ThinkProgressDecember 18, 2008
In his January 2003 State of the Union address, as part of his effort to make the case for invading Iraq, President Bush infamously declared that “the British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.” The White House was later forced to repudiate the statement after former Ambassador Joseph Wilson blew the whistle on the claim. As part of an investigation into pre-war intelligence claims, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence asked the White House to provide examples of times that the CIA had cleared such uranium references for use in speeches. On January 6, 2004, then-White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales sent a letter to Sen. John Rockefeller (D-WV) on behalf of Condoleezza Rice that claimed the CIA had “orally cleared” the uranium claim for two of Bush’s speeches. But in a new memo, House Oversight Chairman Henry Waxman (D-CA) says that he has found evidence contradicting Gonzales’ assertions:
The information the Oversight Committee has received casts serious doubt on the veracity of the representations that Mr. Gonzales made on behalf of Dr. Rice. Contrary to Mr. Gonzales’s assertions, the Committee has received evidence that the CIA objected to the uranium claim in both speeches, resulting in its deletion from the President’s remarks.When White House speechwriters tried to put the uranium claim into Bush’s Sept. 12, 2002 speech to UN, the CIA rejected it because it was “not sufficiently reliable to include it in the speech”:
During an interview with the Committee, John Gibson, who served as Director of Speechwriting for Foreign Policy at the National Security Council (NSC), stated that he tried to insert the uranium claim into this speech at the request of Michael Gerson, chief White House speechwriter, and Robert Joseph, the Senior Director for Proliferation Strategy, Counterproliferation, and Homeland Defense at the NSC. According to Mr. Gibson, the CIA rejected the uranium claim because it was “not sufficiently reliable to include it in the speech.” Mr. Gibson stated that the CIA “didn’t give that blessing,” the “CIA was not willing to clear that language,” and “[a]t the end of the day, they did not clear it.”When National Security Council staff refused to take the uranium claim out of Bush’s Sept. 26, 2002 speech, Jami Miscik, the Deputy Director of Intelligence at the CIA, called Rice personally to request it be removed:
According to Ms. Miscik, the CIA’s reasons for rejecting the uranium claim “had been conveyed to the NSC counterparts” before the call, and Dr. Rice was “getting on the phone call with that information.” Ms. Miscik told Dr. Rice personally that the CIA was “recommending that it be taken out.” She also said “[i]t turned out to be a relatively short phone call” because “we both knew what the issues were and therefore were able to get to a very easy resolution of it.”According to Waxman, Rice refused to testify to the Committee about the pre-war claims, so he is unable to say “how she would explain the seeming contradictions between her statements and those of Mr. Gonzales on her behalf and the statements made to the Committee bv senior CIA and NSC officials.”
Gonzales’ letter said it specifically:
"On January 6,2004, White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales sent a letter on behalf of Condoleezza Rice, who was then the National Security Advisor, to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, writingthat o’Dr. Rice has asked me to respond" to questions raised by the Committee about the uranium claim. Mr. Gonzales informed the Committee that the CIA "orally cleared" the uranium claim "for use by the President" in both a September 12,2002, speech to the United Nations and a September 26,2002, speech in the White House Rose Garden."
Why are we still so hung up on this? It’s a very big deal, that’s why. They were chomping at the bit to include the [false] claim that Saddam Hussein had obtained or tried to obtain yellowcake uranium ore from Niger [not true]. It was part of their two point thrust to Invade Iraq. Saddam Hussein hadn[or was about to have] atomic bombs. The second point was that Saddam Hussein had ties to al Qaeda, an equally fallacious claim cooked up by Douglas Feith in the Department of Defense. What this report confirms is that the Bush Administration had to be almost forcibly restrained from spreading this particular lie all over the place. They finally got it said in the January 2003 SOTUS knowing, in my opinion, that it was not true. Bush now says that he regrets that we had such bad intelligence back then. Rove echos Bush, claiming bad intelligence sent us to war. Cheney disagrees saying that we would have gone to War in Iraq no matter what.
That’s not correct. Had they not made those two claims, Congress wouldn’t have backed them up. Had he and Cheney said to Congress, "We want to Invade Iraq because Saddam Hussein is a bad man and needs to be hunted down and killed," Congress would not have voted for the War – even the Republican Congress of the day. And we wouldn’t have given al Qaeda a place to come add another 40000+ Americans to the 3000+ they killed in the Twin Trade Towers. Gonzales, Rice, Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Feith, etc lied to the people they were elected/appointed to serve, and it had dire consequences. If we’re going to prosecute Bernard Madoff in New York for lying, and Rod Blagojevich in Chicago for manipulating government, then we sure ought to prosecute the members of the Bush Administration who sacraficed 4000+ Americans, uncounted Iraqi Civilians, threw away a Trillion dollars [20 times more than Madoff], and disgraced our country. Obama is not going to go after these people. He’s got another Agenda [as he should]. But Congress has a duty to at least bring the truth to the table – we deserve that much. The same goes for the U.S. Attorney Scandal…
I’d like to see Ambassador Joe Wilson get a job with President Obama”s Administration. I think it would send a very positve message to others in gov’t.