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Common Ground Common Sense > Issues that Affect Our Lives > Foreign Policy and National Defense > Foreign Policy & National Defense Issues Archive
Pages: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/s/thenation/20051101...wN5bnN1YmNhdA--

Cheney, Libby and the Mess They Made John Nichols
Tue Nov 1,11:03 AM ET



The Nation -- Much of official Washington remains focused on the issues -- legal and political -- that have arisen from the indictment of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, the former chief of staff to Vice President Cheney who was a principal architect of the administration's approach to Iraq before and after the invasion and occupation of that distant land. This is as it should be: Libby and his former boss need to be held accountable for leading this country's military forces into a quagmire that has cost more than 2,000 American lives and tens of thousands of Iraqi lives.

The only problem with this otherwise healthy obsession with the investigation is that it draws attention away from the disaster that Cheney, Libby and their crew of neoconservative nutcases have created.

In addition to the rapidly mounting death toll -- 93 U.S. troops were killed in October, the highest casualty rate since January -- the insurgency's Tet offensive-level attacks within the capital city of Baghdad, and the degeneration of the trial of Saddam Hussein into a legal farce, there is the tragedy of the country's bumbled attempt to craft and implement a constitution.

Were any U.S. officials paying serious attention to the process -- as opposed to trying to spin it into something it is not -- they would acknowledge that Iraq is in a state of constitutional crisis. Even if the October 15 vote on the new Iraqi constitution were technically legitimate -- under the undemocratic rules adopted by its framers in order to guarantee a particular result -- it would have been hard to spin as a meaningful signal of progress toward democracy.

The details of the document were literally up for grabs until just days before the voting began, and not even the most over-the-top apologists for the process would dare suggest that the people of Iraq knew what they were voting on. More significantly, the vote took place while the country was occupied by a foreign force that deposed the previous government, that faces an open insurrection and that, by all accounts, shaped the character of the constitution more than did the Iraqis themselves.

But, of course, all this is beside the point, since the vote does not appear to have met the base standards of legitimacy.

Iraq's election commission was for the better part of a week forced to delay the release of the results as it investigated serious irregularities in the voting. The commission had to examine evidence of vote totals that did not appear to be credible -- including "unusually high" numbers of yes votes in provinces where there was widespread opposition to the constitution. Also of concern to the commission were reports that Iraqi police removed ballot boxes from districts where there was significant opposition to the constitution and that districts where there was more support for the document had recorded more votes than there were registered voters.

It is true that, after all the irregularities that were documented in the 2000 and 2004 U.S. presidential elections, the U.S. government lacks the authority that it once had in discussions of democracy. But the Bush administration and members of Congress should have been much more concerned about the evidence of fraud and corruption in what was supposed to be a definitional vote regarding Iraq's future.

As of now, questions about the legitimacy of the Iraq vote remain, especially after the release of "results" suggesting that the constitution was rejected by a majority of voters in three Iraqi provinces. That was the standard that was set for rejection of the plan, but because the constitution was not rejected by a supermajority in one of the provinces, it was determined to have been "approved."

The state of affairs is so troubling that claims by American supporters of the war that Iraq has passed another "milestone" lack even the bare minimum of credibility. The only way the new constitution can ever be considered a viable document, by the Iraqis or by honest observers from the rest of the world, is if all questions about the legitimacy of the process in general and the October 15 vote in particular are removed.

That has not happened. Concerns about stolen and stuffed ballot boxes remain. So, too, do equally serious questions about whether Iraqis were fully aware of the contents of a document that was in flux up until the eve of the vote, and about whether a country can or should try to define its future while under occupation.

Before U.S. officials can make grand claims about "progress" in Iraq, these are the issues that must be addressed.

If Iraq is every to become the stable, functioning democracy that not only President Bush but the vast majority of his critics would like to see emerge, the process must begin with the absolute assurance that elections are conducted in a manner that is transparent, fair and fully legitimate. In light of the scandalous manner in which the vote on the new constitution was conducted -- and the scandals that have arisen as a result -- no such assurance can be found.

John Nichols' biography of Vice President Cheney, Dick: The Man Who Is President (The New Press, 2004) is currently available nationwide at independent bookstores and at www.amazon.com. An expanded paperback version of the book, which Publisher's Weekly describes as "a Fahrenheit 9/11 for Cheney" and Esquire magazine says "reveals the inner Cheney," will be available this fall under the title, The Rise and Rise of Richard B. Cheney: Unlocking the Mysteries of the Most Powerful Vice President in American History (The New Press).
Snuffysmith
http://www.wpherald.com/storyview.php?Stor...31-041213-5808r

October deadly month for U.S. troops
By Martin Sieff
UPI Senior News Analyst
Published October 31, 2005


WASHINGTON -- It is now official: October was one of the deadliest months yet for U.S. soldiers in Iraq.

Monday wrote a bloody finis to the month: Some six American soldiers were killed during it, on the last day of the month, four of them in a single incident when their patrol vehicle hit a roadside bomb or Improvised Explosive Device (IED) in Youssifiyah, 12 miles south of Baghdad in the aptly-named "triangle of death." The other two fatalities occurred in another bombing near Balad, 50 miles north of Baghdad.


That brought the total number of U.S. troops killed during October to more than 90: It was the worst monthly toll since January when 107 U.S. troops died.

As of Monday, the total number of U.S. troops killed in Iraq since the start of U.S. operations to topple Saddam Hussein on March 19, 2003 was 2,025. Only last week, the Department of Defense officially acknowledged the 2,000th American soldier to have been killed in Iraq. More than 1,800 of them have been killed since President George W. Bush declared "Mission Accomplished" in Iraq on May 1, 2003 on the deck of the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln.

Improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, continued to account for more than half the total casualties inflicted on U.S. troops -- an ominous indicator that the technical expertise of the insurgents is steadily advancing.

Up to and including February 2005, IEDs never accounted for more than 43.1 percent of U.S. troops killed per month in Iraq. Since June, IEDs have never accounted for less than 46.2 percent of U.S. military fatalities per month. The percentage of U.S. troops killed by them this month up to Oct. 26, according to figures compiled by the Iraq Index Project (IIP) of the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank, was 55.6 percent. The next highest cause of U.S. troop deaths was other hostile fire which accounted for 12.5 percent of casualties.

The death toll of U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq as of Monday, Oct. 31 was 2,025, a rise of 30 killed in only five days. U.S. soldiers were therefore dying at a rate of six a day in Iraq. If the insurgents could sustain that rate of casualties inflicted, more U.S. soldiers -- 2,200 -- would die within the next year than the total killed so far in the two and a half years of conflict.

The number of U.S. troops wounded in action from the beginning of hostilities on March 19, 2003, through Monday, Oct. 31, was 15,353, the Pentagon said.

This represents an increase of 133 wounded in 12 days, an average rate of just over 11 wounded per day. This rate was far lower than the 30 a day injured during the Oct. 2- Oct. 16 period.

However, the continuing remorseless rise in U.S. military fatalities reflects the continuing widespread and formidable nature of the insurgency. Far from being unable to maintain their increased level of activity and casualties inflicted once the Iraq referendum vote was successfully held, the insurgents therefore continue to show that they are able to far exceed it. And so far, that capability shows no signs of exhausting itself.

It may be that the insurgents have been concentrating more on attacking U.S. forces than maintaining their previous ferocious assault on allied Iraqi ones. For at the same time as the number of fatalities inflicted upon U.S. forces increased, the number of fatalities inflicted upon the Iraqi army and police diminished significantly.

Some 45 of them were killed in the seven days from Oct. 20 to Oct. 26, a rate of just under 6.5 per day. While still very bad, this was strikingly down from the 27 of them killed in only three days from Oct. 17 through Oct. 19, at a rate of nine a day. It was also marked improvement over the rate of just under eight per day at which they were killed from Oct. 2 through Oct. 16.

Still, the rate of attrition remains unacceptable for any police and security force to establish itself effectively. It is also striking that the bulk of these casualties were concentrated in the handful of Sunni majority provinces in central and western Iraq where the insurgency is concentrated. But a series of reports has also highlighted the even more worrying degree in the Shiite majority south of the country to which the new security forces have been subverted, intimidated and rendered irrelevant by networks of ruthless local gangs.

The total number of Iraqi police and military killed from June 1, 2003 to Sunday, Oct. 26 was 3,475, according to the IIP figures.

The total death toll for Iraq security forces in the first 26 days of October was 190. The month's projected total looked likely to be around 228-230, slightly better than the 233 killed in September.

While still bad, this would still be the lowest for any month since April and well below the record 304 fatalities the Iraqi forces suffered in July or the 296 in June. But it would still be still a grim and unacceptable level of attrition for any effective security force in a nation the size of California with less than half California's population.

The statistics on multiple fatality bombings (MFBs) grimly confirm this conclusion. The number soared again, with 11 recorded in the seven days from Oct. 19 to Oct. 26, bringing the total so far for October to 36. This came quite close to the peak levels of September, when there 46 of them, the worst month yet. The October MFBs up to Oct. 26 had killed 256 Iraqi civilians and injuring another 329, according to the IIP figures.

This is a rate of civilian casualties far higher than anything suffered during the entire 25 years of the active Irish Republican Army insurgency in Northern Ireland from 1969 to 2004, or through even the worst months of the Second Palestinian Intifada targeting Israeli civilians from 2001 through to the building of the Israeli security fence last year.

The insurgents, therefore, were able to sustain through the first 26 days of October their very high MFB rate of September and both were significantly worse than the 27 such attacks recorded in August or the 26 in July. By Oct. 26, the insurgents had successfully carried out as many MFBs as had occurred in the whole of May, which was previously the second worst month for them. This figure too unfortunately supported the picture of an insurgency continuing to spread and grow in capabilities.

By Oct. 26, MFBs had killed 4,416 people and wounded another 9,323 since the start of the insurgency, the IIP said. The number of people killed in MFBs in the month to Oct. 26 was, at 256, still significantly down from the 481 killed in all of September but was already far worse than the 170 killed through August.

These figures clearly document an insurgency that so far has been able to sustain its latest quantum leap in area, intensity and tactical sophistication in terms of the power of the IEDs and the number of casualties it can inflict on even well armed and protected U.S. soldiers.

And, clearly, the outcome of the referendum vote did nothing to dent it.
Snuffysmith
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20051114/nichols

Chalabi rules out Iraq troop withdrawal
Monday 31 October 2005, 13:32 Makka Time, 10:32 GMT

Head of the Iraqi National Congress Ahmad Chalabi has ruled out the withdrawal of US and any multinational forces from Iraq at the present.


Speaking to Aljazeera on Sunday, Chalabi has said that Iraq needs these forces to be present until it is able to establish its own army and defend itself.

"Iraq now needs international support in the context of the United Nations, to defend itself and protect its land internally and externally," Chalabi said.

