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Abu Ghraib Torture Photos

  • Ag15
    The photos America doesn't want seen MORE photographs have been leaked of Iraqi citizens tortured by US soldiers at the notorious Abu Ghraib prison on the outskirts of Baghdad. Tonight the SBS Dateline program plans to broadcast about 60 previously unpublished photographs that the US Government has been fighting to keep secret in a court case with the American Civil Liberties Union. Although a US judge last year granted the union access to the photographs following a freedom-of-information request, the US Administration has appealed against the decision on the grounds their release would fuel anti-American sentiment. Some of the photos are similar to those published in 2004, others are different. They include photographs of six corpses, although the circumstances of their deaths are not clear. There are also pictures of what appear to be burns and wounds from shotgun pellets. The executive producer of Dateline, Mike Carey, said he was showing the pictures leaked to his program because it was important people understood what had happened at Abu Ghraib. Seven US guards were jailed following publication of the first batch of Abu Ghraib photographs in April 2004. Mr Carey said he could not explain why the photographs had not yet been published, as he thought it was likely that some journalists had them. "It think it's strange, maybe they think its more of the same."
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Saturday, April 30, 2005

New "Becoming Gannon" blog

Becoming_gannon_logo3


For the past few months, I've been spending many hours working on the ePluribusMedia investigation, propagannon, which was set up to facilitate getting to the bottom of the JD Guckert/Jeff Gannon story. Last Monday, Michael Dietz of Reading A1, blogslut of blogslut.com and I were banned from the investigation's website for publishing this piece in Alternet. You can read through the comments and Michael's post here to see how it happened.

I've set up this weblog, where we we'll just carry on. I'm busy furnishing it with things I gathered over the past two months and I've posted several original articles, including the infamous Alternet piece for which we have been so harshly punished!

Petty Pentagon vandalism an "outrage"

From the Washington Post:

From a row of silhouetted hearses on a rain-drenched tarmac to a convoy of olive-green trucks each bearing a casket, hundreds of images of flag-draped coffins of American service members killed at war were released by the Pentagon this week in response to a lawsuit.

The more than 700 photographs, taken by military photographers from 2001 to 2004, show coffins from Iraq and Afghanistan lining the mechanical silver interiors of Air Force C-17 jets. Many depict solemn honor guard ceremonies for the fallen troops at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware and other U.S. military facilities.
[...]
"Individual judgments were made to black out some faces and identifying information to protect privacy information," said James Turner, a Pentagon spokesman.

Thomas Blanton, director of the National Security Archive, which assisted in the lawsuit, said it was "an outrage and an insult that they blacked out those faces of the honor guard, when today on . . . [the Pentagon Web site] you can see photos of U.S. soldiers in Iraq. I can only imagine they put those black boxes there to make the photos unusable."






Blacked_out

The Pentagon blacked out the faces and identifying information in some photos showing honor guards for coffins lining the interiors of C-17 transports. Thomas Blanton of the National Security Archive called the edited images "an outrage and an insult."
Photo Credit: Defense Department Photos Via Nsarchive.org

UPDATE - Mithras, on the above photo: "Nothing more evocative of this war for me than the officially-anonymous living honoring the anonymous dead. "

Thursday, April 28, 2005

Iraqi Parliament approves partial cabinet

Reports say that Iraq's Parliament has approved 27 actual ministers of less contentious ministries and approved "acting" ministers to the important and highly controversial ones. Oddly, (or not?) over a third of Iraqi MPs were not present for the vote according to the AP, which reports that a show of hands vote on the cabinet was taken among the 185 assembly members (out of 275 elected and 273 that remain after one resignation and one assassination) who showed up.

Apparently Ibrahim al-Jaafari's Sunni choice for defence minister was rejected and Jaafari will be acting defence minister as well as Prime Minister. And, the Iraqi who just won't go away, former Pentagon pet turned Shiite statesman Ahmed Chalabi will have the oil ministry as "acting" minister.

