What Tenet Knew
Unanswered Questions
by Thomas Powers
How we got into Iraq is the great open question of the decade but George Tenet in his memoir of his seven years running the Central Intelligence Agency takes his sweet time working his way around to it. He hesitates because he has much to explain: the claims made by Tenet's CIA with "high confidence" that Iraq was dangerously armed all proved false. But mistakes are one thing, excusable even when serious; inexcusable would be charges of collusion in deceiving Congress and the public to make war possible. Tenet's overriding goal in his carefully written book is to deny "that we somehow cooked the books" about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. If he says it once he says it a dozen times. "We told the president what we did on Iraq WMD because we believed it."
But repetition is not enough. Tenet's problem is that the intelligence and the war proceeded in lockstep: no intelligence, no war. Since Tenet delivered the (shockingly exaggerated) intelligence, and the President used it to go to war, how is Tenet to convince the world that he wasn't simply giving the boss what he wanted? Tenet naturally dislikes this question but it is evident that the American public and Congress dislike it just as much.
Tomgram: Powers on George Tenet, the CIA, and the Invasion of Iraq
[Note
for Tomdispatch readers: Think of this as the first "gone fishing"
notice of the summer. The next Tomdispatch will probably appear the
Sunday after July 4th. By the way, if you have a moment on the Fourth,
check out the Declaration of Independence for a glimpse of the bad old
days when Americans were ruled by a King George, who, as the document's
authors made clear, refused "his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and
necessary for the public good," "affected to render the Military
independent of and superior to the Civil Power," and "transport[ed] us
beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences." Tom]
In a
week dominated by the CIA -- the Agency of the 1950s, 60s, and 70s --
it might be easy enough to forget the Agency of the new century, the
one known for creating its own offshore Bermuda triangle of injustice,
including a global system of secret (or borrowed) prisons, as well as
for kidnappings, ghost prisoners, torture, assassination, covert
programs aimed at "regime change" in countries like (as in 1953) Iran,
and, of course, everything we don't yet know because the "family
jewels" for this period are nowhere near being released. Note, by the
way, that even the recently released "family jewels" from that older
era are not complete and remain heavily redacted -- in the case of one
document (scroll down), far more so than in a version that was released
in the 1970s.
In addition, this cache of documents seems to
deal only passingly, at best, with the Vietnam War, despite the CIA's
infamous Phoenix Program; nor does it focus on the Agency's covert wars
and other major actions abroad, many of which were laid out in Roger
Morris' three-part profile of Robert Gates at this site. Of course, one
difference between those ancient decades and today is that the CIA is
now but one jostling agency among the 16 that make up the official
American "Intelligence Community," whose combined budget, while
unknown, runs into the many tens of billions of dollars.
All
that's missing, as Thomas Powers, an expert on the CIA and author of
Intelligence Wars, makes so clear in the following essay, posted at
this site thanks to the kindness of the editors of the New York Review
of Books, is actual, serviceable "intelligence." Tom
What Tenet Knew
Unanswered Questions
by Thomas Powers
[This essay, which considers At the Center of the
Storm: My Years at the CIA by George Tenet with Bill Harlow
(HarperCollins, 549 pp., $30.00) appears in the July 19th, 2007 issue
of the New York Review of Books and is posted here with the kind
permission of the editors of that magazine.]
How we got into Iraq is the great
open question of the decade but George Tenet in his memoir of his seven
years running the Central Intelligence Agency takes his sweet time
working his way around to it. He hesitates because he has much to
explain: the claims made by Tenet's CIA with "high confidence" that
Iraq was dangerously armed all proved false. But mistakes are one
thing, excusable even when serious; inexcusable would be charges of
collusion in deceiving Congress and the public to make war possible.
Tenet's overriding goal in his carefully written book is to deny "that
we somehow cooked the books" about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction.
If he says it once he says it a dozen times. "We told the president
what we did on Iraq WMD because we believed it."
But
repetition is not enough. Tenet's problem is that the intelligence and
the war proceeded in lockstep: no intelligence, no war. Since Tenet
delivered the (shockingly exaggerated) intelligence, and the President
used it to go to war, how is Tenet to convince the world that he wasn't
simply giving the boss what he wanted? Tenet naturally dislikes this
question but it is evident that the American public and Congress
dislike it just as much. Down that road lie painful truths about the
character and motives of the President and the men and women around
him. But getting out of Iraq will not be easy, and the necessary first
step is to find the civic courage to insist on knowing how we got in.
Tenet's memoir is an excellent place to begin; some of what he tells us
and much that he leaves out point unmistakably to the genesis of the
war in the White House -- the very last thing Tenet wants to address
clearly. He sidles up to the question at last on page 301: "One of the
great mysteries to me," he writes, "is exactly when the war in Iraq
became inevitable."
Hans Blix, director of the United Nations
weapons inspection team, did not believe that war was inevitable until
the shooting started. In Blix's view, reported in his memoir Disarming
Iraq, the failure of his inspectors to find Saddam Hussein's WMD meant
that a US invasion of Iraq could certainly be put off, perhaps avoided
altogether. For Blix it was all about the weapons. Tenet's version of
events makes it clear that WMD, despite all the ballyhoo, were in fact
secondary; something else was driving events.
