A leaked British memo, and other documents, make it
clear that Bush intended all along to invade Iraq -- and lied about it
to the American people. The full gravity of his offense has not yet
sunk in.

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article8891.htm
The lies that led to war
A leaked British memo, and other documents, make it clear that Bush
intended all along to invade Iraq -- and lied about it to the American
people. The full gravity of his offense has not yet sunk
in. By Juan
Cole 05/19/05 "Salon.com"
- - When Newsweek's source admitted that he had misidentified the
government document in which he had seen an account of Quran
desecration at Guantánamo prison, Pentagon spokesman Lawrence Di Rita
exploded, "People are dead because of what this son of a bitch said.
How could he be credible now?" Di
Rita could have said the same things about his bosses in the Bush
administration.
Tens of thousands of people are dead in Iraq, including more than 1,600
U.S. soldiers and Marines, because of false allegations made by
President George W. Bush and Di Rita's more immediate boss, Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, about Saddam Hussein's nonexistent weapons
of mass destruction and equally imaginary active nuclear weapons
program. Bush, Rumsfeld, Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice repeatedly made unfounded allegations that led
to the continuing disaster in Iraq, much of which is now an economic
and military no man's land beset by bombings, assassinations,
kidnappings and political gridlock.
And we now know, thanks to a leaked British memo concerning the head of
British intelligence, that the Bush administration -- contrary to its
explicit denials -- had already made up its mind to attack Iraq and
"fixed" those bogus allegations to support its decision. In short, Bush
and his top officials lied about Iraq.
Going to war is the most serious decision a president can make. It
should never be approached in a cavalier fashion. American lives, the
prestige and influence of the country, international relations, the
health of its defenses, and the future of the next generation are at
stake. Yet every single piece of evidence we now have confirms that
George W. Bush, who was obsessed with unseating Saddam Hussein even
before 9/11, recklessly used the opportunity presented by the terror
attacks to march the country to war, fixing the intelligence to justify
his decision, and lying to the American people about the reasons for
the war. In other times, this might have been an impeachable
offense.
The media circus around the Newsweek story arrived in time to further
divert attention from the explosive British memorandum. Although the
leaked Downing Street memo, published by the London Times on May 1,
revealed the deeply dishonest and manipulative way that the Bush
administration took the United States (and the United Kingdom) to war
against Iraq, the American press corps studiously ignored it for two
weeks.
The memo reported a July 2002 meeting of key British Cabinet and other
officials, held when Sir Richard Dearlove, head of the British
intelligence service, MI6, returned from a trip to Washington. It
revealed that the decision to go to war had already been made by that
point: "Military action was now seen as inevitable," the notes by
British national security aide Matthew Rycrof revealed. Dearlove
reported, "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."
Members of the British Cabinet were worried by the news, the memo
shows, since they knew that the case against Iraq was tissue-thin in
international law and that there were several more egregious sinners in
the weapons area than Iraq. Because the United Kingdom, unlike the
United States, is a member of the International Criminal Court, its
officials had to worry about being tried for war crimes if they became
involved in an illegal war of aggression launched by Bush and lacking
U.N. Security Council sanction. Prime Minister Tony Blair put his hopes
in a ploy. He thought that Bush should arrange for the United Nations
to demand a return to Iraq of weapons inspectors, with the hope that
Saddam Hussein would refuse, thus creating a legal justification for
war acceptable to the international community.
On May 6, Knight Ridder reporters Warren Strobel and John Walcott said
that a former high official in the U.S. government told them that
Dearlove's remarks were "an absolutely accurate description of what
transpired" during his visit. This past Monday, White House spokesman
Scott McClellan finally responded to the leaked document but denied
that he had read it. Regarding the allegation that Bush fixed the
intelligence around the Iraq war policy he said, "The suggestion is
just flat-out wrong. Anyone who wants to know how the intelligence was
used only has to go back and read everything that was said in public
about the lead-up to the war."
It is hard to see how this absurdly vague methodology could actually
refute the memo's charges or, indeed, to know what exactly McClellan
was driving at. He added, "The president of the United States, in a
very public way, reached out to people across the world, went to the
United Nations, and tried to resolve this in a diplomatic manner." But
as the memo makes clear, that "reaching out" was fraudulent, a smoke
screen to cover a decision that had already been made. Bush went to the
United Nations reluctantly and against the advice of the Cheney and
Rumsfeld faction, mainly as a way of giving Saddam an ultimatum that
would form the basis for a war.
