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Israel Shares Blame on Iraq Intelligence, Report Says

Date: December 05, 2003 | 10 Shawwal 1424 Hijriah
Subjects: israel, iraq

From an article1:

Israel was a "full partner" in U.S. and British intelligence failures that exaggerated former president Saddam Hussein's nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs before the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, a report by an Israeli military research center has charged...

..."In the questioning of the picture painted by coalition intelligence, the third party in this intelligence failure, Israel, has remained in the shadows," the report said. "Israeli intelligence was a full partner to the picture presented by American and British intelligence regarding Iraq's non-conventional capabilities."

The report added, "A critical question to be answered is whether governmental bodies falsely manipulated the intelligence information in order to gain support for their decision to go to war in Iraq, while the real reasons for this decision were obfuscated or concealed."
(link)

I thought this was just a conspiracy theory

Complete text of the article, Israel Shares Blame on Iraq Intelligence, Report Says, by Molly Moore

Israel was a "full partner" in U.S. and British intelligence failures that exaggerated former president Saddam Hussein's nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs before the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, a report by an Israeli military research center has charged.

"The failures of this war indicate weaknesses and inherent flaws within Israeli intelligence and among Israeli decision-makers," Brig. Gen. Shlomo Brom wrote in an analysis for Tel Aviv University's Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies.

Israeli intelligence services and political leaders provided "an exaggerated assessment of Iraqi capabilities," raising "the possibility that the intelligence picture was manipulated," wrote Brom, former deputy commander of the Israeli military's planning division.

David Baker, a spokesman for Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, declined to comment on the report.

The allegations parallel those raised in the United States and Britain. Officials have combed Iraq and interrogated former authorities for months, but have turned up little evidence to support the prewar assessments of Iraq's weapons programs.

"In the questioning of the picture painted by coalition intelligence, the third party in this intelligence failure, Israel, has remained in the shadows," the report said. "Israeli intelligence was a full partner to the picture presented by American and British intelligence regarding Iraq's non-conventional capabilities."

The report added, "A critical question to be answered is whether governmental bodies falsely manipulated the intelligence information in order to gain support for their decision to go to war in Iraq, while the real reasons for this decision were obfuscated or concealed."

The study did not cite specific exchanges of intelligence. Israeli officials frequently told foreign journalists before the war that Israel and the United States were sharing information, particularly regarding Iraqi missiles and nonconventional weapons that could possibly be used against Israel.

The report accused intelligence agencies of being blinded by a "one-dimensional perception of Saddam Hussein."

"At the heart of this perception lay the colorful portrait of an embodiment of evil, a man possessed by a compulsion to develop weapons of mass destruction in order to strike Israel and others, regardless of additional considerations," the report said.

The analysis said a "certain degree of intelligence wariness is justified," but added, "the problem lies in getting carried away to extremes, as was clearly the case with Israeli intelligence on Iraq."

The report said that when "Israeli intelligence became aware that certain items had been transferred by the head of the regime from Iraq to Syria, Israeli intelligence immediately portrayed it -- including in leaks to the media -- as if Iraq was moving banned weapons out of Iraq in order to conceal them."

The analysis faulted intelligence officials for discounting the more likely scenario that Hussein and his aides were moving cash or family members out of the country in anticipation of the attack.

The study noted that Israeli and U.S. governments have disagreed over the past decade on the "weight of various threats in the Middle East." The report said Israel has generally claimed that Iran poses a more serious threat than Iraq, because the latter was "contained and under control."

But, the author added, "Once the Bush administration decided to take action against Iraq, it was more difficult for Israel to maintain its position that dealing with Iraq was not the highest priority, especially when it was obvious that the war would serve Israel's interests."

The report prompted one Israeli lawmaker, Yossi Sarid, a member of the Meretz party, to renew demands for an investigation. The analysis said that creating an "inflated, overly-severe intelligence picture" undermined public and international trust in Israel's security services. The report also said the Israeli defense establishment was forced to spend "a great deal of money on addressing threats that were either non-existent or highly unlikely."

reference=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A36694-2003Dec4.html
~ Posted by Al-Muhajabah, a fair and balanced niqabi, at 08:41 AM

Comments

Diane said: Total comments: 3  

Subject: Re: Israel Shares Blame on Iraq Intelligence, Report Says

Uzi Benziman did an interesting report on this for Ha'aretz. He pointed out that Israelis might think that manipulating intelligence is OK because it worked to Israel's favor in Iraq, but asked how do they know now they are being told the truth about their own conflict with the Palestinians? Because once your intelligence services have sold their credibility, they can't easily get it back:

The same officials who forecasted definitively that the "ground will shake" when American troops reach Iraq and uncover weapons of mass destruction are today warning, with great internal conviction, that Arafat views himself as a latter-day Saladin, whose purpose is to drive the Jews from the Holy Land.

The layman assumes that such emphatic diagnoses of Arafat's aims are based upon wiretapped recordings, systematic analyses of his statements, and reliable leaks about his conversations with associates. The same measure of credence was in effect when people believed that intelligence estimates of the threat posed by Iraq had a solid evidentiary foundation; but it now turns out that these estimates about Iraq had no empirical basis.

All the other commentary I had read on the Brom article concentrated on the (lack of) rationale for the invasion of Iraq. It was interesting to hear a slightly different perspective, pointing out that the "We Have No Partner For Peace" mantra comes to us courtesy of the same people who brought us "Saddam Has Nukes Aimed At Tel Aviv".









~ Posted at December 8, 2003 08:24 AM | Comment Permalink

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