesting that Iraq and al-Qa’ida had a partnership, or that Iraq had provided al-Qa’ida with weapons training, were not substantiated by the intelligence.

* Statements by the President and the Vice President indicating that Saddam Hussein was prepared to give weapons of mass destruction to terrorist groups for attacks against the United States were contradicted by available intelligence information.

* Statements by President Bush and Vice President Cheney regarding the postwar situation in Iraq, in terms of the political, security, and economic, did not reflect the concerns and uncertainties expressed in the intelligence products.

* Statements by the President and Vice President prior to the October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate regarding Iraq’s chemical weapons production capability and activities did not reflect the intelligence community’s uncertainties as to whether such production was ongoing.

* The Secretary of Defense’s statement that the Iraqi government operated underground WMD facilities that were not vulnerable to conventional airstrikes because they were underground and deeply buried was not substantiated by available intelligence information.

* The Intelligence Community did not confirm that Muhammad Atta met an Iraqi intelligence officer in Prague in 2001 as the Vice President repeatedly claimed.

To this day, Still-President Bush will talk about his obviously false pre-war claims in the context of mistaken intelligence, which “everybody” believed at the time. But this long-overdue report is a reminder of just how wrong the Bush defense is — he (and his team) weren’t fooled by errors, they fooled others with arguments they knew had no foundation in fact.

Is any of this still relevant now? Maybe. There is a historical record to be concerned with, and it’s important to establish the fact that the White House knowingly said things that weren’t true, specifically to launch a disastrous war.

And then, of course, there’s John McCain, who’s running on his national security expertise and judgment on military matters, who bought every line Bush told him, then parroted it to the nation. Worse, McCain has assured voters that “every [intelligence] assessment” justified the 2003 invasion. Today reminds us how wrong this is.

It boggles my mind that the impeach-and-jail position is considered way out of the mainstream.

  • Gee, thanks Jello Jay, for finally getting this to us long after it would have been most useful. (Like, say, the 2004 elections.) Too bad we didn’t have this at our one and only “accountability moment” for the crooks who perpetrated this.

  • None of this matters if these criminals are not prosecuted for war crimes. Otherswise, who gives a rat’s ass. Historical record doesn’t mean anything if Bush is out giving speeches and making money and clearing brush next year.

  • Pat Roberts is up for re-election. His approval ratings were barely at 51% last year, and I have to imagine news that he was a lying sack of shit might send them even lower.

    Anyone know more about this race, if there even is one?

  • Mattis said:
    None of this matters if these criminals are not prosecuted for war crimes. Otherswise, who gives a rat’s ass. Historical record doesn’t mean anything if Bush is out giving speeches and making money and clearing brush next year.

    Not unless he’s clearing it in an orange vest.

  • @mattis – to me, personally, clearing brush is just a step above going to jail. just sayin’…

  • “President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney made public statements to promote an invasion of Iraq that they knew at the time were not supported by available intelligence”

    28 words when they could have simply said, “They lied.”

  • Does not surprise anybody, I take it.

    If Roberts looks around and wonders what happened to his party next November, he might be reconsidering if covering for Shrub was worth it.

    Ya see with Bush it is always about his short term partisan interest before worrying about his party’s interests and even the Nation’s interest. Roberts enabled this clown at his own expense.

    Hope he enjoys pariah status.

  • Pat Roberts needs to answer for this.

    He’s still lying of course.

    From his sorry ass website:

    Senator Roberts’ Statement on Partisan Phase II Report

    WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senator Pat Roberts, former Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, today released the following statement regarding the partisan Phase II reports on prewar intelligence on Iraq:

    “It is immensely gratifying that the reports released today confirm what I have said for years,” Senator Roberts said. “In fact, after a 17 month review, the Democrat-controlled committee found nothing to support any of its long-standing allegations or partisan rhetoric.

    “This latest Phase II effort has done nothing to improve our intelligence capabilities, nor has it produced any reforms that may prevent intelligence failures in the future.

    “Under my leadership as chairman, all 17 Republicans and Democrats on the committee unanimously approved a report exposing systemic failures throughout our intelligence community. That bipartisan report, coupled with the 9/11 report, led to significant intelligence reforms including the creation of a Director of National Intelligence.

    “I am glad the public can finally see what I have long known. I hope now the committee can put politics aside and continue the work I began five years ago to improve the collection, analysis, and dissemination of intelligence. We owe the American people nothing less.”

    http://roberts.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=PressRoom.PressReleases&ContentRecord_id=59dab2da-802a-23ad-48e4-89cf933185c7

    I would also like to remind everyone that in 2005 By a margin of 50% to 44%, the American people said that Bush should be impeached if he lied us into the war.

    http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/?q=node/3528

  • I love the stuff I get to learn about thanks to this site. It’s really a great resource.

    My comment is not directly about the Iraq intelligence but just a general comment about the right of ex-Presidents to get access to CIA intelligence reports and the like. That should be reversed. I see many years of oil execs and Middle East dictators getting copies of those reports straight from Cheney and Bush…

  • How do you know when George W. Bush and Dick Cheney are lying?

    Their lips move.

