Oriental Rugs the O'Connell NotesDoD Briefing on Policy and
Intelligence Matters
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United States Department
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Presenter: Douglas J. Feith, USD (Policy) Wednesday, June
4, 2003 - 8:38 a.m. EDT
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DoD Briefing on Policy and Intelligence Matters
(Briefing on policy and intelligence matters.
Participating were Douglas J. Feith,
under secretary of defense for policy, and William J. Luti, deputy under secretary
of defense for special plans and Near East and South
Asian affairs.)
Feith: Good morning.
Bill, do you want to join me up here?
The reason that we were interested in meeting with you
this morning is to help lay to rest some stories that
have been circulating about the Defense Department that
are not true and are beginning to achieve the status of
urban legends. So we thought we would try to help
straighten the record out.
There are four issues that I think I'd like to address.
One is this so-called, or alleged intelligence cell and
its relation to the Special Plans Office. Secondly is the
issue of intelligence judgments regarding Iraqi weapons
of mass destruction. Third is the department's alleged
intent to topple the Iranian regime, about which there
have been a number of inaccurate news stories. And
finally, our policy and the Defense Department's views on
the organization called the MEK, the Mujahedeen e Khalq,
an Iranian terrorist group. And I'd like to start with a
review of some of these items, and then my colleague,
Bill Luti and I will be happy to take some of your
questions.
On this so-called intelligence cell, which has been hyped
in various publications as a Department of Defense effort
to create a unit that would somehow substitute for the
CIA, I'd like to give you what actually is the story.
After the September 11th attack, I identified a
requirement to think through what it means for the
Defense Department to be at war with a terrorist network.
This was an unusual circumstance -- warfare has
traditionally been against nation states -- and we
understood that it presents a number of peculiar
conceptual challenges to be at war with a network, or as
I've described it as a network of networks of terrorist
organizations.
So, I asked for some people to think through -- first of
all, to review the large amount of intelligence on
terrorist networks, and to think through how the various
terrorist organizations relate to each other and how they
relate to different groups that support them; in
particular, state sponsors. And we set up a small team to
help digest the intelligence that already existed on this
very broad subject. And the so-called cell comprised two
full-time people. This is why you see that I think it's
almost comical that people think that this was set up as
somehow an alternative -- (Chuckles.) -- to the
intelligence community or to the CIA. I mean, it was two
full-time people. They drew from time to time on
assistance from a few others. I mean, altogether, we're
talking about four people, five people, you know, at one
time or another, doing the work.
The team began its work in October of 2001. It was not
involved in intelligence collection. Rather, it relied on
reporting from the CIA and other parts of the
intelligence community. Its job was to review this
intelligence to help digest it for me and other
policymakers, to help us develop Defense Department
strategy for the war on terrorism. And as I said, it
looked at these interrelationships among terrorist
organizations and their state sponsors. It did not
confine its review to Iraq or al Qaeda. I mean, it was
looking at global terrorist networks and the full range
of state sponsors and other sources of support for
terrorist groups. Its main conclusion was that groups and
states were willing to cooperate across philosophical,
ideological lines.
So, it came up with the -- a number of interesting
connections of where, for example, Sunni and Shi'a groups
cooperated, or religious- based groups cooperated with
secular groups or states. And so it showed that we cannot
simply assume that the only cooperation that existed in
the world among terrorist groups and their sponsors was
on some kind of pure ideological or philosophical lines.
I mean, this is not that shocking for anybody who
remembers that, for example, the Nazis and the Soviets
had a strategic alliance also. But it was a very
important point, because there was a lot of debate in
government circles and in academic circles about whether
these different groups do in fact cooperate across these
philosophical lines.
I think what has become the focus of a lot of the press
stories about this is the fact that in the course of its
work, this team, in reviewing the intelligence that was
provided to us by the CIA and the intelligence community,
came up with some interesting observations about the
linkages between Iraq and al Qaeda. And when they did,
and they brought those to the attention of top-level
officials here in the department, and we arranged for a
briefing of these items to Secretary Rumsfeld, he looked
at that and said, "That's interesting. Let's share
it with George Tenet." And so some members of the
team and I went over, I think it was in August of 2002,
and shared some of these observations. And these were
simply observations of this team based on the
intelligence that the intelligence community had given to
us, and it was just in the course of their reading it,
this was incidental to the purpose of this group. But
since they happened to come up with it and since it was
an important subject, we went over, shared it with George
and people at the CIA. My impression was it was pretty
well received, and that was that. It was one meeting.