Chalabi is a controversial figure in Iraqi politics, currently the interim minister for oil and a deputy prime minister in Iraq, as of 28 April 2005.

He is also the head of the Iraqi National Council (INC), and has been at the helm of the organisation since 1992. The INC had provided much of the so-called evidence regarding Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction to the US.

The information which the US used as the basis for its invasion of Iraq in 2003 and which the then secretary of state used to try to garner support at the United Nations, was codenamed Curveball.

German intelligence had, however, warned that Curveball was fabricated and proved to be true since no WMDs were found in Iraq. The information Chalabi provided did, however, point to the people who were his personal enemies and to Saddam's aides in Iraq, according to wikipedia.org.

Misinformation

Since then, the CIA has admitted that Chalabi made up the story, and Colin Powell was forced to make an embarrassing apology for using the information.


Chalabi was quoted as saying the
US was using him as a scapegoat

In an attempt to have the matter brushed under the carpet, Chalabi told British newspaper The Daily Telegraph in February 2004: "We are heroes in error. As far as we're concerned, we've been entirely successful.

"Saddam is gone and the Americans are in Baghdad. What was said before is not important. The Bush administration is looking for a scapegoat."

Throughout the period, Chalabi's Iraqi National Congress was paid $335,000 a month by the Pentagon for the intelligence provided. In addition, the US State Department paid more than $33 million, according to a US General Accounting office report in 2004.

Chalabi was given a position in the US appointed interim government after the invasion and was appointed president of Iraq's interim governing council in September 2003.

Iraq's defences

"Iraq is surrounded by six countries that have 3 million soldiers in total, at least 10,000 tanks and 2000 fighters, while Iraq has nothing of this sort to defend itself with," he told Aljazeera.

"The Iraqi army has collapsed following the fall of Saddam Hussain's government.


"Now, we are building the Iraqi Armed Forces, and until we finish doing so, we need international assistance to maintain security and defend Iraq," he added.
theglobalchinese
Democrats pull off power play on Iraq inquiry St. Petersburg Times
Memo to Democrats who may have been surprised by that blaze of fury in the Senate Tuesday: It's called seizing the political initiative. Just past 2 pm, during what could best be described as a laborious debate on the budget, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid took the floor, suddenly and without warning. He then demanded the Senate enter a closed session and discuss the state of a Senate investigation into the intelligence that led to the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Democrats close Senate to push war probe CNN
Finally, Senate Democrats Push Back Yahoo! News
San Francisco Chronicle - Reuters - MarketWatch - CNSNews.com - all 796 related »
theglobalchinese
At Least 21 Killed in Iraq Car Bomb Attacks New York Times
At least 21 people were killed and 59 were wounded in two car bomb attacks outside of Baghdad today, and the American military reported the deaths of four more American troops in separate incidents in a troubled Sunni Arab province known for insurgent activity.
Two US pilots killed in Iraq helicopter crash CNN
Baghdad Bomb Kills 5 Iraqis; Helicopter Crash Kills Two Marines Bloomberg
USA Today - Khaleej Times - Forbes - The Age (subscription) - all 221 related »
theglobalchinese
Carter: White House manipulated Iraq intel Seattle Post Intelligencer
The Bush Administration's prewar claims that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction were "manipulated, at least" to mislead the American people, former President Jimmy Carter said Wednesday.
Senate Democrats force closed session, draw ire of Republicans San Jose Mercury News
Senators clash over inquiry on Iraq Boston Globe
ABC News - Washington Post - News24 - Pittsburgh Post Gazette - all 1,105 related »
Snuffysmith
World > Terrorism & Security
posted November 1, 2005 at 11:00 a.m.

US inspector general for Iraq paints 'grim' picture of reconstruction effort

Report to Congress says problems exacerbated by lack of cooperation between State Department, Pentagon.

By Tom Regan | csmonitor.com

In a report that paints a grim picture of the "violence, corruption and mismangement" that has beset the reconstruction effort in Iraq, The Wall Street Journal reports Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, says that "the ambitious US reconstruction effort in Iraq is likely to fall far short of its goals because soaring security costs and poor management have slashed the amount of American money available for rebuilding projects."
The Journal also reports that although the US has allocated $50 billion for the project, the money available for actual reconstruction projects has been significantly reduced by "mounting security expenses, rising costs for materials and delays, and repeated bureaucratic reshuffling." Mr. Bowen says that while steady progress had been made, the "reconstruction gap" presents a "significant and growing threat" to American efforts to rebuild Iraq.

Bowen's report, which was released to Congress on Sunday, when many in the media were preoccupied with the resignation of Lewis Libby and the anticipated announcement of a new Supreme Court justice, also said that the US had "no comprehensive policy or regulatory guidelines." Bloomberg News reports that this lack of guidelines was exacerbated by a "general lack of coordination" between US government agencies charged with rebuilding Iraq, in particular the State Department and the Pentagon.





10/31/05

Berlusconi: 'I tried to get Bush to not invade Iraq'

10/28/05

US undecided on sanctions against Uzbekistan for human rights abuses

10/27/05

US must allow access to Gitmo hunger strikers' medical records



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When planning began in mid-2002, Pentagon officials "were either unaware or chose to ignore" State Department assessments, and drew up a plan on their own, which wasn't finished until late January 2003, less than two months before the war began, US Inspector-General Stuart Bowen said.
"The lack of co-operation" in identifying qualified personnel well before the invasion "significantly hampered the early management of Iraq reconstruction", Mr Bowen wrote in his quarterly accounting to Congress of the reconstruction effort. Mr Bowen's assessment marks the first time a sitting inspector-general - in this case a former White House deputy assistant to President George Bush - has formally criticized the prewar planning process.

Bloomberg reports that this lack of planning process has hindered what has been "a generally positive effort by the State Department and Army officials in Iraq to put in place the management systems necessary to minimize waste in the $30 billion allocated for rebuilding the Mideast nation."
Corruption has also been a major problem in Iraq, according to Bowen. The Daily Times of Pakistan reports that corruption is costing Iraq billions of dollars each year, and that "Washington and Iraq" should be doing more to stop it. More than $2 billion a year is lost to stolen gasoline and fuel supplies, and Iraq's Bureau of Supreme Audit says that up to $1.27 billion from 90 contracts was lost from June 2004 to February 2005 because deals were given to "favoured suppliers" and cash was given to third-party firms to work out contracts.

“Creating an effective anti-corruption structure within Iraq’s government is essential to the long-term success of Iraq’s fledgling democracy,” Bowen wrote in his seventh quarterly report to Congress. It was released days after the United Nations concluded that 2,200 companies including DaimlerChrysler, Siemens and Volvo made illicit payments totaling $1.8 billion to Saddam Hussein’s government under the UN oil-for-food program.
Reuters reports that Bowen's office, which has 20 auditors and 10 investigators in Iraq, has made "significant progress" on cases involving US citizens and allegations of "bribery, fraud, and kickbacks." The report said investigators had gathered "an enormous amount of evidence" but contained no details on any possible indictments.
The New Zealand website Stuff.co.nz, a Fairfax media site, reports that Bowen has referred several cases from the south-central region of Iraq to the Justice Department. Bowen's spokeswoman Kristine Belisle said the Justice Department was looking at possible indictments linked to Iraqi reconstruction. She gave no details and declined to confirm if they were linked to cases in southern Iraq.

Bloomberg reports that Bowen also criticized former Coalition Provisional Authority head Paul Bremer for his decision to disband Iraq's army and defense ministry, and to pursue an "absolutist" policy of de-Baathification. Bowen said these decisions "exacerbated" reconstruction problems.
Snuffysmith
Stephen Hadley says Iraq pullout bad for Israel:

US President George W Bush’s national security adviser warned Monday that a hasty US withdrawal from Iraq would embolden extremists who seek “the eventual destruction of Israel”.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article10857.htm
Snuffysmith
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/03/internat...094&partner=AOL

Iraq Asks Return of Some Officers of Hussein Army

By EDWARD WONG
Published: November 3, 2005

BAGHDAD, Iraq, Nov. 2 - The Iraqi government called Wednesday for the return of junior officers from the disbanded army of Saddam Hussein, openly reversing an American directive issued in 2003.

The move is aimed at draining the insurgency of recruits and bolstering the Iraqi security forces, Iraqi officials said.

The Defense Ministry, with the support of the American military, has quietly recruited a few thousand former officers over the last 18 months. But this is the first time it has offered an open invitation to broad classes of former officers to rejoin the armed forces.

The move could represent a political overture by the Shiite-led government to disaffected Sunni Arabs, possibly to drum up support before the December legislative elections.

With the announcement on Wednesday, any former officers up to the rank of major are eligible for reinstatement by applying in November at recruitment centers in six cities across Iraq.

The move by the Defense Ministry represents the most public departure yet from an American policy instituted by L. Paul Bremer III, the former head of the American occupation, of cleansing the Iraqi government and security forces of former members of Mr. Hussein's Baath Party and disbanding the Iraqi Army.

Many American commanders and military analysts have said the dissolution of the 400,000-member Iraqi Army in May 2003 drove many thousands of Sunni Arab soldiers and officers into the insurgency while depriving the country of a force that could help restore order. American and Iraqi officials now say a core part of the Sunni-led insurgency is made up of former members of Mr. Hussein's military.

Iraqi officials said any recruits signing up in November would go through a rigorous screening process intended to weed out possible insurgents.

Both the Americans and the Iraqis have been retreating in stages from Mr. Bremer's original "de-Baathification" order since early 2004. But American and Iraqi officials said Wednesday's announcement was significant for several reasons.

It not only explicitly extends an invitation to thousands more officers, but in symbolic terms, it also represents an official recognition of a practice under way for some time.

Some senior American military officials said Wednesday that the announcement seemed aimed at Sunni Arab officers, relatively few of whom have rejoined the military. They added that the Iraqi Army was desperately short of midlevel officers.

In Washington, a State Department official said that in negotiations on the constitution earlier this year, overseen by the United States ambassador, Zalmay Khalilzad, the Shiite majority agreed to lift some restrictions on Baath Party participation in the government.

"It was loosened a bit, but it was not a dramatic loosening that might have led more Sunnis to support the constitution in the referendum," said the official, who requested anonymity so he would not be seen as interfering in Iraqi affairs.

A spokesman for the Defense Ministry, Saleh Sarhan, said in an interview that Iraq needed the expertise of the former officers. The new army is trying to rebuild armor and artillery units and wants the return of tank drivers, mechanics and others, he added.

"We're trying to carry out big operations against the terrorists, such as sealing the borders of Iraq," Mr. Sarhan said.

In recent months, many American officers have acknowledged that it will be years before the Iraqi Army is capable of fighting the insurgency on its own. Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the top American commander in Iraq, told the Senate Armed Services Committee in September that only one Iraqi battalion was then able to operate without the aid of the American-led forces.