Tenet's
omissions begin on Day Two of the march to war, September 12, 2001,
when three British officials came to CIA headquarters "just for the
night, to express their condolences and to be with us. We had dinner
that night at Langley,….as touching an event as I experienced during my
seven years as DCI." This would have been an excellent place to
describe the genesis of the war but Tenet declines. We must fill in the
missing pieces ourselves.
The guests that night were David
Manning, barely a week into his new job as Tony Blair's personal
foreign policy adviser; Richard Dearlove, chief of the British secret
intelligence service known as MI6, a man Tenet already knew well; and
Eliza Manningham-Buller, the deputy chief of MI5, the British
counterpart to the FBI. Despite the ban on air traffic, Dearlove and
Manningham-Buller had flown into Andrews Air Force Base near Washington
that day. But David Manning was already inside the United States. The
day before the attack on the World Trade Center, on September 10, he
had been in Washington for a dinner with Condoleezza Rice at the home
of the British ambassador, Christopher Meyer. Early on September 11
Manning took the shuttle to New York and from his airplane window on
the approach to Kennedy Airport he saw smoke rising from one of the
World Trade Center towers. By the time he landed the second tower had
been struck.
It took a full day for the British embassy to
fetch Manning back to Washington by car, and he arrived at Langley that
night carrying the burden of what he had seen. It was a largish group
that gathered for dinner. Along with the three British guests and Tenet
were Jim Pavitt and his deputy at the CIA's Directorate for Operations;
Tenet's executive secretary Buzzy Krongard; the chief of the Counter
Terrorism Center, Cofer Black; the acting director of the FBI, Thomas
Pickard; the chief of the CIA's Near East Division, still not
identified; and the chief of the CIA's European Division, Tyler
Drumheller.
Tenet names his British guests, but omits all that
was said. Tyler Drumheller, barred by the CIA from identifying the
visitors in his own recent memoir, On the Brink, reports an exchange
between Manning and Tenet, who were probably meeting for the first
time. "I hope we can all agree," said Manning, "that we should
concentrate on Afghanistan and not be tempted to launch any attacks on
Iraq."
"Absolutely," Tenet replied, "we all agree on that. Some might want to link the issues, but none of us wants to go that route."
******
Manning
already understood that people close to President Bush wanted to go
after Iraq, and Tenet of course knew it too. Conspicuous among them, in
his mind that night, was the neo-conservative agitator and polemicist
Richard Perle, an outspoken advocate of removing Saddam Hussein by
military force. On the very first page of Tenet's memoir, he tells us
that he had run into Perle that very morning -- September 12 – as Perle
was leaving the West Wing of the White House. They knew each other in a
passing way, as figures of note on the Washington scene. As Tenet
reached the door Perle turned to him and said, "Iraq has to pay a price
for what happened yesterday. They bear responsibility."
This made a powerful impression on the director of the CIA:
"I
was stunned but said nothing.... At the Secret Service security
checkpoint, I looked back at Perle and thought: What the hell is he
talking about? Moments later, a second thought came to me: Who has
Richard Perle been meeting with in the White House so early in the
morning on today of all days? I never learned the answer to that
question."
The meeting with Perle and the dinner with Manning
and Dearlove took place on Wednesday. On Saturday, Tenet was at Camp
David where President Bush was weighing the American response to the
attacks of September 11. During the discussion, arguments for removing
Saddam were pressed by Paul Wolfowitz, another neoconservative and
longtime friend of Perle who was the deputy secretary of defense under
Donald Rumsfeld. "The president listened to Paul's views," Tenet
writes, "but, fairly quickly, it seemed to me, dismissed them." The
vote against including Iraq "in our immediate response plans" was four
to zero against, with Rumsfeld abstaining. Tenet adds, "I recall no
mention of WMD."
Four days later, at a meeting in the White
House, Bush made a request of Tenet. Through a video hookup Vice
President Dick Cheney was in the room as well. "I want to know about
links between Saddam and al Qaeda," said the President. "The Vice
President knows some things that might be helpful."
What the
Vice President thought he knew was that one of the September 11
hijackers, Mohamed Atta, had met in Prague earlier in the year with an
official of Iraqi intelligence. Tenet responded within days to say that
evidence from phone calls and credit cards demonstrated that Atta was
in the United States at the time of the alleged meeting, living in a
Virginia apartment not far from the CIA. A proven link between Saddam
and September 11 would have ended the debate about "regime change"
right there. None was ever established, then or later, but Cheney and
his personal national security adviser, I. Lewis Libby, known by his
nickname as Scooter, argued and reargued the case for the link until
the eve of war. Often they went to the agency personally, bringing
fresh allegations acquired from their own sources, and pressing CIA
analysts to "re-look" the evidence.
Under continuing White
House pressure the agency treated their claims respectfully. Analysts
conceded that "cooperation, safe haven, training, and reciprocal
nonaggression" were all discussed by al-Qaeda and Iraqi officials. "But
operational direction and control?" Tenet asks. "No."