The Bush administration, and some credulous or loyal members of the
press, have long tried to blame U.S. intelligence services for
exaggerating the Iraq threat and thus misleading the president into
going to war. That position was always weak, and it is now revealed as
laughable. President Bush was not misled by shoddy intelligence.
Rather, he insisted on getting the intelligence that would support the
war on which he had already decided. A good half of Americans, opinion
polls show, now believe that the president actively lied to them about
Iraq. In another, less cynical, flag-waving and intimidated age, this
conclusion would provoke a scandal. The question would be, What did
George W. Bush decide about Iraq, and when did he decide
it?
The leaked British document demonstrates that the moment of decision
was far earlier than the Bush administration publicly admitted. On Aug.
7, just weeks after the Dearlove visit to Washington, Cheney said in
California that no decision had been made on Iraq. When Bush met with
Saudi ambassador Bandar bin Sultan on Aug. 26, 2002, CNN reported that
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer told the press, "The president
stressed that he has made no decisions, that he will continue to engage
in consultations with Saudi Arabia and other nations about steps in the
Middle East, steps in Iraq." On Sept. 8, 2002, Cheney was interviewed
by Tim Russert on "Meet the Press." Russert asked, "Will militarily
this be a cakewalk? Two, how long would we be there and how much would
it cost?" Cheney replied, "First of all, no decision's been made yet to
launch a military operation."
The administration continued the charade that no decision had been
taken through the end of 2002 and into 2003. In a White House press
conference on Dec. 17, 2002, a questioner asked Fleischer, "The L.A.
Times today published a poll that found that 72 percent of Americans,
including 60 percent of Republicans, said the president has not
provided enough evidence to justify starting a war with Iraq. Is the
president losing the public relations battle here in the United
States?"
"Well, one, I think that I'll just state what is well known," Fleischer
replied. "The president will not make any decision about war and peace
and the possibility of putting some of our nation's best men and women
in harm's way on the basis of a poll. He will do it on the basis of his
judgment as commander in chief and what it will take to save and
protect American lives in the event that he reaches the conclusion
Saddam Hussein will indeed engage in war against the United States or
provide terrorists with weapons to engage in war against the United
States, just like on September 11th with the attack. And if he reaches
that judgment, he will do so because the information he has and the
judgment he makes suggest that, not because of a poll."
The British memo is only the most decisive in a long list of documents
that make it inescapably clear that Bush had decided to go to war long
before. Indeed, Bush had decided as early as his presidential campaign
in the year 2000 that he would find a way to fight an Iraq war to
unseat Saddam. I was in the studio with Arab-American journalist Osama
Siblani on Amy Goodman's "Democracy Now" program on March 11, 2005,
when Siblani reported a May 2000 encounter he had with then- candidate
Bush in a hotel in Troy, Mich. "He told me just straight to my face,
among 12 or maybe 13 Republicans at that time here in Michigan at the
hotel. I think it was on May 17, 2000, even before he became the
nominee for the Republicans. He told me that he was going to take him
out, when we talked about Saddam Hussein in Iraq." According to
Siblani, Bush added that "he wanted to go to Iraq to search for weapons
of mass destruction, and he considered the regime an imminent and
gathering threat against the Unit ed States." Siblani points out that
Bush at that point was privy to no classified intelligence on Iraqi
weapons programs and had already made up his mind on the
issue.
Siblani's account of Bush's stance is virtually identical to the
impressions Dearlove brought back from Washington a little over two
years later: "Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action,
justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD." Iraq had long
played the great white whale to W.'s Ahab, and the chance to move
decisively against Saddam was intrinsic to his presidential
ambitions.
