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Woodward's definition of "journalism"? Reporting Bush administration falsehoods as "their point of view" |
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from Media Matters for America
Entered into the database on Thursday, November 24th, 2005 @ 14:55:25 MST |
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Appearing on the November 21 edition
of CNN's Larry King Live, Washington Post assistant managing editor Bob Woodward
discussed his book Plan
of Attack: The Definitive Account of the Decision to Invade Iraq (Simon
& Schuster, April 2004). Responding to concerns about his objectivity given
the close relationships he cultivated with senior Bush administration officials
while researching the book, Woodward said that the book "has some pretty
tough stuff in it. At the same time, the president or others [in the government]
get to express their point of view." He added: "I believe that's journalism." But what Woodward was actually allowing his administration sources to do was
something far more problematic: Under the guise of expressing their "point
of view," administration officials were given a forum in which to make
numerous questionable and even categorically false statements about the Iraq
war, without refutation. In many instances, Woodward knew or should have known
of evidence that undermined or refuted their "views." Below are several
of the more flagrant examples of such statements from Plan of Attack concerning
the Bush administration's use of prewar intelligence to make the case that war
with Iraq was necessary because Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction
(WMD). The Office of Special Plans and the Iraqi National Congress In the ongoing debate about whether the Bush administration manipulated intelligence
in the buildup to the Iraq war, the administration and its defenders have repeatedly
claimed that Congress had access to the "same intelligence" as the
White House in assessing that Iraq was a serious threat. As Media Matters for
America has documented,
one key fact undermining such a claim is that the administration had exclusive
access to alternative sources of intelligence upon which it reportedly relied
significantly for prewar intelligence: the Department of Defense's Office of
Special Plans (OSP) and Counter Terrorism Evaluation Group (CTEG) -- both run
by then-undersecretary of defense for policy Douglas J. Feith -- and the Iraqi
National Congress (INC), a group of Iraqi exiles led by Ahmed Chalabi. Woodward devoted little attention to the OSP and INC in Plan of Attack. However,
when he did reference the two intelligence sources on pages 288 and 289*, he
did so in the context of repeating dubious claims by I. Lewis "Scooter"
Libby, then Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff. Arguing that the OSP
"couldn't possibly pollute the intelligence process," Libby claimed
that its findings were "not given to the president or vice president."
Similarly, Libby dismissed the "myth" that the INC's Chalabi had a
"direct channel to pass intelligence to the Pentagon or to Cheney,"
alleging that "[a]ll of Chalabi's information went to the CIA. They could
use it or not use it as they saw fit." But contrary to Woodward's claim on Larry King Live, his book was not "tough"
on Libby's attempt to dismiss the importance of the OSP and INC. Woodward was
simply repeating claims that could have been rebutted with evidence that was
publicly available well before Woodward's book went to print in April 2004.
Contrary to Libby's assertions that the OSP findings were not given to President
Bush or Cheney, there was evidence that Cheney personally cultivated the OSP,
which received intelligence directly from Chalabi, and that this intelligence
did in fact also reach Bush. For example, a December 8, 2003,
article (subscription required) in The New Republic described how Cheney's
distrust for the intelligence community led him to "outsource" intelligence
gathering to the OSP, which supplied the Office of the Vice President (OVP)
with substantial amounts of intelligence: From the OVP's perspective, the CIA -- with its caveat-riddled position on
Iraqi WMD [weapons of mass destruction] and its refusal to connect Saddam
and Al Qaeda -- was an outright obstacle to the invasion of Iraq. And, as
Cheney and his staff remembered so vividly from their Pentagon days, the CIA
was often wrong on the biggest security questions. So Cheney reverted to the
intelligence-gathering method he had perfected at Halliburton: He outsourced.
