U.S. agencies may have relied on fabricators and Saddam’s own spies for intelligence on Iraq
WEB EXCLUSIVE
Newsweek
Updated: 5:18 p.m. ET Feb. 11, 2004
Feb. 11 - Broadening an internal review of prewar intelligence on Iraq, the CIA is reexamining the credibility of four Iraq defectors whose claims were cited by Secretary of State Colin Powell last year as crucial evidence that Saddam Hussein had developed a system of mobile laboratories and factories to produce biological-warfare agents, NEWSWEEK has learned.
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In his otherwise vigorous defense of the agency’s performance at Georgetown University last week, CIA director George Tenet first alluded to the fact that were serious credibility problems with one Iraqi defector who made claims about the purported mobile weapons labs. Tenet said that the CIA had “recently discovered that relevant analysts in the community missed a notice that identified a source we had cited as providing information that, in some cases was unreliable, and in other cases was fabricated.”
U.S. officials say Tenet was referring to the source identified in Powell’s speech as an “Iraqi major who defected.” Powell said the defector had “confirmed that Iraq has mobile biological-research laboratories.” According to several U.S. intelligence officials, the “major” was introduced to U.S. intelligence by the Iraqi National Congress, an exile group with close ties to Pentagon civilians and the office of Vice President Dick Cheney. After initial debriefing by the Defense Intelligence Agency in the winter of 2002, officials say, two intelligence reports recounting the “major’s” allegations regarding Iraqi mobile labs were entered into computer databases maintained by the CIA and DIA.
more at
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/4244033/