WMD Hunt May Be Back-Burnered
WASHINGTON, Oct. 29, 2003
(CBS/AP) U.S. officials are considering shifting intelligence resources from hunting for Iraq's alleged illegal weapons to tracking the fighters attacking U.S. troops, a newspaper reports.
According to The New York Times, the Bush administration is considering transferring some intelligence officers and linguists from the weapons hunt to counterterrorism efforts. But officials stressed that the possible move would not signal the end of the weapons search.
The central argument in the case for war was the claim that Iraq had chemical and biological weapons and a program to develop nuclear weapons. To date, U.S. teams have discovered neither weapons nor active programs to produce them, raising doubts about the rationale for the March invasion.
On Tuesday, a top U.S. intelligence official said Iraq may have moved weapons into Syria before the U.S. invaded, and President Bush defended his decision to attack.
But a former intelligence official claims the intelligence on Iraq was flawed.
In the weapons debate, a key question has been whether intelligence agencies provided bad data or the Bush administration politicized the information it received. -
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/06/25/iraq/main560449.shtml?cmp=EM8706