Guest guest Posted June 14, 2005 Report Share Posted June 14, 2005 A Mon, 13 Jun 2005 12:45:22 -0700 (PDT) Progress Report: British Briefing Papers Revealed The Progress Report by Judd Legum, Faiz Shakir, Nico Pitney, Mipe Okunseinde and Christy Harvey www.progressreport.org 6/13/2005 For news and updates throughout the day, check out our blog at ThinkProgress.org. IRAQ British Briefing Papers Revealed The Washington Post reported this weekend on more secret British memos, including an eight page paper written in July 2002, approximately around the time of the Downing Street Minutes, that warned the Bush administration had given " little thought " to " the aftermath [of war in Iraq] and how to shape it. " The American Progress Action Fund obtained the series of memos written by high-level British officials and has revealed their full text this morning. Although the Post's coverage of the memos focused on the British warnings that Bush lacked a post-war plan for Iraq, the Briefing Papers also shed further light on the key allegation in the Downing Street Minutes – that the intelligence on Iraq was being " fixed. " The newly released documents show that the Bush administration was indeed selling the Iraq war based on evidence it knew was weak. PRE-WAR INTELLIGENCE WAS KNOWN TO BE WEAK: The Downing Street Minutes alleged that the intelligence on Iraq was being " fixed " around Bush's policy of attacking Iraq. Recent media spin surrounding the Minutes has sought to argue that when the British wrote " fixed, " they actually meant something other than " manipulated. " The new Briefing Papers reveal that the British knew the Iraq intelligence was weak, further suggesting that the definition of " fixed " is what most have read it to mean all along. The Iraq: Options Paper noted, " There is no greater threat now that [saddam] will use WMD than there has been in recent years, so continuing containment is an option. " British Foreign Office Political Director Peter Ricketts wrote, " US is scrambling to establish a link between Iraq and Al [Qaida] is so far frankly unconvincing. " British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said, " There has been no credible evidence to link Iraq with UBL [usama bin Laden] and Al Qaida. " BRIEFING PAPERS REPEATEDLY WARNED THAT BUSH WAS FAILING TO PLAN FOR IRAQ: The Post writes of a July 2002 memo that warned the Bush administration had given " little thought " to " the aftermath [of war in Iraq] and how to shape it. " The claims in the newly uncovered Briefing Papers demonstrate that the Bush administration, to the detriment of our troops and national security, simply chose to ignore the recommendations of its key ally. Bush similarly chose to ignore the State Department, which also foresaw the problems the U.S. has encountered in Iraq. In August 2003, the Joint Chiefs of Staff prepared a secret report that confirmed what the British and the State Department had predicted. The report entitled, " Operation Iraqi Freedom Strategic Lessons Learned, " blamed " setbacks in Iraq on a flawed and rushed war-planning process that 'limited the focus' for preparing for post-Saddam Hussein operations. " WHITE HOUSE SPIN CONTRADICTS BUSH: The White House has gone into full spin mode on the revelations of the British papers. " There was significant post war planning, " said spokesman David Almacy. " More importantly, the memo in question was written eight months before the war began; there was significant post war planning in the time that elapsed. " President Bush, however, in an interview he gave to the New York Times last August, admitted he made " a miscalculation of what the conditions would be " in post-war Iraq. BLAIR'S ADVISER WARNED THAT BUSH WAS NOT PREPARED FOR WAR: In a paper written to Prime Minister Blair on 3/14/02, David Manning – Blair's former foreign policy adviser and current British ambassador to the U.S. – wrote about a meeting he had with Condi Rice. He reported, " Bush has yet to find the answers to the big questions: how to persuade international opinion that military action against Iraq is necessary and justified; what value to put on the exiled Iraqi opposition; how to coordinate a US/allied military campaign with internal opposition (assuming there is any); what happens on the morning after? " In a dire prediction of what came about, Manning wrote: " I think there is a real risk that the Administration underestimates the difficulties. " BRITISH COULD NOT UNDERSTAND BUSH'S RUSH TO ATTACK IRAQ: Underlying the Briefing Papers is a sense that the British did not know the true motivations driving the Bush administration's Iraq policy. " Military operations need clear and compelling military objectives, " wrote the British Foreign Office Political Director Peter Ricketts. " For Iraq, 'regime change' does not stack up. It sounds like a grudge match between Bush and Saddam. " A British paper entitled " Iraq: Options Paper " sought to further understand Bush's motivations. " The