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The Road to Coverup Is the Road
to Ruin
by US Senator Robert Byrd, US Senate Floor
Remarks, June 24, 2003
Mr. President, last fall, the White House released a national
security strategy that called for an end to the doctrines of deterrence
and containment that have been a hallmark of American foreign
policy for more than half a century.
This new national security strategy is based upon
pre-emptive war against those who might threaten our security.
Such a strategy of striking first against possible
dangers is heavily reliant upon interpretation of accurate and
timely intelligence. If we are going to hit first, based on perceived
dangers, the perceptions had better be accurate. If our intelligence
is faulty, we may launch pre-emptive wars against countries that
do not pose a real threat against us. Or we may overlook countries
that do pose real threats to our security, allowing us no chance
to pursue diplomatic solutions to stop a crisis before it escalates
to war. In either case lives could be needlessly lost. In other
words, we had better be certain that we can discern the imminent
threats from the false alarms.
Ninety-six days ago [as of June 24], President
Bush announced that he had initiated a war to "disarm Iraq,
to free its people and to defend the world from grave danger."
The President told the world: "Our nation enters this conflict
reluctantly -- yet, our purpose is sure. The people of the United
States and our friends and allies will not live at the mercy of
an outlaw regime that threatens the peace with weapons of mass
murder." [Address to the Nation, 3/19/03]
The President has since announced that major combat
operations concluded on May 1. He said: "Major combat operations
in Iraq have ended. In the battle of Iraq, the United States and
our allies have prevailed." Since then, the United States
has been recognized by the international community as the occupying
power in Iraq. And yet, we have not found any evidence that would
confirm the officially stated reason that our country was sent
to war; namely, that Iraq's weapons of mass destruction constituted
a grave threat to the United States.
We have heard a lot about revisionist history from
the White House of late in answer to those who question whether
there was a real threat from Iraq. But, it is the President who
appears to me to be intent on revising history. There is an abundance
of clear and unmistakable evidence that the Administration sought
to portray Iraq as a direct and deadly threat to the American
people. But there is a great difference between the hand-picked
intelligence that was presented by the Administration to Congress
and the American people when compared against what we have actually
discovered in Iraq. This Congress and the people who sent us here
are entitled to an explanation from the Administration.
On January 28, 2003, President Bush said in his
State of the Union Address: "The British government has learned
that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of
uranium from Africa." [State of the Union, 1/28/03, pg. 7]
Yet, according to news reports, the CIA knew that this claim was
false as early as March 2002. In addition, the International Atomic
Energy Agency has since discredited this allegation.
On February 5, Secretary of State Colin Powell
told the United Nations Security Council: "Our conservative
estimate is that Iraq today has a stockpile of between 100 and
500 tons of chemical weapons agent. That is enough to fill 16,000
battlefield rockets." [Remarks to UN Security Council, 2/5/03,
pg. 12] The truth is, to date we have not found any of this material,
nor those thousands of rockets loaded with chemical weapons.
On February 8, President Bush told the nation:
"We have sources that tell us that Saddam Hussein recently
authorized Iraqi field commanders to use chemical weapons –
the very weapons the dictator tells us he does not have."
[Radio Address, 2/8/03] Mr. President, we are all relieved that
such weapons were not used, but it has not yet been explained
why the Iraqi army did not use them. Did the Iraqi army flee their
positions before chemical weapons could be used? If so, why were
the weapons not left behind? Or is it that the army was never
issued chemical weapons? We need answers.
On March 16, the Sunday before the war began, in
an interview with Tim Russert, Vice President Cheney said that
Iraqis want "to get rid of Saddam Hussein and they will welcome
as liberators the United States when we come to do that."
He added, "...the vast majority of them would turn [Saddam
Hussein] in in a minute if, in fact, they thought they could do
so safely." [Meet the Press, 3/16/03, pg. 6] But in fact,
Mr. President, today Iraqi cities remain in disorder, our troops
are under attack, our occupation government lives and works in
fortified compounds, and we are still trying to determine the
fate of the ousted, murderous dictator.
On March 30, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld,
during the height of the war, said of the search for weapons of
mass destruction: "We know where they are. They're in the
area around Tikrit and Baghdad and east, west, south, and north
somewhat." [This Week, 3/30/03, pg. 8] But Baghdad fell to
our troops on April 9, and Tikrit on April 14, and the intelligence
Secretary Rumsfeld spoke about has not led us to any weapons of
mass destruction.