An April 28, 2004, New York Times article,
which was published shortly after the hardback edition of Woodward's book but
well before the paperback edition was released in October 2004, similarly documented
how Feith's CTEG analysts bypassed the CIA by presenting findings -- some of
which came from Chalabi -- directly to Pentagon officials. The Times cited the
analysts themselves. And journalist Seymour M. Hersh reported
in the October 27, 2003, edition of The New Yorker that, by early 2002, "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." Powell and Rice on aluminum tubes, Iraqi nuclear capabilities At several points in Plan of Attack, Woodward absolved administration officials
of culpability for making false claims about Iraq's WMD capabilities by uncritically
repeating their version of events: that the CIA provided a one-sided case to
dupe them into believing that Iraq had reconstituted its nuclear weapons program. Administration official's "view": On page 440 of
Plan of Attack, Woodward wrote that then-Secretary of State Colin L. Powell
"felt let down" by the CIA when he learned that CIA director George
Tenet would say in a February 5, 2004, speech that "the aluminum tubes
they had previously been so confident were for use as centrifuges for enriching
uranium were possibly for regular artillery shells." According to Powell's
account, as told by Woodward, "[H]e had challenged them [the CIA] on this
before his U.N. presentation," but then-deputy CIA director John McLaughlin
"had gone into a long recitation about the thickness of the walls of the
tubes and the spinning rates, arguing they had to be for centrifuges,"
so Powell had conceded the point. The evidence: By simply repeating that Powell "felt let
down" by the CIA, Woodward absolved Powell of any complicity in overstating
the administration's level of certainty that the tubes were evidence Iraq was
attempting to reconstitute its nuclear weapons program. But while Powell claimed
to have been duped by the CIA -- and a New York Times article published after
Plan of Attack undermines that claim -- evidence available at the time, including
evidence Woodward himself included earlier in the book, should have led Woodward
to challenge Powell's presentation of himself as the unwitting recipient of
bad intelligence. Woodward reported on page 199 that the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence
and Research (INR) had objected to the 2002 National Intelligence Estimate's
(NIE) assertion that Iraq was close to acquiring nuclear weapons, relaying the
assessment that "the evidence did not add up to 'a compelling case' that
Iraq had 'an integrated and comprehensive approach to acquire nuclear weapons.'"
Yet at no point did Woodward mention that a primary basis for INR's dissent
was the claim that the aluminum tubes were to be used as centrifuges for nuclear
weapons, a claim that Powell would nonetheless push to the United Nations the
following year. From the NIE: In INR's view Iraq's efforts to acquire aluminum tubes is central to the
argument that Baghdad is reconstituting its nuclear weapons program, but INR
is not persuaded that the tubes in question are intended for use as centrifuge
rotors. INR accepts the judgment of technical experts at the U.S. Department
of Energy (DOE) who have concluded that the tubes Iraq seeks to acquire are
poorly suited for use in gas centrifuges to be used for uranium enrichment
and finds unpersuasive the arguments advanced by others to make the case that
they are intended for that purpose. INR considers it far more likely that
the tubes are intended for another purpose, most likely the production of
artillery rockets. In simply repeating Powell's claim that he had been misled, Woodward ignored
the counterevidence that he had himself hinted at earlier in the book: that
Powell disregarded the reservations from INR, an arm of his own department,
when he pushed the aluminum tubes claim in his February 5, 2003, presentation
to the United Nations. That fact was further confirmed by a July 7, 2004, report
on prewar intelligence by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, which
noted
that on February 3, 2003, the INR informed Powell that it specifically objected
to his speech's proposed claim that "the aluminum tubes Iraq was seeking
'far exceed US requirements for comparable rockets.' " INR instead maintained
that "the tube tolerances were similar to those of a U.S. rocket system."
Nevertheless, Powell told the U.N.: "[I]t strikes me as quite odd that
these tubes are manufactured to a tolerance that far exceeds U.S. requirements
for comparable rockets. Maybe Iraqis just manufacture their conventional weapons
to a higher standard than we do, but I don't think so." In addition to the INR's objection to the 2002 NIE assertion, another source
to whom Woodward presumably had access also provided compelling evidence that
Powell ignored INR concerns. In an October 15, 2003, interview with CBS' 60
Minutes, Greg Thielmann, who analyzed the Iraqi weapons threat for Powell as
the State Department's acting director of the Office of Strategic Proliferation
and Military Affairs, cited the administration's decision to ignore intelligence
suggesting that Iraqi aluminum tubes were not being used as centrifuges to enrich
uranium for nuclear weapons as evidence that "the senior administration
officials have what I call faith-based intelligence. They knew what they wanted
the intelligence to show." Other evidence published before Plan of Attack also contradicts Woodward's
suggestion that Powell had little reason to question CIA intelligence suggesting
that the aluminum tubes were evidence of a reconstituted nuclear weapons program.