Former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill described to Ron Susskind in
"The Price of Loyalty" the first Bush national security meeting of
principals on Jan. 30, 2001. He writes that after Bush announced he
would simply disengage from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and
"unleash Sharon," he made it clear that Iraq would be a priority. "The
hour almost up, Bush had assignments for everyone ... Rumsfeld and
[Joint Chiefs chair Gen. H. Hugh] Shelton, he said, 'should examine our
military options.' That included rebuilding the military coalition from
the 1991 Gulf War, examining 'how it might look' to use U.S. ground
forces in the north and the south of Iraq ... Ten days in, and it was
about Iraq." Bush hit the ground running with regard to Iraq, shunting
aside key U.S. foreign-policy goals -- such as a resolution of the
Arab-Israeli conflict -- in favor of exploring military options against
Saddam Hussein. O'Neill reports a sense at the meeting that the
reluctance to commit ground forces t o an Asian war, a legacy of the
Vietnam War, had ended with the advent of the Bush
presidency.
An Iraq war might have been a hard sell, even for the skilled and
highly manipulative Bush team. But Sept. 11 ensured that they could get
congressional approval and public support for a war. Americans were
angry and willing to lash out in any direction specified by the
president. Former terrorism czar Richard Clarke related that on the
evening of Sept. 12, 2001, Bush "grabbed a few of us and closed the
door to the conference room. 'Look,' he told us, 'I know you have a lot
to do and all ... but I want you, as soon as you can, to go back over
everything, everything. See if Saddam did this. See if he's linked in
any way...'" When Clarke protested that it was clearly an al-Qaida
operation, Bush insisted, "Just look. I want to know any shred ... Look
into Iraq, Saddam." According to Clarke, Bush said it
"testily."
Clarke reveals that Rumsfeld was already, on the afternoon of Sept. 12,
"talking about broadening the objectives of our response and 'getting
Iraq.'" Although early accounts of National Security Council meetings
after the attacks highlighted the role of Deputy Secretary of Defense
Paul Wolfowitz in pressing for an immediate war on Iraq, it has become
increasingly clear that he was only one such voice, and hardly the most
senior.
Astonishingly, the Bush administration almost took the United States to
war against Iraq in the immediate aftermath of Sept. 11. We know about
this episode from the public account of Sir Christopher Meyer, then the
U.K. ambassador in Washington. Meyer reported that in the two weeks
after Sept. 11, the Bush national security team argued back and forth
over whether to attack Iraq or Afghanistan. It appears from his account
that Bush was leaning toward the Iraq option.
Meyer spoke again about the matter to Vanity Fair for its May 2004
report, "The Path to War." Soon after Sept. 11, Meyer went to a dinner
at the White House, "attended also by Colin Powell, [and] Condi Rice,"
where "Bush made clear that he was determined to topple Saddam. 'Rumors
were already flying that Bush would use 9/11 as a pretext to attack
Iraq,' Meyer remembers." When British Prime Minister Tony Blair arrived
in Washington on Sept. 20, 2001, he was alarmed. If Blair had consulted
MI6 about the relative merits of the Afghanistan and Iraq options, we
can only imagine what well-informed British intelligence officers in
Pakistan were cabling London about the dangers of leaving bin Laden and
al-Qaida in place while plunging into a potential quagmire in Iraq.
Fears that London was a major al-Qaida target would have underlined the
risks to the United Kingdom of an "Iraq first" policy in
Washington.
Meyer told Vanity Fair, "Blair came with a very strong message -- don't
get distracted; the priorities were al-Qaida, Afghanistan, the
Taliban." He must have been terrified that the Bush administration
would abandon London to al-Qaida while pursuing the great white whale
of Iraq. But he managed to help persuade Bush. Meyer reports, "Bush
said, 'I agree with you, Tony. We must deal with this first. But when
we have dealt with Afghanistan, we must come back to Iraq.'" Meyer also
said, in spring 2004, that it was clear "that when we did come back to
Iraq it wouldn't be to discuss smarter sanctions." In short, Meyer
strongly implies that Blair persuaded Bush to make war on al-Qaida in
Afghanistan first by promising him British support for a later Iraq
campaign.
That the Afghanistan war went so well quickly enabled Bush to begin
planning for an attack on Iraq. Bob Woodward reports in "Plan of
Attack" that Bush asked Cheney for an Iraq war plan on Nov. 21. On Nov.
26 the Independent reported that Bush had called Saddam Hussein "evil"
and demanded that he accept U.N. weapons inspectors. On Nov. 27 Howard
Fineman of Newsweek reported a conversation with Bush aboard Air Force
One in the wake of the successful Afghanistan campaign. "He wants to
avoid the more profound mistakes his dad made...: his failure, at the
end of the Gulf War, to stop -- once and for all -- Saddam Hussein in
Iraq from threatening the world with weapons of mass
destruction."
