 |
|
Bush is under a barrage of criticisms for shifting the justification to simply human rights violations of Saddam (AFP)
|
WASHINGTON
(IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The United States quietly
withdrew from Iraq a 400-member military team after they have found no
weapons of mass destruction, as an American think-tank said that the
Bush administration “systematically misrepresented” the danger of
Iraq's allegedly-banned weapons, press reports said on Thursday, January
8.
The
task of the Joint Captured Materiel Exploitation Group, made up of
technical experts headed by an unidentified Australian brigadier,
included searching weapons depots and other sites for missile launchers
that might have been used with illicit weapons.
“They
picked up everything that was worth picking up,” one U.S. official told the New York Times.
Some
military officials described the step as a sign that the administration
might have lowered its sights and no longer expected to uncover the
caches of chemical and biological weapons that the White House cited as
a principal reason for going to war last March, the daily said.
A
separate military team that specializes in disposing of chemical and
biological weapons remains part of the 1,400-member Iraq Survey Group,
which has been searching Iraq
for more that seven months at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars,
reported the Times.
David
Kay, the head of the survey group, made it known last month that he
might leave his post as his team had
yielded no weapons of mass destruction, which President George
W. Bush had cited as justification for the invasion of Iraq.
“I
am sure that if they had found important evidence, we would know about
it,” said Representative Jane Harman of California, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, who has said the
administration exaggerated the Iraqi threat.
The
Washington Post on Wednesday said interviews with Iraqi scientists and
investigators indicate that Saddam's regime concealed arms research that
never went beyond the planning stage.
“The
broad picture emerging from the investigation to date,” said the Post,
“suggests that, whatever its desire, Iraq did not possess the
wherewithal to build a forbidden armory on anything like the scale it
had before the 1991 Persian Gulf War”.
The
United States justified going to invade Iraq last year citing a threat from
Baghdad 's alleged weapons of mass destruction.
‘Systematically
Misrepresented’
In
another related development, a report from a U.S. think tank said on Wednesday that the Bush administration officials
“systemically misrepresented” the danger of Iraq 's allegedly weapons of mass destruction programs.
The
report, by four experts on weapons proliferation at the respected
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, is likely to reignite calls
for a commission to look into the government's pre-invasion intelligence
claims.
According
to the report, carried by the Guardian, the absence of any imminent
threat from Saddam Hussein's chemical or nuclear programs was
“knowable” before the invasion of the oil-rich country.
There
was greater uncertainty over biological weapons but no evidence strong
enough to justify the invasion, said the report.
The
report concludes that “administration officials systematically
misrepresented the threat from Iraq 's WMD and ballistic missile program”.
The
authors say the intelligence reports of Iraq 's capabilities grew more shrill in October 2002 with the publication of
a National Intelligence Estimate (NIE), which included an unusual number
of dissenting views by intelligence officials.
The
intelligence community, the report says, began to be unduly influenced
by policymakers' views “sometime in 2002”.
Repeated
visits to the CIA by the U.S. vice president, Dick Cheney, and demands
by top officials to see unsubstantiated reports, created an atmosphere
in which intelligence analysts were pressed to come to “more
threatening” judgments of Iraq.
The
Bush administration has come under a barrage of criticisms from members
of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee who charged the administration
had "shifted
justification" of the Iraq invasion from alleged weapons of
mass destruction to simply the human rights violations of the ousted
Saddam.