There have been a number of misperceptions about this
team. One of them is that, there have been several press
articles that have identified this team with the Special
Plans Office in Dr. Luti's organization. Dr. Luti is the
deputy under secretary of defense for -- let me get it
right --
Luti: Special Plans and Near Eastern/South Asian Affairs.
Feith: Special Plans and Near Eastern/South Asian
Affairs.
Luti: Twenty-seven countries.
Feith: And this intelligence cell -- alleged -- which is
this team that did this particular project, which was not
an intelligence project -- it was a matter of digesting
other people's intelligence products -- this team is not
-- was not part of that office; wasn't related to it. In
fact, the team stopped doing its work -- basically, once
we had that meeting with the CIA and the team had given
us a report on these terrorist network interconnections,
there was no team anymore. And they stopped doing their
work before the Special Plans Office, if I have it
straight, was actually created within Dr. Luti's
organization.
Q: (Off mike.)
Luti: October of 2002. We had -- a decision was made in
August of 2002 to reorganize, and Doug will explain to
you why. But those are the dates.
Q: And that team stopped in August 2002?
Feith: Roughly. The -- (Chuckling.) -- and the Special
Plans Office was called Special Plans, because at the
time, calling it Iraq Planning Office might have undercut
the -- our diplomatic efforts with regard to Iraq and the
U.N. and elsewhere. We set up an office to address the
whole range of issues regarding Iraq planning.
Luti: And if I may, it's clear to make a distinction;
it's a policy planning office, just like -- in my shop, I
have essentially three directorates: A Middle East
directorate with a handful of people working, a South
Asia directorate with a handful of people working, and I
used to have a Northern Gulf directorate, which we
expanded to meet the incredibly stepped-up requirements
in the summer and fall of last year to deal with Iraq. We
needed help, we needed people. So, we expanded it. And
that's what I do -- policy planning.
Feith: So, I mean, there have been some people who have
kind of concocted a goulash of snippets about this team
that was working on the terrorist interconnections and
the Special Plans Office, and they mixed them up when
there's no basis for the mix.
As I mentioned, this team that was doing the terrorist
analysis was not focused on Iraq. I mean, they focused --
they did not have a narrow focus. It was a global -- it
was a global exercise, even though this particular report
that -- briefing, I should say, that was prepared and
given to the CIA focused on Iraq and al Qaeda because, as
I said, that kind of fell out incidentally from the work
that they were doing on global terrorist networks.
Third, there are some press accounts that have tied the
team to what is called the intelligence collection
program, which was a program for debriefing Iraqi
defectors over recent years. And in fact the team had
nothing to do with that program or the transfer of the
management of that program from the State Department to
the Defense HUMINT [Human Intelligence] Service.
And the -- with regard to this intelligence collection
program, the reports that were obtained from the
debriefings of these Iraq defectors were disseminated in
the same way that other intelligence reporting was
disseminated, contrary to one particular journalist
account who suggested that the Special Plans Office
became a conduit for intelligence reports from the Iraqi
National Congress to the White House. That's just flatly
not true. And in any event, that was a Defense
Intelligence Agency/Defense HUMINT Service function, and
not -- it was not anything that was run out of the policy
organization. So again, this is part of the goulash of
inaccuracies.
And then finally there were some accounts that asserted
that the team dealt with the weapons of mass destruction
issue, and there have been a number of stories in recent
days that suggested that this was a team that somehow
developed the case on Iraqi weapons of mass destruction,
and it didn't -- I mean, it -- and that is also flatly
not true. The team was focused on terrorist networks; it
was not focused on weapons of mass destruction.
