|
Joe Wilson Once Again Under Character Assassination
Attack by the GOP Junk Yard Dogs: His Response
A
BUZZFLASH NEWS ALERT
Joseph
C. Wilson, IV
July 15, 2004
The
Honorable Pat Roberts
Chairman, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence
The
Honorable Jay Rockefeller
Vice Chairman, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence
Dear
Senator Roberts and Senator Rockefeller,
I
read with great surprise and consternation the Niger portion of Senators
Roberts, Bond and Hatch “additional comments to the Senate Select Intelligence
Committee’s Report on the U.S. Intelligence Community’s Prewar Assessment
on Iraq. I am taking this opportunity to clarify some of the issues
raised in these comments.
First
conclusion: “The plan to send the former ambassador to Niger was suggested
by the former ambassador’s wife, a CIA employee.”
That
is not true. The conclusion is apparently based on one anodyne quote
from a memo Valerie Plame, my wife sent to her superiors that says
“my husband has good relations with the PM (prime minister) and the
former Minister of Mines, (not to mention lots of French contacts)
both of whom could possibly shed light on this sort of activity.” There
is no suggestion or recommendation in that statement that I be sent
on the trip. Indeed it is little more than a recitation of my contacts
and bona fides. The conclusion is reinforced by comments in the body
of the report that a CPD reports officer stated the “the former ambassador’s
wife ‘offered up his name’” (page 39) and a State Department Intelligence
and Research officer that the “meeting was ‘apparently convened by
[the former ambassador’s] wife who had the idea to dispatch him to
use his contacts to sort out the Iraq-Niger uranium issue.”
In
fact, Valerie was not in the meeting at which the subject of my trip
was raised. Neither was the CPD Reports officer. After having escorted
me into the room, she departed the meeting to avoid even the appearance
of conflict of interest. It was at that meeting where the question
of my traveling to Niger was broached with me for the first time and
came only after a thorough discussion of what the participants did
and did not know about the subject. My bona fides justifying the invitation
to the meeting were the trip I had previously taken to Niger to look
at other uranium related questions as well as 20 years living and working
in Africa, and personal contacts throughout the Niger government. Neither
the CPD reports officer nor the State analyst were in the chain of
command to know who, or how, the decision was made. The interpretations
attributed to them are not the full story. In fact, it is my understanding
that the Reports Officer has a different conclusion about Valerie’s
role than the one offered in the “additional comments”. I urge the
committee to reinterview the officer and publicly publish his statement.
It
is unfortunate that the report failed to include the CIA’s position
on this matter. If the staff had done so it would undoubtedly have
been given the same evidence as provided to Newsday reporters Tim Phelps
and Knut Royce in July, 2003. They reported on July 22 that:
“A
senior intelligence officer confirmed that Plame was a Directorate
of Operations undercover officer who worked ‘alongside’ the operations
officers who asked her husband to travel to Niger.
“But
he said she did not recommend her husband to undertake the Niger assignment.
‘They (the officers who did ask Wilson to check the uranium story)
were aware of who she was married to, which is not surprising,’ he
said. ‘There are people elsewhere in government who are trying to make
her look like she was the one who was cooking this up, for some reason,’
he said. ‘I can’t figure out what it could be.’
“We
paid his (Wilson’s) airfare. But to go to Niger is not exactly a benefit.
Most people you’d have to pay big bucks to go there,’ the senior intelligence
official said. Wilson said. he was reimbursed only for expenses.” (Newsday
article Columnist blows CIA Agent’s cover, dated July 22, 2003).
In
fact, on July 13 of this year, David Ensor, the CNN correspondent,
did call the CIA for a statement of its position and reported that
a senior CIA official confirmed my account that Valerie did not propose
me for the trip:
“’She
did not propose me’, he [Wilson] said--others at the CIA did so. A
senior CIA official said that is his understanding too.’”
Second
conclusion: “Rather that speaking publicly about his actual experiences
during his inquiry of the Niger issue, the former ambassador seems
to have included information he learned from press accounts and from
his beliefs about how the Intelligence Community would have or should
have handled the information he provided.”
This
conclusion states that I told the committee staff that I “may have
become confused about my own recollection after the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) reported that the names and dates on the documents
were not correct.” At the time that I was asked that question, I was
not afforded the opportunity to review the articles to which the staff
was referring. I have now done so.
