The Bush administration’s first public relations campaign to
lobby for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein was centered around the claim that
Iraq had restarted its nuclear program. This was based upon Baghdad trying to buy 60,000
aluminum tubes in 2001. The October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq
used the tubes to claim that Iraq had renewed its atomic program. The problem
was this story was always contested, especially by the Energy Department and
nuclear specialists, while just one CIA analyst was able to get this claim
propagated by the White House.
On April 10,
2001, the CIA filed its first report on Iraq trying to buy several thousand
aluminum tubes. The paper claimed that the tubes could be used for little else
other than centrifuges to enrich uranium for a bomb, although there was no real
argument to prove that claim. The report did acknowledge that using aluminum
was a step back for Iraq as it was using steel before the Gulf War. This was written by a
CIA analyst named Joe at its Weapons Intelligence, Nonproliferation and Arms
Control (WINPAC) division. He worked in the nuclear field in the 1990s,
including a stint at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, one of America’s
pre-eminent facilities. All of the major reporting out of the Agency on the
tubes would come from Joe, and his work would go on to be repeated by other
U.S. intelligence agencies and by the White House.
The main critic of the CIA’s position was the Energy
Department (DOE). It wrote its own analysis of
the tubes on April 11 arguing that they could be for centrifuges but their
specifications weren’t right for any that Iraq used before. It pointed out that
the large quantity Iraq tried to put would point to a large scale nuclear
program, which no one had evidence of. The purchase was also public, and
Baghdad was arguing over prices, not something that a country trying to
secretly rebuild its capabilities would do. Finally, Energy put out its own
thesis that the tubes were meant for conventional rockets. A second DOE report
on May 9 found that the tubes fit the specifications for rocket launchers,
which Iraq had used before. The Energy Department made a much more convincing
argument than the CIA’s. It gave an analysis of how the tubes were made,
finding that they did not match any centrifuge plans Iraq had used before, and
that they fit rockets instead.
These two views started a debate within the intelligence
community over the purpose of the tubes. From June 2001 to July 2002 the CIA issued 10
assessments on the tubes, all saying that they were for centrifuges. In one
report from July 2, 2001, CIA analyst Joe argued that the tubes far exceeded
the specifications for rocket launchers, and did match those of the 1950s Zippe
centrifuge design. On August 2, 2001, the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)
compared the views of the CIA and Energy Department and threw in with the
former, agreeing that the tubes could work with the Zippe plans. The Energy
Department countered with an August 17 paper that the tubes not only did not
match any centrifuges Iraq ever used, but not any centrifuges that ever worked.
Finally, during the drafting of the October National Intelligence Estimate
(NIE), the pre-eminent report on Iraq’s weapons program, the Energy Department
was joined by the State Department in the criticism of the CIA and DIA
position. The two dissenters were given their own side boxes in the NIE on the
subject as a result, but the CIA’s view became the basis for almost the entire
section on the tubes and Baghdad’s nuclear program. The CIA had the weaker
argument, but given its standing in the intelligence community it was able to
overcome the objections of the Energy and State Departments, especially because
it had the backing of the DIA.
In September 2002, the Bush administration began its first
public relations campaign to convince the American public that Iraq was a
threat based upon the CIA’s reporting on the aluminum tubes. The White House
leaked the tubes story to the New York Times, which wrote two
articles
on it in September. Officials told the Times that Iraq was trying to buy
materials for its nuclear program, which started in 2001 with the tubes. They
repeated the CIA’s positions that the tubes were for centrifuges. The second
piece noted that there was a debate about the tubes, but that the majority
opinion, which included the CIA, National Security Agency, and the Oak Ridge
facility believed that they were for centrifuges, with the State and Energy
Departments disagreeing. This was topped off by several administration
officials saying they didn’t want proof that Iraq had a nuclear program to be a
mushroom
cloud. That story and line would be repeated by the
administration in papers, statements, TV appearances, and speeches from
September until the war in 2003. The problem was the White House’s claims were
not completely true. The director at Oak Ridge said that it
and other nuclear specialists did not agree with the CIA on the tubes. That
didn’t matter as the government held the attention of the press and headlines,
dominating the coverage. The Energy Department and its supporters launched its
own media campaign talking to outlets like the Washington
Post, Knight
Ridder, England’s Guardian, and
local
papers, but they never got the front pages or the lead stories on TV like
the administration could.
In 2003, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),
which was taking part in the inspections in Iraq reported that the tubes were
likely for rockets not centrifuges. In January,
the IAEA said that the tubes would not work as centrifuges. IAEA head Mohammed
El-Baradei told
the United Nations Security Council that the tubes were for rockets. That led
CIA analyst Joe to travel
to Vienna to argue his case with the agency, but they were not convinced. The
response in Washington was that the IAEA was being deceived by Iraq, and that
the intelligence agencies stood by their assessment. Here again, another set of
nuclear experts were being dismissed for the opinion of a single analyst within
the CIA. The White House wanted to push the worst-case scenarios because they
supported its campaign to build support for war. The CIA on the other hand,
believed that Iraq had reconstituted all its weapons programs, and therefore
was all too willing to back reports like the aluminum tubes.