The Iraqi government's announcement came during a surge of violence at the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. Officials said at least 30 Iraqis died in attacks across the country on Wednesday, the deadliest taking place in the town of Musayyib, where a suicide bomber in a minivan packed with explosives killed at least 19 people and wounded 61 others near a Shiite mosque.

The American military announced the deaths of six troops, two from a Marine helicopter crash in western Iraq that may have resulted from insurgent fire.

The helicopter, an AH-1W "Super Cobra," went down at about 8:15 a.m. near the insurgent stronghold of Ramadi, the capital of rebellious Anbar Province, the Marines said in a statement. Col. Dave Lapan, a Marine spokesman, said the cause of the crash remained unclear.

But there were strong indications that the helicopter had been brought down by insurgents. At 2 p.m., a Marine Corps F-18D fighter jet dropped two 500-pound bombs on "a reported insurgent command center" just 500 yards from the helicopter crash site, said Capt. Jeffrey S. Pool, another Marine spokesman. He added that there was no immediate report on the number of casualties from the air strike.

Anbar lies at the heart of the Sunni Arab insurgency, and several American helicopters have been shot down over its harsh desert terrain. Two of the other American deaths announced Wednesday, those of a marine and a sailor, occurred Tuesday in Ramadi, when insurgents attacked an American vehicle with a roadside bomb, the military said.

A soldier was killed south of Baghdad Tuesday in a roadside bomb explosion, and another died Wednesday of wounds sustained in an attack near Balad the previous day.

The car bombing in Musayyib, south of Baghdad, took place at around 5 p.m. outside a restaurant and just hundreds of feet from a Shiite mosque that was attacked by a suicide bomber in July. The explosion occurred as Iraqis were going home to celebrate the start of Id al-Fitr, the three-day celebration that marks the end of Ramadan.

In Baghdad, American military and Iraqi police officials reported two roadside bomb explosions that killed five civilians each. One took place in the south of the city, the other in the east. In the evening, two insurgents were killed in the explosion of a car bomb they were building in a house in western Baghdad, an Interior Ministry official said.

Political jockeying accelerated ahead of the Dec. 15 elections for a full-term National Assembly. Ahmad Chalabi, the former exile and onetime Pentagon favorite, kicked off his campaign by holding a news conference with fellow candidates from his slate.

Mr. Chalabi is the most prominent politician to break away from the religious Shiite parties that ran together as a coalition in last January's elections. He seems to be making a bid for a major position in the new government. He also appears to be repairing ties with the Bush administration, which accused him in the spring of 2004 of leaking American code-breaking secrets to the Iranians. His spokesman, Haider Mousawi, said Wednesday that Mr. Chalabi planned to meet in Washington on Nov. 9 with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and on Nov. 15 with Treasury Secretary John Snow.

In its Wednesday announcement, the Defense Ministry laid out a schedule for the recruitment of former officers. From Nov. 6 to 10, officers who held the rank of major can walk into designated recruitment centers and go through an interview and medical checkup. Those with ranks of captain, first lieutenant and lieutenant will then go in successive waves, until Dec. 1.

"The government made this announcement to put the right people back in the right jobs," Maj. Manaf Abdul-Hussein, formerly of the Iraqi Air Force, said in a telephone interview. "We've worked in the military for a long time, and we're specialists in the field."

The major said he knew of many colleagues clamoring for their jobs back because of the high unemployment rate.

Another former air force officer, Maj. Maithem al-Qaraghuli, said he had been pleasantly surprised by the ministry's announcement.

"I heard about the call today, and I'm thinking seriously of responding to it, because the pension I'm getting right now is not enough," he said. "It's just $80 a month. If you're supporting a family, that's just not enough."

The disbanding of the Iraqi Army and the purging of former senior Baath Party members from government, both announced in May 2003 by Mr. Bremer, have been widely criticized as two of the worst policy blunders of the American occupation. Some Shiite leaders, especially Mr. Chalabi, strongly supported the moves and continue to advocate such purges.

But Iraqi and American officials began in 2004 to roll back the changes. Mr. Bremer himself announced in April 2004 that the American administration wanted to encourage the return of teachers, engineers and others who had joined the Baath Party simply for professional advancement.

Well before the Wednesday announcement, the Defense Ministry had been recruiting former officers to work in commando units and other forces. There have been examples, though, of insurgents infiltrating the new Iraqi units.
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051102/us_nm/arms_strategy_dc



Iraq focus imperils US, ex-Pentagon official says By Andrea Shalal-Esa
Wed Nov 2, 6:54 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States risks losing sight of some key foreign policy issues, including relations with China and the Muslim world, because of its "single-minded focus" on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, a former senior Pentagon official said.

"We have to put the search radar on again for the rest of the world," said Suzanne Patrick, who resigned as defense undersecretary for industrial policy in July.

She was the latest of a number of former officials to criticize the Bush administration, which is on the defensive over the war in Iraq and domestic issues including mounting gas prices and its slow response to Hurricane Katrina.

"After four years of single-minded focus on the global war on terror we must be careful that we're not missing other things going on in the world," she said in an interview with Reuters.

Patrick said the United States was making policies toward China and other key issues in "an ad hoc, sort of reflexive" way because it lacked a coherent national strategic plan.

During her four years at the Pentagon, Patrick said she saw poor coordination among agencies such as the Pentagon, Treasury and State Department and said military policies often did not reflect economic or political considerations and vice versa.

Lawrence Wilkerson, a retired Army colonel and chief of staff for former Secretary of State Colin Powell, last month blasted the administration's national security decision-making process. He said there was a "cabal" including Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld that held sway over policy.

Other former officials who have openly criticized the Bush administration recently include Brent Scowcroft, the national security adviser for Bush's father when he was president, and former White House counter-terrorism chief Richard Clarke.

Patrick blasted the Pentagon's management of its biggest weapons programs, saying the Defense Acquisition Board tends to look at individual weapons programs rather than taking a broader view of the military's ability to fight and win wars.

"At no point is the enterprise truly managed," she added.

"There's much less coherence in the Defense Department than there could be if only some of the widely available practices in industry were applied," she said, noting Rumsfeld had made little headway in his drive to make the Pentagon function more like a business, mainly due to his focus on the Iraq war.

Pentagon officials were not immediately available to comment on the remarks by Patrick, who has also been a Wall Street analyst and a civilian U.S. Navy employee.
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051102/ap_on_.../iraq_elections

Chalabi Launches Election Campaign Wed Nov 2, 1:18 PM ET



BAGHDAD, Iraq - Former Washington insider and Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Chalabi launched his election campaign Wednesday with a call for a national-unity government to take office after a general election slated for Dec. 15.

Flanked by two female candidates running on his electoral ticket, Chalabi said his newly formed alliance wanted to step up the fight against corruption and terrorism. He also reasserted his loyalty to Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq's most respected Shiite cleric, whose edicts, or fatwas, are binding for most of Iraq's majority Shiites.

"We want to see a national-unity government for the sake of stability," Chalabi said.

Chalabi's electoral alliance comprises his own party — the National Iraqi Congress — in addition to a group that supports the restoration of the monarchy and small Kurdish and Turkomen groups.

Chalabi contested Iraq's historic election last Jan. 30 as part of a Shiite alliance built around religious parties with ties to Iran. That alliance was endorsed by al-Sistani, but the Iranian-born cleric is not expected to repeat that this time round.

Chalabi, who returned to Iraq in 2003 after decades in exile, said he left the alliance because his supporters did not agree with its Islamist orientation.

"The political process in Iraq has progressed and matured since the last election. Now that it is stronger, the Iraqi people must have other choices," he told a news conference. "Our supporters don't endorse the ideology of Islamic rule but they respect it and are ready to cooperate with its proponents."

Chalabi refused to speculate about how many of parliament's 275 seats his alliance was expecting to win, saying only that while most of his fellow candidates were not nationwide household names, they have significant support in their constituencies.

Chalabi, once the Pentagon's favorite to replace Saddam Hussein, said he also was campaigning to upgrade Iraq's rickety infrastructure and improve services.

He also pledged his commitment to the expansion and strengthening of Iraq's army and police, saying U.S.-led coalition forces should withdraw from cities when Iraqi security forces are ready to take over security from them.

The Dec. 15 election will produce Iraq's first full-term parliament since the 2003 overthrow of Saddam Hussein. It is the final stop in a U.S.-sponsored political process that included the January election and the drafting and adoption of a permanent constitution in a referendum held last month.

Beside Chalabi's and the Shiite alliance, other major blocs running in the election are the Kurdish alliance, an alliance led by former prime minister Ayad Allawi and a third one of three Sunni Arab parties.
Snuffysmith
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/stor...5389025,00.html

U.S. Circulates Draft Resolution on Iraq

Thursday November 3, 2005 6:31 AM

By NICK WADHAMS

Associated Press Writer

UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The United States on Wednesday circulated a draft U.N. Security Council resolution that would extend the mandate of the nearly 180,000-strong multinational force in Iraq for a year, a move that could face opposition from Russia and others.

The U.S. draft to extend the forces' mandate for a full year marked a change in practice before the council, because their mandate has been renewed every six months since the beginning of 2004.

The current mandate authorizing the presence of the U.S.-led force expires following parliamentary elections in Iraq on Dec. 15 - the end point of the political process as defined by the Security Council.

This time, the resolution says the mandate would last until Dec. 31, 2006 and be reviewed eight months after the resolution passes.

The council would also ``terminate this mandate earlier if requested by the government of Iraq,'' the resolution reads.

The change raised questions from Russia, which has traditionally called for security to be handed over to Iraqi forces as quickly as possible and the speedy withdrawal of multinational forces.

Russia's Ambassador Andrey Denisov, the current Security Council president, said council experts started discussing the resolution Wednesday afternoon.

``Of course it will not be automatic procedure,'' Denisov said. ``It will be based on concrete and specific requirements by Iraqi authorities, of course. So that is why I feel that we should come to a solution which is acceptable to everybody.''

In a letter sent to the council on Oct. 31, Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari sought the yearlong extension and said that, with elections coming on Dec. 15, his nation was nearing the end of a political transition that began with the toppling of Saddam Hussein by U.S.-led forces in 2003.

``The Iraqi national security forces which are increasing in size, capability and experience day after day need more time to complete their training, ranks and equipment in order to take over the primary responsibility of providing adequate security for Iraqis,'' he wrote.