The Vice
President did not take no for an answer. He often cited the link in
public and he wanted the CIA to back him up. In June 2002, the deputy
director for intelligence, Jami Miscik, complained to Tenet that
Scooter Libby and Paul Wolfowitz would not let the subject drop. Tenet
reports that he told Miscik to "just say ‘we stand by what we
previously wrote.'" But six months later, in January 2003, Stephen
Hadley at the National Security Council summoned Miscik to the White
House for yet another revision of a "link" paper. Infuriated, Miscik
went to Tenet's office and told him she would resign before she would
change another word. Tenet says he called Hadley. "‘Steve,' I said,
‘knock this off. The paper is done.... Jami is not coming down there to
discuss it anymore.'"
Ron Suskind tells the same story but
quotes Tenet differently on the phone to Hadley: "It is fucking over.
Do you hear me! And don't you ever fucking treat my people this way
again. Ever!" Even that was not the end. In mid-March 2003, less than a
week before the U.S. launched its attack, Cheney sent a speech over to
the CIA for review making all the old arguments that there was a
"link." Tenet tells us that he telephoned Bush to say, "The vice
president wants to make a speech about Iraq and al-Qa'ida that goes way
beyond what the intelligence shows. We cannot support the speech, and
it should not be given."
Why did Cheney press this point so
relentlessly? Tenet tells a story that helps to explain the motives
behind the struggle over "intelligence" between September 11 and the
day American cruise missiles began to land on Baghdad, eighteen months
later. Only a few days after September 11, Tenet writes, a CIA analyst
attended a White House meeting where he was told that Bush wanted to
remove Saddam. The analyst's response, according to Tenet:
"If
you want to go after that son of a bitch to settle old scores, be my
guest. But don't tell us he is connected to 9/11 or to terrorism
because there is no evidence to support that. You will have to have a
better reason."
The better reason eventually settled on by
President Bush was Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction. The
evidence for WMD turned out to be even weaker than the evidence for
"the link," but Cheney, with the full backing of the White House and
the National Security Council, hammered without let-up on the horrific
consequences of error -- discovering too late that Iraq had nuclear
weapons meant that the smoking gun would be a mushroom cloud. It was
vaguely believed at the time, by the public and foreign intelligence
services alike, that the CIA must have learned something new; why else
in early 2002 had Saddam Hussein suddenly become a threat to the world?
In fact only one thing had changed -- the American frame of
mind, something clearly understood by advisers to Britain's Tony Blair,
who had decided immediately after September 11 that he was going to
back the American response, whatever it was. David Manning's hope,
expressed at his dinner with Tenet, that the Americans would settle for
the invasion of Afghanistan and the overthrow of the Taliban was soon
dashed. A week later Tony Blair himself was at the White House. Bush
took him immediately by the elbow, according to the British ambassador,
Christopher Meyer, and moved the prime minister off into a corner of
the room.
Don't get distracted, Blair told the President; Taliban first.
"I
agree with you, Tony," Bush replied. "We must deal with this first. But
when we have dealt with Afghanistan, we must come back to Iraq."
The
Taliban were in retreat by the end of the year; on March 1, Robert
Einhorn, an assistant secretary of state for nonproliferation,
testified in Congress that Bush had come back to Iraq: "A consensus
seems to be developing in Washington in favor of ‘regime change' in
Iraq, if necessary through the use of military force."
As it
happened, it took a year to get from point A to point B -- from
developing consensus to war. During that year George Tenet's CIA played
an indispensable part in raising fears of Saddam Hussein's weapons of
mass destruction, but in his memoir Tenet is reluctant to approach the
Iraq problem. He writes proudly of the agency's success in removing the
Taliban -- which was in fact a marvel of the light touch, especially in
retrospect -- and insists he was slow to recognize that Iraq was next:
"My
many sleepless nights back then didn't center on Saddam Hussein.
Al-Qa'ida occupied my nightmares.... Looking back, I wish I could have
devoted equal energy and attention to Iraq.... Iraq deserved more of my
time. But the simple fact is that I didn't see that freight train
coming as early as I should have."
******
When did war
become inevitable? When did Tenet see the freight train coming? Does he
really hope to convince us that it took him longer than the British,
who signed on for war at a meeting with Bush at his Texas ranch in
April 2002?
What we know about the extraordinarily close
British-American relationship in the run-up to war comes mainly from a
series of high-level British government papers known collectively as
"the Downing Street memos."5 An unknown person gave them to the British
newspaper correspondent Michael Smith -- a first batch of six, in
September 2004, when Smith was working for the Telegraph; and two more
the following May after Smith had moved over to the London Times. These
documents reveal British plans in a language of bald directness and
candor. There is no fudge; there is no evasion of awkward fact; there
is frank admission of where they want to get and how they plan to get
there.
The British had no objection to overthrowing Saddam by
military means but feared that the American willingness to go it alone
would undermine the case, anger the world, and make it impossible for
Britain to take part. The solution was to cast Saddam as the villain,
and the British saw promise in his serial rejection of UN resolutions.