Now on this issue of intelligence judgments -- now to get
to my second topic, the intelligence judgments on Iraqi
weapons of mass destruction, Secretary of State Powell
talked about our intelligence sources when he gave his
presentation on February 5th to the U.N. Security
Council. He played tapes of Iraqis who were discussing --
these were intercepts of Iraqi communications in which
there were discussions of the concealing of weapons of
mass destruction from U.N. inspectors. Secretary Powell
cited the reports of witnesses and informants. He
discussed the U.S. government's knowledge of Iraq
procurement efforts in the weapons of mass destruction
field. And he cited the old U.N. inspectors
organizations reporting on weapons of mass destruction,
for which Iraq had never accounted adequately.
And these judgments were based on intelligence that --
intelligence reports and intelligence analysis that not
only went back years but predated this administration. In
February 1998 President Clinton said, "Iraq
continues to conceal chemical and biological weapons and
the missiles that can deliver them, and Iraq has the
capacity to quickly restart production of these
weapons." Secretary of Defense Cohen, in -- also in
1998, said, "I believe that Iraq is developing them,
because they've used them in the past. The acquisition of
these types of weapons does make Saddam Hussein a major
player in the region. He's concerned about the power, and
the opportunity to have nuclear or biological or chemical
weapons gives him the status and the ability to project
that power to intimidate the neighbors in the
region." And there are similar quotations from Vice
President Gore and others.
The -- it -- from our perspective, it's pretty clear that
the intelligence community's judgments concerning Iraqi
weapons of mass destruction did not undergo a major
change between the Clinton and Bush administrations. And
that's -- without regard to the issue of whether the
officials from the previous administration agree or
disagree with the policies of this administration about
how to deal with the problem, the basic intelligence
reports did not undergo any kind of change from the
previous administration to this one.
On the third point that I raised, on this issue of
reports about the department's attitude toward toppling
the Iranian regime, there was a recent Financial Times
article that grossly misrepresented Secretary Rumsfeld's
views on Iran. It is true that the United States
government wants Iran to turn over all al Qaeda members
currently in Iran and to comply with its obligations
under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. But as for the
future of the Iranian government, that's a matter to be
decided by the Iranian people. And our policy is what
President Bush has said: that we see Iranian citizens
risking intimidation and death as they speak out for
liberty and human rights and democracy. Iranians, like
all people, have a right to choose their government and
determine their own destiny, and the United States
supports their aspirations to live in freedom. And
everything that we have done and that we support in this
department is consistent with and captured in that
statement by the president. And it's not good to be
reading inaccurate descriptions of what our policy is on
Iran.
A sub-point on that is the last point that I wanted to
address in these opening remarks, and that is the issue
of the policy toward the MEK, the Mujahedeen e Khalq. The
United States has designated the MEK a foreign terrorist
organization; it is on the State Department's list of
such organizations. Accordingly, we demanded the
surrender of MEK forces in Iraq. That demand is being
complied with, and the MEK forces are being disarmed.
Now, earlier in the war, a U.S. commander on the ground
reached a temporary cease-fire with the MEK which he
justified on the grounds that it enabled our forces to
contain the MEK forces in cantonment areas, while not
having to fight against them or to actively disarm them.
And it was also a way of making sure that these MEK
forces were not going to get into a clash with the
pro-Iranian forces. There were a number of different
groups floating around in Iraq that were not under our
control, and we didn't want them clashing in a way that
could interfere with our operations.
Now, because of that local decision to work out this
temporary arrangement, there were some people who
believed that we were giving the MEK special treatment,
and there were even news stories that said that the
Defense Department planned to use the MEK as a Northern
Alliance-type organization -- making the analogy to
Afghanistan -- as a Northern Alliance-type organization
against the government of Iran. There never was such a
plan. We will not do that. We view the MEK as a terrorist
organization and we are treating it as such.
And with that, I will be happy to take your questions.
Q: On Iran, you made the point that the administration
supports the aspirations of the Iranian people. The
question seems to be how far are you going -- that's
important to what kind of support you're talking about,
and people are speculating that you could go as far as
supporting by either actively undermining the existing
government or by taking military action. And can you
define exactly how far you would go?