The force currently comprises 157,000 American troops and 22,000 troops from other countries.
Snuffysmith
4 U.S. Soldiers Among 48 Killed In Continuing Violence:

The death toll in Wednesday's car bombing near a mosque in the Shi'ite town of Musayyib rose to 29
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L0381569.htm
Snuffysmith
U.S. offers plan to keep multinational force in Iraq another year :

The current mandate for the 180-thousand troops expires after next month's legislative elections in Iraq.
http://www.wavy.com/Global/story.asp?S=406...&nav=menu45_2_1
Snuffysmith
Juan Cole: Iraqi President Opposes Military Action against Syria :

The president of Iraq elected six months after the US "turned over sovereignty" on June 28, 2004 is saying before the United Nations that George W. Bush and Donald Rumsfeld decide whether his country can be used as a base to attack other countries, and he is unable to influence such decisions-- even though he categorically rejects any such action.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article10867.htm
Snuffysmith
Iraq focus imperils US, ex-Pentagon official says:

The United States risks losing sight of some key foreign policy issues, including relations with China and the Muslim world, because of its "single-minded focus" on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, a former senior Pentagon official said.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article10864.htm
Snuffysmith
US To Keep 160,000 Troops In Iraq Through December Vote: Officials
http://www.spacewar.com/news/iraq-05zzzzzh.html

Washington (AFP) Nov 03, 2005 - The US military will keep about 160,000 troops in Iraq through national elections in December and then decide how far US force levels in the country can be reduced, senior Pentagon officials said Thursday.
Snuffysmith
Pentagon Stepping Up Efforts To Combat Roadside Bombs In Iraq: General
http://www.spacewar.com/news/iraq-05zzzzzi.html
theglobalchinese
Insist that Bush withdraws 20,000 troops from Iraq John Kerry
Dear Friends,
Amazing. We did four days' work in one.
In the first 24 hours of our "20,000 home over the holidays" campaign, over 80,000 people have signed our petition.
If you haven't acted yet, please do so now.
http://www.johnkerry.com/action/20000/
We've pledged to gather 20,000 signatures a day in each of the 20 days leading up to Thanksgiving. That's 400,000 signatures and we're almost a quarter of the way there already.
It shows you how eager the American people are for a plan on Iraq that makes sense.
Let Republican Senators bristle at our demands for a full investigation of pre-war intelligence. Let the Bush administration cower in fear that Karl Rove will be indicted for his role in trying to intimidate those who dared to speak the truth. Let Dick Cheney try to explain away his four-year-long campaign of deception, bullying, and misdirection.
But don't let America's brave armed forces serve another day without a clear, concrete plan for achieving America's goals in Iraq and bringing the majority of our troops home by the end of 2006.
http://www.johnkerry.com/action/20000/
Next week, we'll be turning up the heat on Republican leaders in dramatic fashion. We won't let them hide from the truth any longer. The reality is: George W. Bush doesn't have a plan for Iraq. And misleading rhetoric about "staying as long as it takes" will never add up to a plan.
To undermine the insurgency, we have to simultaneously pursue both a political settlement and the withdrawal of American combat forces linked to specific, responsible benchmarks.
Our call for the withdrawal of 20,000 troops over the holidays is about taking a first critical step. Upon the completion of the December elections, we can bring 20,000 troops home. You can make it happen.
Sign our "20,000 home over the holidays" petition right now:
http://www.johnkerry.com/action/20000/
This critical first step should be part of a specific timetable for transfer of political and security responsibility to Iraqis and realignment of our troop deployment. That timetable must be real and strict. The goal should be to withdraw the bulk of American combat forces by the end of 2006.
We may never get George W. Bush to admit his string of disastrous mistakes in Iraq. That's why, if he fails to act, we'll demand that Congress takes the decision out of his hands.
And, if the Republican Congress fails to call the Bush administration to account, we will use the 2006 elections to take the decision out of their hands.
Sign our "20,000 home over the holidays" petition right now:
http://www.johnkerry.com/action/20000/
Remember, the only way to keep the pressure on is to add 20,000 new signatures to our petition every day until Thanksgiving. If you haven't signed yet, act now. If you have, get someone in your home to do the same.

Sincerely,

John Kerry

P.S. Don't forget to forward this texte to someone who can be part of tomorrow's 20,000 signatures.
MAKE A CONTRIBUTION
Snuffysmith
http://z1.adserver.com/w/cp.x;rid=1842;tid...=3;ac=60;c=992;

Dating Cheney's nuclear drumbeat
By Jim Lobe

In the wake of the release of the Downing Street memo, there has been much talk about how the Bush administration "fixed" its intelligence to create a war fever in the US in the many months leading up to the invasion of Iraq. What still remains to be fully grasped, however, is the wider pattern of propaganda that underlay the administration's war effort - in particular, the overlapping networks of relationships that tied together so many key figures in the administration, the neo-conservatives and their allies on the outside, and parts of the media in what became a seamless, boundary-less operation to persuade the American people that Saddam Hussein represented an intolerable threat to their national security.

Vice President Dick Cheney, for instance, is widely credited with having launched the administration's nuclear drumbeat to war in Iraq via a series of speeches he gave, beginning in August 2002, vividly accusing Saddam of having an active nuclear weapons program. As it happens though, he started beating the nuclear drum with vigor significantly earlier than most remember; indeed at a time that was particularly curious given its proximity to the famous mission former ambassador Joseph Wilson took on behalf of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

Cheney's initial public attempts to raise the nuclear nightmare did not in fact begin with his August 2002 barrage of nuclear speeches, but rather five months before that, just after his return from a tour of Arab capitals where he had tried in vain to gin up local support for military action against Iraq. Indeed, the specific date on which his campaign was launched was March 24, 2002, when, on return from the Middle East, he appeared on three major Sunday public-affairs television programs bearing similar messages on each. On CNN's Late Edition news show he offered the following comment on Saddam:
This is a man of great evil, as the president said. And he is actively pursuing nuclear weapons at this time.
On NBC's Meet the Press news program he said:
There's good reason to believe that he continues to aggressively pursue the development of a nuclear weapon. Now will he have one in a year, five years? I can't be that precise.
And on CBS's Face the Nation show:
The notion of a Saddam Hussein with his great oil wealth, with his inventory that he already has of biological and chemical weapons, that he might actually acquire a nuclear weapon is, I think, a frightening proposition for anybody who thinks about it. And part of my task out there was to go out and begin the dialogue with our friends to make sure they were thinking about it.
Why do I think that Cheney moment, that particular barrage of statements about Saddam's supposed nuclear program, remains so significant today, in light of the Plame affair? (The identity of CIA agent Valerie Plame was leaked to the press, some believe because her ambassador husband, Joseph Wilson, did not go along with the Bush administration's nuclear line on Saddam.)

For one thing, that Sunday's drum roll of nuclear claims indicated that the "intelligence and facts" were already being "fixed around the policy" four months before Sir Richard Dearlove, head of Britain's MI6, reached that conclusion, as recorded in the Downing Street memo. It's worth asking, then: on what basis could Cheney make such assertions with such evident certainty, nearly six months before, on September 7, 2002, Judith Miller and Michael Gordon of the New York Times first broke a story about how Iraq had ordered "specially designed aluminum tubes", supposedly intended as components for centrifuges to enrich uranium for Saddam's nuclear weapons program. Even five months later, after all, those tubes would still be the only real piece of evidence for the existence of an Iraqi nuclear program offered by then-secretary of state Colin Powell in his presentation to the UN Security Council.

Indeed, on March 24 when Cheney made his initial allegations about an Iraqi nuclear program, we know of only two pieces of "evidence" available to him that might conceivably have supported his charges:

1) Testimony from Adnan Ihsan Saeed al-Haideri, a "defector" delivered up by Ahmad Chalabi's exile organization, the Iraqi National Congress (INC), and enthusiastically recounted by the Times' Miller on December 20, 2001 (although rejected as a fabrication by both the CIA and Defense Intelligence Agency). Al-Haideri claimed to have personally worked on renovations of secret facilities for biological, chemical and nuclear weapons in underground wells, private villas and under the Saddam Hussein Hospital in Baghdad as recently as 2000.

2) The infamous forged Niger yellowcake documents that, at some point in December 2001 or January 2002, somehow appeared on Cheney's desk, supposedly through the Defense Intelligence Agency or the CIA, though accounts differ on the precise route it took from Italian military intelligence to the vice president's office. It was these and related documents that spurred Cheney to ask for additional information, a request that would eventually result in Wilson's trip to Niger in late February, which, of course, set the Plame case in motion. Wilson's conclusion - that there was nothing to the story - would echo the conclusions of both US ambassador to Niger Barbro Owens-Kirkpatrick and Marine General Carlton W Fulford Jr, then-deputy commander of the US European Command who was also sent to Niger in February. A couple of days after his return to Washington, Wilson would be debriefed by the CIA.

How far up their respective chains of command Wilson's and Fulford's reports made it remains a significant mystery to this day. Cheney's office, which reportedly had reminded the CIA of the vice president's interest in the agency's follow-up efforts even while Wilson was in Niger, claims never to have heard about either report. We do know that Fulford's report made it up to Joint Chiefs chairman Richard Myers, whose spokesman, however, told the Washington Post in July 2003, shortly after Wilson went public on the New York Times op-ed page, that the general had "no recollection" of it and so no idea whether it continued on to the White House or Cheney's office.

Meanwhile, Cheney, whose initial curiosity set off this flurry of travel and reporting, appeared to have lost interest in the results by the time he left on a Middle Eastern trip in mid-March; at least, no information has come to light so far indicating that he ever got back to the CIA or anyone else with further questions or requests on the matter of whether Saddam had actually been in the market for Niger yellowcake uranium ore. Yet, within four days of his return to Washington, there he was on the Sunday TV shows assuring the nation's viewers that Iraq was indeed "actively pursuing nuclear weapons at this time".

Did he then acquire new information, perhaps from Iraq's neighbors, during his trip to the Middle East, or had he simply decided by then that the "facts" really had to be "fixed" - or more precisely in Wilson's case, ignored altogether - if the American people were to be persuaded that war was the only solution to the problem of Saddam? In any event, one can only describe his sudden lack of curiosity combined with his public certainty on the subject as, well ... curious.

That Cheney did indeed make the initial request to follow up on the Niger yellowcake report appears now to be beyond dispute, and it also draws attention to another little-noted curiosity of the Plame case - the knowledge and role of Clifford May, ex-New York Timesman, recent head of communications for the Republican National Committee (1997-2001), and president of the ultra-neo-conservative Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD).

In an article at National Review Online (NRO) on September 29, 2003 (as pressure was building on attorney general John Ashcroft to appoint a special prosecutor in the case), he boasted that he had been informed by an unnamed former government official of Wilson's wife's identity long before her outing as a CIA operative by Robert Novak, on July 14, 2003, and so had assumed that her identity (and relationship to Wilson) had been an "open secret" among the Washington cognoscenti. He has subsequently told the Nation magazine's David Corn among others that he was interviewed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation but has never been asked to testify on the subject before special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald's grand jury.