On
March 7, 2003 the Director General of the IAEA reported to the United
Nations Security Council that the documents that had been given to
him were “not authentic”. His deputy, Jacques Baute, was even more
direct, pointing out that the forgeries were so obvious that a quick
Google search would have exposed their flaws. A State Department spokesman
was quoted the next day as saying about the forgeries “We fell for
it.” From that time on the details surrounding the documents became
public knowledge and were widely reported. I was not the source of
information regarding the forensic analysis of the documents in question;
the IAEA was.
The
first time I spoke publicly about the Niger issue was in response to
the State Department’s disclaimer. On CNN a few days later, in response
to a question, I replied that I believed the US government knew more
about the issue than the State Department spokesman had let on and
that he had misspoken. I did not speak of my trip.
My
first public statement was in my article of July 6 published in the
New York Times, written only after it became apparent that the administration
was not going to deal with the Niger question unless it was forced
to. I wrote the article because I believed then, and I believe now,
that it was important to correct the record on the statement in the
President’s State of the Union address which lent credence to the charge
that Iraq was actively reconstituting its nuclear weapons program.
I believed that the record should reflect the facts as the US government
had known them for over a year. The contents of my article do not appear
in the body of the report and is not quoted in the “additional comments.”
In that article, I state clearly that “As for the actual memorandum,
I never saw it. But news accounts have pointed out that the documents
had glaring errors – they were signed, for example, by officials who
were no longer in government – and were probably forged. (And then
there’s the fact that Niger formally denied the charges.)”
The
first time I actually saw what were represented as the documents was
when Andrea Mitchell, the NBC correspondent handed them to me in an
interview on July 21. I was not wearing my glasses and could not read
them. I have to this day not read them. I would have absolutely no
reason to claim to have done so. My mission was to look into whether
such a transaction took place or could take place. It had not and could
not. By definition that makes the documents bogus.
The
text of the “additional comments” also asserts that “during Mr. Wilson’s
media blitz, he appeared on more than thirty television shows including
entertainment venues. Time and again, Joe Wilson told anyone who would
listen that the President had lied to the American people, that the
Vice President had lied, and that he had “debunked” the claim that
Iraq was seeking uranium from Africa.”
My
article in the New York Times makes clear that I attributed to myself
“a small role in the effort to verify information about Africa’s suspected
link to Iraq’s nonconventional weapons programs.” After it became public
that there were then Ambassador to Niger, Barbro Owens-Kirkpatrick’s
report and the report from a four star Marine Corps General, Carleton
Fulford in the files of the U. S. government, I went to great lengths
to point out that mine was but one of three reports on the subject.
I never claimed to have “debunked” the allegation that Iraq was seeking
uranium from Africa. I claimed only that the transaction described
in the documents that turned out to be forgeries could not have and
did not occur. I did not speak out on the subject until several months
after it became evident that what underpinned the assertion in the
State of the Union address were those documents, reports of which had
sparked Vice President Cheney’s original question that led to my trip.
The White House must have agreed. The day after my article appeared
in the Times a spokesman for the President told the Washington Post
that “the sixteen words did not rise to the level of inclusion in the
State of the Union.”
I have been very careful to say that while I believe that the use of the sixteen
words in the State of the Union address was a deliberate attempt to deceive
the Congress of the United States, I do not know what role the President
may have had other than he has accepted responsibility for the words he
spoke. I have also said on many occasions that I believe the President
has proven to be far more protective of his senior staff than they have
been to him.
The
“additional comments” also assert: “The Committee found that, for most
analysts the former ambassador’s report lent more credibility, not
less, to the reported Niger-Iraq uranium deal.” In fact, the body of
the Senate report suggests the exact opposite:
- In
August, 2002, a CIA NESA report on Iraq’s weapons of Mass Destruction
capabilities did not include the alleged Iraq-Niger uranium information.
(pg. 48)
- In
September, 2002, during coordination of a speech with an NSC staff
member, the CIA analyst suggested the reference to Iraqi attempts
to acquire uranium from Africa be removed. The CIA analyst said the
NSC staff member said that would leave the British “flapping in the
wind.” (pg. 50)
- The
uranium text was included in the body of the NIE but not in the key
judgments. When someone suggested that the uranium information be
included as another sign of reconstitution, the INR Iraq nuclear
analyst spoke up and said the he did not agree with the uranium reporting
and that INR would be including text indicating their disagreement
in their footnote on nuclear reconstitution. The NIO said he did
not recall anyone really supporting including the uranium issue as
part of the judgment that Iraq was reconstituting its nuclear program,
so he suggested that the uranium information did not need to be part
of the key judgments. He told Committee staff he suggested that “We’ll
leave it in the paper for completeness. Nobody can say we didn’t
connect the dots. But we don’t have to put that dot in the key judgments.”