Tuesday, April 26, 2005

Terror by blog

Wow. BBC reporter and weblogger Stuart Hughes is being blackmailed and threatened by a Romanian hacker who has hijacked his blog. Apparently, the guy took over Stuart's blog and demanded that he post about the Romanian journalists held hostage in Iraq.

Daster again! I told you to help our romanian journalists hostages in Iraq and you ignored me! That's mean you don't care about them......ok...this is an Ultimatum! If tomorrow our journalists will die, i promise you that i'll distroy you!!! I have all your accounts. I'm not a bad guy but if you'll ignore me again i swear i'll distroy you!!!I hope that you are sure now that's not a joke....don't make me angry...
[...]
If you are not worried about you, or your family...ignore me again...Anyway next time (wich means tommorow if you don't publish any thing about journalists) i'll block your credit card, your cell phone ,and your access to internet......see you soon!

Romanian hacker, DASTER!


People posting comments are saying that Daster has done this before.

HOW CAN YOU ASK SOMEONE TO BE THE LAST MAN TO DIE FOR A LIE?

Those weapons of mass destruction have got to be somewhere. Ha ha ha!

Or not.

Friday, April 22, 2005

About Jeff Gannon....

A story about the transformation of JD Guckert into Jeff Gannon, A Voice of the New Media.

Becoming Jeff Gannon

I wouldn't recommend it just because my friend Michael Dietz wrote it and blogslut and I did the research, either.

And JD, when you read this (yes, you clearly google your name daily) think about a few things. How long will you keep up your sidebar questions once you realize that you'll never be a White House Correspondent for a conservative publication ever again? And, why don't you post under your own pseudonym on Free Republic? Does it surprise you that no one answers you, even though it's obvious that ConservativeMajority only posts about Jeff Gannon? Where are all your good conservative friends?

Tuesday, April 19, 2005

Iraqi Parliament: Green Zone must be liberated

Give 'em a little sovereignty and they get all uppity:

“I saw the whole thing and adding insult to injury was when Iraqi soldiers drew their rifles at brother Fatah as he was being mistreated by the Americans,” said Ali Yushaa an independent Shiite MP.

Deputies took turns to speak for almost two hours about the many indignities that they and the Iraqi population suffer when coming in contact with US troops.

“According to the Geneva conventions, an occupying force must respect the occupied nation,” said Abdul Khaliq Zanganah, a Kurdish MP. “This offending soldier must be thrown out of our country.”

A Sunni MP, Mudhar Shawkat, handed in the green VIP badge issued by the US military authorising him and other deputies to enter the Green Zone and said he would only attend parliament if sessions were moved to another location.

“They should be put on notice and given two months — no more — to leave the Green Zone,” he said before walking out. Another unidentified MP shouted: “Yes, the end of occupation begins here. The Green Zone must be liberated from occupation!” Speaker Hajem Al Hassani said he would suspend sessions altogether unless they move within a week to a building on the fringes of the Green Zone that has its own entrance and would be guarded by Iraqi soldiers.

“Enough is enough!” he said before adjourning parliament until Sunday.

So, what sparked all this anger? Fatah Al Sheikh explains:
“When I told the translator with the soldier that I was a member of the national assembly, he answered: To hell with you and the national assembly,” Sheikh told his colleagues.

“I got really upset, so I got down from my vehicle to confront him and at that moment a US soldier came over and grabbed my neck and choked me for a minute or so.” Sheikh said the whole fracas started when he lined up in his car with other deputies to enter the Green Zone, the seat of the transitional government and home to the US embassy, foreign advisors and contractors.

He said he decided to get out of line and come back later when it was less crowded, but that as he began to pull out, a US soldier came over and kicked his car. “I showed him my badge, but he grabbed it from my hand and tossed it in my face,” said the bearded Sheikh. “When I got out of my car, the soldier twisted my arm.”

The US military said it was investigating the incident and refused to comment.

This kind of incident happens all the time in Occupied Iraq, with the difference that this time an MP got the treatment and he actually has recourse to a public platform from which to speak, unlike the ordinary Iraqis who endure the indignities in silence. Whatever will the Americans do?

