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Bush under
fire over Iran claims
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—The White House Thursday struggled to defend the dire
warnings about Iran made by US President George W. Bush even after he
had learned that Tehran had likely frozen its atomic weapons program in
2003.
A new US National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) released on Monday
formally endorsed that conclusion, which Bush had first heard about in
August from US Director of National Intelligence Michael McConnell.
On August 28, Bush warned of a “nuclear holocaust” if the Islamic
republic developed nuclear weapons, and on October 17 he warned that
anyone interested in avoiding “World War III” should support US pressure
on Tehran. On October 21, US Vice President Dick Cheney warned Iran to
suspend uranium enrichment or face “serious consequences” — the very
language in the UN resolution on Iraq that the White House says
justified the March 2003 invasion.
On Tuesday, the US president defended himself from Democratic charges of
exaggerating the threat by saying that he had only been briefed on the
NIE on November 28 and suggesting that McConnell’s earlier warning had
been vague.
“In August, I think it was, Mike McConnell came in and said, ‘we have
some new information’. He didn’t tell me what the information was. He
did tell me it was going to take a while to analyze,” Bush told a press
conference. But White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said one day later
that McConnell had told Bush that he was looking into information that
Tehran had frozen its atomic weapons quest, casting doubt on previous US
charges. McConnell “said that if the new information turns out to be
true, what we thought we knew for sure is right. Iran does in fact have
a covert nuclear weapons program, but it may be suspended,” the
spokeswoman said.
Confronted with the apparent contradiction between her comments and
Bush’s own words, Perino replied: “The president could have been more
precise in that language. But the president was being truthful.”
But some of Bush’s Democratic critics, including candidates to succeed
him in the November 2008 election, charged that Bush knew or should have
known in August about the blockbuster finding that upended years of US
rhetoric on Iran. “Are you telling me a president who’s briefed every
single morning, who’s fixated on Iran, is not told back in August that
the tentative conclusion of 16 intelligence agencies in the United
States government said they had abandoned their effort for a nuclear
weapon in ‘03?” asked Senator Joseph Biden. Biden noted Bush’s
contention that McConnell’s warning had not been specific and flatly
declared: “That’s not believable.”
“If that’s true, he has the most incompetent staff in modern American
history and he’s one of the most incompetent presidents in modern
American history,” the senator told reporters on a conference call on
Tuesday.
Biden also linked the latest flap to the flawed case for war with Iraq.
“For this president to knowingly disregard or once again misrepresent
intelligence about the issue of war and peace, I find it outrageous.
This is exactly what he did in the run-up to the war in Iraq,” said
Biden.
The US reversal on Iran’s nuclear weapons program has exposed a breaking
of ranks within a waning administration, with US intelligence and
military professionals asserting themselves on issues of war and peace,
analysts said Friday.
Senior US intelligence officials said this week they were responding to
new information, subjected to more rigorous analysis than in the past,
in declaring with “high confidence” that Iran halted a covert nuclear
weapons program in 2003.
But their willingness to set aside all previous assumptions flowed from
a determination not to repeat the errors made in 2002, when bogus
intelligence on Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction set the United States
on a course to war, they said.
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