Feith: Our policy is to urge the Iranians, as the
president has done publicly and as other top
administration people have done, to urge them to stop
their support for terrorism -- Iran is one of the world's
leading supporters of terrorist organizations -- to
comply with their obligations under the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty and stop the development of
nuclear weapons. And we know that there is widespread
unhappiness in the country about the failures of the
clerical regime. And the president has expressed his
sympathy with the aspirations of the Iranians to have a
free country. And that's our policy. And that's what
we're willing to say and do.
And there are a lot of countries in the world who are
coming increasingly to understand the dangers that this
state support for terrorism and the development of
nuclear weapons by countries that are not supposed to be
developing them -- that represents the international
security. And so, we're getting increasing international
support for this kind of an approach. And we hope that
the Iranians will change their policies.
Q: [And now] to the intelligence, one of the more
puzzling aspects of all of this for a lot of people is
the Niger letter, and why U.S. officials seem so willing
to accept and promulgate what appears to people who were
knowledgeable about it to have clearly been a forgery.
Can you explain -- and there's been a couple of
congressional requests for information about that. Can
you shed some light on that?
Feith: I mean, I'm aware of it in general. I don't know
how much light I could shed on it.
Luti: No, no, I can't either. No. I believe that that is
an issue between the source of the document and the
analysts in the government in the intelligence community,
and they're sorting that out. We're not particularly as
policy people involved in that process.
Q: I want to challenge your assumption here that the
intelligence has remained consistent throughout the '90s.
This administration, starting in September, painted the
picture of an imminent threat from weapons of mass
destruction, yet the DIA -- this is -- and this is
something that U.S. News and World broke [a past sentence
of] of this week, said in September, there's no reliable
information on whether Iraq is producing and stockpiling
chemical weapons. Just square the circle. You say the
intelligence has been consistent, but yet you painted a
much more imminent threat than anybody in the Clinton
administration did during the '90s.
Feith: I think what we -- what we have been stressing is
that September 11th highlighted the special dangers that
come from the connection of weapons of mass destruction
to state sponsors of terrorism. The September 11th attack
forced a lot of people to rethink the dangers of both
terrorism and weapons of mass destruction in light of the
possible connection between the two. And the willingness
of terrorist organizations to do as much damage as they
possibly can was something that was driven home, you
know, powerfully, by the September 11th attack. And the
recognition that if a terrorist organization, perfectly
willing to do as much damage as it possibly can, could
get its hands on weapons of mass destruction from one of
the state sponsors that is otherwise providing support to
it, then the possibility exists, the danger exists that
you could have an attack that would kill many times the
number of people that were killed on September 11th.
So that caused a reassessment of the nature of the threat
and the risk. That's a different issue from the analysis
of whether one believes that the Iraqis possessed the
capability to use chemical weapons, biological weapons;
whether they had a program that was aiming toward the
development of nuclear weapons. On the basic question of
whether the Iraqis had the capability, I don't think
there was any kind of major discontinuity in the analysis
over the years from the intelligence community.
Q: Well let me push back then, because Rumsfeld, starting
in September, and the president talked about that they
had a capability. They had -- they produced -- they have
weapons; they have this; they have that. That was a lot
stronger than the Clinton people or the intelligence
community publicly talked about in the '90s, and your DIA
is even saying this now in September of '02, raising
questions about we don't have reliable information.
Feith: As I -- I mean, I quoted from -- President Clinton
said, in 1998, Iraq continues to conceal chemical and
biological weapons. And the U.N., in its report, I
believe it was in January of '99, when UNSCOM [United
Nations Special Commission] shut down its operations,
said that there were large quantities of chemical and
biological weapons materials that were unaccounted for.
And this was precisely the point that President Bush
stressed in -- and I don't remember whether it was in his
U.N. speech or his State of the Union speech, but he made
a major focus on what the UNSCOM report from 1999 said
about chemical and biological weapons in Iraq.
So, I mean, this is -- this was not news. I mean, a
number of the recent stories have suggested that the
basic question of whether the Iraqis -- whether there was
intelligence to support the conclusion that the Iraqis
had these weapons, there have been a number of stories
that have suggested that this whole issue arose in recent
months, and it didn't, it went back years.