Friday, April 15, 2005

"Conservatives" Love Caterpillar Bulldozers and Human Pancakes

You know, I saw this post by Brad Brooks-Rubin on Semitism.net and I wasn't even going to comment on it (this is just an excerpt, please read the entire thing for context):

What was this step? It came as part of AJCongress' anti-divestment campaign. The point of this campaign is to combat those who "seek to undermine Israel’s self-defense, its economy and its legitimacy, and to pressure Israel to make concessions during peace negotiations with the Palestinians."

The first plank of this campaign, AJCongress' strongest answer to divestment? Buy shares of Caterpillar. Or, stated another way, underwrite home demolitions.

Now, divestment itself is a complex and difficult topic. Debates about divestment rage in many places, and I am no expert on any of them. I will admit that I go back and forth on what I think of these efforts and do little to support them.

But regardless of where you stand on divestment, how can buying shares of Caterpillar do anything for Israel's self-defense, economy or legitimacy – that is, of course, except undermine all three? First, this is an American company selling items to Israel, so one can hardly say it does much for the Israeli economy. If you truly seek to help the Israeli economy -- and it needs help -- why would you prioritize sales to Israel of items not destined for the general economy, or for the most part, even destined to be used within Israel?

And what of self-defense? Israel uses CAT's bulldozers and other equipment to demolish homes; tactics the IDF itself has now ceased because of findings that they do not work. Tens of thousands of Palestinian lives have been torn asunder by these bulldozers; American peace activist Rachel Corrie was killed by a CAT bulldozer in 2003 during a demolition in Gaza. So self-defense? If anything, at least some of those who lost their homes and possessions to the demolitions later turned in response to tactics endangering Israel and Israelis.

Legitimacy? Human rights groups consistently call out home demolitions as among the most egregious of Israeli human rights violations in the Palestinian Territories. The IDF itself knows demolitions don’t serve their purpose, and as such, has announced their cessation.

Help Israel's self-defense, economy and legitimacy? O for 3.

But, then, via Porquois Pas?, I see this, on Jesus' General:
Lgf

This sharp leather LGF vest is accented with an Iron Cross and flaming skulls.

And, this. How can one not at least point out such sickness?
Cat_got_syrup_rachel_corrie
I Love Big Cats

UPDATE: Arthur Silber points me to a post (almost painful to read) on Rachel Corrie. It will be especially helpful for those who don't know Rachel's story already. For the rest of us, it will be another weight on the heart.

How to make a difference in Iraq

Raed_and_co_1
L to R: Rafat, Dr. Salam and Raed

Raed Jarrar, his family and girlfriend Niki began a project some five months ago to purchase and distribute medicines in Iraq. They thought that being Iraqi (except Niki, who's Iranian), they'd know the best places to distribute the aid so that it did the most good. So, they began taking donations, buying medicines and medical supplies in Jordan and distributing them in Iraq. Raed documents everything they do with photos and scans of documents, so that he's not only doing a good deed in a very aboveboard and accountable fashion, he also almost inadvertently creates a heartwarming story on his blog. So go here and scroll up through the story of the third batch of medicines and how it got to Iraq, or just go here and scroll down.




Raed_medicines Raed_mom

Raed: I tried to cover some of the medicines so that when my mom woke up she wouldn't have a heart attack...

Raed's Mom having a heart attack over the redecoration of her living room

All the medicines in this, the third batch, were bought with only a little over ten thousand in donations. In all, Raed has received almost eighteen thousand dollars (US). Oddly, the donors seem to be mainly Canadian? How is that possible?

I think Raed and his friends and family have done a great job with this project.

Iraqi Victims of American Delusions

Since a murderous, violent resistance movement (which antiwar people predicted) rules much of Iraq rather than the liberation cakewalk and democratic utopia (that prowar people predicted), an inevitable class of victims of the American invasion of Iraq has emerged (just as it always does, after an invasion.)