In that NRO article, he also noted that he "was the first to publicly question the credibility of Mr Wilson" following the ambassador's Times op-ed. Indeed, only five days after that op-ed appeared, on July 11, 2003, NRO published May's first attack on Wilson - many more would follow right up to the present - depicting the ambassador as a "pro-Saudi, leftist partisan with an axe to grind". The article - and this is the curious part - included the following passage: "Mr Wilson was sent to Niger by the CIA to verify a US intelligence report about the sale of yellowcake - because Vice President Dick Cheney requested it, because Cheney had doubts about the validity of the intelligence report." This phrasing is fascinating because it purports to know Cheney's subjective motivation, and the motivation ascribed to him - that he had "doubts" about the Niger story - conflicts with everything we've otherwise come to understand about why he asked for the Niger story to be investigated. It hints, certainly, at how consciously Cheney would indeed fix the facts when it came to Saddam's nuclear doings.

Given this tidbit of curious information hidden in May's piece, it's important to know what former government officials might not only have told May about Plame's identity but possibly about Cheney's real thoughts on the subject of Saddam's nuclear program - presuming, that is, that Cheney himself or "Scooter Libby", his chief of staff, was not the source. Among May's board of advisers at FDD were several former government officials, a number of whom were known to be very close to Cheney and Libby as well as to Pentagon hawks like then-deputy secretary of defense Paul Wolfowitz and under secretary of defense Douglas Feith. They included head of the Center for Security Policy Frank Gaffney, former CIA director James Woolsey, and Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol. All of them played starring roles in efforts to tie Saddam's Iraq to al-Qaeda and the September 11 attacks, as well as in raising the nuclear bogeyman well before Cheney did so on March 24, 2002.

In fact, a close examination of how the pre-war propaganda machine worked shows that it was led by the neo-cons and their associates outside the administration, particularly those on the Defense Policy Board (DPB) like Richard Perle, Woolsey and Kenneth "Cakewalk" Adelman (and Judith Miller of the Times) who had long championed the cause of Ahmad Chalabi and his INC, and were also close to the Office of Special Plans that Douglas Feith had set up in the Pentagon to cherry-pick intelligence. They would invariably be the first to float new "evidence" against Saddam (such as the infamous supposed Prague meeting of September 11 conspirator Mohammed Atta with an Iraqi intelligence officer). They would then tie this "evidence" into ongoing arguments for "regime change" in Iraq that would often appear in the Times or elsewhere as news and subsequently be picked up by senior administration officials and fed into the drumbeat of war commentary pouring out of official Washington. It is by now perfectly clear that the neo-conservatives on the outside were aided by like-minded journalists, particularly the Times' Miller - then the only "straight" reporter on the client list of neo-conservative heavyweights and columnists represented by Benador Associates - and media outlets, especially the Wall Street Journal's editorial page and Fox News. Working hand-in-glove with the war hawks on the inside, they created a powerful and persuasive machine to convince the public that Saddam's Iraq represented an imminent and potentially cataclysmic threat to the US that had to be eliminated once and for all. The failure to investigate and demonstrate precisely how seamlessly this web of intra and extra-administration connections worked in the run-up to the war - including perhaps in the concoction of the Niger yellowcake documents, as some former intelligence officials have recently suggested - has been perhaps the most shocking example of the mainstream media's failure to connect the dots (the reporters from Knight-Ridder excepted.)

In that context, it is worth noting the first moment that the specter of an advanced Iraqi nuclear-weapons program was propelled into post-September 11 public consciousness. On December 20, 2001, the New York Times published Judith Miller's version of the sensational charges made by Chalabi-aided defector al-Haideri. Her report was immediately seized on by former CIA director and Defense Policy Board member Woolsey, (who had just spent many weeks trying desperately but unsuccessfully to confirm the alleged Mohammed Atta meeting in Prague that would have linked Saddam to the September 11 attackers). Appearing that same evening on CNBC's "Hard Ball", he breathlessly told Chris Matthews, "I think this is a very important story. I give Judy Miller a lot of credit for getting it. This defector sounds quite credible." Within a week, he was telling the Washington Post that the case that Iraq was developing nuclear weapons was a "slam dunk". (Now, there's a familiar expression!) He continued confidently, "There is so much evidence with respect to his development of weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missiles ... that I consider this point beyond dispute."

One week later, Perle weighed in with an op-ed in the New York Times in which he also referred to Miller's work, albeit without naming her. "With each passing day, [Saddam] comes closer to his dream of a nuclear arsenal," he wrote.

"We know he has a clandestine program, spread over many hidden sites, to enrich Iraqi natural uranium (Nigerian yellowcake perhaps?) to weapons grade. We know he has the designs and the technical staff to fabricate nuclear weapons once he obtains the material. And intelligence sources know he is in the market, with plenty of money, for both weapons material and components as well as finished nuclear weapons. How close is he? We do not know. Two years, three years, tomorrow even? We simply do not know, and any intelligence estimate that would cause us to relax would be about as useful as the ones that missed his nuclear program in the early 1990s or failed to predict the Indian nuclear test in 1998 or to gain even a hint of the September 11 attack."

It was a new argument being taken out for a test run, one that would become painfully familiar in the months that followed. At about that time, or shortly thereafter, a report about the mysterious Niger documents landed on Cheney's desk, and the rest would be history.

Jim Lobe is a reporter for the Rome-based international news agency Inter Press Service and has followed the paths of the neo-conservatives since the early 1970s.

(Copyright 2005 Jim Lobe)
Snuffysmith
http://www.antiwar.com/lind/?articleid=7917

November 5, 2005
Engagement: An Exit Strategy

by William S. Lind
One day late in the Vietnam war, a Senator called his defense staffer into his office. Like too many Senators (though neither of the two I worked for), the distinguished legislator depended entirely upon his staff but treated them like peons. Although the end of the day had come and gone, the Senator snarled at his hapless staffer, "I want to give a speech on the Floor tomorrow morning on the Vietnam war. You can stay here tonight and write it."

The next morning, the Senator found the text of his speech on his desk, neatly typed and bound. Without bothering to look it over, he took it to the Floor of the Senate where, with the voice if not the mind of Cicero, he shared it with the world. About half way through, he read a page that concluded with the words, "I will now offer my five-point plan for ending the Vietnam war." Turning the page, he found an unexpected message from his despised staffer: "You're on your own now, you SOB. I quit."

Like the Senator, I think it is time I offered my own exit strategy for Iraq. Everyone in Washington except those in the Bushbunker knows we need an exit strategy; few have offered one. While I have had a bit more time to consider my proposal than did the Senator in the story (which was current during my early days on Senate staff), I am sure my proposal will have holes in it. Nonetheless, it may help move the discussion along, from whether to get out of Iraq to how to get out.

Please note that I am not talking about how to win the Iraq war. The war was lost from before the first bomb fell, because the strategic objectives were never attainable no matter what we did. Further blunders, from de-Baathification and sending the Iraqi Army home through mistreating the civilian population, have moved us from mere failure to incipient disaster. The question, rather, is how we might get out without our defeat being so obvious as to be undeniable.

So here is my proposal:

First, announce that we will leave Iraq soon, and completely. Not one American base or soldier will remain on Iraqi soil. The spin should be, "We came only to remove Saddam from power, and we have accomplished that mission. Iraq now has a constitution and an elected government; we have no reason to remain."

Second, open negotiations to set a date by which we will be gone. The formal negotiations will be with the Iraqi government. Behind the scenes, we will have to set a deadline for achieving an agreement, failing which we will announce a withdrawal unilaterally. Governments established by foreign powers may be reluctant to see foreign troops leave.

The critical (and secret) negotiations, however, will not be with Iraq's puppet government, but with the Sunnis. Here, what we need is what is sometimes called a "diplomatic revolution." Instead of siding with the Kurds and Shi'ites against the Sunnis, we need to offer the Sunnis an alliance. The terms would be roughly these:

1) We will set and adhere to a date for complete withdrawal;

2) We will cease all attacks on the Sunni resistance, as part of a mutual cease-fire; and

3) We will use such political influence as we retain with Iraq's Shi'ite-Kurdish condominium to protect and advance the Sunnis' interests.

In return, the Sunnis will:

1) Enforce a cease-fire in the Sunni provinces, and

2) Clean up al-Qaeda in Iraq. If they need and want our help to do that, we will help. I doubt they will need any assistance from us, beyond stopping our attacks in Sunni areas, and I doubt even more they will want it, since it would de-legitimize them.

Third, while we will cease our useless "sweeps" and other clearly offensive actions, we will also quietly institute the "ink-blot strategy" in some mixed Sunni-Shi'ite-Kurdish areas. While the ink-blot strategy (like the CAP program in Vietnam) represents a strategic offensive, which allows us to keep pressure on the Sunnis to make a deal, it requires de-escalation on the tactical level, so as not to alienate the local population. That should help reduce both Sunni and American casualties while negotiations proceed.

As I have noted in previous columns, a problem in Fourth Generation conflicts is finding someone with whom to negotiate, someone who can deliver once a deal is made. Here, events in Iraq may have given us an opportunity. According to the October 27 Christian Science Monitor, Iraq's key Sunni political parties have formed a new coalition. That coalition is, to quote the Monitor, "Islamist, vehemently anti-American, opposed to foreign troops, and discreetly pro-insurgency." I think it is safe to add that it is closely tied to the Ba'athist elements of the insurgency, which are both a large part of the resistance and strongly opposed to al-Qaeda.

All those characteristics make it a credible negotiating partner. Negotiations with Sunni Quislings serve no purpose, because the Quislings can't deliver what we need, a quieting down of the fighting while we get out. There is good reason to think the new Sunni coalition could deliver that. In turn, we could deliver what they need, which is political support vis-à-vis the Shi'ites and Kurds.

Could it work? Maybe; in such business, there are no guarantees. Would the new Sunni coalition talk with us about a deal along these lines? It's worth a try. Would the Bush administration make such an attempt? Aye, there's the rub. The Bushbunker may be so detached from reality that it still thinks we can win this war militarily.

If that is the case, then it is time for America's senior military leaders, the chief and members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to have a little talk with the president. Another Vietnam war story, a true one, is how the JCS failed to give President Johnson the advice he needed though did not want, namely that the military had done all that it could and it was time to seek a political solution.

So that's my exit strategy. If someone else comes up with a better one, I will be happy to defer to it. But the time is past for arguing whether we need an exit strategy; the discussion should be about what that strategy might be. "Staying the course" in a lost war is not a strategy at all; it is merely a recipe for disaster.
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051105/ap_on_...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-

Kissinger Discourages Exiting Iraq Early By CONSTANT BRAND, Associated Press Writer
Sat Nov 5, 4:37 AM ET



Former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger warned against an early withdrawal of U.S.-led coalition forces from Iraq, saying such a move would bolster insurgents and terrorists worldwide, causing instability across the Middle East.