In the end, the aluminum tubes story was another failure of
the U.S. intelligence community. The CIA’s standing not only got it to win the
debate within the community with a weak argument, but its reports got to the
highest levels of government, while those of the Energy and State Departments
did not. The White House in turn, went with whatever negative reports it could
find to mount its campaign against Iraq. Officials might have known about the
debate over the usages of the tubes, but if reports such as the NIE said that
Iraq had reconstitution its nuclear program and the tubes were the reason why
it would go with that over a sidebar by the Energy or State Departments. When
the dust had settled and Saddam was toppled it would turn out that the tubes
were for rockets, and various reviews by bodies such as the Senate Intelligence
Committee and the presidential commission on WMD lamented how things played
out. The fact was, the CIA wanted to believe that Iraq had a nuclear program,
and therefore went with Joe’s analysis over everyone else’s. That was also
exactly what the government was looking for, and why it used it in its public
campaign.
SOURCES
Barstow,
David, Broad, William, and Gerth, Jeff, “Skewed Intelligence Data in March to
War in Iraq,” New York Times, 10/3/04
Battle, Joyce, “The
Iraq War – PART I: The U.S. Prepares for Conflict, 2001, Timeline,” National
Security Archive, 9/22/10
Borger, Julian, “White House ‘exaggerating Iraqi threat,’”
Guardian, 10/9/02
Collier, Robert, “Bush’s evidence of threat disputed,” San
Francisco Chronicle, 10/12/02
Dakss, Brian, “Inspectors Call U.S. Tips ‘Garbage,’” CBS,
2/20/03
Gellman, Barton, “Search in Iraq Fails to Find Nuclear
Threat,” Washington Post, 10/26/03
Gellman, Barton and Pincus, Walter, “Depiction of Threat
Outgrew Supporting Evidence,” Washington Post, 8/10/03
Gordon, Michael, “Agency Challenges Evidence Against Iraq
Cited by Bush,” New York Times, 1/10/03
Gordon, Michael and
Miller, Judith, “Threats And Responses: The Iraqis; U.S. Says Hussein
Intensifies Quest For A-Bomb Parts,” New York Times, 9/8/02
Gordon, Michael and
Risen, James, “Report’s Findings Undercut U.S. Argument,” New York Times,
1/28/03
Iraq Survey Group, “Comprehensive Report of the Special
Advisor to the DCIA on Iraq’s WMD,” 9/30/04
Isikoff, Michael and Corn, David, Hubris, The Inside Story Of Spin, Scandal, and the Selling of the Iraq
War, New York: Crown Publishers, 2006
Jansen, Michael,
“Inspectors states no banned weapons found in Iraq so far,” Irish Times, 1/2/03
Judis, John and Ackerman, Spencer, “The Selling of the Iraq
War: The First Casualty,” The New Republic, 6/30/03
Landay, Jonathan, “CIA report reveals analysts’ split over
extent of Iraqi nuclear threat,” Knight Ridder Newspaper, 10/4/02
- “Iraq has been unable to get materials needed for nuclear
bomb, experts say,” Knight Ridder Newspapers, 9/13/02
Miller, Judith and Gordon, Michael, “White House Lists Iraq
Steps to Build Banned Weapons,” New York Times, 9/13/02
Mukhopandhyay,
Dipali, “The Bush Administration on Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction
Capabilities,” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, January 2004
Rangwala, Glen,
“Claims and evaluations of Iraq’s proscribed weapons,” University of Cambridge,
2004
Risen, James, State of War; The Secret History of the CIA
and the Bush Administration, New York, London, Toronto, Sydney: Free Press,
2006
Robb, Charles Silberman, Laurence, “Commission on the
Intelligence Capabilities of the United States Regarding Weapons of Mass
Destruction,” 3/31/05
Select Committee On Intelligence United States Senate,
“Report On The U.S. Intelligence Community’s Prewar Intelligence Assessments On
Iraq,” 7/7/04
Warrick, Joby, “Evidence on Iraq Challenged,” Washington
Post, 9/19/02
1 comment:
Yet the Arms Control Wonk blog did identify a use for aluminum tubes. Yellowcake was in deposits all over Iraq and was the basis of a refining project producing fertilizer. That would have predated Joe Wilson's mission to Nigeria to verify Saddam Hussein's government had been trying to buy yellowcake, which was posited as a resource for making WMD. Wasn't it wonderfully convenient that Dick Cheney's office exposed the identity of Joe's wife as Valerie Plame, exposing the Brewster-Jennings spy networks and blinding the CIA nuclear threat desk by removing its field support.
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