  • Please support Jim Slattery, who is running against that lying sack of shit Pat Roberts, who blocked the phase two report for years and is still lying about Bush’s lies.

    Slattery is within striking range, let’s kick ass!!!

    http://www.slatteryforsenate.com/?home

  • Dollars to doughnuts the Report will be dismissed by the MSM as “old news”

  • The moment Dems put impeachment off the table, Phase II was always destined for the “irrelevant” folder.

  • Thanks RacerX. That answers my first question.

    I’m also guessing this Phase II report goes a long ways toward explaining why the Bush Administration was so careful to not dispute anything in Scott McClellan’s book.

    I first saw this on TPMM this morning, and have been switching back and forth between MSNBC and CNN ever since. Not a mention. In fact MSNBC has been replaying a video of a guy getting hit by a car all day long. Would someone please wake up Russert.

  • Worse, McCain has assured voters that “every [intelligence] assessment” justified the 2003 invasion. Today reminds us how wrong this is.

    Does this mean McCain knowingly covered for Bush and his venality for the short benefit of the Republican Party to the detriment of the People’s Right to know the truth?

    Or was John McCain just a Rube that the President playfully used to deceive We the People ?

    McCain owes the Country answers.

  • * Statements by the President and Vice President…

    So, can we send both bastards to the Hague *now*? Now, that their Litany of Lies has finally been made public?

  • Something has to be done before Bush and Cheney pardon each other. Here’s what might happen:

    1] Bush pardons Cheney on January 16th.
    2] Bush resigns from office making Cheney president on January 17th.
    3] Cheney pardons Bush on January 18th.

  • So Jim Slattery is the guy running against Pat Roberts THIS YEAR??!!! What a dumbass Roberts must be pushing it out past 2004 for the President’s reelection, then pushed out again in 06 to try to stop the bleeding of the Senate and House and the dipshit pushes it right into the year he has to face reelection. That is some funny shit there. I hope he gets what he deserves. I hope the DSCC and all of the other campaign committees are helping this guy out. Sweet revenge.

  • So what are our lawmakers going to do with this long-awaited proof?

    Hell, I knew Iraq didn’t have WMDs (the central claim of the Bush administration) even before the invasion, but I listened to Hans Blix. Soon after the invasion, pretty much everyone knew that if they’d had them, they would have USED them against the invaders.

    This will be a real challenge to Obama’s first administration and the new Congress. They cannot just let it fade away.

  • I hope this news jumps up and slaps the face of the ‘woe is me’ crowd we’ve all seen commenting lately and wakes them up. Obama doesn’t have the time to waste nursing their wounded pride in the coming months because we have to focus like a laser beam on these issues, and taking back our country.

    These supposed fighters have turned into whiny crybabies because they didn’t get their way, and they expect us to coddle them and do research for them because they don’t want to face reality and support the Democratic nominee.

    I’ve already had it with the victim meme.

    Now, let’s win this election, and convict these war criminals.

  • Dear Speaker Pelosi,

    Seems we bedwetting liberals were right. NOW can put impeachment back on the table?

    Thankee,

    Adam Benson

  • Bush isn’t necessarily lying just because his lips are moving. He might be reading.

  • So the phase II report has finally come out, no thanks to Sen. Roberts. Now what?

  • NOW can put impeachment back on the table?

    I’m sure she’ll have some other excuse now.

    Sure wish someone would pin her to the wall and demand to know how she is living up to her oath to defend the constitution.

  • “…Is any of this still relevant now? ” Steve asks.
    Consider this is the same Jay Rockefeller who pushes through a senate bill granting Bush unchecked spying power and telecom immunity for those complicit with Bush’s illegal demands. All based on the idea that we should just trust this President and this administration that they will not abuse this unchecked power and that they would not lie to us about what he had the telecoms do.

    Jay tells us Bush and Cheney (the other sponsor to the FISA-Telecom immunity bill) lied to us over and over again in order to start a war and invade a country and then turns right around and tells us we must trust Bush and the telecoms and not worry about what they were doing specifically.

    What is Rockefeller and his committee saying with this report and their FISA telecom immunity bill…”Bush/Cheney…Liars You Can Trust”

    Yeah Steve, It is definitely relevant now…no new FISA bill and no telecom immunity. Liars need warrants and proof.

  • Bush isn’t necessarily lying just because his lips are moving. He might be reading. -Tales of the Boojum

    Why do his lips move when he’s ‘lookin’ at pitchers?’

  • Under the War Crimes Act of 1996—

    Did the willful, intentional misactions of Bush/Cheney result in the death of victims?

    If so—then the penalty for those misactions is death.

    They willfully lied this nation into a war of aggression, and knowing that they were willfully lying demonstrates intent. The world must avenge the unwarranted deaths of thousands of US/coalition forces, thousands of civilian contractors, and hundreds of thousands of Iraqi nationals at the hands of these two pieces of filth.

    George W. Bush—a legacy of being executed for crimes of war. I wouldn’t be in too much of a rush to build that presidential library, Georgie. The world might view it as “America’s Auschwitz….”

  • the nice thing is, I don’t think there is a statute of limitations on international war crimes.

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