He also warned that European Union nations and Washington needed to find another way to get Iran to stop the development of its nuclear program, which the EU and US fear is being used to make nuclear weapons. Iran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.

Kissinger, in a speech Friday to top NATO officers and officials, said Iran's nuclear program and terrorism continued to pose a tough challenge for trans-Atlantic ties, and warned also that Iran could use nuclear weapons as a way to protect itself while continuing to promote terrorist groups.

"They (weapons) can become a shield by which to step up terrorist actions," said Kissinger, who was secretary of state and national security adviser under U.S. presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. He retains substantial influence in foreign affairs, and continues to have close links to the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush.

Saying an early pullout of U.S. forces from Iraq would have disastrous consequences for regional stability, Kissinger made clear Friday that he supported Bush's Iraq policy.

"To argue that a collapse of the United States in Iraq would not have consequences ... is simply living in a dream world," the former top U.S. diplomat said. "Shockwaves would ripple throughout the Islamic world."

Terrorists and opponents of governments across the Arab world — such as in Egypt and Saudi Arabia, which support Washington — would be encouraged by an early withdrawal of the American military from Iraq, he said. A U.S. military withdrawal would "embolden their attacks on existing governments."

He said he hoped that, when a new government is elected in Iraq next month, "a combination of legitimacy and training of troops of the Iraqi army will improve (the) security situation."

Nevertheless, the 82-year-old Kissinger said upcoming U.S. congressional elections would have an effect on the debate of how long U.S. troops would remain in Iraq.

U.S. politicians opposed to Bush's Iraq troop commitments have called on him to clarify a timeline for reducing troop levels, saying the losses U.S. troops are suffering there are untenable due to the continued violent attacks against them.

"The challenge we now have is to generate enough patience," he said.

Kissinger did not touch on the sensitive issue of whether Washington's European allies should contribute more troops to rebuilding Iraq, nor did he suggest NATO take a larger role in Iraq. NATO members, notably France and Germany, were opposed to the alliance playing a key role in providing peacekeepers to Iraq, and also opposed the U.S.-led war there.

NATO opened a long-awaited training academy for the Iraqi military last month, which aims to train 1,000 officers a year, as part of the alliance's limited role there. The 26-nation alliance will also supply equipment, such as used tanks, said U.S. Gen. James L. Jones, NATO's supreme commander in Europe.

"Currently we have 77 Hungarian T-72 tanks en route to be delivered to the Iraqi army, which is obviously is going to make an important difference in their capabilities," Jones told reporters.

In his speech, Kissinger also touched on other challenges ahead, saying European nations had to accept that their continent was no longer Washington's top concern. Instead, he said, the rise of China and India and other Asian powers was now the key focus.

Both European countries and the United States, however, had to work closer together to coordinate new policies for Asia and for other top issues such as terrorism and nuclear proliferation, he said.

"There is not the commitment to the Atlantic alliance that there was before," he said. The question would be whether nations bordering the Atlantic would "be able to develop cohesion and coordination to address so vast an agenda."




Copyright © 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.


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theglobalchinese
Major US-Led Offensive Continues in Iraq Guardian Unlimited
About 3,500 US and Iraqi troops backed by warjets launched a major attack Saturday against an insurgent-held town near the Syrian border, seeking to dislodge al-Qaida and its allies from a western bastion and seal off a key route for foreign fighters entering the country. U.S. officials describe the town of Husaybah as the key to controlling the volatile Euphrates River valley of western Iraq and dislodging al-Qaida in Iraq, led by Jordanian terror mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
US, Iraq forces launch border assault Aljazeera.net
US, Iraqi forces launch offensive CNN
Reuters - BBC News - Radio New Zealand - DeHavilland - all 465 related »
Snuffysmith
Iraq offensive meets resistance
Several thousand US and Iraqi troops have met sporadic resistance during an offensive against al-Qaeda militants near Iraq's Syrian border
Some 2,500 American marines and other troops, as well as about 1,000 Iraqi government soldiers, are involved near Husayba, the US military said.

It is the first time Iraqi troops have been used on a major scale in the western Anbar province, it added.

There have been no reports of military or civilian casualties.

Air strikes

Operation Steel Curtain comes after two offensives near the Syrian border last month.

"The force is moving through the city to restore security along the border," a statement said.

"The Iraqi and US forces have encountered sporadic resistance - mostly small arms fire and improvised explosive devices - from al-Qaeda in Iraq-led insurgents throughout the city."

At least nine strikes were ordered against what the US military described as "strongpoints" which had been firing on troops.

At least 400 civilians who have fled the fighting are being sheltered in an abandoned housing estate.

Its aim is to "restore security along the Iraqi-Syrian border and destroy the al-Qaeda in Iraq terrorist network operating throughout Husayba", the US military said in its statement.


Iraqi units have included scouts tasked with identifying militant strongpoints and unexploded bombs.

The area's population is predominantly Sunni Muslim.

Sunni political parties in Baghdad have criticised the operation, saying that innocent people would be the victims, said the BBC's correspondent Jim Muir from Baghdad.

They have taken issue with a recent statement from the Iraqi defence minister, who threatened to bring down the houses of militants on their heads.

Troops, the US military added, are tasked with both finding insurgents and locating their "safe houses" ahead of the Iraqi parliamentary election on 15 December.

'Al-Qaeda route'

Steel Curtain also "marks the first large-scale employment of multiple battalion-sized units of Iraqi Army forces in combined operations" with US-led forces.

The area around Husaybah, located near the border town of Qaim and is about 320km (200 miles) west of Baghdad, is used by al-Qaeda in Iraq to smuggle in foreign fighters, money and equipment, the US military believes.


"They do not bring battalions - they bring the leadership, the financial man, the demolition expert," Marine Col Stephen Davis told AFP news agency.

Al-Qaeda in Iraq is among Iraq's most feared militant organisations, having claimed responsibility for many of the country's bloodiest bombings and beheadings.

Its commander is said to be Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

October's two big operations, Iron Fist and River Gate, were aimed at ending al-Qaeda militants' "campaign of murder and intimidation" in the province.

Last week, US warplanes destroyed a building in Husayba, killing five leaders of the militant al-Qaeda group, according to military statements.

In another development, a prominent Sunni Muslim politician has been seriously injured in a shooting in Baghdad.

Fakhri al-Qaisi, a spokesman for the Iraqi National Dialogue Council was shot several times when the car he was travelling in was ambushed in the mainly Sunni neighbourhood of Ghazaliya in the west of the city.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/midd...ast/4409332.stm

Published: 2005/11/05 21:13:44 GMT

© BBC MMV
Snuffysmith
http://fairuse.1accesshost.com/news2/nyt055.html

New York Times
November 6, 2005
Chalabi, in Tehran, Meets With Iranian President Before Traveling to U.S. Next Week
By DEXTER FILKINS
TEHRAN, Nov. 5 - Ahmad Chalabi, the former Iraqi exile who has become a deputy prime minister, met with senior Iranian leaders here on Saturday in what appeared to be an effort to distance himself from them, just days before he visits Washington.

In a series of closed meetings, Mr. Chalabi saw Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the tough-talking Iranian president; Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mattaki; and Ali Larijani, the head of the Iranian National Security Council.

Mr. Chalabi said he had spoken to the Iranians about an issue that seemed likely to endear him to the Americans: the question of Iranian interference in Iraq's domestic politics.

American and some Iraqi officials have long alleged that the Iranian government is deeply involved in Iraqi internal affairs, by directly assisting Iraqi political parties and private Shiite militias.

"The principal reason is to tell them about our concern about some of the activities in Iraq," Mr. Chalabi said of the Iranians. "We feel it is very important to address some of these issues, like border security and so on."

Mr. Chalabi said he also made clear to the Iranians that the Iraqi government would maintain close ties to the United States.

"It is important to emphasize and tell them very clearly that we working with the United States and they have come to help us liberate Iraq and that we are interested in having a decent Iraq," Mr. Chalabi said. "It is very important that they help us achieve that."

The timing of the visit, which both sides said came at the Iranians' request, suggested the possibility that Mr. Chalabi might have been asked to carry a message from the Iranians to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice at their scheduled meeting next week. Mr. Chalabi is also scheduled later to meet the Treasury secretary, John W. Snow.

Mr. Ahmadinejad, a strict Islamist elected in June, has become increasingly isolated in recent weeks.

In September, the International Atomic Energy Agency rebuked Iran for noncompliance with the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty over its insistence on developing advanced nuclear technologies. In a speech on Oct. 26, Mr. Ahmadinejad created a stir when he told a rally of Iranian students that Israel should be "wiped off the map." After those remarks, Kofi Annan, the United Nations secretary general, postponed a visit scheduled for the coming week.

But Mr. Chalabi said he had not been asked by the Iranians to mediate with the Americans. Mr. Larijani, the head of the national security council, also said his government had made no such request.

Mr. Ahmadinejad, who appeared before reporters before meeting with Mr. Chalabi on Saturday, did not speak publicly.

In an interview, Mr. Larijani reiterated his government's intention to continue developing advanced nuclear technology for peaceful purposes. The Bush administration says Iran is hiding its effort to build nuclear weapons.

"The pressure they are putting on Iran over its nuclear program, it will only result in more hatred for America," Mr. Larijani said, reiterating his government's position that it did not intend to develop nuclear weapons.

Mr. Chalabi's visit may be connected to Iraq's parliamentary elections, scheduled for Dec. 15. The events of Saturday suggested that Mr. Chalabi had embarked on a campaign to reposition himself as a secular, American-backed candidate, and, perhaps, an alternative to the Shiite alliance that currently dominates the government in Baghdad.

Earlier this month, Mr. Chalabi said he had dropped out of the Islamist-dominated Shiite coalition that dominated the Iraqi elections in January and that was strongly supported by the Iranian government.

While the exact circumstances of Mr. Chalabi's departure from the Shiite alliance is unclear, Mr. Chalabi said he no longer wanted to be part of what he described as an Islamist coalition. "My intention was to give people in Iraq who are Muslim but who do not support the Islamist parties a choice," Mr. Chalabi said.

Mr. Chalabi's move toward secular leadership appears to signal a new phase in his political maneuvering.

As an exile, he was long a favorite of the Defense Department. But after the American-led invasion, he took a harshly critical line on the efforts of foreign military forces and relations with the Bush administration soured. Last year, he aligned himself with overtly Islamist leaders, including the firebrand cleric Moktada al-Sadr. During that period, the Bush administration accused Mr. Chalabi of divulging classified information to the Iranians.

Mr. Chalabi denied that charge. The outcome of the investigation is not known.

In an interview following his meeting with Iranian leaders, Mr. Chalabi said he had secured a promise that they would not oppose him if he made a run at becoming Iraq's prime minister.

