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What About the UN Weapons Inspectors?: Statement by Arms Control Association Executive Director Daryl G. Kimball on the June 2008 Senate Select Committee on Intelligence 'Phase II' Report on Prewar Iraq Intelligence

    WASHINGTON, June 5 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The following is a
statement by Arms Control Association Executive Director Daryl G. Kimball
on the June 2008 Senate Select Committee on Intelligence "Phase II" Report
on Prewar Iraq Intelligence:

    The long-delayed Senate Select Committee on Intelligence report
released today underscores once again that the president and his war
cabinet selectively used portions of the flawed October 2002 National
Intelligence Assessment (NIE) to justify the March 2003 U.S.-led invasion
of Iraq. The new report documents, beyond a doubt, that Bush and his team
cherry-picked the flawed intelligence estimate, which was filled with
caveats and qualifications about Iraq's alleged nuclear, chemical,
biological, and missile programs.

    Yet the committee report makes an inexcusable and obvious error of
omission that most of the mainstream media and commentariat continue to
overlook: the Bush administration and Congress ignored the widely-available
findings of the UN weapons inspectors weeks before the U.S. invasion.

    On Feb. 13, 2003, the chief UN inspector, Hans Blix, reported to the UN
Security Council that there was no evidence of either active chemical or
biological weapons programs or stockpiles. International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) Director-General Mohamed ElBaradei reported that there was no
evidence of a reconstituted nuclear weapons program. On the basis of leads
provided by U.S. and other intelligence agencies and information gained
from earlier inspections, the UN inspectors conducted more than 760
inspections covering about 500 sites from November 2002 through February
2003.

    The UN inspectors' findings directly contradicted key assessments of
the October 2002 NIE and provided ample reason to reassess that document,
which was based entirely on information gathered before the return of the
UN inspectors in November of 2002.

    The UN inspectors again reported March 7 to the Security Council, once
more rebutting the key findings in the NIE that the Bush administration had
used to claim Iraq was actively pursuing prohibited weapons. For example, a
full month before the U.S. invasion, the inspectors found strong evidence
that Iraq was procuring aluminum tubes for artillery rockets rather than
for nuclear weapons material production. The IAEA also exposed as "not
authentic" the documents which laid the basis for the claim that Iraq
attempted to purchase uranium from Niger.

    The UN inspectors' case against the Bush administration's weapons
allegations should have led Bush and members of Congress to delay the
invasion, allow the inspectors to resolve remaining questions and contain
any new Iraqi weapons work, and order a new intelligence assessment. Their
failure to do so has cost innumerable lives, billions of dollars, lost
American prestige, and insecurity.

    The failure to consider the UN inspectors' pre-invasion findings also
has allowed the Bush administration to foist another falsehood on the
public and on the lazy press corps: that the administration's belief that
there were prohibited weapons activities in Iraq was based on the
intelligence available at the time and that everyone agreed with that
assessment.

    Wrong. The NIE was flawed and the UN inspectors told us so before the
United States and its coalition partners invaded Iraq. Unfortunately, the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence has failed to fully correct the
record.

    The Arms Control Association is an independent, non-partisan membership
organization dedicated to practical strategies to reduce and eliminate the
threats posed by the world's most dangerous weapons.



SOURCE Arms Control Association




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Related links:
  • http://www.armscontrol.org
    CONTACT:
    Peter Crail, +1-202-463-8270 x102, or Daryl
    G. Kimball, +1-202-463-8270 x107, both of Arms Control
    Association