A January 9, 2003, report
by International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) director general Mohamed ElBaradei
noted that the IAEA's investigation into the tubes had thus far determined that
they were intended for use with conventional weapons: "[T]he IAEA's analysis
to date indicates that the specifications of the aluminium tubes sought by Iraq
in 2001 and 2002 appear to be consistent with reverse engineering of rockets."
Woodward did not mention ElBaradei's statement on the tubes when he noted on
page 293 of Plan of Attack ElBaradei's assessment that "[w]e have to date
found no evidence that Iraq has revived its nuclear weapons program." Even Powell's suggestion that the CIA itself hid any doubts about the aluminum
tubes from him is contradicted by evidence that Woodward presumably was aware
of at the time he was writing his book. According to a "senior administration
official" cited in an October 3, 2004, New York Times report, the CIA was
"indeed candid about the differing views" on the aluminum tubes during
meetings with the National Security Council. The same administration official
"also spoke to senior officials at the Department of Energy about the tubes,
and a spokeswoman for the department said in a written statement that the agency
'strongly conveyed its viewpoint to senior policy makers.' " It is true that the Times report was published after the hardback edition of
Woodward's book was released and just days before the release of the paperback
edition. But given Woodward's description of his sweeping access to sources,
it seems reasonable to assume that he had heard as well what the Times subsequently
reported. While the Times appears to have relied on a handful of sources in
the White House and the CIA, Woodward described the extensive research he did
in preparing the book: Information in the book comes from more than 75 key people directly involved
in the events, including war cabinet members, the White House staff and officials
serving at various levels of the State and Defense Departments and the Central
Intelligence Agency. The interviews were conducted on background, meaning
I could use the information but not identify the sources of it in the book. Administration official's "view": On p. 441 of Plan
of Attack, Woodward repeated then-national security adviser Condoleezza Rice's
assertion that "the CIA's intelligence on Iraq WMD was among the most categorical
she had ever seen." The evidence: Even if the CIA intelligence could have been
considered "categorical" -- and subsequent evidence suggests that
Rice might have misled on even that question -- Woodward neglected to mention
that the CIA's "categorical" evidence cited by Rice was undermined
by the INR's dissent in the NIE on nuclear weapons, which, again, Woodward documented
earlier in Plan of Attack. The INR had cited the Department of Energy, which
had earlier voiced a similar objection, a fact Woodward was presumably aware
of given his extensive quoting from the NIE on pages 197-199 of his book. As
Vanity Fair summarized in a May 2004 article:
"The document [the NIE] did note that the D.O.E.'s experts didn't think
the tubes were meant for centrifuges, and the State Department didn't, either." Further, the October 3, 2004, New York Times report identified several reasons
that the intelligence on Iraqi WMD was not as uniform as Rice claimed. First,
there is the evidence that the CIA had emphasized its doubts about the aluminum
tubes to the National Security Council. Further, the Times report noted that
almost a year before she appeared
on CNN's Late Edition With Wolf Blitzer and said the tubes were ''only really
suited for nuclear weapons programs," experts at the Energy Department
conveyed their assessment directly to Rice that "the tubes were likely
intended for small artillery rockets" National Intelligence Estimate, Bush's State of the Union address Woodward also apparently ignored the INR's lengthy dissent about Iraq nuclear
capabilities when he reported on how the NIE was constructed. On page 197 of
Plan of Attack, Woodward wrote that among the National Foreign Intelligence
Board, the heads of the intelligence agencies that approved the NIE, "[n]o
one disputed the central conclusions." In fact, in addition to skepticism
of the aluminum tubes claims, INR also stated in the NIE that "the claims
of Iraqi pursuit of natural uranium in Africa" were "highly dubious."
Woodward also appeared to excuse Bush's adoption of that claim, writing on page
294 that "Tenet and the CIA had excised" it from a Bush speech in
late 2002, but it had appeared in Bush's January 27, 2003, State of the Union
address because "Tenet had not reviewed the State of the Union speech,
and [then-deputy national security adviser Stephen J.] Hadley had forgotten
the earlier CIA warning." |