The new Pentagon
papers
A high-ranking
military officer reveals how Defense Department extremists suppressed
information and twisted the truth to drive the country to war.
-
- - - - - - - - - - - By Karen
Kwiatkowski
March 10,
2004 | In
July of last year, after just over 20 years of service, I retired as a
lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Air Force. I had served as a
communications officer in the field and in acquisition programs, as a
speechwriter for the National Security Agency director, and on the
Headquarters Air Force and the office of the secretary of defense staffs
covering African affairs. I had completed Air Command and Staff College
and Navy War College seminar programs, two master's degrees, and
everything but my Ph.D. dissertation in world politics at Catholic
University. I regarded my military vocation as interesting, rewarding
and apolitical. My career started in 1978 with the smooth seduction of a
full four-year ROTC scholarship. It ended with 10 months of duty in a
strange new country, observing up close and personal a process of
decision making for war not sanctioned by the Constitution we had all
sworn to uphold. Ben Franklin's comment that the Constitutional
Convention of 1787 in Philadelphia had delivered "a republic,
madam, if you can keep it" would come to have special meaning.
In the spring of
2002, I was a cynical but willing staff officer, almost two years into
my three-year tour at the office of the secretary of defense,
undersecretary for policy, sub-Saharan Africa. In April, a call for
volunteers went out for the Near East South Asia directorate (NESA).
None materialized. By May, the call transmogrified into a posthaste
demand for any staff officer, and I was "volunteered" to enter
what would be a well-appointed den of iniquity.
The education I
would receive there was like an M.
Night Shyamalan movie -- intense, fascinating and frightening. While
the people were very much alive, I saw a dead philosophy -- Cold War
anti-communism and neo-imperialism -- walking the corridors of the
Pentagon. It wore the clothing of counterterrorism and spoke the
language of a holy war between good and evil. The evil was recognized by
the leadership to be resident mainly in the Middle East and articulated
by Islamic clerics and radicals. But there were other enemies within,
anyone who dared voice any skepticism about their grand plans, including
Secretary of State Colin Powell and Gen. Anthony Zinni.
From May 2002
until February 2003, I observed firsthand the formation of the
Pentagon's Office of Special Plans and watched the latter stages of the
neoconservative capture of the policy-intelligence nexus in the run-up
to the invasion of Iraq. This seizure of the reins of U.S. Middle East
policy was directly visible to many of us working in the Near East South
Asia policy office, and yet there seemed to be little any of us could do
about it.
I saw a narrow
and deeply flawed policy favored by some executive appointees in the
Pentagon used to manipulate and pressurize the traditional relationship
between policymakers in the Pentagon and U.S. intelligence agencies.
I witnessed
neoconservative agenda bearers within OSP usurp measured and carefully
considered assessments, and through suppression and distortion of
intelligence analysis promulgate what were in fact falsehoods to both
Congress and the executive office of the president.
While this
commandeering of a narrow segment of both intelligence production and
American foreign policy matched closely with the well-published desires
of the neoconservative wing of the Republican Party, many of us in the
Pentagon, conservatives and liberals alike, felt that this agenda,
whatever its flaws or merits, had never been openly presented to the
American people. Instead, the public story line was a fear-peddling and
confusing set of messages, designed to take Congress and the country
into a war of executive choice, a war based on false pretenses, and a
war one year later Americans do not really understand. That is why I
have gone public with my account.
To begin with, I
was introduced to Bill Luti, assistant secretary of defense for NESA. A
tall, thin, nervously intelligent man, he welcomed me into the fold. I
knew little about him. Because he was a recently retired naval captain
and now high-level Bush appointee, the common assumption was that he had
connections, if not capability. I would later find out that when Dick
Cheney was secretary of defense over a decade earlier, Luti was his
aide. He had also been a military aide to Speaker of the House Newt
Gingrich during the Clinton years and had completed his Ph.D. at the
Fletcher School at Tufts University. While his Navy career had not
granted him flag rank, he had it now and was not shy about comparing his
place in the pecking order with various three- and four-star generals
and admirals in and out of the Pentagon. Name dropping included
references to getting this or that document over to Scooter, or
responding to one of Scooter's requests right away. Scooter, I would
find out later, was I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, the vice
president's chief of staff.
