Edited on Fri Jun-01-07 12:23 PM by L. Coyote
Lengthy list of officials got accurate Iraq forecast
JAMES GERSTENZANG; Los Angeles Times
Published: May 26th, 2007 01:00 AM
http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/nationworld/story/71622.htmlWASHINGTON – Two months before the invasion of Iraq, U.S. intelligence agencies twice warned the Bush administration that establishing a democracy there would prove a difficult challenge and that al-Qaida would use political instability to increase its operations, according to a Senate report released Friday.
The report, issued by the Senate Intelligence Committee, brought to light once-classified warnings that accurately forecasted many of the specific military and political problems the Bush administration and Iraqi officials have faced since the invasion in March 2003.
The report also details that these warnings were distributed to senior officials with daily access to President Bush and others at the top of the administration.
Although many names were left blank to protect those in the intelligence community, the report’s 81-page list of those who received the predictions included figures throughout the national security bureaucracy. One of those was Stephen Hadley, the president’s national security adviser, who at the time was the deputy national security adviser, serving under Condoleezza Rice.
The Senate report, unlike previous studies of the buildup to the war, did not focus on the flawed information provided by the intelligence community. Those included assessments that overstated Iraq’s potential for developing weapons of mass destruction.
The report spotlighted two documents prepared in January 2003 by the National Intelligence Council; one was titled “Regional Consequences of Regime Change in Iraq, the other “Principal Challenges in Post-Saddam Iraq.”
The papers warned that: .................