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Feith: I Was Right All Along
In a Washington Post op-ed today, former Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith defends himself against the Pentagon inspector general's assessment that his office conducted "inappropriate" intelligence work in the lead-up to the Iraq war. It turns out, in Feith's view, that he's been vindicated after all.
As Feith tells it, his analysts were conducting no more than an academic critique of intelligence work, and to find fault with their effort is to accept the absurdity that policymakers must uncritically endorse the CIA's product. He goes so far to say that since now, after the invasion of Iraq, al-Qaeda and former Baathists have colluded in attacks on U.S. forces, the CIA was wrong and he was right -- even though what the CIA actually said was that there was no evidence of collusion before the war, and that the only thing that might bring on such cooperation was ... a U.S. attack.
Then there's Feith's description of what the 2004 Senate intelligence committee report said:
A 2004 Senate intelligence committee report praised the quality of the Pentagon's Iraq-al-Qaeda work -- the critical briefing and the related Pentagon-CIA dialogue. The policy officials "played by [intelligence community] rules" and asked questions that "actually improved the Central Intelligence Agency's products," it said.
Unfortunately for Feith, the report also concluded that the CIA's intelligence product on the "murky relationship" between Iraq and al-Qaeda that Feith found so unacceptable was ultimately correct. Starting on page 345 of the report are these conclusions:
Conclusion 90: The Central Intelligence Agency's assessment that Saddam Hussein was most likely to use his own intelligence service operatives to conduct attacks was reasonable, and turned out to be accurate. ...Conclusion 92: The Central Intelligence Agency's examination of contacts, training, safehaven and operation cooperation as indicators of a possible Iraq-al-Qaida relationship was a reasonable and objective approach to the question. ...
Conclusion 93: The Central Intelligence Agency reasonably assessed that there were likely several instances of contacts between Iraq and al-Qaida throughout the 1990s, but that these contacts did not add up to an established formal relationship. ...
Conclusion 94. The Central Intelligence Agency reasonably and objectively assessed in Iraqi Support for Terrorism that the most problematic area of contact between Iraq and al-Qaida were the reports of training in the use of non-conventional weapons, specifically chemical and biological weapons.
Just as a footnote here: those claims were later recanted by their source, an al-Qaeda detainee, Ibn Shaikh al-Libi, who was likely tortured into making them. But anyway.
Conclusion 95: The Central Intelligence Agency's assessment on safehaven -- that al-Qaida or associated operatives were present in Baghdad and in northeastern Iraq in an area under Kurdish control -- was reasonable.Conclusion 96: The Central Intelligence Agency's assessment that to date there was no evidence proving Iraqi complicity or assistance in an al-Qaida attack was reasonable and objective. No additional information has emerged to suggest otherwise.
Conclusion 97: The Central Intelligence Agency's judgment that Saddam Hussein, if sufficiently desperate, might employ terrorists with a global reach -- al-Qaida -- to conduct terrorist attacks in the event of war, was reasonable. No information has emerged thus far to suggest that Saddam did try to employ al-Qaida in conducting terrorist attacks.

Comments (7)
Justin B. wrote on February 14, 2007 10:06 AM:What a schmuck.
NCProsecutor wrote on February 14, 2007 11:16 AM:Sad to see the Post editorial page continue its sad tradition of enabling (hell, cheerleading) this administration's military adventurism by publishing this demonstrably false drivel.
Threegoal wrote on February 14, 2007 11:23 AM:General Tommy Franks was on to something!
ShorelineCT wrote on February 14, 2007 12:23 PM:A LITTLE LEARNING
What Douglas Feith knew, and when he knew it.
by JEFFREY GOLDBERG
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/050509fa_fact
"Several shelves in Feith's library are taken up by authors whose understanding of the world Feith, I was sure, found lacking. These were books by the great British Arabists, men such as T. E. Lawrence, John Bagot Glubb, and Harry St. John Philby. Neoconservatives, by reputation, have a certain nostalgia for the era of British imperialism, and I asked Feith what he learned from the English Arabists.
"There's a paradox I've never been able to work out," he said. "It helps to be deeply knowledgeable about an area--to know the people, to know the language, to know the history, the culture, the literature. But it is not a guarantee that you will have the right strategy or policy as a matter of statecraft for dealing with that area. You see, the great experts in certain areas sometimes get it fundamentally wrong."
I asked Feith if he was talking about himself, and he said, "I am talking about myself in the following sense: expertise is a very good thing, but it is not the same thing as sound judgment regarding strategy and policy. George W. Bush has more insight, because of his knowledge of human beings and his sense of history, about the motive force, the craving for freedom and participation in self-rule, than do many of the language experts and history experts and culture experts." "
Robin Boerner wrote on February 14, 2007 5:04 PM:The whole Bush Regime AKA Administration will hopefully one day be sitting together in jail.
I am sure they will fill their days blaming the MSM, the Democrats, Nancy Pelosi cutting off the Great Decider's blank check, liberals, the Axis of Evil (which by then will encompass 99% of the world), Valerie Plame, Gobal Warming, and the tooth fairy. None will take responsibility for the state of our country, or their role in creating it.
With any luck the prison warden will give them unfettered access to the unregulated internet they so hate and they will post their own rantings here on TPM. By then we will all need a good laugh.
Darren7160 wrote on February 15, 2007 10:59 AM:I am looking forward to the day when the "intellectual elites" start publishing their footnoted, annotated and cross referenced analysis of Feith, Kristol, Cheney, AEI, PNAC and all the other fellow travelers.
I will sit back in my chair with a big cup of coffee and enjoy how history is going to prove to the world that they lied and manipulated our country into a war.
They can deny all they want... but the truth will come out and it will be most damning.
bunny99 wrote on February 15, 2007 11:25 AM:All of these guys are such cowering weasels, falling over themselves with excuses and NEVER accepting responsibility. One of the alarming attitudes about Feith is when he makes reference to the Iraq war, "product." I've heard him say this before, and even as recent as last week in one of his interviews trying to cover his ass.
What I would love to see is everyone write to his employer, is it GWU? demanding he be fired. Any learning institution should be concerned of such a morally bankrupt individual, who treats a war as merchandising a product to sell. He is one dangerous psychopath.