If he could be coaxed to defy one last and final offer to disarm,
worded carefully to make UN demands sound fair, then the world might
come around to seeing war as reasonable. This was the strategy the
British hoped to sell to the Americans in the spring of 2002. In a
first step, David Manning in mid-March flew again to Washington where
he met twice with the national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice. He
reported in a memo to Blair on March 14:
"These were good
exchanges, and particularly frank when we were one-on-one at dinner....
Condi's enthusiasm for regime change is undimmed. But there were some
signs, since we last spoke, of greater awareness of the practical
difficulties.... From what she said, Bush has yet to find the answers
to the big questions: how to persuade international opinion that
military action against Iraq is necessary and justified;... what
happens on the morning after?"
Blair was in a strong position,
in Manning's view. "Bush will want to pick your brains," he told the
prime minister in his memo. "He also wants your support." The price of
that support, Manning told Rice, would be recognition of British
concerns:
"[I]n particular: the UN dimension. The issue of
the weapons inspectors must be handled in a way that would persuade
European and wider opinion that the US was conscious of the
international framework, and the insistence of many countries on the
need for a legal base. Renewed refusal by Saddam to accept unfettered
inspections would be a powerful argument."
A few days after
Manning's dinner with Rice, Christopher Meyer invited Paul Wolfowitz to
lunch at the ambassador's residence. He reported the result to Manning
on March 18: "I opened by sticking very closely to the script that you
used with Condi Rice last week." Yes, Britain supported regime change
but the world had to be brought along. Wolfowitz wanted to talk about
Saddam's crimes and his connections to al-Qaeda -- "did we, he asked,
know anything more about this meeting" of Mohamed Atta with the Iraqi
intelligence officer in Prague? Meyer stuck to the script: "I then went
through the need to wrongfoot Saddam on the inspectors and the UNSCRs
[Security Council Resolutions]...."
The British foreign
secretary, Jack Straw, expanded on this argument in his options paper
for Blair at the end of the month. Making the case, in Straw's view,
meant going back to the UN:
"That Iraq is in flagrant
breach of international legal obligations imposed on it by UNSC
provides us with the core of a strategy.... I believe that a demand for
the unfettered readmission of weapons inspectors is essential, in terms
of public explanation, and in terms of legal sanction for any
subsequent military action."
Straw appended a memo from the
Foreign Office political director, Peter Ricketts, who described the
immediate challenge as explaining why Iraq, and why now?
"The
truth is that... even the best survey of Iraq's WMD programmes will not
show much advance in recent years on the nuclear, missile or CW/BW
fronts: the programmes are extremely worrying but have not, as far as
we know, been stepped up.... We are still left with a problem of
bringing public opinion to accept the imminence of a threat from Iraq.
This is something the Prime Minister and President need to have a frank
discussion about."
Blair met with Bush in Crawford, Texas, on
April 6 and promised to join a military campaign for Saddam's removal,
but only, Blair stressed, after "the options for action to eliminate
Iraq's WMD through the UN weapons inspectors had been exhausted." Bush
did not say yes to this at the time and as spring of 2002 moved into
summer the Vice President argued against any return to the UN. Cheney
feared that Baghdad would renew its cat-and-mouse game with inspectors,
the process would drag on, and the administration's determination to
invade and occupy Iraq would gradually erode, leaving a defiant Saddam
still in power.
The British made a final effort to convince
Bush to obtain a UN resolution in July, beginning with a trip to
Washington by MI6's director, Richard Dearlove, to check the
temperature of American thinking. On Saturday, July 20, Dearlove and
other British intelligence officials visited the CIA in Langley, where
George Tenet took Dearlove aside for a private talk that lasted an hour
and a half. On July 23, back in London, Dearlove reported on his frank
discussions in Washington.
******
But first let us
consider Tenet's account of this episode in his memoir. It is deceptive
in the extreme. "In May of 2002," he writes, Dearlove came to
Washington and met with Rice, Hadley, Scooter Libby, and Congressman
Porter Goss, then chair of the House Intelligence Committee. Three
years later the documents leaked to the British press quoted Dearlove
describing his findings in Washington at a cabinet meeting. Tenet
writes, "Sir Richard later told me that he had been misquoted."
May
of 2002? Tenet is off by two months. I suspect that Dearlove really did
come in May as well, and that Tenet cites the earlier visit to muddy
the waters about his meeting with Dearlove on July 20 -- neither
denying it took place nor lying about what was said. After May 2005 --
a full year after Tenet had left the CIA -- Dearlove "told me that he
had been misquoted." Tenet knows what he told Dearlove; does he think
his views were misrepresented by Dearlove's report to the cabinet, as
recorded in the minutes? Tenet does not say. He adds that Dearlove
"believed that the crowd around the vice president was playing fast and
loose with the evidence." In short, Tenet is trying to put a country
mile of daylight between Dearlove's unvarnished report to the British
cabinet and Tenet's ninety-minute, private conversation with Dearlove
at the CIA only three days earlier.