To the resistance, they're collaborators and to the occupiers they're living proof of failure. They want to get out of Iraq before the resistance kills them and their families for aiding the US occupation. The Americans in Iraq want them to shut up and go hide somewhere, so they won't be embarrassed back home by the spectacle of Iraqis fleeing the US-recreation of the Garden of Eden in Mesopotamia. This woman sums up their predicament poignantly,

Alyaa hoped to find a haven in the United States but discovered the State Department isn't resettling refugees from Iraq. She's lost her faith in the country she once loved.

"We gave them our friendship," Alyaa said during a recent interview at an Amman restaurant, wearing jeans and smoking cigarettes. "We gave them our hard work. And they don't even help us to have a new life." Is it so hard, she asked, "for America to give a visa to Iraqis to have a new life that they took from them?"

Iraqi refugees in mortal fear at home can't get entry into United States

Recommended reading

Jonathan Schwarz has a great interview with Chris Floyd posted. Just so you know what you're missing if you don't go over there and read this interview, here's Chris Floyd on Matt Taibbi (who I vote for as the subject for Jonathan's next interview, if he can't get JD Guckert.)

There were lots of people from the paper [The Moscow Times]during that period who you see now all over the place. Carlotta Gall, who's in Afghanistan now for the New York Times. I used to take her dictation when she'd call on her satellite phone from Chechnya. Anne Barnard, who's in Baghdad for the Boston Globe. Frank Brown, my roommate in Moscow, who writes for Newsweek now. Matt Taibbi was there.

Taibbi was a great reporter, a big, honking goon of a guy who'd ride with the police and get down in the real Moscow dirt. He used to make fun of me because I wore this black shirt with a pink tie—I had about four changes of clothes altogether while I was there, living out of a couple of suitcases—so he started calling me "Cheap Trick," because he thought I looked like one of the singers from that old band. Which I suppose tells you something about his musical tastes.

Tuesday, April 12, 2005

"Buds of Democracy" in Iraq

Any guerrilla war has lulls, slowdowns, little coffee breaks that last a week, a month, sometimes years. It doesn't mean the war's over. The VC used to go home when it was time to harvest the rice crop; every time they did, the Saigon PR office would declare that the insurgency was beaten. Sadr and his boys are going to work us the way you work a can lid: back and forth, over and over, sheer metal fatigue. They've got a whole new crop of martyrs to worship, and all they have to do is wait for another policy mistake to outrage all their followers. One thing you can be sure of, if you're an Iraqi Shiite: outrages are like buses, there'll always be another one coming along. When it arrives, they'll get on board, fight us again, lose again, win the propaganda battle again, and come back a little stronger, with more of the Shi'ite poor on their side. After a half dozen lost battles, they'll be so strong we'll be glad to catch the last chopper out of Najaf and let'em martyr each other, instead of paying hundreds of billions of my tax money to be their Santa-Claus bogeyman....Gary Brecher, War Nerd, 04 September 2004
***********
The bombings, the shootings and kidnappings go on daily in Iraq. But two years after US troops pulled down the statue of Saddam Hussein in Baghdad, there are signs of hope that Iraq is finally turning the corner. The number of US casualties, the scale of militant attacks and the amount of civilian blood spilt have been reduced sharply from the peak in January and February. The security situation is still bad, but it is less awful than it has been for the past year.

American and British commanders are careful to caution that this may be a lull, little different from those seen in February and June last year. Yet in the Green Zone, the fortified government enclave in Baghdad, coalition and Iraqi officials dare to hope that they are gaining the upper hand......Telegraph, 13/04/2005

***********
Iraq4a
Chanting “Death to America” and burning effigies of President Bush and Saddam Hussein, tens of thousands of Iraqis flooded central Baghdad on Saturday in what police called the largest anti-American protest since the fall of Baghdad, the capital, exactly two years ago.

The peaceful demonstration by angry young followers of Shiite Muslim cleric Muqtada al-Sadr underscored the United States’ accomplishments and its failures since the end of the war.