Q: I think the question is that the issue -- you put a
finer point on it than in past years and you raised the
bar in terms of what Iraq allegedly had, and now we're
seeing that they might not have had what you allegedly
said they did.
Feith: Well, we'll see. We'll see what they had.
But the main thing that I think was different in the way
this administration talked about the issue from the past,
were the conclusions, the strategic conclusions that we
came to as a result of the September 11 attack, and the
particular strategic problems that arise from a
recognition that you can't rely to the extent that we did
in the past, or that at least some people did in the
past, you can't rely on deterrence to deal with the
problem of weapons of mass destruction in the hands of
state sponsors of terrorism because the possibility that
those state sponsors might employ chemical weapons or
biological weapons by means of a terrorist organization
proxy means that they could use the weapons without
leaving their fingerprints, as it were, on the attack.
And that meant that the traditional deterrence approach
was not adequate.
Q: If I could just go back, Mr. Secretary, and look at
the relationship -- I think three key relationships you
have tried to -- (inaudible) -- I think; the one between
the intelligence team and the special plans office, the
intelligence team the Iraqi exile project, and the
intelligence team and the assessment on weapons of mass
destruction. Let me make sure I understand this now. The
team is going to put out a report that's going to become
a part of a larger body of material that policymakers,
including those in the special plans office, would look
at, right? So it's not to say while they may not have
been resident in the same office, I would -- it certainly
sounds like special plans would be aware of and would --
and have available those reports that they make, right? I
mean, they would --
Feith: If the -- yeah, I mean, if the connection is that
a team that is analyzing a policy problem by looking
through a lot of intelligence is going to generate a
briefing that is going to come to the attention of
various offices -- I mean, that's true. That connection
exists. There were various offices that were informed by,
you know, that briefing.
Q: And given the importance that this team had within
your office, would it not also be logical that the
special plans office would give its -- whatever reports
came from the team special significance? And this is
something you're looking at, you created especially to
look at the intelligence in a different way --
Feith: No, no, you see, it was not created to look --
there is this idea -- again, there have been a number of
press stories that have said that the reason this team
was created was because we wanted the intelligence looked
at in a different way. That's not true. It was -- what
happened was, on September 11th we were attacked, and the
president announced we are in a global war against
terrorism. And the office that's responsible for strategy
is my office. And we asked ourselves: What does it mean
to be at war against terrorism? What -- and how is this
different from previous wars conceptually? How does one
develop a strategy for fighting an international network?
So it just was kind of an obvious thing to do. I asked
for some people to review the existing intelligence on
what do we know about the nature of these terrorist
networks. This was not because we were dissatisfied with,
as some of the news stories have suggested -- it's not
because we were dissatisfied with the intelligence or the
intelligence analysis. It was because we needed people
looking at that intelligence, good intelligence produced
by the CIA and other agencies -- we needed people looking
at it from the point of view of what do we need to
understand from this intelligence about these connections
to allow us to develop a Defense Department strategy for
the war on terrorism.
Q: That's looking at intelligence in a different way,
with a different perspective.
Feith: Well -- but I mean, not as --
Q: (Off mike.)
Feith: -- but it's been portrayed as this was done --
Q: They did not find their own intelligence. They took
existing intelligence, given this new perspective, given
this new focus you've asked them to address, and said,
"Here. Here's a new way of looking at it."
Right? That's what you asked for.
Feith: You could say that, except the way it --
Q: All right. Let me move on to my second point, then.
Feith: Well, let me just say, the way it's been portrayed
in a number of stories was that this was set up because
there was dissatisfaction with what the intelligence
community had done. That's not true. It was set up
because we had a different function to be performed; we
had a different mission to be performed. We had to
develop a strategy to fight the global war on terrorism.
And so, we needed to take this material and review it in
that light.
Q: Point two, on the Iraqi exile project. While these
guys didn't run, obviously, the interrogations or
anything, they obviously took the information that was
provided for them from those interviews, right? And they
looked at it and they put it in a larger context, as
well. That's part of the existing intelligence, no? Part
of their definition?