We may assume that the
whole of Dearlove's remarks as reported in the cabinet meeting minutes
were colored by what Tenet told him:
"C [the traditional
designation for the chief of MI6] reported on his recent talks in
Washington. There was a perceptible shift in attitude. Military action
was now seen as inevitable. Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through
military action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But
the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy. The NSC
had no patience with the UN route, and no enthusiasm for publishing
material on the Iraqi regime's record. There was little discussion in
Washington of the aftermath after military action."
Tenet has
done his utmost -- short of lying -- to hide his role as Dearlove's
informant, but every point the MI6 director made was something Tenet
was uniquely positioned to tell him.
The danger from Blair's
point of view was a bull-headed American drive to war which the British
would find it politically impossible to join. He told the cabinet that
"it would make a big difference politically and legally if Saddam
refused to allow in the UN inspectors." The cabinet agreed that a
strategy to "wrongfoot" Saddam through the UN was crucial. Jack Straw
"would send the prime minister the background on the UN inspectors and
discreetly work up the ultimatum to Saddam." Early in August Straw made
a secret visit to argue Blair's case for the UN gambit with Secretary
of State Colin Powell in the latter's house; Powell then pressed the
point about the UN hard with Bush at a private White House dinner and
Bush at last agreed. Tenet attended a final meeting on the issue at
Camp David on Saturday morning, September 7:
"Colin Powell
was firmly on the side of going the extra mile with the UN, while the
vice president argued just as forcefully that doing so would only get
us mired in a bureaucratic tangle with nothing to show for it other
than the time lost off a ticking clock. The president let Powell and
Cheney pretty much duke it out."
******
But the decision
had already been made. Blair was also present at Camp David that day.
He had been urging a UN resolution for months and had not crossed the
ocean to be told no. According to Bob Woodward's book Plan of Attack,
Bush told Blair that the United States would bring the question of
Saddam's WMD to the UN one more time before going to war, but war would
probably still follow in the end. Thus the stage was set for a UN
melodrama starring a defiant Saddam before armies crossed borders, but
nothing worked as the British had imagined. Saddam accepted
unconditionally the Security Council's demand on November 8 for
intrusive new inspections. While the report he submitted on Iraq's
destruction of its WMD was rejected as obfuscating, the UN was able to
resume inspections at the end of November. Hans Blix's inspectors
scoured the country inspecting hundreds of sites but found nothing, and
Blix infuriated the White House by refusing to declare Iraq in material
breach of Resolution 1441 demanding that he disarm.
As a ploy
for war, "wrongfooting" Saddam was a bust. With each passing week he
seemed less of a threat. Cheney's clock was ticking; American military
plans, hoping to avoid the brutal Iraqi summer, called for fighting to
begin in March at the latest. Bush was determined and Blair was willing
to go forward with war, but since the UN gambit had generated no just
cause for war, the Americans were compelled to make the case before the
UN themselves. The date was set for February 5, and Colin Powell was
chosen to present the evidence -- the fruits of many months of work by
the collectors and analysts of George Tenet's CIA. Everything seemed to
rest on the strength of Powell's argument -- the onset of war, the Bush
policy to remake the Middle East, the American reputation in the world.
This was the moment when the intelligence and the war fell completely
into lockstep; no intelligence, no war. If Tenet is to be vindicated as
an honest man this is where he must convince us the intelligence was
genuinely believed and honestly presented.
"My colleagues,"
Powell said in the speech, "every statement I make today is backed up
by sources, solid sources. These are not assertions. What we're giving
you are facts and conclusions based on solid intelligence." Visible
behind Powell as he placed his public reputation on the line was George
Tenet, arms folded and filling his seat with bearlike bulk. Tenet had
personally guaranteed Powell that every claim he made was on firm
ground.
"It was a great presentation," Tenet writes of Powell's speech, "but unfortunately the substance didn't hold up."
The
substance, in fact, was wrong in every particular, as is now well
known. Tenet does not linger on that. He argues instead that it didn't
matter: Bush didn't go to war because the CIA told him Saddam Hussein
had WMD -- the dead-certain "slam dunk" he used to describe the
evidence in a White House meeting in December 2002. And maybe the WMD
claims in the agency's National Intelligence Estimate "were flawed," he
writes, but didn't Congress have an obligation at the very least to
read the whole of the ninety-page paper before voting to authorize war?
Should their negligence be blamed on him? "The intelligence process was
not disingenuous," he insists, "nor was it influenced by politics."
This is the whole of his defense: we were wrong, but it was an honest
error.
******
This is not the place for an exhaustive
reexamination of the agency's long-exploded claims, but no plea of
honest error can survive even a quick look at the facts in three
disputes -- what Iraq intended to do with aluminum tubes, how the
agency knew about Iraq's mobile biological warfare labs, and why a
report that Iraq was trying to buy uranium "yellowcake" in Niger made
its way into one official speech after another until it finally
appeared -- the infamous "sixteen words" -- in Bush's state of the
union speech in January 2003. None of these claims was robust when
first encountered by the CIA. All were "processed" by CIA analysts in a
manner intended to disguise shaky sources, minimize doubts, exclude
alternative explanations, exaggerate their significance, and inflate
the confidence level with which they were believed. None passes the
"honest error" test.
