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Phase II: What Was Missing
Last week the Senate intel committee released their report on pre-war intelligence in Iraq, which confirmed the disconnect between intelligence information espoused by Bush Administration officials and what was actually known.
The parameters of Phase II were negotiated between Senate Republicans and Democrats, for years, so it was maybe doomed to be a document with glaring omissions. But as damning as parts of the report were (Rumsfeld's false testimony, etc.) it probably could have been a lot worse for the executive branch, had not large swaths of White House communications been excluded from the scope of the investigations.
As Walter Pincus of the Washington Post writes, "the panel did not review 'less formal communications between intelligence agencies and other parts of the Executive Branch.'"
Which basically means that only the speeches and public press statements by senior officials, fell within the purview of the intel. committee's investigation. As Pincus points out, that leaves out a number of the other ways the administration misled the public before going into Iraq:
One obvious target for such an expanded inquiry would have been the records of the White House Iraq Group (WHIG), a group set up in August 2002 by then-White House Chief of Staff Andrew H. Card Jr.The group met weekly in the Situation Room. Among the regular participants (many have since left or changed jobs) were Karl Rove, the president's senior political adviser; communications strategists Karen Hughes, Mary Matalin and James R. Wilkinson; legislative liaison Nicholas E. Calio; and policy aides led by national security adviser Condoleezza Rice and her deputy, Stephen J. Hadley, as well as I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Cheney's chief of staff.
As former White House press secretary Scott McClellan wrote in his recently released book, What Happened, the Iraq Group "had been set up in the summer of 2002 to coordinate the marketing of the war to the public."
"The script had been finalized with great care over the summer," McClellan wrote, for a "campaign to convince Americans that war with Iraq was inevitable and necessary." [Emphasis ours]
Beyond rehashing sentiments of the Senate intel. committee's purposeful stonewalling and foreshortening of the investigation, Fred Kaplan at Slate
takes a different read on the line "less formal communications between intelligence agencies and other parts of the executive branch." Kaplan believes the line addresses the covert pressure the White House placed on the CIA to play up its pro-war intelligence:
Another intriguing point, made fleetingly in the Senate report's preface, is that the committee reviewed "only finished analytic intelligence documents"--not "less formal communications between intelligence agencies and other parts of the executive branch."In other words (though the authors don't put it in these terms), the committee once again evaded the key question of whether the White House pressured the Central Intelligence Agency into hardening its October 2002 NIE on Iraq.
Unless this question is addressed, the report is beside the point. Its full, ungainly title is "Report on Whether Public Statements Regarding Iraq by U.S. Government Officials Were Substantiated by Intelligence Information." If those same government officials politicized the intelligence information, then the report only perpetuates the sham. (I am not saying this is the case, only that the committee should have investigated whether it is--should have reviewed those "less formal communications.")
[Emphasis ours]
In sum, while Phase II shed light on the "lies," or "misstatements," or "misinformation," or "whatever-you-want-to-call-it," of the administration's public claims in the days leading up to the Iraq war, it still leaves much to be desired in terms of scope and accountability.













If I hear that we don't have votes(the 60 vote crap) to hold hearings or take up charges against these thugs...I'll scream. Our war dead and the Iraq people demand justice! This ia a prime example of war crimes!
June 10, 2008 6:13 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thank you for covering good journalism and reporting.
June 10, 2008 6:28 PM | Reply | Permalink
"Less formal communications" like those emails that, say, were originated by and traveled through the gwb43.com, georgewbush.com and rnchq.org clandestine e-mail domains?
June 10, 2008 6:46 PM | Reply | Permalink
Why wasn't the NIE from just prior to the one released in October 2002 taken into consideration for the phase II report?
By taking that NIE into account it seems to me the whole report would have had much more weight.
Is that NIE available? In any watered down form?
June 10, 2008 9:25 PM | Reply | Permalink
Are we sure the WHIG had "minutes" or notes of any kind? Seems to me their modus operandi would have precluded record-taking? (trying not to wear the tinfoil hat...)
June 10, 2008 11:37 PM | Reply | Permalink
Seems Jay Rockefella and Nancy pelosi have many of the same traits. There are always too many things taken off the table. One would almost thing that Pat Roberts still ran the intelligence committee of the 110th.
June 11, 2008 11:57 AM | Reply | Permalink
Is there a list of Senators and Congressfolks who have a vested interest in federal contracts (their spouses, children, etc.). It seems too unbelievable that impeachment has been withheld due to anything more than complete greed by those who negate their duty to uphold the constitution.
Hopefully, enough folks read and pay attention to our leaders that none of those crooks who made decisions before the fact not to prosecute ongoing and future crimes by the administration while openly accusing them... will remain in office after the next election.
Saying impeachment is off the table puts the entire leadership of both parties in the realm of a dictatorship, not a democracy, and if they remain in power, it pretty much proves this fact.. IMHO
June 11, 2008 12:08 PM | Reply | Permalink