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"The
committee will use whatever tools of oversight it deems necessary to complete its work," said a
statement co-signed by Rockefeller |
WASHINGTON,
June 21 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee agreed late
Friday, June 20, to broaden the scope of its probe into Iraq’s alleged weapons of mass destruction
and whether intelligence had been manipulated to justify war, as President George Bush admitted U.S.
forces are still facing "continuing risk of danger" in Iraq.
A
brief joint statement issued by Republican chairman of the committee Senator Pat Roberts and its
ranking Democrat Senator Jay Rockefeller, made clear the probe would go far beyond a mere review of
documents from the CIA and other U.S. intelligence agencies.
According
to the statement, the committee will examine "the quantity and quality" of
U.S.
intelligence on
Iraq
’s WMDs and "the objectivity, reasonableness, independence, and accuracy of the judgments
reached by the intelligence community," Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
The
lawmakers will also try to find out whether those conclusions "were properly disseminated to
policy makers in the executive branch and Congress" and "whether any influence was brought
to bear on anyone to shape their analysis to support policy objectives," it added.
Thanks
to Roberts, the agreement fell far short of a full-fledged congressional investigation, which
traditionally involves a special panel armed with subpoena power and a staff of professional
investigators, widely-publicized open hearings and a voluminous report at the end of the process
that could prove to
be damaging to Republicans in the 2004 presidential elections.
Democratic
Senator Dianne Feinstein said she still favored a full probe because lawmakers needed to know if
there was an intelligence failure in the lead-up to the war.
"A
substantial number of senators decided to vote to authorize use of force, including myself, because
of the arguments that were put forward by the administration about the intelligence that was
presented to us," Feinstein said.
In
a recent letter to CIA Director George Tenet, members of the House Permanent Select Committee
on Intelligence stressed it "is now time to re-evaluate
U.S.
intelligence regarding the amount or existence of weapons of mass destruction in
Iraq
and that country's linkages to terrorist groups, such as Al-Qaeda."
The
failure of the
U.S.
and its war ally
Britain
to find any of the alleged WMD in
Iraq
, the main cause of waging the war, put their credibility on
the line.
Nearly
11 weeks after the fall of
Baghdad
, the U.S.-led occupying power failed to discover so much as an
ounce of the alleged banned weapons.
This
gave momentum to mounting accusations that in making the case for war, the Bush administration had
either used intelligence selectively, or pressured the intelligence community into turning a blind
eye to questionable sources.
Critics
cite a September 2002 Defense Intelligence Agency report, in which the DIA stated that there was
"no
reliable information" that
Iraq
was producing chemical weapons.
'Sacrifice'
 |
|
"The
men and women of our military face a continuing risk of danger and sacrifice in Iraq," Bush
admitted |
Meanwhile,
U.S. President George W. Bush warned Saturday, June 21, that the U.S. forces in Iraq face a future
of "danger and sacrifice" before the country is secure.
"Making
Iraq
secure is vitally important for both Iraqi citizens and our own forces," Bush said in his
weekly radio address after a week in which a growing number of
U.S.
military fatalities in
Iraq
raised many questions in Congress.
"The
men and women of our military face a continuing risk of danger and sacrifice in
Iraq
. Dangerous pockets of the old regime remain loyal to it and they, along with their terrorist
allies, are behind deadly attacks designed to kill and intimidate coalition forces and innocent
Iraqis," Bush claimed.
"As
we establish order and justice in
Iraq
, we also continue to pursue Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction," he argued.
"Military
and intelligence officials are interviewing scientists with knowledge of Saddam Hussein's weapons
programs and are poring over hundreds of thousands of documents.
"For
more than a decade, Saddam Hussein went to great lengths to hide his weapons from the world. And in
the regime's final days, documents and suspected weapons sites were looted and burned," said
Bush.
He
added that "all who know the dictator's history agree that he possessed chemical and biological
weapons and that he used chemical weapons in the past.
"The
intelligence services of many nations concluded that he had illegal weapons and the regime refused
to provide evidence they had been destroyed. We are determined to discover the true extent of Saddam
Hussein's weapons programs, no matter how long it takes."
Bush
said
Iraq
was already selling oil on international markets, with its main commercial port at Umm Qasar opened
to commercial traffic this week and
Baghdad
airport expected to reopen next month.
"For
the first time in over a decade,
Iraq
will soon be open to the world. And the influence of progress in
Iraq
will be felt throughout the
Middle East
. Over time, a free government in
Iraq
will demonstrate that liberty can flourish in that region," declared the
US
president.
In
a draft resolution tabled
to the U.N. Security Council on May 9, to lift
Iraq
sanctions, the
U.S.
formally recognized
its obligations as an occupying power, proposed a U.S.-British body to decide how Iraqi oil proceeds
would be spent.