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Australian investigation into Iraqi WMD
Howard government exonerated despite proof of lies
By Linda Tenenbaum
5 March 2004
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What stands out about the report tabled in the Australian federal
parliament on Monday on the intelligence used by the Howard government
to justify participation in the war on Iraq is the staggering
contradiction between its contents and conclusions.
Taken as a whole, the evidence compiled by the seven-member
Senate committee investigating The accuracy of intelligence
on Iraqs Weapons of Mass Destruction amounts to a damning
exposure of the conduct of the Australian governmentalong
with its British and US counterpartsin waging an unprovoked,
aggressive war. While carefully worded, and couched in the mildest
possible language, the 147-page dossier makes clear that the Bush
and Blair administrations manufactured and manipulated intelligence
to give the false impression that Iraq had active WMD programs,
as well as the capacity to utilise WMD; that all three governments
lied to their populations about the threat posed by Saddam Hussein;
and that the existence or otherwise of WMD had nothing to do with
the real reasons for going to war.
As the report declares: ...the case made by the [Australian]
government was that Iraq possessed WMD in large quantities and
posed a grave and unacceptable threat to the region and the world,
particularly as there was a danger that Iraqs WMD might
be passed to terrorist organisations.
This is not the picture that emerges from an examination
of the assessments provided to the committee by Australias
two analytical agencies.
The report even alludes to the damaging implications of this
evidence. There was an expectation created prior to the
war that actual weapons of mass destruction would be found and
found in sufficient quantities to pose a clear and present danger
requiring immediate pre-emptive action. Such action is only sanctioned
under international law where the danger is immediate, so the
immediacy of the threat was crucial to the argument. The existence
of programs alone does not meet the threshold.
In other words, although the committee doesnt explicitly
say so, since Iraq had no immediate WMD capacity, or even any
WMD programs, the US-led war was illegal. Thus, according to the
precedents established at the Nuremberg trials after World War
II relating to unprovoked and aggressive war, Prime Minister Howard
and his ministers, not to speak of the Bush and Blair governments,
are guilty of committing war crimes.
But the bipartisan committee, comprising members of both the
ruling Coalition and opposition Labor parties goes to extraordinary
lengths to draw the opposite conclusion. It politically exonerates
Howard and shifts all responsibility for the failure
of WMD intelligencei.e., for the fact that there were actually
no WMD in Iraqonto Australias intelligence agencies.
Its major recommendation is another inquiry, to assess the performance
of the intelligence agencies, which will be held in secret,
conducted by an ex-intelligence officer and, since it will report
to the National Security Committee of Cabinet, will probably never
be made public. Its purpose is to bury the issue once and for
all.
While the parliamentary inquirys report was finalised
more than three months agogiving the government plenty of
time to rehearse its response before the public releaseits
conclusions mirror the whitewash brought down in January by the
Hutton inquiry in Britain.
A shift by the ONA
One of the main thrusts of the report concerns a sudden shift
that occurred in September 2002 in the intelligence assessments
being provided to the government by the Office of National Assessments
(ONA). While the ONA and the Defence Intelligence Organisation
(DIO) had similar views until September 12, 2002, their analyses
began to diverge after that date. According to chairman and former
Coalition minister David Jull, The committee was aware of
a sudden and as yet unexplained change in assessments provided
by the ONA between 12 and 13 September, 2002.
The report documents that from February 2000 until September
12, 2002 both agencies described intelligence on Iraqs WMD
as scarce, patchy and inconclusive. They assessed
Iraqs military capability as limited and the
countrys infrastructure in decline. Saddam Husseins
capacity to use his weapons is low and his willingness to
use them is assessed to be defensive.
The document continues: In March 2001, ONA reports that
the scale of threat from Iraq WMD is less that it was a
decade ago. On September 6, ONA said Iraq was highly
unlikely to have nuclear weapons. On September 12, the agency
maintained there was no firm evidence of any chemical
or biological warfare production.
Then, on September 13, ONA was requested by the Department
of Foreign Affairs to prepare another assessment, which was subsequently
the basis of government speeches. In the words of the report,
the new analysis was drawn upon by ministers in some of
their parliamentary and public statements and was
intended to be the basis of Ministers speeches. The
first major government statement on Iraq was delivered in both
chambers of parliament on 17 September 2002.
From this date on, the skeptical and cautionary language became
much more definitive. Unlike the DIO, the ONA now declares:
A range of intelligence and public information suggests
that Iraq is highly likely to have chemical and biological
weapons and Iraq has almost certainly been
working to increase its ability to make chemical and biological
weapons (emphasis in original). Moreover, there is
no reason to believe that Saddam Hussein has abandoned his ambition
to acquire nuclear weapons.
Not only does the committee find this shift inexplicable, it
concludes that it was not the result of political pressure. Predictably,
Prime Minister Howard has seized upon this finding as proof that
his repeated claims that Iraq had an arsenal of WMD
and a massive program, rendering war the only means
of disarming Saddam and averting a direct, undeniable
and lethal threat to Australia and its people were simply
based on the intelligence he received from the countrys
agencies. If it has turned out to be falsesomething he still
refuses to concedeneither he nor his government were to
blame.
A chronology of events
To explain the ONAs sudden shift, one only has to turn
to the parliamentary committees own report.