The Paradise Revolution.....LENIN"S TOMB

Thanks to blogslut for the picture

Rumsfeld lectures Iraqi Parliament

All those recently elected Iraqis who've been screwing around like forming a government is no big deal, have had the riot act read to them by Rumsfeld.

Rumsfeld’s message was made extremely loudly and clearly in his indomitable style when he told the interim Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari about Washington’s frustration with the fact that 10 weeks after the historic elections here in Iraq, the government has still yet to be formed.

The defense secretary made the Iraqi officials fully aware of his belief that this delay is having damaging effects on Iraq’s future. It not only undermines the faith of the Iraqi people in democracy. But, every day the formation of the government is delayed is yet another day that U.S. troops are going to have to remain in this country. In addition, the power vacuum only feeds the insurgency that is making the daily lives of regular Iraqis so miserable.


That'll show 'em.

If a power vacuum feeds an insurgency, is that why it has grown so large under the US occupation? Just asking...

Tuesday, April 05, 2005

Why do lies ricochet in an echo chamber?

Clark Stooksbury catches ButtRocket and ElephantProboscis EmEssEmming the AP, again.

Same lie, Round 2.

Saturday, April 02, 2005

Warblogging conservatives are such jokers

I found this leftover April Fool's joke linked from Roger Simon's WarBlog. It is a joke, right? If it isn't, at least tell me the title of the blog is.

The All-New Fallujah Brigades?

64 Sunni clerics of the Association of Muslim Scholars and the Iraqi Islamic Party gave a fatwa calling for Iraqi Sunnis to join the military and police. Juan Cole comments that , "Unlike Sistani's this ruling does potentially change things," which is rather an understatement, since the Sunnis have resisted recruitment into these organizations en masse, generally viewing those who participate as traitors and puppets of the occupation.

Cole goes on, "The Sunni clerics seem to have figured out that boycotting the new government is just a form of self-marginalization, and if Sunnis aren't in the army and police, then those forces will be largely Shiite and Kurdish." Cole doesn't explain why he thinks the Sunnis joining the army and police means they're suddenly doing a 180 degree turnabout and cooperating with the government they've relentlessly maintained is illegitimate, but it's a conclusion more optimistic than is warranted, considering the context.

Swopadamus's speculation as to the Sunni motives behind this sudden change of MO is more skeptical,

It's also noteworthy that the statement apparently says nothing about supporting the new Iraqi government politically. Could the call for Sunni Muslims to join the army be a way to keep Anbar and other Sunni-majority provinces from being patrolled by predominantly Shiite military units? Assuming that new Sunni recruits are allowed to serve in their home regions, with fresh training and weaponry, they would be far more prepared to fight against the government when if the entire new scheme collapses into civil war among various sectarian/party militias.
The answer to swopa's first question is surely yes. As for his second question, try to imagine a police squad from Ramadi patrolling Basra. Yeah, me neither.

In fact, there is precedent for a Sunni military unit in Iraq during the US occupation. It was called the Fallujah Brigade, and it was so successful (from the occupation's point of view) that it lasted a whopping four months before the US military "disbanded" it. (They got to keep the weapons, vehicles and armor.)

According to numerous accounts, some Brigade members almost immediately integrated themselves among the various mujahideen resistance outfits that dominate the city to this day, collecting paychecks from the U.S. military all the while.

One Brigade leader expressed exasperation at the disbanding of the unit. "We don't know where to go now after this dismissal by the American troops and the Iraqi interim government," Brig. Gen. Tayseer Latief told the Times. "They leave us no other option but to join the resistance."

So, will the Sunnis now flock to the Iraqi Army and police and form up some new Fallujah Brigades? At the moment, the 101st Fighting Keyboarders, Good News Division, is touting this as a positive development, seeing the Sunni fatwa as election-induced Sunni recognition of their marginalized, left-out status resulting in their sheepish cooperation with the Iraqi political process, rather than as a tactical move aimed at creating local Sunni police and Army units, armed at US expense, concerned more with the defense of their own territory and people than with the success of the government formed under US occupation.

