Source: Carnegie
by Jessica
T. Mathews and Jeff Miller
(pdf
version)
WMD
in Iraq: Evidence and Implications details
how the intelligence community and administration officials misconstrued
the threat posed by Iraq’s weapon programs and outlines intelligence
reforms and policy changes stemming from this incident. In this new analysis,
the authors focus exclusively on differing versions of the key CIA document,
the National Intelligence Estimate. A comparison suggests that before
the crucial congressional vote the intelligence community itself misrepresented
information in a highly significant way.
The failure to find weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in Iraq is frequently
portrayed as the result of either intelligence failures or misrepresentation
of the intelligence by others. In fact, both were involved. It appears that
a third factor was involved as well: misrepresentation of intelligence by the
intelligence community itself.
One week before lawmakers were to vote on the use of force in Iraq, the CIA
released an unclassified version of its just-completed National Intelligence
Estimate (NIE). As the intelligence community's definitive judgments on key
issues, NIEs are always important documents on which great care is expended.
However, this NIE was unusually important because it was the authoritative assessment
of the Iraqi threat available to members of Congress on which to base a decision
whether to support or oppose a war.
A close comparison of the unclassified version (CIA White Paper: "Iraq's
Weapons of Mass Destruction Programs," published in October 2002) and the
original classified NIE (parts of which were declassified and released after
the war), reveals striking differences. In addition to changes presumably made
to protect sensitive sources and methods, the differences are of two types.
Some convey the impression that the intelligence community was much more confident
and more united in its views than it actually was. Others appear designed to
portray a sense of heightened threat, and particularly of a threat that could
touch the U.S. homeland. Sentences and phrases in the classified NIE expressing
uncertainty were deleted while new formulations alluding to gathering danger
were added.
The words "we judge" and "we assess" were
deleted from five key findings of the classified document. For example, the
classified version read: "We judge that Iraq has continued its weapons
of mass destruction (WMD) programs." The unclassified version stated: "Iraq
has continued its weapons of mass destruction (WMD) programs." The classified
NIE opined: "We judge Iraq has some lethal and incapacitating BW agents."
In the unclassified version, this was a certainty: "Iraq has some lethal
and incapacitating BW agents." The classified version expressed the view:
"We assess that Baghdad has begun renewed production of mustard, sarin,
GF (cyclosarin) and VX." The unclassified version was unequivocal: "Baghdad
has begun renewed production of chemical warfare agents." In each case,
uncertainties turned into fact.
The unclassified version had no reference to the dissenting opinions of the
Department of Energy, U.S. Air Force, or the extensive dissenting views of the
Department of State's Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR) on Iraq's nuclear
weapons program and its attempts to acquire aluminum tubes. Instead, where there
was agency disagreement, the unclassified version used the phrase "most
analysts assess" or "most analysts believe." Only
on one occasion did the unclassified version mention the reason why "some"
analysts disagreed. We now know that entire government agencies rejected many
of what were portrayed as consensus judgments and that they held less alarmist
views of Iraqi behavior.
A summary box that assigned confidence levels to key judgments was expunged.
Only in the classified NIE did the intelligence community reveal that it had
"low confidence" in its ability to assess: when Saddam would use WMD;
whether he would engage in clandestine attacks against the United States; and,
whether he would share chemical or biological weapons with Al Qaeda. The judgments
themselves, also omitted, were that the intelligence community believed Saddam
was unlikely to engage in such risky activity unless he was provoked by fear
of regime change; in other words, unless he faced imminent attack.
The following excerpts detail more of the striking differences between the
two documents. They raise a disturbing question: why the director of central
intelligence would release a document purporting to reflect the consensus judgment
of the intelligence agencies that distorted those views in highly significant
ways.
In recent congressional testimony, CIA director George Tenet asserted: "You
have the confidence to know that when I believed somebody was misconstruing
intelligence I said something about it." (3/9/04) In this case it appears
that he misconstrued the available intelligence himself.
Key sentences omitted from the unclassified version:
- "We lack specific information on many key aspects of Iraq's WMD
program."
- "We have low confidence in our ability to assess when Saddam would
use WMD."
- "He probably would use CBW when he perceived he irretrievably had
lost control of the military and security situation, but we are unlikely to
know when Saddam reaches that point."
- "Baghdad for now appears to be drawing a line short of conducting
terrorist attacks with conventional CBW against the United States, fearing
that exposure of Iraqi involvement would provide Washington a stronger case
for making war."
- "Iraq probably would attempt clandestine attacks against the US
Homeland if Baghdad feared an attack that threatened the survival of the regime
were imminent or unavoidable, or possibly for revenge."
- The classified NIE expresses low confidence in its ability to assess
"whether in desperation Saddam would share chemical or biological weapons
with al-Qa'ida."
Material added to the unclassified version (additions italicized):
- "Iraq has some lethal and incapacitating BW agents and is capable of
quickly producing and weaponizing a variety of such agents, including anthrax,
for delivery by bombs, missiles, aerial sprayers, and covert operatives, including
potentially against the US Homeland."
- "Baghdad's UAVs-especially if used for delivery of chemical and
biological warfare (CBW) agents-could threaten Iraq's neighbors, US forces
in the Persian Gulf, and the United States if brought close to, or into, the
US Homeland."
However, some omissions arguably make the unclassified version less alarmist
than the original (information that was only in the classified version is italicized):
- "Iraq's efforts to re-establish and enhance its cadre of weapons
personnel as well as activities at several suspect nuclear sites further indicate
that reconstitution is underway."
- "Baghdad probably has developed genetically engineered BW agents."
- "An array of clandestine reporting reveals that Baghdad has procured
covertly the types and quantities of chemicals and equipment sufficient to
allow limited CW agent production hidden within Iraq's legitimate chemical
industry."
- "Most agencies assess that Baghdad started reconstituting its nuclear
weapons program about the same time that UNSCOM inspectors
departed - December 1998."
- "Saddam probably has stocked at least 100 metric tons and possibly
as much as 500 metric tons of CW agents - much of it added in the last
year."
Jessica Mathews is president of the Carnegie Endowment and Jeff Miller is
a researcher in the president's office.
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