Whether or not intelligence reports were bent,
stretched, or massaged to make Iraq look like an imminent threat
to the United States, it is clear that the Administration's rhetoric
played upon the well-founded fear of the American public about
future acts of terrorism. But, upon close examination, many of
these statements have nothing to do with intelligence, because
they are at root just sound bites based on conjecture. They are
designed to prey on public fear.
The face of Osama bin Laden morphed into that of
Saddam Hussein. President Bush carefully blurred these images
in his State of the Union Address. Listen to this quote from his
State of the Union Address: "Imagine those 19 hijackers with
other weapons and other plans – this time armed by Saddam
Hussein. It would take one vial, one canister, one crate slipped
into this country to bring a day of horror like none we have ever
known." [State of the Union, 1/28/03, pg 7] Judging by this
speech, not only is the President confusing al Qaeda and Iraq,
but he also appears to give a vote of no-confidence to our homeland
security efforts. Isn't the White House, the brains behind the
Department of Homeland Security? Isn't the Administration supposed
to be stopping those vials, canisters, and crates from entering
our country, rather than trying to scare our fellow citizens half
to death about them?
Not only did the Administration warn about more
hijackers carrying deadly chemicals, the White House even went
so far as to suggest that the time it would take for U.N. inspectors
to find solid, 'smoking gun' evidence of Saddam's illegal weapons
would put the U.S. at greater risk of a nuclear attack from Iraq.
National Security Advisor Condoleeza Rice was quoted as saying
on September 9, 2002, by the Los Angeles Times, "We don't
want the 'smoking gun' to be a mushroom cloud." [Los Angeles
Times, "Threat by Iraq Grows, U.S. Says," 9/9/02] Talk
about hype! Mushroom clouds? Where is the evidence for this? There
isn't any.
On September 26, 2002, just two weeks before Congress
voted on a resolution to allow the President to invade Iraq, and
six weeks before the mid-term elections, President Bush himself
built the case that Iraq was plotting to attack the United States.
After meeting with members of Congress on that date, the President
said: "The danger to our country is grave. The danger to
our country is growing. The Iraqi regime possesses biological
and chemical weapons.... The regime is seeking a nuclear bomb,
and with fissile material, could build one within a year."
These are the President's words. He said that Saddam
Hussein is "seeking a nuclear bomb." Have we found any
evidence to date of this chilling allegation? No.
But, President Bush continued on that autumn day:
"The dangers we face will only worsen from month to month
and from year to year. To ignore these threats is to encourage
them. And when they have fully materialized it may be too late
to protect ourselves and our friends and our allies. By then the
Iraqi dictator would have the means to terrorize and dominate
the region. Each passing day could be the one on which the Iraqi
regime gives anthrax or VX – nerve gas – or some day
a nuclear weapon to a terrorist ally." [Rose Garden Remarks,
9/26/02]
And yet, seven weeks after declaring victory in
the war against Iraq, we have seen nary a shred of evidence to
support his claims of grave dangers, chemical weapons, links to
al Qaeda, or nuclear weapons.
Just days before a vote on a resolution that handed
the President unprecedented war powers, President Bush stepped
up the scare tactics. On October 7, just four days before the
October 11 vote in the Senate on the war resolution, the President
stated: "We know that Iraq and the al Qaeda terrorist network
share a common enemy – the United States of America. We
know that Iraq and al Qaeda have had high-level contacts that
go back a decade." President Bush continued: "We've
learned that Iraq has trained al Qaeda members in bomb-making
and poisons and deadly gasses.... Alliance with terrorists could
allow the Iraqi regime to attack America without leaving any fingerprints."
President Bush also elaborated on claims of Iraq's
nuclear program when he said: "The evidence indicates that
Iraq is reconstituting its nuclear weapons program. Saddam Hussein
has held numerous meetings with Iraqi nuclear scientists, a group
he calls his 'nuclear mujahideen' - his nuclear holy warriors....
