http://www.publicintegrity.org/WarCard/Default.aspx?src=home&context=overview&id=945
False Pretenses
Following 9/11, President Bush and seven top
officials of his administration waged a carefully orchestrated
campaign of misinformation about the threat posed by Saddam
Hussein's Iraq.
President George W. Bush and seven of his administration's top
officials, including Vice President Dick Cheney, National Security
Adviser Condoleezza Rice, and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld,
made at least 935 false statements in the two years following
September 11, 2001, about the national security threat posed by
Saddam Hussein's Iraq. Nearly five years after the U.S. invasion of
Iraq, an exhaustive examination of the record shows that the
statements were part of an orchestrated campaign that effectively
galvanized public opinion and, in the process, led the nation to war
under decidedly false pretenses.
On at least 532 separate occasions (in speeches, briefings,
interviews, testimony, and the like), Bush and these three key
officials, along with Secretary of State Colin Powell, Deputy
Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, and White House press secretaries
Ari Fleischer and Scott McClellan, stated unequivocally that Iraq
had weapons of mass destruction (or was trying to produce or obtain
them), links to Al Qaeda, or both. This concerted effort was the
underpinning of the Bush administration's case for war.
It is now beyond dispute that Iraq did not
possess any weapons of mass destruction or have meaningful ties to
Al Qaeda. This was the conclusion of numerous bipartisan government
investigations, including those by the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence (2004 and 2006), the 9/11 Commission, and the
multinational Iraq Survey Group, whose "Duelfer Report" established
that Saddam Hussein had terminated Iraq's nuclear program in 1991
and made little effort to restart it.
In short, the Bush administration led the nation to war on the
basis of erroneous information that it methodically propagated and
that culminated in military action against Iraq on March 19, 2003.
Not surprisingly, the officials with the most opportunities to make
speeches, grant media interviews, and otherwise frame the public
debate also made the most false statements, according to this
first-ever analysis of the entire body of prewar rhetoric.
President Bush, for example, made 232 false statements about
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and another 28 false statements
about Iraq's links to Al Qaeda. Secretary of State Powell had the
second-highest total in the two-year period, with 244 false
statements about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and 10 about
Iraq's links to Al Qaeda. Rumsfeld and Fleischer each made 109 false
statements, followed by Wolfowitz (with 85), Rice (with 56), Cheney
(with 48), and McClellan (with 14).
The massive database at the heart of this project juxtaposes what
President Bush and these seven top officials were saying for public
consumption against what was known, or should have been known, on a
day-to-day basis. This fully searchable database includes the public
statements, drawn from both primary sources (such as official
transcripts) and secondary sources (chiefly major news
organizations) over the two years beginning on September 11, 2001.
It also interlaces relevant information from more than 25 government
reports, books, articles, speeches, and interviews.
Consider, for example, these false public statements made in the
run-up to war:
- On August 26, 2002, in an address to the national convention
of the Veteran of Foreign Wars, Cheney flatly declared: "Simply
stated, there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of
mass destruction. There is no doubt he is amassing them to use
against our friends, against our allies, and against us." In
fact, former CIA Director George Tenet later recalled, Cheney's
assertions went well beyond his agency's assessments at the
time. Another CIA official, referring to the same speech, told
journalist Ron Suskind, "Our reaction was, 'Where is he getting
this stuff from?' "
- In the closing days of September 2002, with a congressional
vote fast approaching on authorizing the use of military force
in Iraq, Bush told the nation in his weekly radio address: "The
Iraqi regime possesses biological and chemical weapons, is
rebuilding the facilities to make more and, according to the
British government, could launch a biological or chemical attack
in as little as 45 minutes after the order is given. . . . This
regime is seeking a nuclear bomb, and with fissile material
could build one within a year." A few days later, similar
findings were also included in a much-hurried National
Intelligence Estimate on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction --
an analysis that hadn't been done in years, as the intelligence
community had deemed it unnecessary and the White House hadn't
requested it.
- In July 2002, Rumsfeld had a one-word answer for reporters
who asked whether Iraq had relationships with Al Qaeda
terrorists: "Sure." In fact, an assessment issued that same
month by the Defense Intelligence Agency (and confirmed weeks
later by CIA Director Tenet) found an absence of "compelling
evidence demonstrating direct cooperation between the government
of Iraq and Al Qaeda." What's more, an earlier DIA assessment
said that "the nature of the regime's relationship with Al Qaeda
is unclear."
- On May 29, 2003, in an interview with Polish TV, President
Bush declared: "We found the weapons of mass destruction. We
found biological laboratories." But as journalist Bob Woodward
reported in State of Denial, days earlier a team of
civilian experts dispatched to examine the two mobile labs found
in Iraq had concluded in a field report that the labs were not
for biological weapons. The team's final report, completed the
following month, concluded that the labs had probably been used
to manufacture hydrogen for weather balloons.
