The final Senate report on executive use of intelligence prior to Iraq war is finally released. The report was held up for many years, although there were repeated assertions (by then Republican chair, Pat Roberts) that investigations were moving forward. For links to official report go here.
The ultimate quote from committee chair John D. Rockefeller, "In making the case for war, the administration repeatedly presented intelligence as fact when it was unsubstantiated, contradicted or even non-existent."
If accurate what happened was not an exaggeration of known intelligence (as both the Times and WaPost headlines read today), but rather intentional deception. Can't editors recognize the difference?
I have no sense for whether the report's conclusions are already widely believed or not, but it's important to have official government confirmation even if such beliefs are already widely held. No longer can we merely claim that everyone was misled by faulty intelligence; evidently, we were misled by our current government.
Thursday, June 5, 2008
Must read
Posted by MT Nguyen at 2:28 PM
Labels: Iraq, us politics
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