Luti: No, Eric (sp), who took those reports and looked at
them?
Q: The team.
Luti: No, no.
Q: They were ignorant of that when they did their
analysis?
Luti: No, the information collection program was removed
from the State Department and deposited into Defense
HUMINT Service to ensure that proper tradecraft was used,
accounting procedures. And it was a program to interview
Iraqi defectors.
Q: Right.
Luti: The INC would remove them from Iraq to a different
location. DHS [Defense HUMINT Service] teams would go to
that location, debrief them according to the tradecraft
-- all the professional tradecraft that's required -- and
then they would write a report. Those reports would go
into the intelligence system, writ large --
Q: Right. And that would be one of the many things that
this team would look at, right, and draw upon for your --
for the tasks that they were assigned, correct?
Feith: There were lots [of customers] throughout the
building --
Luti: Many customers, not only --
Q: Were those reports given any extra weight or
significance by this team that you're aware of?
Luti: The information collection program was moved into
the Defense HUMINT --
Q: That's a mechanical issue. I'm asking about the report
that they produced, giving the fresh information that
Iraqi exiles are providing. And that's now going into the
system. Among all of the other things that they're going
to look at, does the team hone in on these type of
reports as a special source and give them that hint of
added significance, that you're aware of? That's
essentially what the accusation --
Luti: No more than -- in fact, I'm trying to remember
when --
Q: (Inaudible.) -- you weigh it -- the intelligence that
is coming from defectors was given unusual and
disproportionate weight among all the other sources.
Luti: I don't know.
Q: Do you agree with that?
Luti: No. I don't know what the basis of that charge --
no, no, there's been no basis for that. None whatsoever.
Q: But the third point was you said there's no connection
between this team and WMD. But you've just said that the
relationship between terrorists and terrorist states and
WMD has been -- is -- that was -- demonstrated how they
--
Feith: No, I didn't mean no connection between the team
and WMD. If I said that, I misstated it. What I said is
it was not the purpose or the special focus of this team
to look at WMD. Its focus was to look at terrorist
networks and the connection.
Q: (Inaudible.) -- terrorist networks, and you've just
explained how what 9/11 demonstrates is that terrorist
networks and WMD and their acquisition thereof are
importantly intertwined. And so, how do you not look at
WMD when you're looking at terrorist networks in the case
of Iraq?
Feith: No, I didn't mean to suggest that they didn't look
at WMD at all. I'm saying that the mission that this team
was given was not: Look at WMD. The mission that they
were given was: Help us understand how these different
organizations relate to each other and to their state
sponsors.
Q: That may not have been their stated mission, but
certainly that's one of the things they found, right?
Feith: I imagine -- yes, I imagine that they looked at
WMD along with other stuff. All I'm saying is it was not
as it is portrayed in a number of erroneous press stories
that we've read. It was not the purpose of this group to
focus on the WMD issue.
Staff: Sir, I hate to bring this to a close, but I know
you're at the end of your time here. Maybe you can take
one or two more.
Q: Critics have raised the issue of the slanting of
intelligence findings, the alleged slanting, basically to
conform with the views of top policymakers. Can you say
what pressure, if any, was put on intelligence analysts
in the CIA, DIA, anywhere else, to endorse the view of
Iraq possessing chemical and biological weapon stockpiles
and reconstituting the nuclear weapons program as an
imminent threat to U.S. interests? And can you rule out
that intelligence analysts may have perceived that this
pressure existed, whether it did or not?
Feith: I know of no pressure. I can't rule out what other
people may have perceived. Who knows what people
perceive? I know of nobody who pressured anybody. We have
a -- we have a normal and, I think, useful interchange
between the intelligence community and its customers,
basically the policy community. It is not a one-way
transmission. If people understand the way intelligence
-- the intelligence agencies relate to their customers,
they understand that it's -- there's a process of back
and forth where we get reports, I get a briefing every
morning. I know that Secretary Rumsfeld has talked about
this too. I mean, we're all, I think, in the same boat,
those of us who get daily briefings from the CIA. I get a
briefing. As I'm being briefed, questions occur to me. I
ask for clarification of items. I sometimes say,
"Well, that's an interesting point. That suggests
that it might be good to get a report on x, y, and z. And
I'd like to learn more about that." And those
questions go back and they produce additional work and
reports. And the intelligence community prides itself on
being responsive when its customers raise questions and
make requests for additional information or clarification
or tables or historical perspective on some topic. I
mean, things go back and forth all the time. And, I mean,
that is the way a good system works.
