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The
weapons issue was the main reason cited by Bush for the war
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WASHINGTON,
February 2 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Coming under
strong pressure from Republicans and Democrats in Congress, U.S.
President George W. Bush will announce this week a probe into apparent
flaws in intelligence used to invade Iraq, U.S. administration
officials revealed Monday, February 2.
Meanwhile,
British Prime Minister Tony Blair faced Monday mounting pressure to
follow the example of Bush and order a similar inquiry.
Bush
is expected to set up a bipartisan and independent commission to
investigate the failure to find a sniff of Iraq's alleged weapon of
mass destruction after nine months of the invasion, Reuters news
agency reported.
"The
president wants a broad, bipartisan and independent review of our
intelligence, particularly relating to weapons of mass destruction and
counter-proliferation efforts," said a senior Bush administration
official, who asked to remain unidentified.
The
commission is expected to be given until next year to report back,
instead of this year as Democrats demand.
About
nine members are expected to be picked for the commission. Some will
be experts outside the government, while others could be members of
Congress. They will include both Republicans and Democrats, Reuters
quoted officials as saying.
They
added that it would be given a "broad mandate" to look not
just at Iraq but other intelligence challenges around the world.
The
weapons issue was the main reason cited by Bush for the war, in which
more than 500 U.S. troops have now died.
Some
Republican insiders have said that although a probe on intelligence
poses plenty of political risks for Bush in the run-up to the
election, continuing to resist calls for an inquiry might make the
president appear as if he has something to hide.
Bush
further began in recent days to reconsider the position following the
resignation of his top weapons expert in Iraq David Kay and the stunning
acknowledgment made by his close aid and National Security
Adviser Condoleezza Rice that there might have been flaws in prewar
intelligence about Iraq.
After
his resignation, Kay said he
did not believe Iraq possessed any chemical or biological
weapons.
Blair
Under Pressure
On
the British front, Conservative leader Michael Howard was to put
forward a parliamentary motion demanding a probe into the quality of
data on Saddam Hussein's alleged weapons of mass destruction.
"It
is very interesting that it looks as though President Bush is going to
hold an inquiry. I think we do need one here," Howard said in an
interview with the British broadcaster ITV.
"I
hope that Tony Blair won't continue to be the odd man out on this.
Everybody, I think, now recognizes that something went wrong over the
intelligence," he added.
"It
is of the utmost importance that, should we find ourselves again in a
position where we may have to contemplate taking military action, we
do so on the basis of intelligence material in which everyone has full
confidence," he said in another interview with the BBC.
The
pressure comes although Blair escaped
unscathed Wednesday, January 28, from the worst crisis of his
career when the British judge investigating the death of arms expert
David Kelly concluded that the senior inspector took his own life.
Lord
Hutton further vehemently criticized the BBC for unfoundedly claiming
that Downing Street "sexed up" intelligence on Iraq in a
pre-war dossier, while cleared the government of any
"dishonorable, underhand or duplicitous strategy".
The
dossier claimed that Iraq could deploy weapons of mass destruction
within 45 minutes of an order to do.
Kelly's
suicide plunged Prime Minister Tony Blair into the
worst political crisis since he came to power in May
1997.
On
Tuesday, February 3, Blair faces a potentially difficult grilling when
he makes a regular appearance before a parliamentary committee of
senior lawmakers.
The
Guardian said that Blair was expected to use the occasion to
acknowledge the need to explain the failure to uncover any banned
weapons so far, although he would resist calls to order an inquiry.
On
The Defensive
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"We've
got a president who's playing politics with national
security," Clark
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Back
to the U.S. president as analysts said the weapons debate has put
Bush, in effect, on the defensive in the U.S. presidential campaign.
"He
is kind of stuck. He's got a situation where he established the
justification on one ground and then, drib-drab, drib-drab, you have a
sort of gradual erosion of that ground," Trevor Parry-Giles, a
professor of political communications at the University of Maryland,
told Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"You
have three choices: You find new grounds, that they've tried -- 'We
were liberating the Iraqi people'; (you) stick to your guns and say,
'We're still going to find them,' but you have all the people (and)
all the evidence saying no, they're not there, it's wrong. Or you
agree, and you say, 'Well, we blew it.'
"He
seems unwilling to do the last and more weighted to the first
two," he said.
Presidential
hopeful retired Gen. Wesley Clark also accused Sunday, February 1, of
making the same mistakes in Iraq as the United States did in Vietnam.
"In
1964/65 we decided to insert U.S. troops into Vietnam in a piecemeal
fashion. That's why I am so worried about what is going in Iraq
today," he told reporters.
"We've
got a president who's playing politics with national security, and we
need to hold him accountable," said Clark.
The
Democratic frontrunner
John Kerry has further hardened his attacks on Bush following Kay's
resignation.
"This
president broke every one of those promises to the American
people," said Kerry.
"He
launched a war. He did not build a legitimate coalition. He did not
exhaust the remedies of the inspections. He did not go to war as a
last resort, and I think he fails the test of the commander in
chief."