"Clearly I am not going to be a candidate for prime minister because they tell me to," Mr. Chalabi said of the Iranians. "They certainly expressed support for the idea that if the process is done locally then they would not oppose it."

It was impossible to verify that assertion, but Mr. Larijani said that Iranian leaders held Mr. Chalabi in high regard. "He is a very wise man and a very useful person for the future of Iraq," he said.

For their part, Iranian leaders asserted that they had indeed exercised a strong force in internal Iraqi politics, and they said they intended to continue to do so. Last January, after the Shiite coalition's selection of Ibrahim al-Jafaari as its choice to be prime minister, rumors swirled about Baghdad that the Iranians had intervened strongly on his behalf.

When asked about this, Mr. Larijani said the Iranians had indeed intervened strongly with Iraq's Shiite leaders, but he said the Iranians had not sided with a particular candidate.

"America should consider this power as legitimate," Mr. Larijani said of his country's role in Iraqi affairs. "They should not fight it."

Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
Snuffysmith
http://www.debka.com/headline.php?hid=1150


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DEBKAfile Reports: The New US-Iraqi “Steel Curtain” Operation launched Saturday follows Washington’s “clear, hold and build” strategy for cleansing western Iraq of terrorists

November 5, 2005, 2:10 PM (GMT+02:00)

For this new offensive against al Qaeda, 2,500 US Marines and 1,000 Iraqi troops are massed at Husayba, near al Qaim, one of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s key way stations for smuggling fighters, money and equipment from Syria. Last week, US aircraft bombed Husayba, killing 5 al Qaeda leaders. The new offensive follows on last month’s Iron Fist and River Gate operations which aimed at freeing the border province from al Qaeda’s control and intimidation.

On Oct. 19, US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice articulated the Bush administration’s political-military strategy before the Senate foreign relations committee as being “to clear areas of insurgent control, hold them secure and build “durable, national Iraqi institutions.”

DEBKAfile’s military sources report that the coalition’s “hold” on “cleared” locations is temporary for lack of manpower, while “building” is a vision that applies to Baghdad rather than the terrorist-infested al Anbar region. For now, the immediate objective is to curb terrorist and insurgent activity as far as possible for the December 15 general election. To this end, US military operations are focusing not only on al Qaeda sanctuaries around al Qaim but also across the border to choke off the traffic at source, their Syrian bases of departure.

All the same, although a Qaeda’s foreign fighters are under pressure, they continue to stream into western Iraq from Syria. Moreover, the deepening Iranian involvement in the Iraq war has not been publicly addressed except by the British in the south.

British commander of southern Iraq Maj. Gen Jim Dutton said Friday that insurgents are still getting weapons from the other side of the border - Iran
Snuffysmith
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N06469774.htm

US saw Qaeda-Iraq informant as likely liar in 2002
06 Nov 2005 19:52:10 GMT

Source: Reuters

By David Morgan

WASHINGTON, Nov 6 (Reuters) - A captured al Qaeda operative who told U.S. authorities that Iraq had trained al Qaeda members to use unconventional weapons was identified as a probable liar months before the Bush administration began using his claims to make its case for war.

Declassified portions of a Defense Intelligence Agency document dated February 2002 said it was likely that the prisoner, Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, was intentionally misleading debriefers about Saddam Hussein's support for al Qaeda's work with chemical and biological weapons.

"Ibn al-Shaykh has been undergoing debriefs for several weeks and may be describing scenarios to the debriefers that he knows will retain their interest," said document excerpts obtained by Reuters on Sunday.

The DIA document was first reported by The New York Times and Washington Post on Sunday. Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, top Democrat on the Senate Committee on Armed Services, later released the excerpts on his Senate Web site.

"Saddam's regime is intensely secular and is wary of Islamic revolutionary movements. Moreover, Baghdad is unlikely to provide assistance to a group it cannot control," the excerpts said.

The report surfaced days after Democrats forced Senate Republicans to agree to complete the second phase of a probe into U.S. intelligence on Iraq. Phase 2 of the investigation by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence seeks to determine whether the Bush administration twisted intelligence to justify the March 2003 invasion.

President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, then-Secretary of State Colin Powell and other administration officials cited Libi's input as "credible" evidence that Iraq was training al Qaeda members in explosives and illicit weapons use. The officials did not mention him by name at the time.

Bush, in a speech in October 2002, said: "We've learned that Iraq has trained al Qaeda members in bomb-making and poisons and gases."

MISUSE OF INTELLIGENCE?

Democrats said the DIA document was only the latest evidence to suggest the administration may have misused prewar intelligence to link Saddam Hussein with al Qaeda.

But White House spokesman Scott McClellan pointed out that Democrats in Congress also supported military action based on the same intelligence findings. "Many of their comments said, 'We cannot wait to address this threat,'" he said.

Sen. John Rockefeller of West Virginia, top Democrat on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, said on CNN's "Late Edition" that the DIA document on Libi showed the White House trusted an unreliable source in "a classic example of a lack of accountability to the American people."

Libi, at the time the most senior al Qaeda member in U.S. custody, recanted his story in January 2004.

Rockefeller, who helped oversee the first phase of the Senate's investigation and its scathing 2004 report on Iraq intelligence, also accused the Bush administration of lying about a meeting between Sept. 11 ringleader Mohamed Atta and Iraqi intelligence in Prague before the 2001 attacks.

The bipartisan Sept. 11 commission reported last year that it could find no evidence that the meeting ever took place.

"It was an absolute lie, and yet they used that very substantially to leave the American people to say, 'This is al Qaeda and Iraq hooked up,'" said Rockefeller, who has long pressed his committee to complete its investigation.

"He (Atta) was in this country. We have his travel schedules, his hotel schedules, his phone calls," he added.

Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas, Republican chairman of the Senate intelligence panel, told CBS' "Face the Nation" that committee staff would present lawmakers this week with "working drafts" of its intelligence probe's second phase.

(Additional reporting by Steve Holland in Brasilia)
Snuffysmith
http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-11-06-voa12.cfm

Report: US Relied on False Information Linking Iraq, Al-Qaida
By VOA News
06 November 2005



A published report says a top al-Qaida operative in U.S. custody gave false information later used by the Bush administration to support its contention that Iraq trained al-Qaida militants to use illegal weapons.

The New York Times reports Sunday that newly declassified portions of a February 2002 Defense Intelligence Agency document says Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi misled debriefers in his claims about Iraq's work with al-Qaida members.

Mr. Libi, captured in Pakistan in 2001, told investigators Iraq trained the terrorist organization's militants to use biological and chemical weapons.

The newspaper says intelligence experts realized his claims about al-Qaida's ties to Iraq were lies months before the Bush administration used the information as part of its justification to topple Saddam Hussein.

The Times was given the report by Senator Carl Levin of Michigan, the leading Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee. He is strongly critical of the Bush administration for what he calls its misuse of prewar intelligence to justify the war in Iraq.
Snuffysmith
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/politics/3441562

Nov. 6, 2005, 12:45AM

Document in 2002 warned of faulty intelligence on Iraq
Administration used the dubious data to show links to al-Qaida
By DOUGLAS JEHL

AYMAN AL-ZAWAHRI
WASHINGTON - A high al-Qaida official in U.S. custody was identified as a likely fabricator months before the Bush administration began to use his statements as the foundation for its claims that Iraq trained al-Qaida members to use biological and chemical weapons, according to newly declassified portions of a Defense Intelligence Agency document.

The document, an intelligence report from February 2002, said it was probable that the prisoner, Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, "was intentionally misleading the debriefers" in making claims about Iraqi support for al-Qaida's work with illicit weapons.

The document provides the earliest and strongest indication of doubts voiced by American intelligence agencies about Libi's credibility. Without mentioning him by name, President Bush; Vice President Dick Cheney; Colin Powell, who was then secretary of state; and other administration officials repeatedly cited Libi's information as "credible" evidence that Iraq was training al-Qaida members in the use of explosives and illicit weapons.

The newly declassified portions of the document were made available by Sen. Carl M. Levin of Michigan, the top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Levin said the new evidence of early doubts about Libi's statements dramatized what he called the Bush administration's misuse of prewar intelligence to try to justify the war in Iraq.

A White House spokeswoman said she had no immediate comment on the DIA report on Libi. But Senate Republicans have been arguing that Republicans were not alone in making prewar assertions about Iraq, illicit weapons and terrorism that have since been discredited.

Libi, who was captured in Pakistan at the end of 2001, recanted his claims in January 2004.

That prompted the CIA a month later to recall all intelligence reports based on his statements, a fact that was recorded in a footnote to the report issued by the Sept. 11 commission later in 2004.

As an official intelligence report, labeled DITSUM No. 044-02, the DIA document would have circulated widely within the government, and it would have been available to the CIA, the White House, the Pentagon and other agencies.

In outlining reasons for its skepticism, the DIA report noted that Libi's claims lacked details about the Iraqis, the illicit weapons used and the location where the training was to have taken place.

"It is possible he does not know any further details; it is more likely this individual is intentionally misleading the debriefers," the February 2002 report said. "Ibn al-Shaykh has been undergoing debriefs for several weeks and may be describing scenarios to the debriefers that he knows will retain their interest."

