Wednesday, April 12, 2006

Capitol Hill Blue: Another Bush lie surfaces in now-discredited Iraq war rationale

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By Staff and Wire Reports
Apr 12, 2006, 05:18

President George W. Bush lied to the American public when he claimed two trailers captured by U.S. troops in Iraq in May 2003 were mobile "biological laboratories." At the time he made the claim, U.S. intelligence officials already knew it was not true and had told the President the trailers had nothing to do with biological weapons.


On May 29, 2003, Bush hailed the capture of the trailers, declaring "We have found the weapons of mass destruction."

But a Pentagon-sponsored fact-finding mission had already concluded that the trailers had nothing to do with biological weapons, citing government officials and weapons experts who participated in the secret mission or had direct knowledge of it.

The group's unanimous findings had been sent to the Pentagon in a field report, two days before the president's statement.

The revelation is the latest in a series that shows how the Bush Administration intentionally withheld or downplayed information that did support its now-discredited claim that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction and posed an immediate threat to the United States.

Bush cited the threat posed by weapons of mass destruction as the prime justification for invading Iraq. No such weapons ever were found.

A U.S. intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity confirmed the existence of the field report but said it was a preliminary finding that had to be evaluated.

"You don't change a report that has been coordinated in the (intelligence) community based on a field report," the official said. "It's a preliminary report. No matter how strongly the individual may feel about the subject matter."

The three-page field report and a 122-page final report three weeks later were classified and shelved. It added that for nearly a year after that, the Bush administration continued to public assert that the trailers were biological weapons factories.

The authors of the reports -- nine U.S. and British civilian experts -- were sent to Baghdad by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA).

A DIA spokesman claimed the team's findings were neither ignored nor suppressed, but were incorporated in the work of the Iraqi Survey Group, which led the official search for Iraqi weapons of mass destruction.

The team's work remains classified. Interviews revealed the team was unequivocal in its conclusion that the trailers were not intended to manufacture biological weapons.

"There was no connection to anything biological," one expert who studied the trailers said.

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