US has lost confidence in containment. Some in government want Saddam removed. The success of Operation Enduring Freedom, distrust of UN sanctions and inspection regimes, and unfinished business from 1991 are all factors. " CORPORATE POWER Community Internet Under Attack Though outgoing FCC Chairman Michael Powell may find it funny to joke about " a Mercedes divide, " the ever increasing gap " between those who have access to information technology and digital content and those who do not " is no laughing matter. Now the battle to close the digital divide has spilled onto another front – the fight for free municipal broadband services. After last year's Supreme Court ruling that states can bar " cities from offering high-speed Internet services, " lobbyists from the telecommunications industry swarmed on state capitals with one singular purpose: " to take cities out of the broadband business by state dictum. " Telecom enjoyed some initial success until anti-municipal Internet bills failed in three straight states – Iowa, Florida, and Texas. The ever determined industry then set upon " an outrageous attempt ... to protect their duopoly over broadband from competition " with the help of one of their own. Doing their shilling on the steps of Congress is Rep. Pete Sessions (R-TX), a former employee of Southwestern Bell, who recently introduced legislation that " would extend the ban on municipal broadband services to every city in the country. " Send a letter to your representatives telling them to oppose the Sessions bill. THE SOCIOECONOMIC DIVIDE ON BROADBAND: Similar to the gap seen in basic Internet access, there is a vast divide between socioeconomic classes when it comes to high-speed Internet access. A recent report found that " virtually every rural state remains underserved and uncompetitive " while " in urban areas, many families are priced out of the market. " Telecom giants " have failed to bridge the digital divide and opted to serve the most lucrative markets at the expense of universal, affordable access. " One expert compared such high-speed Internet access inequity to " having the moderate and upper classes in IMAX theatres, while the underprivileged are still watching silent movies. " THE CASE FOR COMMUNITY INTERNET: Over the course of our nation's history, municipalities have played a key role in " building and maintaining critical infrastructure. " Therefore, a chief claim made by opponents of municipal broadband – that local governments are incapable of running complex broadband systems – is a statement that " defies history and the experiences of daily life. " Also, municipalities care about more than profits and do not " enjoy a wealth of state and federal subsidies " and other perks thrown at telecom giants. Local governments, which are " accountable to local citizens [and] understand their own needs, " can " provide needed broadband services designed to address community needs " rather than just the bottom line. Municipal networks will " provide the competition necessary to keep rates low and quality of service high " as well as " increase investment in local communities. " Other developed nations that have surpassed America in providing broadband access not only permit but oftentimes encourage " local governments to build out broadband networks. " INNOVATORS NO MORE: Though President Bush would like to celebrate the increased accessibility of the Internet, over the first three years of the Bush administration, the nation " dropped from 4th to 13th place in global rankings of broadband Internet usage and the latest mobile-phone technology. " Once considered a leader of innovation, the United States is being outdone by many other industrialized nations that are " positioning themselves to be the first states to reap the benefits of the broadband era: economic growth, increased productivity, and a better quality of life. " In fact, broadband service is seen as " essential to economic development. " As broadband " becomes a necessary utility for commerce, education and healthcare, " high-speed Internet services will be as critical to a nation's infrastructure as water pipelines and electricity grids or schools and hospitals. THE CASE AGAINST CORPORATE-ONLY BROADBAND: Desperate to maintain their monopoly, telecom giants have " done their best to demonize " municipal broadband projects, launching " an aggressive lobbying and misinformation campaign. " Earlier this year, Verizon, which successfully blocked Pennsylvania residents from obtaining low-cost Internet access without its permission, " circulated ... to lawmakers, journalists and opinion leaders " a so-called fact sheet that was chock full of erroneous statistics on the " " 'failures' of public broadband. " In actuality, " municipal broadband has been a success for those communities that have begun offering service ... [and] the propaganda maligning municipal systems is nothing more than industry-sponsored folklore. " All their shadowy