After the seizure of a shipment of
aluminum tubes bound for Iraq in the summer of 2001, a CIA analyst
argued that they were intended for use in the building of centrifuges
for separation of fissionable material, a claim rejected by experts for
the Department of Energy when they learned of it. Analysts for the
State Department also found the argument implausible. The CIA's view
was leaked to a New York Times reporter in September 2002 and then
cited the same day on a Sunday-morning talk show by Condoleezza Rice as
proof sufficient of Saddam's nuclear plans unless we waited for "the
smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud."
The National Intelligence
Estimate given to Congress at that time ignored Department of Energy
objections and printed the State Department's footnote of protest sixty
pages away from the bald claim that "all intelligence experts agree...
that these tubes could be used in a centrifuge enrichment program."
Only an elastic interpretation of the word "could" rescues this
statement from being a bald lie. After a year of exhaustive postwar
investigation, the Iraq Survey Group concluded that the tubes were
intended for use as battlefield rockets, as other experts and the Iraqi
government had claimed all along.
In describing the Iraqi
threat at the UN, Colin Powell laid it on thickest in his description
of Iraq's mobile labs for the production of biological weapons, first
reported by an Iraqi engineering student who defected to Germany in
1998 and was given the codename Curveball. German intelligence
officials routinely passed on his claims to the Defense Intelligence
Agency, which then circulated them to other American intelligence
organizations in 2000 and 2001. Immediately after September 11 these
reports became a major building block in the case for Iraqi WMD, but
the Germans refused access to Curveball, and later told the European
Division chief, Tyler Drumheller, that Curveball was mentally unstable,
that his reports had never been corroborated by anyone else, and that
some German intelligence officials thought he was a fabricator.
In
December 2002, while compiling evidence for Powell's speech to the UN,
the CIA formally asked the Germans for permission to use Curveball's
information. The German intelligence chief, August Hanning, wrote back
on December 20 granting permission, but repeating what had been said to
Drumheller two months earlier -- Curveball's claims had never been
corroborated. Tenet in his memoir denies that he saw Hanning's letter
or was ever informed about the analysts' knockdown arguments over
Curveball's claims. In one session, according to Drumheller, a
Curveball believer insulted a Curveball doubter who responded, "You can
kiss my ass in Macy's window." Drumheller comments, "It would be funny
if it weren't so tragic."
But Tenet insists that word of the
ruckus never reached him. Only a week before Powell's speech to the UN,
the CIA's chief of station in Berlin cabled headquarters to say yet
again that the Germans could not verify Curveball's claims, and adding:
"Defer to headquarters but to use information from another
liaison service's source whose information cannot be verified on such
an important, key topic should take the most serious consideration."
Tenet
has insisted that he never saw that cable either. Nor does he remember
a last-minute warning from Drumheller the night before Powell's speech.
Tenet had called Drumheller seeking a phone number. "As long as I've
got you," said Drumheller on the phone, "there are some problems with
the German reporting." Drumheller writes that he tried to tell Tenet
that Curveball was worthless. Tenet remembers the phone call, but not
the warning. What Curveball said was found by the Iraq Survey Group to
be wrong in every detail.
******
The claim that Iraq
was trying to buy yellowcake uranium in Niger was not only weak but was
based, if that is the word, on evidence, if that is the word, that was
fabricated in so obvious a manner that the CIA claims not to have seen
the documents till very late in the day. First notice of the
Iraqi-Niger connection reached the CIA shortly before September 11,
probably from Italian intelligence officials passing on a two-year-old
Telex which reported plans of the Iraqi ambassador to the Vatican to
visit Niger. Two Italian journalists who have investigated the case,
Carlo Bonini and Giuseppe D'Avanzo, note that the only significant
Niger export is uranium ore. So this was an item of interest.
The
uranium mines in Niger are under the control of a French company and
the export of uranium ore is closely monitored by French intelligence,
which answered a routine CIA query in the summer of 2001 by saying that
nothing was amiss. The following spring the CIA was again "knocking on
our door," according to Alain Chouet, the director of the French
intelligence branch which monitors WMD matters. Chouet told Bonini and
D'Avanzo, as they report in their book Collusion: International
Espionage and the War on Terror, that there was now "an undeniable
urgency" to American questions, which were no longer vague, but full of
detail. Again the French investigated; again the answer to the CIA was
that nothing was amiss. But the Americans pressed the matter and now,
for the first time, sent Chouet some documents. "All it took was a
quick glance," said Chouet. "They were junk. Crude fakes."
At
about the same time -- June 2002 -- a sometime Italian intelligence
operative named Rocco Martino tried to sell the French a sheaf of
documents reporting a secret Iraqi purchase of five hundred tons of
uranium yellowcake. Chouet had them checked against the material sent
him by the Americans. "The documents were identical." A great deal more
might be said about these documents, which had already been passed to
the British in late 2001, according to Bonini and D'Avanzo. The
Germans, too, were given a crack at them. "The Germans asked our
advice," Chouet said, "and we told them they were trash."
