The following letter had been sent to the Senate Intelligence Committee. These are the signatories: Senators Johnson, Corzine, Reed, Lautenberg, Boxer, Kennedy, Harkin, Bingaman, and Durbin.
The Honorable Pat Roberts, Chairman
The Honorable John D. Rockefeller, IV, Vice Chairman
United States Senate
Select Committee on Intelligence
SH-211
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Senator Roberts and Senator Rockefeller:
We write concerning your committee’s vital examination of pre-war Iraq intelligence failures. In particular, we urge you to accelerate to completion the work of the so-called “Phase II” effort to assess how policy makers used the intelligence they received.
Last year your committee completed the first phase of a two-phased effort to review the pre-war intelligence on Iraq. Phase I-begun in the summer of 2003 and completed in the summer of 2004-examined the performance of the American intelligence community in the collection and analysis of intelligence prior to the war, including an examination of the quantity and quality of U.S. intelligence on Iraqi weapons of mass destruction and the intelligence on ties between Saddam Hussein’s regime and terrorist groups.. At the conclusion of Phase I, your committee issued an unclassified report that made an important contribution to the American public’s understanding of the issues involved.
In February 2004-well over a year ago-the committee agreed to expand the scope of inquiry to include a second phase which would examine the use of intelligence by policy makers, the comparison of pre-war assessments and post-war findings, the activities of the Policy Counterterrorism Evaluation Group (PCTEG) and the Office of Special Plans in the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, and the use of information provided by the Iraqi National Congress.
The committee’s efforts have taken on renewed urgency given recent revelations in the United Kingdom regarding the apparent minutes of a July 23, 2002, meeting between Prime Minister Tony Blair and his senior national security advisors. These minutes-known as the “Downing Street Memo”-raise troubling questions about the use of intelligence by American policy makers-questions that your committee is uniquely situated to address.
The memo indicates that in the summer of 2002, at a time the White House was promising Congress and the American people that war would be their last resort, that they believed military action against Iraq was “inevitable.”
The minutes reveal that President “Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.”
The American people took the warnings that the administration sounded seriously-warnings that were echoed at the United Nations and here in Congress as we voted to give the president the authority to go to war. For the sake of our democracy and our future national security, the public must know whether such warnings were driven by facts and responsible intelligence, or by political calculation.
These issues need to be addressed with urgency. This remains a dangerous world, with American forces engaged in Iraq and Afghanistan, and other challenges looming in Iran and North Korea. In this environment, the American public should have the highest confidence that policy makers are using intelligence objectively-never manipulating it to justify war, but always to protect the United States. The contents of the Downing Street Memo undermine this faith and only rigorous Congressional oversight can determine the truth.
We urge the committee to complete the second phase of its investigation with the maximum speed and transparency possible, producing, as it did at the end of Phase I, a comprehensive, unclassified report from which the American people can benefit directly.
The heat is on, the media is turning a critical eye, the people are getting angry and the representatives are responding.
YES YES YES !!
The previous report is available on the Committee’s main page. Nice letter. Hope it gets read.
What a relief that there is finally a viable strategy for taking on the “failures of the intelligence community” bullshit cover-up for the Bush adminstration’s high crimes and misdemeanors! It’s especially ironic to hear them blame the “failures” of the intelligence community when this so-called “community” was actually incredibly successful at delivering lies and distortions to make the case for an unnecessary and illegal war.
(P.S. Love the scroll bar. Wow!)
<div style="height: XXXpx; width: XXXpx; overflow: auto; border: 1px solid #666;background-color: #XXX; padding: 8px;">TEXT GOES HERE</div>
Do you have to include values for the height and width px’s?
I used for my immigration diary:
height: 275px;
width: 400px;
overflow: auto;
border: 1px solid #666;
background-color: #XXX; padding: 8px;”>
And I haven’t popped into that diary yet even though I asked for the backgrounder.
I’m sorry.
</end_Canadian_apology>
No worries!
</Mexican-American apology acceptance>
Thanks! Tried it, but doesn’t work in the preview.
Yes, very cool.
Oh, and the content is good, too.
I don’t have much faith in Roberts going along with this, especially after seeing how obstructionist he was about the Bolton/NSA intercepts issue. What are the odds the committee will take this on?
Well then, maybe we need to do one of those librul thangs and start a petition to send to the committee.
Roberts is one of my two Senators, probably the least offensive, yet you might as well talk to a wall, as to talk to him about the republicans making GW take responsibility for anything other than their false economic forcasts. My other Senator, Sam the Brownshirt Brownback is a Religious Fascist in the ilk of Sen Rick the fecal matter Santorum, whom both make me want to regurgitate my lunch when ever they open their mouths.
Roberts is a republican’s republican, which means, come hell or high water he will walk the party line, even when proven they are wrong.
Sorry about that folks, but that is how the good people of Kansas have voted and I am stuck with them unti the revolution, when people actually see that what they are doing to them is going to destroy their own lives.
They need more than a letter.
They need to march to Roberts’ office with some news cameras in tow to demand “What’s your answer Pat? Don’t wait for Karl’s hand up your ass, just tell us now.”
The Dems are stepping up and putting on the heat. I agree with marching it to the office themselves and making sure the cameras are rolling. Maybe if they said the word Nazi or facist or therapy or something?
my senator. I think I would rather have him remain as a senator than become governor of New Jersey. Who can replace him that would be half as good?
dropping these guys a line to tell them you approve.
You can find links to a contact form or email address for all of the senators here:
http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm
Even if it is just a sentence, it is really important now for those who take even a modest stand to know that they are not alone. It’s a small thing, but it could mean a lot, especially if lots of people do it.
I’m not surprised Johnson’s signing the letter. His son is currently serving in Iraq, so these events affect him personally.
As Salon.com (hardly a radical e-rag) points out, there are forty-four Senate Democrats, Kerry’s been circulating a draft of this letter for two weeks, and he only got one in five to sign on.
Meanwhile Biden’s essentially hoping that pimpin’ for Bush’s Iraq policy will win him the White House.
What a pathetic excuse for an opposition party they are.