THE WORLD
French Told CIA of Bogus Intelligence
The foreign spy
service warned the U.S. various times before the war that there was no
proof Iraq sought uranium from Niger, ex-officials say.
By Tom Hamburger, Peter Wallsten and Bob Drogin
Times Staff Writers
December 11, 2005
PARIS — More than a year before President Bush declared in his 2003
State of the Union speech that Iraq had tried to buy nuclear weapons
material in Africa, the French spy service began repeatedly warning the
CIA in secret communications that there was no evidence to support the
allegation.
The previously undisclosed exchanges between the U.S. and the French,
described in interviews last week by the retired chief of the French
counterintelligence service and a former CIA official, came on separate
occasions in 2001 and 2002.
The French conclusions were reached
after extensive on-the-ground investigations in Niger and other former
French colonies, where the uranium mines are controlled by French
companies, said Alain Chouet, the French former official. He said the
French investigated at the CIA's request.
Chouet's account was
"at odds with our understanding of the issue," a U.S. government
official said. The U.S. official declined to elaborate and spoke only
on condition that neither he nor his agency be named.
However, the essence of Chouet's account — that the French repeatedly
investigated the Niger claim, found no evidence to support it, and
warned the CIA — was extensively corroborated by the former CIA
official and a current French government official, who both spoke on
condition of anonymity.
The repeated warnings from France's
Direction Generale de la Securite Exterieure did not prevent the Bush
administration from making the case aggressively that Saddam Hussein
was seeking nuclear weapons materials.
It was not the first time a foreign government tried to warn U.S.
officials off of dubious prewar intelligence.
In the notorious "Curveball" case, an Iraqi who defected to Germany
claimed to have knowledge of Iraqi biological weapons. Bush and other
U.S. officials repeatedly cited Curveball's claims even as German
intelligence officials argued that he was unstable and might be a
fabricator.
The case of the forged documents that
were used to support claims that Hussein was seeking materials in
Africa launched a political controversy that continues to roil
Washington.
A special prosecutor continues to investigate
whether the Bush administration unmasked a covert CIA operative in a
bid to discredit her husband, a former diplomat whom the CIA dispatched
in February 2002 to investigate the Niger reports. The diplomat, Joseph
C. Wilson IV, like the French, said he found little reason to believe
the uranium story. The investigation into the leak led to the
indictment of Vice President Dick Cheney's former Chief of Staff I.
Lewis "Scooter" Libby on charges of obstruction of justice and perjury.
The French opposed U.S. policy on Iraq and refused to support the
invasion. But whether or not that made top U.S. officials skeptical of
the French report on Niger, intelligence officials from both countries
said that they cooperated closely during the prewar period and
continued to do so. And the French conclusions on Niger were supported
by some in the CIA.
The CIA requested French assistance in
2001 and 2002 because French firms dominate the uranium business
internationally and former French colonies lead the world in production
of the strategic mineral.
French officials were particularly
sensitive to the assertion about Iraq trying to obtain nuclear
materials given the role that French companies play in uranium mining
in France's former colonies.
"In France, we've always been
very careful about both problems of uranium production in Niger and
Iraqi attempts to get uranium from Africa," Chouet said. "After the
first Gulf War, we were very cautious with that problem, as the French
government didn't care to be accused of maintaining relations with
Saddam in that field."
The French-U.S. communications were
detailed to The Times last week by Chouet, who directed a 700-person
intelligence unit specializing in weapons proliferation and terrorism.
Chouet said the cautions from his agency grew more emphatic over time
as the Bush administration bolstered the case for invading Iraq by
arguing that Hussein had sought to build a nuclear arsenal using
uranium from Niger.
Chouet recalled that his agency was
contacted by the CIA in the summer of 2001 — shortly before the attacks
of Sept. 11 — as intelligence services in Europe and North America
became more concerned about chatter from known terrorist sympathizers.
CIA officials asked their French counterparts to check that uranium in
Niger and elsewhere was secure. The former CIA official confirmed
Chouet's account of this exchange.
Then twice in 2002, Chouet
said, the CIA contacted the French again for similar help. By mid-2002,
Chouet recalled, the request was more urgent and more specific. The CIA
was asking questions about a particular agreement purportedly signed by
Nigerian officials to sell 500 metric tons of uranium to Iraq.
Chouet dispatched a five- or six-man team to Niger to double-check any
reports of a sale or an attempt to purchase uranium. The team found
none.
Chouet and his staff noticed that the details of the
allegation matched those in fraudulent documents that an Italian
informant earlier had offered to sell to the French.
"We told the Americans, 'Bull - - - -. It doesn't make any sense,' "
Chouet said.