Co-workers who
had watched the transition from Clintonista to Bushite shared
conversations and stories indicating that something deliberate and
manipulative was happening to NESA. Key professional personnel, longtime
civilian professionals holding the important billets in NESA, were
replaced early on during the transition. Longtime officer director Joe
McMillan was reassigned to the National Defense University. The
director's job in the time of transition was to help bring the newly
appointed deputy assistant secretary up to speed, ensure office
continuity, act as a resource relating to regional histories and
policies, and help identify the best ways to maintain course or to
implement change. Removing such a critical continuity factor was not
only unusual but also seemed like willful handicapping. It was the first
signal of radical change.
At the time, I
didn't realize that the expertise on Middle East policy was not only
being removed, but was also being exchanged for that from various
agenda-bearing think tanks, including the Middle East Media Research
Institute, the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, and the Jewish
Institute for National Security Affairs. Interestingly, the office
director billet stayed vacant the whole time I was there. That vacancy
and the long-term absence of real regional understanding to inform
defense policymakers in the Pentagon explains a great deal about the
neoconservative approach on the Middle East and the disastrous mistakes
made in Washington and in Iraq in the past two years.
I soon saw the
modus operandi of "instant policy" unhampered by debate or
experience with the early Bush administration replacement of the
civilian head of the Israel, Lebanon and Syria desk office with a young
political appointee from the Washington Institute, David Schenker. Word
was that the former experienced civilian desk officer tended to be
evenhanded toward the policies of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon of Israel,
but there were complaints and he was gone. I met David and chatted with
him frequently. He was a smart, serious, hardworking guy, and the proud
author of a book on the chances for Palestinian democracy. Country desk
officers were rarely political appointees. In my years at the Pentagon,
this was the only "political" I knew doing that type of
high-stress and low-recognition duty. So eager was the office to have
Schenker at the Israel desk, he served for many months as a defense
contractor of sorts and only received his "Schedule C"
political appointee status months after I arrived.
I learned that
there was indeed a preferred ideology for NESA. My first day in the
office, a GS-15 career civil servant rather unhappily advised me that if
I wanted to be successful here, I'd better remember not to say anything
positive about the Palestinians. This belied official U.S. policy of
serving as an honest broker for resolution of Israeli and Palestinian
security concerns. At that time, there was a great deal of talk about
Bush's possible support for a Palestinian state. That the Pentagon could
have implemented and, worse, was implementing its own foreign policy had
not yet occurred to me.
Throughout the
summer, the NESA spaces in one long office on the fourth floor, between
the 7th and 8th corridors of D Ring, became more and more crowded. With
war talk and planning about Iraq, all kinds of new people were brought
in. A politically savvy civilian-clothes-wearing lieutenant colonel
named Bill Bruner served as the Iraq desk officer, and he had apparently
joined NESA about the time Bill Luti did. I discovered that Bruner, like
Luti, had served as a military aide to Speaker Gingrich. Gingrich
himself was now conveniently an active member of Bush's Defense Policy
Board, which had space immediately below ours on the third floor.
I asked why
Bruner wore civilian attire, and was told by others, "He's
Chalabi's handler." Chalabi, of course, was Ahmad Chalabi, the
president of the Iraqi National Congress, who was the favored exile of
the neoconservatives and the source of much of their
"intelligence." Bruner himself said he had to attend a lot of
meetings downtown in hotels and that explained his suits. Soon, in July,
he was joined by another Air Force pilot, a colonel with no discernible
political connections, Kevin Jones. I thought of it as a
military-civilian partnership, although both were commissioned officers.