And in this particular case, we, as customers, were
analyzing this information about terrorist networks, and
when we happened to come up with some interesting
observations, we took them back and gave them to the
intelligence community. And I must say, I was very
pleased with the response that we got. I mean, people
over there said that's -- you know, that's worthy of
looking at and study. And I think that, you know, that
George Tenet received it very well and found it useful.
Q: Two questions. Are any of the people who were on the
intelligence team, which you said is now no longer doing
that work, are any of those people still paid by the
department and perhaps in other parts of your
organization basically doing that same work on other
topics? That's my first question. Are any of those people
still there doing that work, perhaps on Iraq or on WMD?
And my second question, I am really puzzled why you two
gentlemen are exactly doing this briefing today. Neither
of you are well known to come down here and talk about
what you read in the news media. Were you asked to do
this briefing by Secretary Rumsfeld, by the White House,
by Torie Clarke? Do you have any sense that there's some
article coming out somewhere in the news media that
you're trying to respond to ahead of time?
Feith: On the latter question first, there have been
enough articles that have come out already on these
subjects that have been inaccurate that -- and it's quite
clear that some of the articles that are inaccurate are
getting reverberations in numerous other articles that
clearly are derivative of the mother lode of inaccuracies
here and there. And we just -- and since it directly
relates to our office, we just thought it might be useful
to straighten the record out. So --
Q: So this briefing was your idea?
Feith: This briefing was my idea. And -- I mean, I hope
it is in the nature of a public service.
Now, the first question you asked was --
Q: Is anybody who was on that intelligence team doing
that work still --
Feith: Well, as I mentioned before you arrived, the --
Q: No, I was here.
Feith: Oh. Okay. The team that has gotten so much
attention was two people, full-time. (Chuckling.) I mean,
this is much less than one would infer from a lot of the
press coverage of it. And altogether, as I said, there
might have been a half a dozen people who were in and
out, working either on the team full-time, part-time.
Q: (Off mike.) --
Feith: And some of those people -- because some of them
were Reserve officers, so I mean, I think they're --
they've moved on, but some of them are people who are
still in the government.
Q: May -- what I'm not understanding is, are any of those
half dozen people -- bluntly, what I'm trying to ask --
doing the same work, perhaps not in an assembled team --
Feith: No, this was a project.
Q: I understand that.
Feith: So the answer's no.
Q: But the question is, I want to make sure there's no
bureaucratic misunderstanding. That team has been
disbanded. That label is gone. But is that work,
candidly, going on somewhere else?
Feith: "Disbanded" is a peculiar term to apply.
They had a project. They finished their project.
Q: And the project -- fine. The project is done.
Nonetheless, is that work of reviewing information still
going on in your organization? Is that basic task --
Feith: I would say that there are hundreds and hundreds,
perhaps thousands, of people in this building who review
intelligence for policy purposes every day. So that work
is ongoing by thousands of people in this department.
Q: So why did you need these special people?
Feith: As I explained, we had a particular requirement to
review the existing intelligence, to help us develop the
strategy for the Defense Department for the global war on
terrorism.
(Cross talk.) I'll take one last question here. This lady
has had her hand up.
Q: And couple of -- (Inaudible.) -- here. These two
people you say you had managed to come up with a link,
you say, between al Qaeda and Iraq -- using the same
intelligence, because you didn't gather intelligence --
that the CIA hadn't really come up with, and then you
present this to George Tenet. Is that just coincidental
that these two -- was their analysis more intense?
