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Cheney Got it Right on Syrian Nukes
Townhall.com ^ | September 22, 2011 | Cliff May

Posted on 09/23/2011 7:35:03 AM PDT by Kaslin

Journalism, they say, is a rough draft of history. Sometimes, very rough.

I have in mind a recent piece by Bob Woodward, among America’s most celebrated journalists, about the debate that took place within the Bush White House over Syria’s al-Kibar nuclear reactor. CIA Director Michael Hayden told the president his agency had “only low confidence” that the reactor was part of a nuclear weapons program. Nevertheless, Vice President Dick Cheney favored a military strike, as he makes clear in his newly released memoir.

According to Woodward, this demonstrates Cheney’s failure to learn the lesson of Iraq where flawed intelligence about Saddam Hussein’s possession of stockpiles of Weapons of Mass Destruction was a major factor in President Bush’s decision to topple the dictator.

Woodward writes: “Cheney said he wanted the United States to commit an act of war to send a message, demonstrate seriousness and enhance credibility — a frightening prospect given the doubts. Two participants in the key National Security Council meeting in June 2007 said that after Cheney, the ‘lone voice,’ made his arguments, Bush rolled his eyes.”

Kudos to Washington Post editors: A few days later, they ran an op-ed by four former Bush administration officials: Elliott Abrams, Eliot Cohen, Eric Edelman and John Hannah (Hannah is currently a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies) who participated in the deliberations over the Syrian reactor. They were blunt. Woodward’s account, they said, is a “revisionist and misleading history.” And Woodward “misunderstands the reality of al-Kibar.”

Among the facts Woodward neglects to mention in his piece: Al-Kibar did, in fact, turn out to be a nuclear weapons facility. Woodward may have seen that as not relevant to his point: that unleashing military power in the absence of rock-solid intelligence is risky.

But in the real world rock-solid intelligence is rare. What’s more, intelligence requires analysis. Those advising Bush, the former officials recall, knew that the reactor was built “in the middle of the desert and — according to the CIA — ‘was not configured to produce electricity.’ For what likely purpose was it built, then, if not to produce fissile material for nuclear weapons?”

They knew, too, that Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad was building it secretly even though, as a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty, he could have openly and legitimately built a civilian nuclear power plant – so long as he did so under the auspices of the International Atomic Energy Agency. Why would he choose instead to violate his international treaty obligations and obtain secret assistance from, of all places, North Korea?

The White House advisors did not argue over these questions. No one was so naïve as to believe that al-Kibar was being built to power homes, farms and baby formula factories. Rather, the dispute among them was over “what to do about the most brazen nuclear proliferation case in history. … Here was the world’s worst proliferator providing nuclear assistance to one of the world’s worst state sponsors of terrorism — which also happened to be facilitating attacks on American troops in Iraq. It is hard to imagine a more egregious challenge to the Bush Doctrine and America’s war against terrorism.”

Cheney favored swift and decisive military action. Others wanted to continue to pursue a diplomatic solution. “Whatever our individual views, Woodward is dead wrong to present the vice president’s arguments as unreasonable,” the four former officials write. “His advice was seriously considered at the time, and his claims look even more prescient in hindsight.”

In the end, after Bush decided not act and diplomacy went nowhere, the Israelis took it upon themselves to destroy the reactor. The former advisors write: “Syria then spent months trying to sanitize the site and stonewall the IAEA — confirmation of its non-peaceful intentions. The Israeli attack in September 2007 was flawless, Syria and North Korea did not lash out, and a dire proliferation threat was eliminated for good. America and the world are safer for it.”

History will record that the CIA failed in this mission. Such failures have happened before and will happen again. That’s to be expected. What is not: After Bush’s decision not to take out the nuclear reactor, Woodward writes, the CIA officers responsible for providing the “low confidence” assessment “were pleased they had succeeded in avoiding the overreaching so evident in the Iraq WMD case. So they issued a very limited-circulation memorial coin. One side showed a map of Syria with a star at the site of the former reactor. On the other side the coin said, ‘No core/No war.’”

In other words, they considered it a victory that they had prevented Bush from acting That is shameful. The CIA’s job is to provide the president with the intelligence he needs to make policy. The CIA’s job is not to substitute its policy preferences for those of the commander in chief – and then celebrate such power-grabs.

Hayden has attempted to give this incident a benign spin, saying “the coin was commissioned to reflect CIA's role in fulfilling the President's twin policy goals” – destroying the reactor (including its nuclear core) without resorting to military force. Nice try but really not plausible: The CIA had no role in destroying the reactor. If the Israelis hadn’t done the job -- and the evidence suggests they had neither encouragement nor approval from the White House -- a nuclear “core” would be in place at al-Kibar today.

Woodward is correct that there is a lesson to be learned from all this. But it is the intelligence community and journalists such as Woodward who need to learn it. And it’s not the lesson of Iraq and the WMDs. It’s the lesson of the 2007 National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) that wrongly assessed that Iran had ended work its nuclear weapons program in 2003. That tied Bush’s hands in regard an issue of paramount strategic importance.

Was usurping the president’s authority the goal of those who wrote that NIE? If that’s the true story, it’s uncomfortable for people like Woodward who would rather be criticizing Cheney and uncomfortable for people like me who would rather not be criticizing the intelligence community.  But it’s the job of journalists to write first drafts of history that are as accurate as possible – and then let the historians take it from there.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: cheney; syria

1 posted on 09/23/2011 7:35:06 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

This is good, but why was nothing done about Iranian nukes?