Among the other
people arriving over the summer of 2002 was Michael Makovsky, a recent
MIT graduate who had written his dissertation on Winston Churchill and
was going to work on "Iraqi oil issues." He was David
Makovsky's younger brother. David was at the time a senior fellow at the
Washington Institute and had formerly been an editor of the Jerusalem
Post, a pro-Likud newspaper. Mike was quiet and seemed a bit
uncomfortable sharing space with us. He soon disappeared into some other
part of the operation and I rarely saw him after that.
In late summer,
new space was found upstairs on the fifth floor, and the "expanded
Iraq desk," now dubbed the "Office of Special Plans,"
began moving there. And OSP kept expanding.
Another person I
observed to appear suddenly was Michael Rubin, another Washington
Institute fellow working on Iraq policy. He and Chris Straub, a retired
Army officer who had been a Republican staffer for the Senate
Intelligence Committee, were eventually assigned to OSP.
John Trigilio, a
Defense Intelligence Agency analyst, was assigned to handle Iraq
intelligence for Luti. Trigilio had been on a one-year
career-enhancement tour with the office of the secretary of defense that
was to end in August 2002. DIA had offered him routine intelligence
positions upon his return from his OSD sabbatical, but none was as
interesting as working in August 2002 for Luti. John asked Luti for help
in gaining an extension for another year, effectively removing him from
the DIA bureaucracy and its professional constraints.
Trigilio and I
had hallway debates, as friends. The one I remember most clearly was
shortly after President Bush gave his famous "mushroom cloud"
speech in Cincinnati in October 2002, asserting that Saddam had weapons
of mass destruction as well as ties to "international
terrorists," and was working feverishly to develop nuclear weapons
with "nuclear holy warriors." I asked John who was feeding the
president all the bull about Saddam and the threat he posed us in terms
of WMD delivery and his links to terrorists, as none of this was in
secret intelligence I had seen in the past years. John insisted that it
wasn't an exaggeration, but when pressed to say which actual
intelligence reports made these claims, he would only say, "Karen,
we have sources that you don't have access to." It was widely felt
by those of us in the office not in the neoconservatives' inner circle
that these "sources" related to the chummy relationship that
Ahmad Chalabi had with both the Office of Special Plans and the office
of the vice president.
The newly named
director of the OSP, Abram Shulsky, was one of the most senior people
sharing our space that summer. Abe, a kindly and gentle man, who would
say hello to me in the hallways, seemed to be someone I, as a political
science grad student, would have loved to sit with over coffee and
discuss the world's problems. I had a clear sense that Abe ranked high
in the organization, although ostensibly he was under Luti. Luti was
known at times to treat his staff, even senior staff, with disrespect,
contempt and derision. He also didn't take kindly to staff officers who
had an opinion or viewpoint that was off the neoconservative
reservation. But with Shulsky, who didn't speak much at the staff
meetings, he was always respectful and deferential. It seemed like
Shulsky's real boss was somebody like Douglas Feith or higher.
Doug Feith,
undersecretary of defense for policy, was a case study in how not to run
a large organization. In late 2001, he held the first all-hands policy
meeting at which he discussed for over 15 minutes how many bullets and
sub-bullets should be in papers for Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. A year
later, in August of 2002, he held another all-hands meeting in the
auditorium where he embarrassed everyone with an emotional performance
about what it was like to serve Rumsfeld. He blithely informed us that
for months he didn't realize Rumsfeld had a daily stand-up meeting with
his four undersecretaries. He shared with us the fact that, after he
started to attend these meetings, he knew better what Rumsfeld wanted of
him. Most military staffers and professional civilians hearing this were
incredulous, as was I, to hear of such organizational ignorance lasting
so long and shared so openly. Feith's inattention to most policy detail,
except that relating to Israel and Iraq, earned him a reputation most
foul throughout Policy, with rampant stories of routine signatures that
took months to achieve and lost documents. His poor reputation as a
manager was not helped by his arrogance. One thing I kept hearing from
those defending Feith was that he was "just brilliant." It was
curiously like the brainwashed refrain in "The Manchurian
Candidate" about the programmed sleeper agent Raymond Shaw, as the
"kindest, warmest, bravest, most wonderful human being I've ever
known."