Feith: I don't think it's all that unusual or hard to
understand. If a large amount of material is reviewed by
fresh eyes -- I mean, this -- I think this would apply to
-- you know, any intelligent people sitting down with
this pile of intelligence, looking it over, reading it
over, has a chance of finding certain things in it. I
mean, ask yourself why new history books get written
about old events. I mean, people look over very often the
very same material. But in light of experience or just
because they see something that nobody had seen before,
certain connections become clear or appear, and, you
know, new hypotheses get developed and new facts surface.
I mean, it's not that mysterious. It's just -- there was
an enormous amount of intelligence about terrorist
networks that had been developed for many years before
September 11th. And the idea that we would look at it
again in light of September 11th and maybe see some new
things in it shouldn't be that surprising.
Q: But you act as if the other intelligence agencies
weren't looking at it that way.
Feith: No, they were. I -- no, I'm not acting that way.
Q: Only in post-9/11. So why --
Feith: They were too, but, I mean, I don't know why it
should surprise anybody that any given group of people
looking at a mass of material might come up with a few
interesting insights that other people didn't come up
with.
Q: And in --
Q: Why not just hire the CIA to do it then? I mean,
that's what they do full time.
Feith: Because, well --
Q: (Inaudible.) -- the DIA, and you have to get in your
own people and say, "This is what we're looking for.
Go find it."
Feith: No. Nobody -- nobody helped -- see, this
suggestion that we said to them -- "This is what
we're looking for. Go find it." -- is precisely the
inaccuracy that we are here to rebut.
Q: Can I just do one final one. Can I just --
Q: Can you give us an example of information that they
found that did not fit those scenarios; that did not say
there was an imminent danger; that did not present the
facts that there was a belief that they were -- had an
active and ongoing weapons of mass destruction program?
Was that a part of what they found --
Feith: No, as I told you, the main thing that the
briefing of this team produced was not this Iraq-al Qaeda
connection. That was incidental. The main thing that the
team produced was it helped -- it helped educate a lot of
people about the fact that there was more cooperation and
interconnection among these terrorist organizations and
state sponsors across ideological lines than many people
had appreciated before. That was really -- I mean, to sum
it up in a sentence, that's it.
Q: Just one final point. What do think now of --
Feith: And this is her final point.
Q: (Laughs.) What do you think of the intelligence now?
You said we'll see about the weapons of mass destruction,
and yet some of the intelligence thus far that the United
States was told about has been wrong. The Iraqis didn't
use chemical weapons when American troops advanced. The
first 200 sites you've checked that were suspected sites
for weapons of mass destruction had nothing. You're
backing away from some of the other sites, unless you get
further intelligence. Can you assess the intelligence
thus far?
Feith: The process of gathering information about the
Iraqi programs is underway. I'm not going to come in and
preempt the careful work that's being done. As you all
know, there's a major new team going over to make
systematic and comprehensive the work on studying what
exists in Iraq and what became of this and that, about
which we had information regarding the Iraqi weapons of
mass destruction programs. They'll do their systematic
and comprehensive work, and they'll come back and report.
Q: Can we talk about the last couple of months, though?
Feith: Thank you all.
Q: What about the last couple of months?
Feith: I'm not going to preempt what the team is -- (Off
mike as he leaves the podium.)
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This is from G o o g l e's cache of http://defenselink.mil/transcripts/2003/tr20030604-0248.html as retrieved on Aug 9, 2004 06:29:41 GMT.
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Oriental Rugs the O'Connell Notes
Copyright Barry O'Connell 2004 - 2008.
Last revised: January 31, 2008.
People in the SW-Asia Model - A
People in the SW-Asia Model - B
People in the SW-Asia Model - C
People in the SW-Asia Model - D
People in the SW-Asia Model - E
People in the SW-Asia Model - F
People in the SW-Asia Model - G
People in the SW-Asia Model - H
People in the SW-Asia Model -I
People in the SW-Asia Model - J
People in the SW-Asia Model - K
People in the SW-Asia Model - L
People in the SW-Asia Model - M
People in the SW-Asia Model - N
People in the SW-Asia Model - O
People in the SW-Asia Model - P
People in the SW-Asia Model - R
People in the SW-Asia Model - S
People in the SW-Asia Model - T
People in the SW-Asia Model - V