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Media overlooked Sen. Roberts's conflicting
statements about investigation into Bush administration's use of intelligence
before Iraq war
Media Matters
November 2, 2005
In reporting Sen. Pat Roberts's (R-KS) response to criticism from Democrats
that he has stonewalled the portion of a Senate Intelligence Committee report
dedicated to investigating the use -- or misuse -- of intelligence by Bush
administration officials in the buildup to the Iraq war, the media overlooked
Roberts's history of conflicting statements on the subject. Democrats say that
stonewalling by Roberts and Senate Republicans on long-standing demands for an
investigation into the use of pre-war intelligence prompted them to take the
unusual step of invoking Senate Rule 21 and calling for a closed Senate session
on November 1.
Robert's conflicting statements on "phase two"
* In a July 9, 2004, news conference, Roberts agreed with Sen. Jay
Rockefeller (D-WV) that determining whether administration officials
manipulated intelligence to promote the war, in part, constituted "phase two"
of the investigation, and was a "top priority" of his:
ROCKEFELLER: The central issue of how intelligence on Iraq was --
in this senator's opinion, was exaggerated by the Bush administration
officials, was relegated to that second phase, as yet unbegun, of the committee
investigation.
ROBERTS: As Senator Rockefeller has alluded to, this is in phase
two of our efforts. We simply couldn't get that done with the work product that
we put out. And he has pointed out that has a top priority. It is one of my top
priorities.
* In a July 13, 2004, press conference, Roberts elaborated that
phase two would include three things: 1) "what the intelligence community said
in regards to what would happen after the military mission was over"; 2) the
role of the Defense Department's Office of Special Plans, led by undersecretary
Douglas Feith; and 3) "the use question" in which the committee would "look at
the public statements of any administration official and public official ...
and compare it with the intelligence and what we have found out in regards to
the inquiry."
* In March, Roberts appeared to redefine phase two, suggesting that
the investigation would not examine how Bush administration officials allegedly
manipulated the available intelligence, if the investigation was completed at
all. In early March, Roberts said that the inquiry into the use of intelligence
was "on the back burner." Then, in a March 31 press release in which he
commented on the release of phase one of the report, Roberts stated: "I don't
think there should be any doubt that we have now heard it all regarding prewar
intelligence. I think that it would be a monumental waste of time to replow
this ground any further." Phase one of the report determined that intelligence
assessments were not impacted by pressure from policymakers, but it did not
examine how those completed intelligence assessments were used by President
Bush or policymakers in the administration and Congress.
* Roberts again contradicted himself on the April 10 edition of
NBC's Meet the Press, when he reaffirmed his 2004 commitment to include an
assessment of the use of intelligence by policymakers in phase two of the
investigation. However, in that appearance, he also downplayed such an endeavor
as something other than the "real issue" and baselessly concluded that it would
only show "that the intelligence was wrong and that's exactly why they
[policymakers] said what they said":
TIM RUSSERT (host): But as you well know, when your report came out
there were many people who said that you were not going forward with phase two
about exaggerations and shaping because you didn't want to involve yourself,
influence the election. You made a firm commitment to do just
that.
ROBERTS: Yeah, we're going to do that, Tim.
RUSSERT: The United States went to war --
ROBERTS: Tim, we're going to do that. I will bring it here. We'll
have the 50 statements. We'll have the intelligence. We can match it up and you
can do it with members of Congress, who are very, very critical, who made the
same things, and you can say, "OK," and you'll say, "Well, Pat, it just looks
to me that the intelligence was wrong and that's exactly why they said what
they said." Now, I don't know what that accomplishes over the long term. I'm
perfectly willing to do it, and that's what we agreed to do, and that door is
still open. And I don't want to quarrel with Jay, because we both agreed that
we would get it done. But we do have --we have [former U.S. representative to
the United Nations and former Iraq] Ambassador [John D.] Negroponte next week,
we have General Mike Hayden next week. We have other hot-spot hearings or other
things going on that are very important. So we will get it done, but it seems
to me that we ought to put it in some priority of order, and after we do get it
done I think everybody's going to scratch their head and say, "OK, well, that's
fine. You know, let's go to the real issue."
* In July, Roberts again reneged on his pledge to investigate the
use of intelligence. After release of the Downing Street memo, a secret British
intelligence document indicating that intelligence officials there believed
that "the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy" by the
Bush administration to support its case for war, Senate Democrats -- led by
Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) -- wrote to Roberts and Rockefeller on June 22, urging
them to "accelerate to completion the work of the so-called 'phase II' effort
to assess how policymakers used the intelligence they received." In a July 20
response to Kerry, Roberts disputed that the Senate Intelligence Committee had
"agree[d] to examine the vague notion" of how policymakers used intelligence,
and argued -- irrelevantly -- that the point was moot because the committee
unanimously found that the intelligence community's assessments were not
"influenced by political pressure." Contrary to Roberts's argument, whether the
intelligence was tainted by "pressure" is a wholly separate matter from how
that intelligence was used once it was obtained by the
administration.
* In that same response to Kerry, Roberts also appeared to
contradict his promise to Russert that he would "bring it [phase two of the
report]" onto Meet the Press by casting doubt over whether phase two would ever
be made public. Roberts wrote: "When the Committee has completed its work on
phase II, we will determine the form in which the Committee will express its
findings and whether it will be possible or prudent to release them
publicly."
* Roberts's misleading statements about phase two have continued in
recent days. While he has continued to suggest that phase two will be released
in the near future, Roberts has also continued to dismiss the need to examine
the administration's use of intelligence in the buildup to the war. On the
November 1 edition of CNN's The Situation Room, Roberts said:
ROBERTS: There's a part of me that says if you look in the rearview
mirror, there's a little crack in regards to partisan lines, and figure out
what somebody said two or three years ago, and was it justified by
intelligence. I don't know the relevancy of that.
Roberts's past statements ignored by print, broadcast media
Roberts's history of conflicting statements about whether the Senate
Intelligence Committee will, and should, examine the Bush administration's use
of pre-war intelligence went unreported throughout the media. For example,
November 2 articles by the Associated Press, The New York Times, and the Los
Angeles Times did not report Roberts's contradictory statements about the
investigation while reporting his claim that the move by Democrats to hold a
closed session of the Senate to discuss pre-war intelligence was a "stunt,"
that he had not slowed the inquiry, and that the phase two report would be
shortly forthcoming. Roberts's conflicting statements also went unmentioned in
the broadcast media, including the November 2 broadcast of National Public
Radio's (NPR) Morning Edition.
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