Below is a prior interview with retired Director Greg Thielman of the U-S State Department's bureau of intelligence that confirms Bush former Treasury Sec O'Neill's report of Bush lying to the American people about the war. Today the BBC has a new interview with Greg Thielman which is being re-broadcast in NPR's "BBC Hour" where he states that what Bush did is the worst betrayal possible of the Constitution - I recommend taking the time to listen today.
Impeachment anyone?
http://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/library/news/2003/intell-030714-37e51422.htmIn the ongoing controversy over U-S intelligence leading up to the Iraq war, the Bush administration has conceded one mistake: a reference in the President's State of the Union address to Iraq's trying to acquire nuclear weapons material from Africa. But the administration stands by other intelligence it used to justify the war, while critics remain skeptical. V-O-A's Ed Warner reports the debate.
TEXT:
In his determination to go to war, did President Bush overstate the case against Iraq based on faulty intelligence? Critics say he did, while supporters respond that a president can take no chances with protecting the American people and must prepare for the worst.
At a press briefing held by the Arms Control Association in Washington, a recently retired member of the U-S State Department's bureau of intelligence denied Iraq had weapons of mass destruction or ties to al-Qaeda terrorists, as the Bush Administration had insisted.
The CIA has taken the blame for the erroneous information that Iraq was trying to buy uranium from Niger, but Greg Thielman says the problem goes beyond that:
“I believe the Bush Administration did not provide an accurate picture to the American of the military threat posed by Iraq. Some of the fault lies with the performance of the intelligence community, but most of it lies with the way senior officials misused the information they were provided. This administration has had a faith-based intelligence attitude. It's top-down use of intelligence. We know the answers. Give us the intelligence to support these answers.
All indications were that Iraq was in no condition to turn out weapons of mass destruction, says Mr. Thielman. It had been defeated in the first Gulf War, crippled by economic sanctions and carefully monitored for these weapons by U-N inspectors.”