What
is clear is that the documents, which were fabricated with materials
stolen from the embassy of Niger in Rome, were given or at least
offered to the British, the Americans, the French, and the Germans --
all by the summer of 2002, when the US had decided on war to remove
Saddam Hussein and was building a case that he threatened the world
with WMD. It should be noted here that intelligence services trying to
bolster a weak case will sometimes pass a report under the nose of a
foreign intelligence service to create an echo effect. Were the
yellowcake documents the basis of British claims in an intelligence
report released on September 24, 2002, that Iraq was trying to buy
uranium in Africa? As "the dodgy dossier," that report -- allegedly
"sexed up" by aides to Blair -- later became the subject of a major
inquiry by Parliament. The British insist that they have other credible
information on the yellowcake story but refuse to say what it is.
The
Italian intelligence service concedes that its man -- Rocco Martino,
the sometime operative -- was the one who circulated the yellowcake
documents, but insists that he did it simply for the money. Bonini and
D'Avanzo don't believe it, and point out that Italy's prime minister,
Silvio Berlusconi, wanted a central role in Bush's coalition to fight
the war on terror. A report in Rome's La Repubblica on October 25,
2005, says that Berlusconi pressured his new intelligence chief, Nicolo
Pollari, to provide the Americans with intelligence that would inflate
Italy's role.
******
Who dreamed up the yellowcake
stratagem? So far Americans -- public and Congress alike -- don't seem
to care, choosing to lump the Niger documents with all the other phony,
exaggerated reports under the category of "intelligence failures." The
yellowcake story didn't stand up for long, but it didn't need to stand
up for long. An echo effect put it into play after Bush, in his 2003
state of the union speech, included it in the list of scary signs that
Saddam was preparing trouble for the world: "The British government has
learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of
uranium from Africa."
Tenet makes much of the fact that he
twice blocked use of the yellowcake claim by Bush -- once in September
2002 and again a few weeks later -- but his argument was a narrow one:
the President should not be a "fact witness" on the yellowcake story
because the facts were too iffy. But not too iffy, in Tenet's view, to
include the yellowcake story in the National Intelligence Estimate of
October 2002 that persuaded Congress to vote for war. Nor did Tenet
protest when the State Department accused Iraq in December of leaving
the yellowcake story out of its WMD declaration, when Bush repeated the
charge in a report to Congress, when Condoleezza Rice cited it as an
example of Iraqi duplicity in an Op-Ed piece for The New York Times in
January 2003, when Powell cited it a few days later in a speech in
Switzerland, and when Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld cited it at
the end of January.
The yellowcake story would have appeared
in Powell's UN speech as well if Powell had not drawn the line and
tossed it out. That left the secretary of state with a lot of
atmospheric intelligence rigmarole and two factual claims -- the
aluminum tubes proved that Saddam was going for nuclear weapons and the
mobile biological weapons labs proved that he was a threat to the
region and possibly the world. Powell's speech was all smoke and
mirrors, but it was enough. Bush turned his back on the UN and prepared
to go to war.
*******
Hans Blix, meanwhile, had been
undergoing a kind of slow awakening. Blix never answered reporters'
questions about his "gut feelings" on WMD, but he had them, and in the
beginning they were roughly what everybody else believed -- despite
Saddam Hussein's cease-fire pledge to give up WMD at the end of the
1991 Gulf War, Blix believed that he retained some and was trying to
build more. But gradually the failure to find anything eroded Blix's
confidence that his gut was correct. When the inspections resumed in
November 2002, American experts suggested to Blix that the inspectors
begin with Iraqi government ministries, seize computers, and look for
names and addresses on the hard drives. Blix thought this a lame idea;
the inspectors had tried it before, but the Iraqis were too
sophisticated to leave incriminating clues in such an obvious place. "I
drew the conclusion," Blix writes in Disarming Iraq, "that the US did
not itself know where things were."
Between late November and
mid-March 2003, Blix reports, the UN inspectors made seven hundred
separate visits to five hundred sites. About three dozen of those sites
had been suggested by intelligence services, many by Tenet's CIA, which
insisted that these were "the best" in the agency's database. Blix was
shocked. "If this was the best, what was the rest?" he asked himself.
"Could there be 100-percent certainty about the existence of weapons of
mass destruction but zero-percent knowledge about their location?"
By
this time Blix was firmly opposed to the evident American preference
for disarmament by war. "It was, in my view, too early to give up now,"
he writes. Tony Blair in late February tried to convince Blix that
Saddam had WMD even if Blix couldn't find them -- the French, German,
and Egyptian intelligence services were all sure of it, Blair said.
Blix told Blair that to him they seemed not so sure, and adds as an
aside, "My faith in intelligence had been shaken." On March 5, Blix on
the phone with Rice asked her point-blank if the United States knew
where Iraq's WMD were hidden. "No, she said, but interviews after
liberation would reveal it."