If the Iraqi regime is able to produce, buy, or steal an amount
of highly enriched uranium a little larger than a single softball,
it could have a nuclear weapon in less than a year." [Cincinnati
Museum Center, 10/7/02, pg. 3-4]
This is the kind of pumped up intelligence and
outrageous rhetoric that were given to the American people to
justify war with Iraq. This is the same kind of hyped evidence
that was given to Congress to sway its vote for war on October
11, 2002.
We hear some voices say, but why should we care?
After all, the United States won the war, didn't it? Saddam Hussein
is no more; he is either dead or on the run. What does it matter
if reality does not reveal the same grim picture that was so carefully
painted before the war? So what if the menacing characterizations
that conjured up visions of mushroom clouds and American cities
threatened with deadly germs and chemicals were overdone? So what?
Mr. President, our sons and daughters who serve
in uniform answered a call to duty. They were sent to the hot
sands of the Middle East to fight in a war that has already cost
the lives of 194 Americans, thousands of innocent civilians, and
unknown numbers of Iraqi soldiers. Our troops are still at risk.
Hardly a day goes by that there is not another attack on the troops
who are trying to restore order to a country teetering on the
brink of anarchy. When are they coming home?
The President told the American people that we
were compelled to go to war to secure our country from a grave
threat. Are we any safer today than we were on March 18, 2003?
Our nation has been committed to rebuilding a country ravaged
by war and tyranny, and the cost of that task is being paid in
blood and treasure every day.
It is in the compelling national interest to examine
what we were told about the threat from Iraq. It is in the compelling
national interest to know if the intelligence was faulty. It is
in the compelling national interest to know if the intelligence
was distorted.
Mr. President, Congress must face this issue squarely.
Congress should begin immediately an investigation into the intelligence
that was presented to the American people about the pre-war estimates
of Saddam's weapons of mass destruction and the way in which that
intelligence might have been misused. This is no time for a timid
Congress. We have a responsibility to act in the national interest
and protect the American people. We must get to the bottom of
this matter.
Although some timorous steps have been taken in
the past few days to begin a review of this intelligence –
I must watch my terms carefully, for I may be tempted to use the
words "investigation" or "inquiry" to describe
this review, and those are terms which I am told are not supposed
to be used – the proposed measures appear to fall short
of what the situation requires. We are already shading our terms
about how to describe the proposed review of intelligence: cherry-picking
words to give the American people the impression that the government
is fully in control of the situation, and that there is no reason
to ask tough questions. This is the same problem that got us into
this controversy about slanted intelligence reports. Word games.
Lots and lots of word games.
Well, Mr. President, this is no game. For the first
time in our history, the United States has gone to war because
of intelligence reports claiming that a country posed a threat
to our nation. Congress should not be content to use standard
operating procedures to look into this extraordinary matter. We
should accept no substitute for a full, bipartisan investigation
by Congress into the issue of our pre-war intelligence on the
threat from Iraq and its use.
The purpose of such an investigation is not to
play pre-election year politics, nor is it to engage in what some
might call "revisionist history." Rather it is to get
at the truth. The longer questions are allowed to fester about
what our intelligence knew about Iraq, and when they knew it,
the greater the risk that the people – the American people
whom we are elected to serve – will lose confidence in our
government.
This looming crisis of trust is not limited to
the public. Many of my colleagues were willing to trust the Administration
and vote to authorize war against Iraq. Many members of this body
trusted so much that they gave the President sweeping authority
to commence war. As President Reagan famously said, "Trust,
but verify." Despite my opposition, the Senate voted to blindly
trust the President with unprecedented power to declare war. While
the reconstruction continues, so do the questions, and it is time
to verify.
I have served the people of West Virginia in Congress
for half a century. I have witnessed deceit and scandal, cover
up and aftermath. I have seen Presidents of both parties who once
enjoyed great popularity among the people leave office in disgrace
because they misled the American people. I say to this Administration:
do not circle the wagons. Do not discourage the seeking of truth
in these matters.
Mr. President, the American people have questions
that need to be answered about why we went to war with Iraq. To
attempt to deny the relevance of these questions is to trivialize
the people's trust.
The business of intelligence is secretive by necessity,
but our government is open by design. We must be straight with
the American people. Congress has the obligation to investigate
the use of intelligence information by the Administration, in
the open, so that the American people can see that those who exercise
power, especially the awesome power of preemptive war, must be
held accountable. We must not go down the road of cover-up. That
is the road to ruin.
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