2 posted on 09/23/2011 8:01:41 AM PDT by The Sons of Liberty (Psalm 109:8 Let his days be few and let another take his office. - Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin)
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To: Kaslin

Note to Woodward:

The WMD’s WERE in Iraq & Saddam had already shown he could & would use them. See the total killing done in whole villages in northern Iraq. Every resident wiped out with chemical weapons.

He had a close advisor called Dr Germ!!!

The USA gave a 6 month warning to Saddam that we were coming. A mistake, I believe.

At the last week of that warning, CONVOYS of trucks went into Syria from Iraq. 24 hours a day—convoys.

I am convinced that those convoys carried the WMD”s that could be moved. I believe that others were hidden.

Don’t you remember the MIG’s that were found BURIED in the Iraq desert, Woodward?? I do. Are they not consideered a weapon of mass destruction??? I think they are.

Shame on you for your Monday Morning Quarterbacking.


3 posted on 09/23/2011 8:03:16 AM PDT by ridesthemiles
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To: ridesthemiles
At the last week of that warning, CONVOYS of trucks went into Syria from Iraq. 24 hours a day—convoys.

Not only that, there were stripped out passenger jets that were ferrying stuff out of Baghdad to Syria in those last days. I know this from an engineer friend who was working for the Baghdad Airport at the time.
4 posted on 09/23/2011 8:05:37 AM PDT by aruanan
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To: aruanan; ridesthemiles

We should have obliterated those convoys regardless of whether Russians were driving those trucks or not and we should have given Syria a 24 hour warning to close its border or turn Damascus into bouncing rubble.


5 posted on 09/23/2011 8:17:18 AM PDT by TigersEye (Life is about choices. Your choices. Make good ones.)
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To: Kaslin
...the lesson of Iraq where flawed intelligence about Saddam Hussein’s possession of stockpiles of Weapons of Mass Destruction was a major factor in President Bush’s decision to topple the dictator.

When did this piece of revisionist history become acceptable? Outside of DU and the NYT of course. I can't believe that Townhall of all places subscribes to this blatant lie. If this keeps happening and goes unchallenged, even by our own side, how can we possibly expect the rest of short-attention-span America to get it right?

6 posted on 09/23/2011 8:20:33 AM PDT by SunTzuWu
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To: ridesthemiles

Combat aircraft aren’t usually considered WMD.


7 posted on 09/23/2011 8:21:05 AM PDT by RitchieAprile
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To: The Sons of Liberty; TigerLikesRooster; AmericanInTokyo; wardaddy; x; rustbucket; stevie_d_64; ...
This is good, but why was nothing done about Iranian nukes?

Because liberals had captured the CIA and, with full intentions of kneecapping US policy, wrote an NIE on Iran and gave a bogus assessment of the Syrian project that kept Bush from striking both.

The little liberul-simple Code-Pinko slogan on that victory bauble, "NO CORE / NO WAR" is your only necessary guide. In the transports of their dark win over the President and Dick Cheney, the CIA peacenik-Pinkos gave themselves away.

This episode also throws new light on the WMD wrangle. Did CIA Code-Pinkos cover up a Russo-Baathist conspiracy to conceal the WMD's and hamstring Bush politically?

Ping for possible interest.

8 posted on 09/23/2011 8:26:57 AM PDT by lentulusgracchus (Concealed carry is a pro-life position.)
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To: SunTzuWu

Townhall.com didn’t write the column


9 posted on 09/23/2011 8:32:09 AM PDT by Kaslin (Acronym for OBAMA: One Big Ass Mistake America)
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To: Kaslin

bttt


10 posted on 09/23/2011 8:33:46 AM PDT by Liberty Valance (Keep a simple manner for a happy life :o)
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To: Kaslin

bttt


11 posted on 09/23/2011 8:36:23 AM PDT by Liberty Valance (Keep a simple manner for a happy life :o)
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To: Kaslin
Townhall.com didn’t write the column

The New York Times doesn't "write" columns either but that doesn't stop us from holding them accountable for the drivel that they print.

12 posted on 09/23/2011 9:27:37 AM PDT by SunTzuWu
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To: Kaslin

Syria got a bolus of WMD’s from Iraq just before we jumped off back in 2003...

I recall a story about three Iraqi Chemical Parcel Tankers leaving the port of Basra “hull down” (loaded) with “something”...This was back in December of 2002...

I believe they were tracked heading around the horn to the Med and possibly Syria...

Then the attention went away from that obvious transfer, and the big war jumped off...No one seems to remember this stuff...

It is hard to believe anything these days because of all the misinformation and deliberate efforts to keep a lot of the truth away from the public...

Not that the information would hurt us, it is the feckless nature of politics to allow things like this to go un-addressed...


13 posted on 09/23/2011 9:35:00 AM PDT by stevie_d_64 (I'm jus' sayin')
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To: ridesthemiles
Thanks for recapping the known facts. I heard also that the Euphrates River was found to be polluted with toxins, presumably dumped at the last minute to avoid discovery. The Baathists couldn't remove quite everything to Syria in time.

Most Americans are blissfully unaware of these things, but so many millions believe the leftist lie about secret torture rooms run by the CIA in foreign countires such as Germany. The Commie goal of working steadily to take control of education and the media has paid off handsomely for them.

14 posted on 09/23/2011 6:41:30 PM PDT by ARepublicanForAllReasons (Crony Capitalism & Unionboot-licking Marxist politicians are our undoing.)
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