Well, it's not as if the War Party has gotten anything about Iraq right yet. I doubt they're going to ruin their perfect record in this case.

Friday, April 01, 2005

Looking back: "Curveball" and the WMD Lie Factory

"We have teams of people that are out looking. They've investigated a number of sites. And within the last week or two, they have in fact captured and have in custody two of the mobile trailers that Secretary Powell talked about at the United Nations as being biological weapons laboratories."

Donald Rumsfeld
Infinity Radio Interview
May 31, 2003

"Is it an embarrassment to people on the other side that we’ve discovered these biological production vans, which the defector told us about?"

Paul Wolfowitz
CNN Interview
May 31, 2003

Now that the Bush's commission has released it's "scathing report," finding that intelligence from "America's spy agencies" was "dead wrong," it's time to take a look back at the character emerging as the favored scapegoat, the infamous "Curveball."

According to Adam Entous reporting for Reuters, Curveball was "...the 'pivotal' source behind the intelligence community's escalating warnings about Iraq's biological weapons programs before the invasion."

Assertions that Iraq was cooking up biological agents in mobile labs to elude international inspectors and Western intelligence services -- based almost exclusively on Curveball's information -- became what the report called one of the "most important and alarming" assessments in the October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate cited by President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney in justifying the war.
Who is this amazing Curveball, who was able almost singlehandedly to make the Bush Administration believe that Saddam Hussein had mobile chemical weapons factories? As was reported a year ago
Curveball is the brother of a top aide of Ahmad Chalabi, the pro-western Iraqi former exile with links to the Pentagon.
A whole family of "Heroes in Error!"

Ahmed Chalabi of the Iraqi National Congress, darling (even now) of the War Party, and opportunistic peddler of whatever lies his sponsors needed to sell the invasion of Iraq. Shouldn't we peer back through the fog of time and reconstruct just how the Bushies came to put forward such Heroes in Error? Maybe we should look all the way back to the Office of Special Plans, that stovepiping secret intelligence group that operated through VP Cheney's office:

...what the Bush people did was “dismantle the existing filtering process that for fifty years had been preventing the policymakers from getting bad information. They created stovepipes to get the information they wanted directly to the top leadership. Their position is that the professional bureaucracy is deliberately and maliciously keeping information from them.

“They always had information to back up their public claims, but it was often very bad information,” Pollack continued. “They were forcing the intelligence community to defend its good information and good analysis so aggressively that the intelligence analysts didn’t have the time or the energy to go after the bad information.”

The Administration eventually got its way, a former C.I.A. official said. “The analysts at the C.I.A. were beaten down defending their assessments. And they blame George Tenet”—the C.I.A. director—“for not protecting them. I’ve never seen a government like this.”
[...]
The defectors, however, had an audience prepared to believe the worst. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld had long complained about the limits of American intelligence. In the late nineteen-nineties, for example, he had chaired a commission on ballistic-missile programs that criticized the unwillingness of intelligence analysts “to make estimates that extended beyond the hard evidence they had in hand.” After he became Secretary of Defense, a separate intelligence unit was set up in the Pentagon’s policy office, under the control of William Luti, a senior aide to Feith. This office, which circumvented the usual procedures of vetting and transparency, stovepiped many of its findings to the highest-ranking officials.
[...]
Chalabi’s defector reports were now flowing from the Pentagon directly to the Vice-President’s office, and then on to the President, with little prior evaluation by intelligence professionals. When INR analysts did get a look at the reports, they were troubled by what they found. “They’d pick apart a report and find out that the source had been wrong before, or had no access to the information provided,” Greg Thielmann told me. “There was considerable skepticism throughout the intelligence community about the reliability of Chalabi’s sources, but the defector reports were coming all the time. Knock one down and another comes along. Meanwhile, the garbage was being shoved straight to the President.”

A routine settled in: the Pentagon’s defector reports, classified “secret,” would be funnelled to newspapers, but subsequent C.I.A. and INR analyses of the reports—invariably scathing but also classified—would remain secret.