Chouet said the information was contained in formal cables delivered to
CIA offices in Paris and Langley, Va. Those communications did not use
such coarse language, he said, but they delivered the point in
consistent and blunt terms.
"We had the feeling that we had been heard," Chouet said. "There was
nothing more to say other than that."
The former CIA official could not confirm the specifics of this 2002
communication, but said the general conclusions matched what many in
the CIA were learning at the time.
Chouet left the French
government in the summer of 2002, after the center-right coalition led
by President Jacques Chirac won control, forcing out top officials who
had been aligned with the outgoing Socialist Francois Mitterand.
When Bush gave his State of the Union address in January 2003, citing a
report from the British that Iraq had attempted to purchase uranium in
Africa, other French officials were flabbergasted.
One
government official said that French experts viewed the statement
attributed to the British as "totally crazy because, in our view, there
was no backup for this." Nonetheless, he said, the French once again
launched an investigation, turning things "upside-down trying to find
out what was going on."
Chouet's comments come as the FBI and
the Italian government reopen investigations into the origins of the
documents that surfaced in 2002 purporting to prove the Iraq-Niger
link. The documents in question originally surfaced in Rome.
Before speaking with The Times last week, Chouet had told part of his
story to La Repubblica, a Rome newspaper, prompting Italian
investigators to resume their inquiry and seek Chouet's testimony.
In the U.S., the FBI recently reopened its inquiry into the documents
in part because it had won access to new information.
Wilson, the former U.S. ambassador sent to Niger by the CIA to
investigate the allegations, said he believed that his trip was
inspired by the forged documents. He said the briefing he received at
the CIA referred to a sales agreement between Iraq and Niger that
sounded like the forged documents.
Bush attributed the African
uranium information to British intelligence in his 2003 address: "The
British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought
significant quantities of uranium from Africa."
The British
government maintains that its conclusions were based not on the forged
documents but on other, more reliable sources. In fact, British
officials have said that they reached their conclusions long before the
forged documents surfaced.
Still, Chouet said in the interview
that the question from CIA officials in the summer of 2002 seemed to
follow almost word for word from the documents in question. He said
that an Italian intelligence source, Rocco Martino, had tried to sell
the documents to the French, but that in a matter of days French
analysts determined the documents had been forged.
"We thought
they [the Americans] were in possession of the documents," Chouet said.
"The words were very similar." The former CIA official said that in
fact the U.S. had been offered the same documents in 2001 but had
quickly rejected them as forgeries.
A spokeswoman for the
British Embassy in Washington declined to comment on Chouet's remarks,
reiterating that the British government continued to stand behind its
conclusions that Iraq had sought to purchase uranium in Africa.
A British report on prewar intelligence found the Africa claims in
Bush's speech to be "well-founded," noting that British suspicions on
Iraq's efforts to buy uranium originated with visits in 1999 by Iraqi
officials to Niger and the Congo.
Bush's assertions in his
2003 State of the Union speech had previously been made by other U.S.
officials in speeches and internal documents.
On Sept. 8, 2002
— within months of the third French warning — Cheney and then-national
security advisor Condoleezza Rice spoke in dire terms of Iraq's alleged
efforts to pursue nuclear materials. Rice warned: "We don't want the
smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud."
Chouet, asked for his
reaction to Bush's speech and the claims of his lieutenants, said: "No
proof. No evidence. No indication. No sign."
White House
officials scrambled to explain how the 16 words found their way into
the 2003 speech when so much doubt surrounded the claims. Ultimately,
then-deputy national security advisor Stephen Hadley took
responsibility for allowing them to remain.
On June 17, 2003,
five months after Bush's State of the Union, the CIA clarified its
position on whether Iraq had sought uranium from Africa.
"Since learning that the Iraq-Niger uranium deal was based on false
documents earlier this spring, we no longer believe that there is
sufficient other reporting to conclude that Iraq pursued uranium from
abroad," the agency said in an internal memorandum that was disclosed
by the Senate Intelligence Committee.
Bush critics now say that
— in light of the warnings from the French and others — the White House
owes the public a better explanation.
Former Sen. Bob Graham
(D-Fla.), who was chairman of the Intelligence Committee when the Niger
claims first surfaced in 2002, said some officials in the U.S. State
Department were also expressing doubts: "The big mystery is why did the
administration, in the face of at least a very persuasive contrary
view, feel the president should take the risk of stating this?"
*
Hamburger
and Wallsten reported from Paris and Washington, Drogin from
Washington. Times staff writer Sebastian Rotella in Paris contributed
to this report.
Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times