- On January 28, 2003, in his annual State of the Union
address, Bush asserted: "The British government has learned that
Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium
from Africa. Our intelligence sources tell us that he has
attempted to purchase high-strength aluminum tubes suitable for
nuclear weapons production." Two weeks earlier, an analyst with
the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research sent
an email to colleagues in the intelligence community laying out
why he believed the uranium-purchase agreement "probably is a
hoax."
- On February 5, 2003, in an address to the United Nations
Security Council, Powell said: "What we're giving you are facts
and conclusions based on solid intelligence. I will cite some
examples, and these are from human sources." As it turned out,
however, two of the main human sources to which Powell referred
had provided false information. One was an Iraqi con artist,
code-named "Curveball," whom American intelligence officials
were dubious about and in fact had never even spoken to. The
other was an Al Qaeda detainee, Ibn al-Sheikh al-Libi, who had
reportedly been sent to Eqypt by the CIA and tortured and who
later recanted the information he had provided. Libi told the
CIA in January 2004 that he had "decided he would fabricate any
information interrogators wanted in order to gain better
treatment and avoid being handed over to [a foreign
government]."
The false statements dramatically increased in August 2002, with
congressional consideration of a war resolution, then escalated
through the mid-term elections and spiked even higher from January
2003 to the eve of the invasion.

(click for
larger version)
It was during those critical weeks in early 2003 that the
president delivered his State of the Union address and Powell
delivered his memorable U.N. presentation. For all 935 false
statements, including when and where they occurred, go to the
search
page for this project; the methodology used for this analysis is
explained
here.
In addition to their patently false pronouncements, Bush and
these seven top officials also made hundreds of other statements in
the two years after 9/11 in which they implied that Iraq had weapons
of mass destruction or links to Al Qaeda. Other administration
higher-ups, joined by Pentagon officials and Republican leaders in
Congress, also routinely sounded false war alarms in the Washington
echo chamber.
The cumulative effect of these false statements -- amplified by
thousands of news stories and broadcasts -- was massive, with the
media coverage creating an almost impenetrable din for several
critical months in the run-up to war. Some journalists -- indeed,
even some entire news organizations -- have since acknowledged that
their coverage during those prewar months was far too deferential
and uncritical. These mea culpas notwithstanding, much of the
wall-to-wall media coverage provided additional, "independent"
validation of the Bush administration's false statements about Iraq.
The "ground truth" of the Iraq war itself eventually forced the
president to backpedal, albeit grudgingly. In a 2004 appearance on
NBC's Meet the Press, for example, Bush acknowledged that
no weapons of mass destruction had been found in Iraq. And on
December 18, 2005, with his approval ratings on the decline, Bush
told the nation in a Sunday-night address from the Oval Office: "It
is true that Saddam Hussein had a history of pursuing and using
weapons of mass destruction. It is true that he systematically
concealed those programs, and blocked the work of U.N. weapons
inspectors. It is true that many nations believed that Saddam had
weapons of mass destruction. But much of the intelligence turned out
to be wrong. As your president, I am responsible for the decision to
go into Iraq. Yet it was right to remove Saddam Hussein from power."
Bush stopped short, however, of admitting error or poor judgment;
instead, his administration repeatedly attributed the stark
disparity between its prewar public statements and the actual
"ground truth" regarding the threat posed by Iraq to poor
intelligence from a Who's Who of domestic agencies.
On the other hand, a growing number of critics, including a
parade of former government officials, have publicly -- and in some
cases vociferously -- accused the president and his inner circle of
ignoring or distorting the available intelligence. In the end, these
critics say, it was the calculated drumbeat of false information and
public pronouncements that ultimately misled the American people and
this nation's allies on their way to war.
Bush and the top officials of his administration have so far
largely avoided the harsh, sustained glare of formal scrutiny about
their personal responsibility for the litany of repeated, false
statements in the run-up to the war in Iraq. There has been no
congressional investigation, for example, into what exactly was
going on inside the Bush White House in that period. Congressional
oversight has focused almost entirely on the quality of the U.S.
government's pre-war intelligence -- not the judgment, public
statements, or public accountability of its highest officials. And,
of course, only four of the officials -- Powell, Rice, Rumsfeld, and
Wolfowitz -- have testified before Congress about Iraq.
Short of such review, this project provides a heretofore
unavailable framework for examining how the U.S. war in Iraq came to
pass. Clearly, it calls into question the repeated assertions of
Bush administration officials that they were the unwitting victims
of bad intelligence.
Above all, the 935 false statements painstakingly presented here
finally help to answer two all-too-familiar questions as they apply
to Bush and his top advisers: What did they know, and when did they
know it?