I spent time that
summer exploring the neoconservative worldview and trying to grasp what
was happening inside the Pentagon. I wondered what could explain this
rush to war and disregard for real intelligence. Neoconservatives are
fairly easy to study, mainly because they are few in number, and they
show up at all the same parties. Examining them as individuals, it
became clear that almost all have worked together, in and out of
government, on national security issues for several decades. The Project
for the New American Century and its now
famous 1998 manifesto to President Clinton on Iraq is a recent
example. But this statement was preceded by one written for Benyamin
Netanyahu's Likud Party campaign in Israel in 1996 by neoconservatives
Richard Perle, David Wurmser and Douglas Feith titled "A Clean
Break: Strategy for Securing the Realm."
David Wurmser is
the least known of that trio and an interesting example of the tangled
neoconservative web. In 2001, the research fellow at the American
Enterprise Institute was assigned to the Pentagon, then moved to the
Department of State to work as deputy for the hard-line conservative
undersecretary John Bolton, then to the National Security Council, and
now is lodged in the office of the vice president. His wife, the
prolific Meyrav Wurmser, executive director of the Middle East Media
Research Institute, is also a neoconservative team player.
Before the Iraq
invasion, many of these same players labored together for literally
decades to push a defense strategy that favored military intervention
and confrontation with enemies, secret and unconstitutional if need be.
Some former officials, such as Richard Perle (an assistant secretary of
defense under Reagan) and James Woolsey (CIA director under Clinton),
were granted a new lease on life, a renewed gravitas, with positions on
President Bush's Defense Policy Board. Others, like Elliott Abrams and
Paul Wolfowitz, had apparently overcome previous negative associations
from an Iran-Contra conviction for lying to the Congress and for utterly
miscalculating the strength of the Soviet Union in a politically driven
report to the CIA.
Neoconservatives
march as one phalanx in parallel opposition to those they hate. In the
early winter of 2002, a co-worker U.S. Navy captain and I were
discussing the service being rendered by Colin Powell at the time, and
we were told by the neoconservative political appointee David Schenker
that "the best service Powell could offer would be to quit right
now." I was present at a staff meeting when Bill Luti called Marine
Gen. and former Chief of Central Command Anthony Zinni a
"traitor," because Zinni had publicly expressed reservations
about the rush to war.
After August
2002, the Office of Special Plans established its own rhythm and cadence
separate from the non-politically minded professionals covering the rest
of the region. While often accused of creating intelligence, I saw only
two apparent products of this office: war planning guidance for Rumsfeld,
presumably impacting Central Command, and talking points on Iraq, WMD
and terrorism. These internal talking points seemed to be a mélange
crafted from obvious past observation and intelligence bits and pieces
of dubious origin. They were propagandistic in style, and all desk
officers were ordered to use them verbatim in the preparation of any
material prepared for higher-ups and people outside the Pentagon. The
talking points included statements about Saddam Hussein's proclivity for
using chemical weapons against his own citizens and neighbors, his
existing relations with terrorists based on a member of al-Qaida
reportedly receiving medical care in Baghdad, his widely publicized aid
to the Palestinians, and general indications of an aggressive viability
in Saddam Hussein's nuclear weapons program and his ongoing efforts to
use them against his neighbors or give them to al-Qaida style groups.
The talking points said he was threatening his neighbors and was a
serious threat to the U.S., too.
I suspected, from
reading Charles Krauthammer, a neoconservative columnist for the
Washington Post, and the Weekly Standard, and hearing a Cheney speech or
two, that these talking points left the building on occasion. Both OSP
functions duplicated other parts of the Pentagon. The facts we should
have used to base our papers on were already being produced by the
intelligence agencies, and the war planning was already done by the
combatant command staff with some help from the Joint Staff. Instead of
developing defense policy alternatives and advice, OSP was used to
manufacture propaganda for internal and external use, and pseudo war
planning.