In his classified submission, the director general of ONA,
Kim Jones, noted that ONA did not operate in a
complete mental vacuum and that it was conscious of
policy issues. He went on, We see ourselves as servicing
ministers needs for assessed intelligence.
What were the needs that required servicing?
As the chronology of events cited in the reports appendix
makes clear, in August 2002 the Bush administration began stepping
up its propaganda campaign for war against Iraq. The White House
Iraq Group (WHIG) was established to organise and disseminate
disinformation about Iraqs so-called WMD, sourced mainly
from the right-wing Iraqi dissidents who had come under Washingtons
patronage. Vice President Cheney delivered two major speeches
to make the case for war and on September 7, Bush
and Blair met at Camp David to work out the details.
On September 12, Bush delivered an ultimatum to the United
Nations in his address to the UN General Assembly that it either
rubberstamp a US invasion of Iraq or become irrelevant.
The lies about Iraqi WMD and other disinformation deemed necessary
to justify an illegal, aggressive war were funneled to the Australian
government, which had already committed itself to the coalition
of the willing, from the WHIG via US and UK intelligence
agencies to the ONA.
Nobody needed to pressure the ONA to provide Howard
and other ministers with the material they required, because the
agency functions as a political adjunct to the government. Unlike
the DIO, which serves the Department of Defence, and therefore
the needs of the military, the ONA operates under the direction
of the prime ministers office. It has become notorious,
for example, for having supplied the Howard government with defamatory
lies about asylum seekers in the 2001 election in order to help
it win office.
Not surprisingly the speeches made by Howard and other government
ministers after September 12 followed the line of Bush and Cheney
to the letter.
As the parliamentary report points out there was a surge
of new intelligence on Iraq... from the beginning of September
2002. According to the report, there was a 10-fold
increase in intelligence reports received by the agencies at that
time, most of it untested or uncertain, and 97 percent of it coming
from partner agencies. The ONA and DIO testified that only
22 percent of this new material was designated as tested,
i.e., the majority came from unreliable sourcesprimarily
Iraqi dissidents who wanted to replace Saddam Hussein with their
own regime.
The DIO continued to express reservations about this intelligence
from the US, as well as from the UK, and to caution about Iraqs
WMD. The fact that it maintained a degree of skepticism towards
the governments agenda was bound up with deep-going divisions
within the ruling class itself over Australian participation in
the US-led war. Significant sections of the military hierarchy,
as well as leading corporate figures, opposed the war on the grounds
that it would compromise Australias national interests
within the Asia-Pacific region and at home.
The real reasons for war
Despite the wealth of material amassed in the document demonstrating
the fraudulent character of the WMD campaign, the parliamentary
committee made no mention of the real motivations behind the war.
According to the report, the DIO testified: We made a judgement
here in Australia... that the United States was committed to military
action against Iraq. We had the view that that was, in a sense,
independent of the intelligence assessment.
Like millions of people around the world who were well aware
that the WMD campaign was full of lies, and who were expressing
their opposition in the largest antiwar demonstrations in history,
the Australian intelligence agencies knew full well that the decision
to go to war had been made for other reasons.
But the committee decided to probe no further, arguing that
the terms of reference precluded consideration of the decision
to go to war except insofar as it rested on intelligence assessments.
Once again, the purpose was to provide a whitewash for the Howard
government.
The Bush administration unleashed war on Iraq, not to disarm
Saddam Hussein or protect the worlds people from WMD, but
to seize Iraqi oil and establish US hegemony over the Middle East
against its imperialist rivals. Howard decided to extend his unconditional
support, despite massive opposition, in order to strengthen the
US-Australia alliance and, in this way, try to ensure continued
US backing for his own neo-colonial designs within the South Pacific.
Having been cleared of any wrongdoing by the parliamentary
inquiry, Howard has insisted, in the wake of the reports
release, that his primary reason for participating in the war
was to remove Saddam Hussein from power. Anyone who opposed the
war, he declared to parliament, was a supporter of the old regime.
This was not, however, the prime ministers position last
yearbecause such a policy of regime change would
have been transparently illegal. Like Bush and Blair, he needed
the WMD lies to justify what was an illegal and criminal war.
In light of this, the official response to the parliamentary
committees report is highly revealing. The press has uniformly
supported its findings, deeming them careful and fair.
Its effusive support for anothersecretinquiry into
the intelligence agencies simply highlights that the purpose of
any further investigation will be to divert attention from the
governments role. The editorial in the liberal
Melbourne Age newspaper was typical of the media as a whole:
What the review does not need to be over is an inquiry into
the politics.
As for the opposition partiesLabor, Democrat and Greensnot
one voice has called for the resignation of Howard and his senior
ministers for knowingly deceiving the parliament and the Australian
people. No demands have been made for criminal charges to be laid
against Bush, Blair and Howard for unleashing an unprovoked aggressive
war or for the Australian government to be called to account.
Behind the official reaction lies the abandonment of the previous
norms and traditions of parliamentary accountability and bourgeois
parliamentary democracy. In Australia, as in the US and Britain,
the prosecution of an illegal war, with the full complicity of
the entire official establishment, is an expression of a deep-going
shift in social relations that has already transcended the old
political forms.
See Also:
Bush's Iraq commission and
the "intelligence failure" fraud
Part One
[7 February 2004]
Hutton Inquiry: A black day
for democracy in Britain
[3 February 2004]
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