Nov. 27, 2001, was a significant date. Gen. Tommy Franks in his memoirs
reveals that he received an unexpected call from Rumsfeld. "General
Franks, the president wants us to look at options for Iraq." Franks
knew exactly what the call portended. "Son of a bitch, I thought. No
rest for the weary." There would be another war. The die had already
been cast.
On Dec. 31 Newsweek reported, "In principle, Bush and his national-
security team have decided that Saddam has to go, U.S. officials say.
'The question is not if the United States is going to hit Iraq; the
question is when,' says a senior American envoy in the Middle East."
The article notes Bush's oft-stated caution that no final decision had
been made, but dismisses it on the basis of insider information. The
main credit for this article was given to Christopher Dickey and John
Barry, but Sami Kohen is listed as reporting from Turkey. Since a U.S.
ambassador is quoted, and Kohen was the only one of the coauthors in
the Middle East, he is likely the one who got the quote. Was his source
Ambassador W. Robert Pearson?
Former Sen. Bob Graham of Florida says in his memoirs, "Intelligence
Matters," that on Feb. 19, 2002, he visited the U.S. Central Command.
Franks revealed to him that the command was no longer engaged in a war
in Afghanistan. Graham was taken aback. Franks told the stunned
senator, "Military and intelligence personnel are being re-deployed to
prepare for an action in Iraq." The implementation phase had already
begun.
In April 2002, Tony Blair went to see Bush at his Crawford, Texas,
ranch. Vanity Fair reports that Blair stressed the need to get the
backing of the United Nations for an Iraq war if he was going to swing
Parliament behind it.
This long-term obsession of George W. Bush, then, was the background of
the meeting in Washington with Dearlove in July 2002. Although Dearlove
reported on a change of mood, such that the Iraq war was now a sure
thing, he was probably actually observing that Bush had moved it to the
front burner. By late July or very early August 2002, according to
Vanity Fair, Blair had called Bush. A senior White House official who
saw the transcript remarked, "The way it read was that, come what may,
Saddam was going to go; they said they were going forward, they were
going to take out the regime, and they were doing the right thing."
Blair, he said, did not need any convincing. Both Blair and Bush would
go on telling the public for months afterward that no final decision
had been made about going to war.
It was also in midsummer 2002 that Franks asked Rumsfeld for $750
million to begin making preparations in Kuwait toward an Iraq war. The
request, reported in Woodward's "Plan of Attack," provoked a good deal
of controversy. Many in Congress felt that no specific appropriation
had been made for such preparations, and the money was essentially
taken from Afghanistan appropriations without congressional
approval.
>From Bush's meeting in May 2000 with Osama Siblani and 12
Republicans in a hotel room in Troy, Mich., until July 2002, his
obsession with attacking Iraq never wavered. His first national
security meeting was all about Iraq. He seriously considered attacking
Iraq before Afghanistan after Sept. 11, and Blair had to argue him into
the Afghanistan war. He had Rumsfeld ask Gen. Franks for an Iraq war
plan on Nov. 27, 2001. The sense that Dearlove had, that the die had
been inexorably cast by July 2002, was entirely
correct.
But it is no positive reflection on the head of MI6 that he had not
been able to discern that the die had been cast long before. The
Downing Street memo is remarkable only for the frankness with which it
acknowledges the illegality of the planned war and Bush's policy of
"fixing" the intelligence around the policy. That the decision was made
first, and various pretexts advanced for it in the aftermath, is now
clear to the public.
Why has there not been more outrage in the United States at these
revelations? Many Americans may have chosen to overlook the lies and
deceptions the Bush administration used to justify the war because they
still believe the Iraq war might have made them at least somewhat
safer. When they realize that this hope, too, is unfounded, and that in
fact the war has greatly increased the threat of another terrorist
attack on U.S. soil, their wrath may be visited on the president and
the political party that has brought America the biggest foreign-policy
disaster since Vietnam. About the
writer
Juan Cole is a professor of modern Middle Eastern and South Asian
history at the University of Michigan and the author of "Sacred Space
and Holy War" (IB Tauris, 2002).
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