As a result of my
duties as the North Africa desk officer, I became acquainted with the
Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) support staff for NESA. Every policy
regional director was served by a senior executive intelligence
professional from DIA, along with a professional intelligence staff.
This staff channeled DIA products, accepted tasks for DIA, and in the
past had been seen as a valued member of the regional teams. However, as
the war approached, this type of relationship with the Defense
Intelligence Agency crumbled.
Even the most
casual observer could note the tension and even animosity between
"Wild Bill" Luti (as we came to refer to our boss) and Bruce
Hardcastle, our defense intelligence officer (DIO). Certainly, there
were stylistic and personality differences. Hardcastle, like most senior
intelligence officers I knew, was serious, reserved, deliberate, and
went to great lengths to achieve precision and accuracy in his speech
and writing. Luti was the kind of guy who, in staff meetings and in
conversations, would jump from grand theory to administrative minutiae
with nary a blink or a fleeting shadow of self-awareness.
I discovered that
Luti and possibly others within OSP were dissatisfied with Hardcastle's
briefings, in particular with the aspects relating to WMD and terrorism.
I was not clear exactly what those concerns were, but I came to
understand that the DIA briefing did not match what OSP was claiming
about Iraq's WMD capabilities and terrorist activities. I learned that
shortly before I arrived there had been an incident in NESA where
Hardcastle's presence and briefing at a bilateral meeting had been nixed
abruptly by Luti. The story circulating among the desk officers was
"a last-minute cancellation" of the DIO presentation.
Hardcastle's intelligence briefing was replaced with one prepared by
another Policy office that worked nonproliferation issues. While this
alternative briefing relied on intelligence produced by DIO and
elsewhere, it was not a product of the DIA or CIA community, but instead
was an OSD Policy "branded" product -- and so were its
conclusions. The message sent by Policy appointees and well understood
by staff officers and the defense intelligence community was that senior
appointed civilians were willing to exclude or marginalize intelligence
products that did not fit the agenda.
Staff officers
would always request OSP's most current Iraq, WMD and terrorism talking
points. On occasion, these weren't available in an approved form and
awaited Shulsky's approval. The talking points were a series of bulleted
statements, written persuasively and in a convincing way, and
superficially they seemed reasonable and rational. Saddam Hussein had
gassed his neighbors, abused his people, and was continuing in that
mode, becoming an imminently dangerous threat to his neighbors and to us
-- except that none of his neighbors or Israel felt this was the case.
Saddam Hussein had harbored al-Qaida operatives and offered and probably
provided them with training facilities -- without mentioning that the
suspected facilities were in the U.S./Kurdish-controlled part of Iraq.
Saddam Hussein was pursuing and had WMD of the type that could be used
by him, in conjunction with al-Qaida and other terrorists, to attack and
damage American interests, Americans and America -- except the
intelligence didn't really say that. Saddam Hussein had not been
seriously weakened by war and sanctions and weekly bombings over the
past 12 years, and in fact was plotting to hurt America and support
anti-American activities, in part through his carrying on with
terrorists -- although here the intelligence said the opposite. His
support for the Palestinians and Arafat proved his terrorist
connections, and basically, the time to act was now. This was the gist
of the talking points, and it remained on message throughout the time I
watched the points evolve.
But evolve they
did, and the subtle changes I saw from September to late January
revealed what the Office of Special Plans was contributing to national
security. Two key types of modifications were directed or approved by
Shulsky and his team of politicos. First was the deletion of entire
references or bullets. The one I remember most specifically is when they
dropped the bullet that said one of Saddam's intelligence operatives had
met with Mohammad Atta in Prague, supposedly salient proof that Saddam
was in part responsible for the 9/11 attack. That claim had lasted
through a number of revisions, but after the media reported the claim as
unsubstantiated by U.S. intelligence, denied by the Czech government,
and that Atta's location had been confirmed by the FBI to be elsewhere,
that particular bullet was dropped entirely from our "advice on
things to say" to senior Pentagon officials when they met with
guests or outsiders.