lobbying work obscures the fact that " the commercial broadband market has not only failed to bring affordable access in 2005, it is nowhere close. " Under the Radar GITMO – MINORS AS YOUNG AS 14 DETAINED, LAWYERS SAY: " Lawyers representing detainees at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, say that there still may be as many as six prisoners who were captured before their 18th birthday and that the military has sought to conceal the precise number of juveniles at the prison camp, " the New York Times reports. One lawyer says his client was 14 when captured, and has told him that " he was beaten regularly in his early days at Guantanamo, hanged by his wrists for hours at a time and that an interrogator pressed a burning cigarette into his arm. " On Friday, Sen. Mel Martinez (R-FL) became the first high-profile conservative politician to say the Bush administration should consider shutting Gitmo down. ETHICS – ANOTHER WEEK, ANOTHER DELAY SCANDAL: Ever since the PAC founded by House leader Tom Delay (R-TX) was found to have " broken the law by failing to report $500,000 in donations, " DeLay has insisted he never handled any of the PAC's donations personally and " had no control over its day-to-day operation. " But the Los Angeles Times, citing newly subpoenoed documents of conservative activists, shows that's simply not the case. In one document, for example, a DeLay fundraiser informs an aide that DeLay would " personally contact " potential donors to the PAC. " Another exchange suggested that two donor checks would be delivered to DeLay himself, " the Times reports. (Oh yeah, and DeLay's " children's charity " is now under fire as well.) CORRUPTION – DUKE'S DIRTY DWELLING DEALINGS: In November 2003, a defense contractor named Mitchell Wade bought the house of Rep. Randy 'Duke' Cunningham (R-CA), a member of the influential defense appropriations subcommittee. Wade ended up taking a $700,000 loss on the purchase – but all was not lost. Wade's firm, which " had been suffering through a flat period in winning Pentagon contracts, " suddenly went on a tear, " reeling in tens of millions of dollars in defense and intelligence-related contracts " from Cunningham's defense appropriations subcommittee. Conflict of interest? Sure looks like it. But Cunningham says otherwise: " My whole life I've lived aboveboard, " the congressman told the San Diego Union-Tribune. " I've never even smoked a marijuana cigarette. I don't cheat. " IRAQ – TOP COMMANDER SAYS NO MILITARY SOLUTION: " A growing number of senior American military officers in Iraq have concluded that there is no long-term military solution " to the insurgency in Iraq, Knight-Ridder reports. Gen. George W. Casey, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, said the military's efforts in Iraq had been struck " by the 'the Pillsbury Doughboy idea' – pressing the insurgency in one area only causes it to rise elsewhere. " Instead, the officials said, " the only way to end the guerilla war " is through the Iraqi political process, which itself is moving " further toward a political stalemate, " according to yesterday's New York Times. CORRUPTION – CUSTER'S REVENGE: Remember Custer Battles LLC? That's the firm accused of defrauding U.S. taxpayers of $50 million in Iraq reconstruction funds and banned from bidding on further government contracts. For months, the Justice Department turned a blind eye to Custer Battles, declining to even take part in the whistle-blower case against the company. Now, AP has learned that former execs of the firm " have continued doing contracting work [for the Pentagon] and have formed new companies " to bid on contracts in Iraq. The new companies (AP reports there are at least three) are all headed by Custer Battles' former COO and housed in the firm's old office. GOOD NEWS Over the weekend, " G8 finance ministers agreed to wipe out $40 billion of debt owed to multilateral institutions by 18 of the world's poorest nations. " DON'T MISS TALKING POINTS: No Truth, No Plan on Iraq War. MEDIA: The great Watergate cover-up ... of 2005. REFORM: The one thing that may take down Tony Soprano? Congress. PRIVACY: War against Roe v. Wade being waged at state level. TERRORISM: The truth behind the admin's celebrated conviction rate. DAILY GRILL " There's no question that Saddam Hussein had Al Qaeda ties. " – President Bush, 9/17/03 VERSUS " US scrambling to establish a link between Iraq and Al [Qaida] is so far frankly unconvincing. " – British memo, 3/22/02 (full text released today on ThinkProgress) DAILY OUTRAGE Fred Jackson, news director of American Family Radio, called the historic win by Los Angeles' first Hispanic mayor " a direct result of what's been going on with illegal immigration, " warning that Latino mayors would be popping up all over the nation. © Copyright 2005 by American Progress Action Fund. All rights reserved. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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