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Monday, Jan. 26
The Indiana Daily Student

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Senate to investigate pre-war intelligence

Two committees challenge Bush's reasons to enter Iraq

WASHINGTON -- Two Senate committees want to investigate whether U.S. intelligence accurately pointed to banned weapons in Iraq as claimed by the Bush administration in going to war, senators said Sunday.\nMore than 11 weeks have passed without conclusive evidence of an Iraqi program to develop weapons of mass destruction, senators said, and it's time to investigate whether intelligence reports saying so were correct.\nAn investigation doesn't mean senators think something was done incorrectly, Sen. John Warner, R-Va., chairman of the Armed Services Committee, said on CNN's "Late Edition."\n"By the fact that we're just investigating it, should not in any way indicate that we're putting any credibility doubt against" the CIA or the Bush administration, Warner said.\nHe said his committee and the Senate Intelligence Committee might look jointly into the situation.\nOne member of the Intelligence panel, Sen. Bob Graham, running for the Democratic presidential nomination from Florida, went further than other senators by declaring on CNN that the government might have willfully distributed erroneous information on Iraq's arsenal.\n"If we don't find these weapons of mass destruction, it will represent a serious intelligence failure or the manipulation of that intelligence to keep the American people in the dark," Graham said.\nThe Bush administration's main argument for the Iraq invasion was that deposed President Saddam Hussein held chemical and biological weapons and was possibly developing nuclear weapons. All were banned to Iraq under sanctions imposed by the United Nations in August 1990 after Iraq invaded neighboring Kuwait and by subsequent U.N. resolutions.\nBush faced the question again Sunday in a news conference at St. Petersburg, Russia, as he ended an official visit. He seemed to have told a Polish television reporter Thursday that U.S. searchers had found weapons in the form of two mobile laboratories that the Americans say were to manufacture biological weapons.\n"We've discovered weapons systems -- biological labs -- that Iraq denied she had, and labs that were prohibited under the U.N. resolutions," Bush said.\nWhile Democrats have been bashing the White House for the military's failure to find unconventional weapons in Iraq, Warner and other Republican senators joined in Sunday in proposing a congressional inquiry.\n"Absolutely, absolutely, there should be," said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., on ABC's "This Week." "And I would think that the Congress is very well suited for that, a bipartisan committee, or Intelligence Committee report."\nWarner said he and Intelligence Chairman Pat Roberts, R-Kan., have talked about a joint hearing into the intelligence about Iraq that the Bush administration was given.\nCIA Director George Tenet "assured me that he's going to supply the Congress first and foremost with all the statements made by the administration on weapons of mass destruction and the underlying \nintelligence that supported those statements," Warner said.\nWarner gave no time for an investigation.\nThe Pentagon is sending a new group of weapons hunters to Iraq to expand the search for banned weapons, beginning Monday.\nTenet defended his agency's work. "The integrity of our process was maintained throughout, and any suggestion to the contrary is simply wrong," he said Friday.\nIntelligence mistakes might have been made, Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., said, but he isn't ready to say information was manipulated.\n"I don't think we know enough yet to cross the line, though, and start questioning motives and saying that people were consciously manipulating the facts," Bayh said on CNN.\nIt's important to find out what happened, though, said Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.\n"I think it cannot go uninvestigated, because big nations have two things: they have their word and they have their credibility," Biden said on CBS's "Face the Nation."\n"Our credibility is going to be called into question in other parts of the world" if nothing is found, he said.

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