The other change
made to the talking points was along the line of fine-tuning and
generalizing. Much of what was there was already so general as to be
less than accurate.
Some bullets were
softened, particularly statements of Saddam's readiness and capability
in the chemical, biological or nuclear arena. Others were altered over
time to match more exactly something Bush and Cheney said in recent
speeches. One item I never saw in our talking points was a reference to
Saddam's purported attempt to buy yellowcake uranium in Niger. The OSP
list of crime and evil had included Saddam's attempts to seek
fissionable materials or uranium in Africa. This point was written
mostly in the present tense and conveniently left off the dates of the
last known attempt, sometime in the late 1980s. I was surprised to hear
the president's mention of the yellowcake in Niger in his 2002 State of
the Union address because that indeed was new and in theory might have
represented new intelligence, something that seemed remarkably absent in
any of the products provided us by the OSP (although not for lack of
trying). After hearing of it, I checked with my old office of
Sub-Saharan African Affairs -- and it was news to them, too. It also
turned out to be false.
It is interesting
today that the "defense" for those who lied or prevaricated
about Iraq is to point the finger at the intelligence. But the National
Intelligence Estimate, published in September 2002, as remarked
upon recently by former CIA Middle East chief Ray McGovern, was an
afterthought. It was provoked only after Sens. Bob Graham and Dick
Durban noted in August 2002, as Congress was being asked to support a
resolution for preemptive war, that no NIE elaborating real threats to
the United States had been provided. In fact, it had not been written,
but a suitable NIE was dutifully prepared and submitted the very next
month. Naturally, this document largely supported most of the outrageous
statements already made publicly by Bush, Cheney, Rice and Rumsfeld
about the threat Iraq posed to the United States. All the caveats,
reservations and dissents made by intelligence were relegated to
footnotes and kept from the public. Funny how that worked.
Starting in the
fall of 2002 I found a way to vent my frustrations with the
neoconservative hijacking of our defense policy. The safe outlet was
provided by retired Col.
David Hackworth, who agreed to publish my short stories anonymously
on his Web site Soldiers for the Truth, under the moniker of "Deep
Throat: Insider Notes From the Pentagon." The "deep
throat" part was his idea, but I was happy to have a sense that
there were folks out there, mostly military, who would be interested in
the secretary of defense-sponsored insanity I was witnessing on almost a
daily basis. When I was particularly upset, like when I heard Zinni
called a "traitor," I wrote about it in articles like this
one.
In November, my
Insider articles discussed the artificial
worlds created by the Pentagon and the stupid naiveté
of neocon assumptions about what would happen when we invaded Iraq.
I discussed the price
of public service, distinguishing between public servants who told
the truth and then saw their careers flame out and those "public
servants" who did not tell the truth and saw their careers ignite.
My December articles became more depressing, discussing the history
of the 100 Years' War and "combat
lobotomies." There was a painful one titled "Minority
Reports" about the necessity but unlikelihood of a Philip Dick
sci-fi style "minority report" on
Feith-Wolfowitz-Rumsfeld-Cheney's insanely grandiose vision of some
future Middle East, with peace, love and democracy brought on through
preemptive war and military occupation.
I shared some of
my concerns with a civilian who had been remotely acquainted with the
Luti-Feith-Perle political clan in his previous work for one of the
senior Pentagon witnesses during the Iran-Contra hearings. He told me
these guys were engaged in something worse than Iran-Contra. I was
curious but he wouldn't tell me anything more. I figured he knew what he
was talking about. I thought of him when I read much later about the
2002 and 2003 meetings between Michael Ledeen, Reuel Marc Gerecht and
Iranian arms dealer Manucher Ghorbanifar -- all Iran-Contra figures.