(pg. 53)
- On
October 2, 2002, the Deputy DCI testified before the SSCI. Senator
Jon Kyl asked the Deputy DCI whether he had read the British White
Paper and whether he disagreed with anything in the report. The Deputy
DCI testified that “the one thing where I think they stretched a
little bit beyond where we would stretch is on the points about where
Iraq seeking uranium from various African locations. (pg.54)
- On
October 4, 2002 the NIO for Strategic and Nuclear Programs testified
that “there is some information on attempts ….there’s a question
about those attempts because of the control of the material in those
countries…For us it’s more the concern that they (Iraq) uranium in
country now. (pg. 54)
- On
October 5, 2002, the ADDI said an Iraq nuclear analyst – he could
not remember who – raised concerns about the sourcing and some of
the facts of the Niger reporting, specifically that the control of
the mines in Niger would have made it very difficult to get yellowcake
to Iraq. (pg. 55)
- Based
on the analyst’s comments, the ADDI faxed a memo to the Deputy National
Security Advisor that said, “remove the sentence because the amount
is in dispute and it is debatable whether it can be acquired from
this source. We told Congress that the Brits have exaggerated this
issue. Finally, the Iraqis already have 550 metric tons of uranium
oxide in their inventory. (pg. 56)
- On
October 6, 2002, the DCI called the Deputy National Security Advisor
directly to outline the CIA’s concerns. The DCI testified to the
SSCI on July 16, 2003, that he told the Deputy National Security
Advisor that the “President should not be a fact witness on this
issue,” because his analysts had told him the “reporting was weak.”
(pg. 56)
- On
October 6, 2002, the CIA sent a second fax to the White House which
said, “more on why we recommend removing the sentence about procuring
uranium oxide from Africa: Three points 1) the evidence is weak.
One of the two mines cited by the source as the location of the uranium
oxide is flooded. The other mine cited by the source is under the
control of the French authorities. 2) the procurement is not particularly
significant to Iraq’s nuclear ambitions because the Iraqis already
have a large stock of uranium oxide in their inventory. And 3) we
have shared points one and two with Congress, telling them that the
Africa story is overblown and telling them this in one of the two
issues where we differed with the British.” (Pg 56)
- On
March 8, 2003, the intelligence report on my trip was disseminated
within the U.S. Government according the Senate report (pg. 43).
Further, the Senate report states that “in early March, the Vice
President asked his morning briefer for an update on the Niger uranium
issue.” That update from the CIA “also noted that the CIA would be
debriefing a source who may have information related to the alleged
sale on March 5.” The report then states the “DO officials also said
they alerted WINPAC analysts when the report was being disseminated
because they knew the high priority of the issue.” The report notes
that the CIA briefer did not brief the Vice President on the report.
(Pg. 46)
It
is clear from the body of the Senate report that the Intelligence Community,
including the DCI himself, made several attempts to ensure that the
President not become a “fact witness” on an allegation that was so
weak. A thorough reading of the report substantiates the claim made
in my opinion piece in the New York Times and in subsequent interviews
I have given on the subject. The sixteen words should never have been
in the State of the Union address as the White House now acknowledges.
I
undertook this mission at the request of my government in response
to a legitimate concern that Saddam Hussein was attempting to reconstitute
his nuclear weapons program. This was a national security issue that
has concerned me since I was the Deputy Chief of Mission in the U.S.
Embassy in Iraq before and during the first Gulf War.
At
the time of my trip I was in private business and had not offered my
views publicly on the policy we should adopt towards Iraq. Indeed,
throughout the debate in the runup to the war, I took the position
that the U.S. be firm with Saddam Hussein on the question of weapons
of mass destruction programs including backing tough diplomacy with
the credible threat of force. In that debate I never mentioned my trip
to Niger. I did not share the details of my trip until May, 2003, after
the war was over, and then only when it became clear that the administration
was not going to address the issue of the State of the Union statement.
It
is essential that the errors and distortions in the additional comments
be corrected for the public record. Nothing could be more important
for the American people than to have an accurate picture of the events
that led to the decision to bring the United States into war in Iraq.
The Senate Intelligence Committee has an obligation to present to the
American people the factual basis of that process. I hope that this
letter is helpful in that effort. I look forward to your further “additional
comments.”
Sincerely,
Joseph C. Wilson, IV
Washington, D.C
A
BUZZFLASH NEWS ALERT
|