Two days later, Mohammed
ElBaradei, chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency, in a report
to the Security Council, decisively undermined the two principal
American arguments that Saddam was illicitly pursuing nuclear weapons:
the aluminum tubes which the CIA insisted were for use in a centrifuge
to manufacture fissionable material were actually for conventional
rockets, ElBaradei said, and the documents used to "prove" that Saddam
was trying to buy uranium yellowcake in Niger were, in ElBaradei's
diplomatic words, "not authentic." Only people paying close attention
to the details understood at once that he meant the documents were
fakes, fabrications, forgeries. ElBaradei's experts had reached this
conclusion in one day.
In that meeting of the Security Council
both ElBaradei and Blix reported their continuing plans for further
inspections, and both said that outstanding issues might be resolved
within a few months. This was not what the United States wanted to
hear. In mid-February, President Bush had derided efforts to give Iraq
"another, 'nother, 'nother last chance." Blix had pleaded in a phone
call about the same time to Secretary of State Colin Powell for a free
hand at least until April 15. "He said it was too late."
But
three weeks later Blix soberly argued in his report to the Security
Council for more time. "It would not take years, nor weeks, but
months," he said. France, Russia, China, and other council members
favored the idea and proposed a new resolution which the Americans
agreed to discuss but loaded with difficulties. "Nevertheless, I
thought, here on March 7 there was something new," Blix wrote in his
memoir, "a theoretical possibility to avoid war. Saddam could make a
speech; Iraq could hand over prohibited items."
The resolution
went nowhere but Blix did not give up hope even when President Bush
flew to the Azores on March 16 to talk war with his allies, British
Prime Minister Tony Blair and Spanish Prime Minister José MarÃa Aznar
López. "Most observers felt the war was now a certainty," Blix wrote,
"and, indeed, it came. Although I thought the probability was very
high, I was also, even at this very late date, aware that unexpected
things can happen."
Three years later, in a speech to the Arms
Control Association, Blix reflected on that moment in his office at the
UN -- the afternoon of March 16 -- when the State Department's John
Wolf called to say that the time had come to pull the inspectors out of
Iraq. "My belief is that if we had been allowed to continue with
inspections for a couple of months more, we would then have been able
to go to all of the sites which were given by intelligence," he said.
"And since there were not any weapons of massive destruction, we would
have reported there were not any." An invasion might have taken place
anyway, Blix concedes; the Americans and British had sent several
hundred thousand troops to Kuwait and could not leave them sitting in
the desert indefinitely. "But it would have been certainly more
difficult," Blix said. Even so, in Blix's view, something important had
been achieved. "The UN and the world had succeeded in disarming Iraq
without knowing it." Blix guessed that Saddam hid his compliance so
Iran wouldn't think him weak, but it was the Americans who were
deceived.
******
That in outline is how we got into
Iraq. When Tony Blair's UN gambit failed to provide an excuse for war,
Colin Powell made the American case, putting in the scary stuff -- the
"product" of Tenet's CIA -- which Hans Blix's inspectors had failed to
find. No one paying serious attention was convinced. The French,
German, and Canadian intelligence services were appalled by the
weakness of Powell's case -- what could the Americans be thinking?
Periodically over the following year Powell would tell his assistant,
Larry Wilkerson, that George Tenet had telephoned to say that the
agency was formally withdrawing another pillar from his UN speech. "He
took it like a soldier," said Wilkerson, "but it was a blow."
Tenet
in his memoirs says almost nothing about UN inspections. The names of
Hans Blix and Mohammed ElBaradei do not appear in his book. Tenet
nowhere betrays genuine surprise that the CIA got everything wrong;
maybe, he concedes, "reports and analysis...were flawed, but the
intelligence process was not disingenuous." What shocked Tenet was the
brutal manner in which the White House blamed him for the infamous
"sixteen words," and even for the war itself, which never would have
happened, the President's men implied, if Tenet had not assured them
that the case for Saddam's WMD was a "slam dunk." When Tenet read the
phrase in The Washington Post he seethed for a day and then called
Andrew Card at the White House to say that leaking the "slam dunk"
phrase to reporter Bob Woodward was "about the most despicable thing I
have ever seen in my life." Card said nothing.
Thus George
Tenet broods about his hurt feelings. In the flood of his many parting
thoughts he never returns to his original question about the moment
when war became inevitable, which was in any case rhetorical. More to
the point would have been answerable questions, the kind any fair
historian would put to him: When did Tenet first hear the President
talk about "regime change"? When did he realize that Iraq was next on
the President's agenda? When did he understand that WMD were to be the
heart of the argument for war? And when did he know that without
Curveball and without the aluminum tubes, Colin Powell would have been
left standing in front of the UN with nothing?
[The footnotes that accompany this piece can be found in the July 19th issue of the New York Review of Books.]
Thomas
Powers is the author most recently of Intelligence Wars: American
Secret History from Hitler to al-Qaeda. He would like to thank the
American Academy in Berlin, where this essay, in the latest New York
Review of Books, was written.
This article appears in the July 19th issue of the New York Review of Books.
Copyright 2007 Thomas Powers
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