“It became a personality issue,” a Pentagon consultant said of the Bush Administration’s handling of intelligence. “My fact is better than your fact. The whole thing is a failure of process. Nobody goes to primary sources.” The intelligence community was in full retreat.

In the spring of 2002, the former White House official told me, Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz began urging the President to release more than ninety million dollars in federal funds to Chalabi. The 1998 Iraq Liberation Act had authorized ninety-seven million dollars for the Iraqi opposition, but most of the funds had not been expended. The State Department opposed releasing the rest of the money, arguing that Chalabi had failed to account properly for the funds he had already received. “The Vice-President came into a meeting furious that we hadn’t given the money to Chalabi,” the former official recalled. Cheney said, “Here we are, denying him money, when they”—the Iraqi National Congress—“are providing us with unique intelligence on Iraqi W.M.D.s.”


It was "unique intelligence" all right. As Robert Dreyfuss and Jason Vest write in their dissection of the OSP, "The Lie Factory,"
According to multiple sources, Chalabi's Iraqi National Congress sent a steady stream of misleading and often faked intelligence reports into U.S. intelligence channels. That information would flow sometimes into NESA/OSP directly, sometimes through Defense Intelligence Agency debriefings of Iraqi defectors via the Defense Human Intelligence Service, and sometimes through the INC's own U.S.-funded Intelligence Collection Program, which was overseen by the Pentagon. The INC's intelligence "isn't reliable at all," according to Vincent Cannistraro, a former CIA chief of counterterrorism. "Much of it is propaganda. Much of it is telling the Defense Department what they want to hear, using alleged informants and defectors who say what Chalabi wants them to say, [creating] cooked information that goes right into presidential and vice presidential speeches."
When we see statements like this: "... the Bush administration relied on bogus intelligence from a mysterious Iraqi chemical engineer code-named 'Curveball'," let's remember how that "intelligence" was created, lest we be mislead by propagandistic lines like this,
.....the presidential commission that investigated intelligence failures in Iraq cast Curveball as the "pivotal" source behind the intelligence community's escalating warnings about Iraq's biological weapons programs before the invasion.
The "intelligence community" which used Curveball "intelligence" certainly wasn't part of this community:
An Iraqi defector nicknamed Curveball who wrongly claimed that Saddam Hussein had mobile chemical weapons factories was last night at the centre of a bitter row between the CIA and Germany's intelligence agency.

German officials said that they had warned American colleagues well before the Iraq war that Curveball's information was not credible - but the warning was ignored.

It was the Iraqi defector's testimony that led the Bush administration to claim that Saddam had built a fleet of trucks and railway wagons to produce anthrax and other deadly germs.

In his presentation to the UN security council in February last year, the US secretary of state, Colin Powell, explicitly used Curveball's now discredited claims as justification for war. The Iraqis were assembling "mobile production facilities for biological agents", Mr Powell said, adding that his information came from "a solid source".

These "killer caravans" allowed Saddam to produce anthrax "on demand", it was claimed. US officials never had direct access to the defector, and have subsequently claimed that the Germans misled them.

Yesterday, however, German agents told Die Zeit newspaper that they had warned the Bush administration long before last year that there were "problems" with Curveball's account. "We gave a clear credibility assessment. On our side at least, there were no tricks before Colin Powell's presentation," one source told the newspaper.

Who "misled" the "intelligence community?" As Justin Raimondo points out in today's column, "The system did not just break down all by itself: somebody sabotaged it, and that is pretty clearly the "analysts" who fed on the lies concocted by Chalabi & Co. "


Thanks to billmon for the quotes.

ADDED BY POPULAR REQUEST:

"We found the weapons of mass destruction. We found biological laboratories. You remember when Colin Powell stood up in front of the world, and he said, Iraq has got laboratories, mobile labs to build biological weapons. They're illegal. They're against the United Nations resolutions, and we've so far discovered two. And we'll find more weapons as time goes on. But for those who say we haven't found the banned manufacturing devices or banned weapons, they're wrong, we found them."

George W. Bush
Interview, TVP Poland
May 29, 2003

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