Powell relied heavily on accounts provided by Libi as the foundation for his speech to the U.N. Security Council on Feb. 5, 2003, saying that he was tracing "the story of a senior terrorist operative telling how Iraq provided training in these weapons to al-Qaida."
theglobalchinese
US, Iraqi Forces Sweep Syrian Border Washington Post
American and Iraqi security forces continued their sweep through the border region with Syria on Sunday, the second day of one of the largest military offensives since the U.S.-led war in 2003 to clear foreign militants from western Iraq. About 3,500 troops participated in the operation in the Qaim region, which the military dubbed "Operation Steel Curtain." No American or Iraqi troops were killed or wounded on Sunday, the military said. This is the second time in about a month that American-led troops have stormed the expansive desert area in a full-fledged assault to root out militants tied to the al Qaeda in Iraq group. The offensive began on Saturday, with troops battling insurgents in Husaybah, essentially a suburb of the larger city of Qaim, located about 200 miles northwest of the Iraqi capital. "The combined force is clearing the city, house by house, as the al Qaeda in Iraq-led insurgents continue to plant improvised explosive devices throughout the city and fire on Marines and Iraqi Army soldiers from homes, schools and mosques," the U.S. Marines said in a statement. Iraqi officials have acknowledged that they are failing to stop the flow of fighters from crossing into the country from Syria and then traversing the Euphrates River valley region, dispersing weapons, explosives and militants who then move on to the Iraqi cities of Ramadi, Baghdad or Mosul. The officials have repeatedly criticized the Syrian government for not doing more to control their side of the border, while also noting that Iraqi troops are not yet adequately trained to do the job either without American support. By Sunday afternoon, U.S. and Iraqi forces controlled seven of 11 neighborhoods in the city of Qaim, civilian witnesses said. At 10 a.m. the U.S. forces raided the neighborhoods and searched the houses, digging up gardens in search of contraband. The soldiers found weapons caches and papers tied to the al Qaeda insurgency, the witnesses said. "I think the town will be cleansed within three to four days," said Capt. Arkan Hussein, with the Iraqi Army. "Only small pockets of the fighters remained." Through loudspeakers, the American troops called on remaining residents to help the joint forces by informing on insurgents' hideouts and potential car bombs. Mohammed Azzawi, a doctor at the Qaim hospital, said five civilians were killed and nine wounded since the assault began. He said 13 civilians were missing and presumed trapped under wreckage. The Marines countered that, saying there had been no reports of civilian casualties. "Marines can confirm 17 insurgents have been killed since the operation began" on Saturday, the Americans said in a statement. "Many more are suspected of being killed, but Coalition forces haven't been able to confirm those numbers yet. A statement reportedly from the al Qaeda group that was posted on a mosque in nearby Haditha claimed victory in the now two-day battle. "The heroes of al Qaeda are fighting and got what they wanted from the worshipers of the cross and the worshipers of the graves" -- the latter referring to Shiite Muslims -- according to the statement. Al Qaeda said nine of its fighters died during the offensive. Four of them were foreigners, according to the group, backing up Iraqi military contentions that the insurgency is not solely made up of foreigners. "Not all the attacks are by the Zarqawi people," Hussain Ali Kamal, head of Iraq's intelligence service, said in a recent interview. Al Qaeda in Iraq is led by Jordanian Abu Musab Zarqawi, a feared leader who is not solely responsible for the insurgency in Iraq but has been behind some of the deadliest attacks, Iraqi and American intelligence officers have said. "Many of the attacks are done by remnants of the last regime and former Baathists in cooperation with the Zarqawi people," Kamal said. "We can't totally control these operatives because the Iraqi forces are not qualified enough yet." At the eastern part of Qaim, 31 families set up tents in the desert, while the sound of gunfire rang from their city. Thaer Hamid, 47, fled Qaim on Saturday, he said. "We don't have relatives in other cities, so we have to stay here. We also do not have enough money to go to hotels like other people." Saadi Mohammed Janabi, 39, camped with his family in another tent. He said the American troops provided the camp with water tanks for drinking and washing.
Terrified Residents Flee Iraq Fighting Guardian Unlimited
US and Iraqi forces battle insurgents near Syrian border Forbes
ABC News - Voice of America - Khaleej Times - Independent Online - all 961 related »
Snuffysmith
Outside View: Exiting Iraq
http://www.spacewar.com/news/iraq-05zzzzzj.html

Washington (UPI) Nov 05, 2005 - One day late in the Vietnam war, a senator called his defense staffer into his office. Like too many senators (though neither of the two I worked for), the distinguished legislator depended entirely upon his staff but treated them like peons. Although the end of the day had come and gone, the Senator snarled at his hapless staffer, "I want to give a speech on the Floor tomorrow morning on the Vietnam war. You can stay here tonight and write it."
Snuffysmith
US, Iraqi Troops Fight House-To-House On Syria Border
http://www.spacewar.com/news/iraq-05zzzzzk.html
Snuffysmith
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/07/politics...cq8lOQRkzX0SQbw

No Evidence of Pressure on Iraq Data, Senator Says

By ERIC LICHTBLAU
Published: November 7, 2005
WASHINGTON, Nov. 6 - With Democrats stepping up their attacks over prewar intelligence on Iraq, the Republican leader of the Senate Intelligence Committee said on Sunday that the panel's initial work had found no evidence of "political manipulation or pressure" in the use of such intelligence.

This week the committee expects to begin circulating among its members draft reports on the question of whether the administration manipulated or distorted intelligence on Iraq in making its case for war, said the chairman, Pat Roberts of Kansas.

Mr. Roberts did not say what the draft reports would conclude. But he did make clear that past work by his committee and other commissions did not point to any evidence that made him believe that intelligence had been distorted.

As part of a report released last year by his committee that found widespread intelligence failures on Iraq's weapons capabilities, "we interviewed over 250 analysts and we specifically asked them: 'Was there any political manipulation or pressure?' Answer: 'No,' " Mr. Roberts said on "Face the Nation" on CBS.

Studies by the independent Robb-Silberman commission, appointed by the president, as well as the similar Butler commission in Britain reached the "same conclusion," said Mr. Roberts, who has been a staunch supporter of the administration's policies on Iraq.

Democrats have accused the Republicans - and Mr. Roberts in particular - of dragging their feet on the Intelligence Committee's study, begun some 20 months ago. Frustration over the pace of the inquiry led Senate Democratic leaders to invoke a rare procedural rule last week, sending the Senate into a special closed session.

Democrats said they had been driven to act by the indictment of I. Lewis Libby Jr., Vice President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff, on charges of obstruction and perjury, charges that were related to the disclosure of the name of a Central Intelligence Agency operative whose husband had been a vocal critic of prewar intelligence.

In addition, articles published Sunday in The New York Times and The Washington Post showed that Defense Department intelligence analysts warned in February 2002 that a top member of Al Qaeda was a likely fabricator, months before the Bush administration began to use his statements as a foundation for its claims that Iraq had trained Qaeda members in the use of biological and chemical weapons.

Senator John D. Rockefeller IV of West Virginia, the ranking Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, said Sunday of the reports: "Once again, we have another important example of where the administration was warned that information was questionable, yet they turned around and presented it as fact to the American people.

"This most recent example underscores just how important it is that the Senate Intelligence Committee get to the bottom of whether this administration knowingly misrepresented intelligence in making their case for war," he said.

The White House spokesman, Scott McClellan, asked on Sunday about the articles on the Qaeda fabricator, did not address the issue specifically but said that both Republicans and Democrats, including those in the Clinton administration, "came to the same conclusion, that Saddam Hussein was a threat and a threat that needed to be addressed."

Pointing to the findings of the Robb-Silberman commission, he said that "we've taken steps to make sure that we have the best possible intelligence" and that "we are acting to address the problems."

Democrats have sought to link Mr. Libby's prosecution to the use of intelligence on Iraq, and on Sunday they stepped up calls for greater accountability at the White House for anyone implicated in the Libby case.

Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts, said on "Meet the Press" on NBC that Karl Rove, the senior presidential adviser, "should leave" the White House because he was found to have had discussions with reporters about the C.I.A. operative, Valerie Wilson. And even some Republicans suggested that a housecleaning was in order.

"The president should be, in my opinion, reviewing and analyzing and putting some deep perspective into who's around him at the White House," said Senator Chuck Hagel, Republican of Nebraska, on "This Week" on ABC. "And if I was the president, I think I'd want to enlarge and widen that group, and start making some serious review and inventory of what has happened in the last five years that's gotten him into so much trouble."
Snuffysmith
http://www.wpherald.com/storyview.php?Stor...06-094255-7054r


Analysis: U.S. casualties persist in Iraq after referendum
By Martin Sieff
UPI Senior News Analyst
Published November 6, 2005


WASHINGTON -- October was one of the deadliest months yet for U.S. soldiers in Iraq. And November got off to a grim start too.

In the first three days of November, 10 U.S. soldiers were killed in Iraq. As of Friday morning, the total number of U.S. troops killed in Iraq since the start of U.S. operations to topple Saddam Hussein on March 19, 2003 was 2,035 according to official figures issued by the Department of Defense. Almost 1,900 of them have been killed since President George W. Bush declared "Mission Accomplished" in Iraq on May 1, 2003 on the deck of the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln.


Improvised explosive devices, or roadside bombs, continued to account for more than half the total casualties inflicted on U.S. troops -- an ominous indicator that the technical expertise of the insurgents is steadily advancing.

The rate of deaths last week at least showed some improvement on the previous week. Some 10 U.S. soldiers were killed in three days, an average of 3.3 were therefore lost per day. This was significantly less than the rate at which they were killed during the previous five-day period when 30 were killed, a rate of six per day.

However, the number of U.S. troops wounded in action from the beginning of hostilities on March 19, 2003, through Thursday, Nov. 3, was 15,577, the Pentagon said. This meant 224 U.S troops were wounded in the seven days since Oct. 28, an average of 32 per day.

This was more than twice as bad as the 133 wounded in the previous nine days, an average rate of just under 15 per day. And it marked a return to the high rates of 30-plus a day injured during the Oct. 2- Oct. 16 period.

The stubborn persistence of the rate of U.S. military casualties reflects the continuing widespread and formidable nature of the insurgency.

Prior to the successful referendum poll Oct. 15, U.S. officials had predicted that the vote would be a milestone, and that the growing credibility of the democratic process would likely undermine the ability of the insurgency to maintain the level of their attacks.

To the contrary, the casualty figures suggest that the insurgents' operational tempo remains at least what it was prior to the vote, if not greater. Their continued ability to And so far, that capability shows no signs of exhausting itself.

There is some evidence that the insurgents are concentrating now more on trying to inflict casualties on American forces, perhaps in the hope of influencing U.S. public opinion and forcing a U.S. military withdrawal from Iraq.

Though the insurgency continues to inflict serious casualties on the new Iraqi forces, the scale of those casualties has now been falling for more than three months.

Some 34 Iraqi troops and police were killed in the seven day period from Oct. 27 to Nov. 2, an average of just under five per day, according to the Iraq Index Project of the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank.

This marked a significant drop from the previous figure of 45 killed in the seven days from Oct. 20 to Oct. 26, a rate of just under 6.5 per day. It was also a marked improvement over the rate of just under eight per day at which they were killed from Oct. 2 through Oct. 16.

The total number of Iraqi police and military killed from June 1, 2003 to Nov. 2, 2005 was 3,509, according to the Brookings figures.

The total death toll for Iraq security forces in October was 215, somewhat better than the 233 killed in September. While still bad, this was the lowest for any month since the 199 killed in April and well below the record 304 fatalities the Iraqi forces suffered in July or the 296 in June.

The number of Iraqi troops and police killed per month has now been falling since July. However, it must be cautioned that the statistics represent a level of attrition hard to sustain for any effective security force in a nation the size of California with less than half California's population.

On the other hand, the statistics on car and truck bombs -- grimly referred to as multiple fatality bombings, or MFBs -- continue to climb. There were six recorded in the eight days from Oct. 27 through Nov.3 -- an average of 0.75 per day.

This was certainly an improvement -- just half the rate of more than 1.5 per day in the seven day period from Oct. 19 to Oct. 26 when 11 were recorded -- but it still reflects a very serious insurgency.

In all, 39 of these attacks -- generally the kind that generate the highest number of civilian casualties --