In December 2002,
I requested an acceleration of my retirement to the following July. By
now, the military was anxiously waiting under the bed for the other shoe
to drop amid concerns over troop availability, readiness for an
ill-defined mission, and lack of day-after clarity. The neocons were
anxiously struggling to get that damn shoe off. That other shoe fell
with a thump, as did the regard many of us had held for Colin Powell, on
Feb. 5 as the secretary of state capitulated to the neoconservative line
in his speech at the United Nations -- a speech not only filled with
falsehoods pushed by the neoconservatives but also containing many
statements already debunked by intelligence.
War is generally
crafted and pursued for political reasons, but the reasons given to the
Congress and to the American people for this one were inaccurate and so
misleading as to be false. Moreover, they were false by design.
Certainly, the neoconservatives never bothered to sell the rest of the
country on the real reasons for occupation of Iraq -- more bases from
which to flex U.S. muscle with Syria and Iran, and better positioning
for the inevitable fall of the regional ruling sheikdoms. Maintaining
OPEC on a dollar track and not a euro and fulfilling a half-baked
imperial vision also played a role. These more accurate reasons for
invading and occupying could have been argued on their merits -- an
angry and aggressive U.S. population might indeed have supported the war
and occupation for those reasons. But Americans didn't get the chance
for an honest debate.
President Bush
has now appointed a commission to look at American intelligence
capabilities and will report after the election. It will "examine
intelligence on weapons of mass destruction and related 21st century
threats ... [and] compare what the Iraq Survey Group learns with the
information we had prior..." The commission, aside from being
modeled on failed rubber stamp commissions of the past and consisting
entirely of those selected by the executive branch, specifically
excludes an examination of the role of the Office of Special Plans and
other executive advisory bodies. If the president or vice president were
seriously interested in "getting the truth," they might
consider asking for evidence on how intelligence was politicized,
misused and manipulated, and whether information from the intelligence
community was distorted in order to sway Congress and public opinion in
a narrowly conceived neoconservative push for war. Bush says he wants
the truth, but it is clear he is no more interested in it today than he
was two years ago.
Proving that the
truth is indeed the first casualty in war, neoconservative member of the
Defense Policy Board Richard Perle called this February for "heads
to roll." Perle, agenda setter par excellence, named George Tenet
and Defense Intelligence Agency head Vice Adm. Lowell Jacoby as guilty
of failing to properly inform the president on Iraq and WMD. No doubt,
the intelligence community, susceptible to politicization and outdated
paradigms, needs reform. The swiftness of the neoconservative casting of
blame on the intelligence community and away from themselves should have
been fully expected. Perhaps Perle and others sense the grave and
growing danger of political storms unleashed by the exposure of
neoconservative lies. Meanwhile, Ahmad Chalabi, extravagantly funded by
the neocons in the Pentagon to the tune of millions to provide the
disinformation, has boasted with remarkable frankness, "We are
heroes in error," and, "What was said before is not
important."
Now we are told
by our president and neoconservative mouthpieces that our sons and
daughters, husbands and wives are in Iraq fighting for freedom, for
liberty, for justice and American values. This cost is not borne by the
children of Wolfowitz, Perle, Rumsfeld and Cheney. Bush's daughters do
not pay this price. We are told that intelligence has failed America,
and that President Bush is determined to get to the bottom of it. Yet
not a single neoconservative appointee has lost his job, and no high
official of principle in the administration has formally resigned
because of this ill-planned and ill-conceived war and poorly implemented
occupation of Iraq.
Will Americans
hold U.S. policymakers accountable? Will we return to our roots as a
republic, constrained and deliberate, respectful of others? My
experience in the Pentagon leading up to the invasion and occupation of
Iraq tells me, as Ben Franklin warned, we may have already failed. But
if Americans at home are willing to fight -- tenaciously and
courageously -- to preserve our republic, we might be able to keep it.
About the
writer
Karen Kwiatkowski now lives in western Virginia on a small farm with her
family, teaches an American foreign policy class at James Madison
University, and writes regularly for militaryweek.com
on security and defense issues.
Copyright 2004 Salon.com. Reprinted for Fair Use educational purposes
only.