ـ |
ـ |
|
|
|||||||||||||||
تحذير للاستخبارات الأمريكية: العراق في طريقه إلى مزيد من العنف بقلم:
كارين دي يونغ & والتر بينكاس واشنطن
بوست - 2/2/2007 Iraq
at Risk of Further Strife, Intelligence Report Warns By
Karen DeYoung and Walter Pincus Washington
Post Staff Writers Friday,
February 2, 2007; Page A01 A long-awaited National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq, presented to
President Bush by the intelligence community yesterday,
outlines an increasingly perilous situation in which the
United States has little control and there is a strong
possibility of further deterioration, according to
sources familiar with the document. In a discussion of whether The document emphasizes that although al-Qaeda activities in Completion of the estimate, which projects events in In acid remarks yesterday to Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the departing Although McCain supports the additional troop deployments, he has proposed a
Senate resolution including stringent benchmarks to
gauge the progress of the Iraqi government and military.
McCain's resolution and other nonbinding, bipartisan
proposals that would express varying degrees of
disapproval of Bush's plan will be debated on the Senate
floor next week. Legislators have been equally critical of the intelligence community,
repeatedly recalling that most of the key judgments in
the October 2002 NIE on "One of the sort of deeply held rumors around here is that the
intelligence community gives an administration or a
president what he wants by way of intelligence," Sen.
Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) told Navy Vice
Adm. John M. McConnell, Bush's nominee to be director of
national intelligence, during McConnell's confirmation
hearing yesterday. Without directly accepting Feinstein's premise, McConnell replied that the
intelligence community had learned
"meaningful" lessons over the past several
years and that "there's very intense focus on
independence." McConnell and others made clear that
the new NIE on One senior congressional aide said the NIE had been described to him as
"unpleasant but very detailed." A source
familiar with its language said it contained several
dissents that are prominently displayed so that
policymakers understand any disagreements within the
intelligence community -- a significant change from the
2002 document, which listed most key dissents in
small-type footnotes. Sen.
Christopher S. Bond (R-Mo.), vice chairman of
the Senate intelligence committee, pointedly told
McConnell that "we are not going to accept national
security issue judgment[s] without examining the
intelligence underlying the judgments, and I believe
this committee has an obligation to perform due
diligence on such important documents." Previous
committee attempts to obtain material to back up a 2005
NIE on The outgoing director of national intelligence, John D. Negroponte, briefed
the president on the Iraq NIE yesterday, and the
document will be made available to Congress early today.
A two-page declassified version of its key judgments
will then be posted on the DNI Web site. Sources familiar with the closely held estimate agreed to discuss it in
general terms yesterday on the condition that they
remain anonymous and not be directly quoted. But
Negroponte and others in the intelligence community have
made frequent references to its conclusions in recent
testimony. On Tuesday, Negroponte referred to the NIE in testimony before the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee. " Congress, which requested the Iraq NIE last August, has pressured the
intelligence community to complete it in time for
consideration of Bush's new strategy. Intelligence
officials have insisted that their best experts were
working on the project at the same time they were
meeting the demands of policymakers for current
intelligence reports. NIEs comprise input from across the community and are written by the
National Intelligence Council. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/01/AR2007020101152.html
|
ـ |
ـ |
من حق الزائر الكريم أن ينقل وأن ينشر كل ما يعجبه من موقعنا . معزواً إلينا ، أو غير معزو .ـ |