Poland Says It Was 'Misled' On WMD
But Warsaw Says World Better With Saddam Out Of Power
-
Play CBS Video Video CIA Chief On Defensive
Jim Stewart reports then-CIA chief George Tenet found himself on the defensive when questioned in March about the intelligence President Bush used to justify the U.S.-led war in Iraq.
-
Video
Bloody Tuesday In Iraq
In the latest attempt to spark civil war in Iraq, terrorists launched coordinated bomb attacks on mosques in two cities, killing over 140 Shiite muslims, Elizabeth Palmer reports.
-
Video
Iraq & Al Qaeda
Richard Roth reports the attacks in Iraq fit a timetable for civil war outlined in a memo from Iraqi insurgents to al Qaeda. But a homegrown culture of Jihad is also taking root.
-
Interactive
WMD Fallout
Controversy surrounds the hunt for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
-
Interactive
The Hunt
Searching for Iraq's most-wanted people and weapons.
-
Interactive
The U.N. Effort
Learn about resolution 1441, the weapons inspections and key events on the road to war.
The remarks by President Aleksander Kwasniewski to a small group of European reporters were his first hint of criticism about war in Iraq.
Earlier in the day, Kwasniewski said Poland may start withdrawing its troops from Iraq early next year, months earlier than the previously stated date of mid-2005.
"Naturally, one may protest the reasons for the war action in Iraq. I personally think that today, Iraq without Saddam Hussein is a truly better Iraq than with Saddam Hussein," Kwasniewski told the European reporters.
"But naturally I also feel uncomfortable due to the fact that we were misled with the information on weapons of mass destruction," he said, according to a transcript released by the presidential press office.
The Bush administration argued for the war based on intelligence that President Bush said left "no doubt" that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.
President Bush, in the chow line with troops at Fort Campbell, Ky., after delivering a speech, was asked about Kwasniewski's remarks but shook his head and said, ``I'm here to eat.''
In months of searching, no weapons have been found. The U.S. has reported evidence of illegal weapons-related activity, especially on missiles, but has not produced proof that Iraq had active programs to make biological, chemical or nuclear arms.
Asked about Kwasniewski's remarks as he visited with troops at Kentucky's Fort Campbell, Mr. Bush replied "I'm here to eat dinner," reports CBS News White House Correspondent Mark Knoller.
A presidential commission is probing why U.S. intelligence apparently missed the mark in Iraq and other countries. But CIA director George Tenet says his analysts "never said there was an 'imminent' threat."
The House and Senate intelligence committees are also examining the prewar data, with the Senate committee reviewing not just the intelligence reports but also how they were used by administration officials to justify the war to the public.
Reports like the CIA's national intelligence estimate on Iraq reflect doubts and gray areas over Iraq's weapons that administration officials rarely acknowledged.
Tenet denied there was political pressure to skew intelligence reports, but has acknowledged that he only recently learned that a special Pentagon office was feeding intelligence directly to this White House, not approving it with the CIA as is customary.
Kwasniewski's comments came days after Spain's new government, taking power in the wake of the Madrid bombings with their apparent link to Islamic extremists, said it would pull its troops from Iraq by June 30 unless the United Nations takes over.
"Everything suggests that pullout from Iraq may be possible after the stabilization mission is crowned with success and, in my assessment soon, it may be the start of 2005," Kwasniewski told RMF-FM radio.
Poland commands a 9,500-strong multinational force in south-central Iraq that includes the Spaniards.
But he noted that Iraq now has an interim constitution and said it should soon have an interim government that will allow current forces to be replaced by peacekeepers.
He insisted, however, that Poland was staying the course in Iraq and would not bow to terror.
"We are facing the same threat as Spain," Kwasniewski said, but he stressed that "terrorism must be combated, also with force."
In Britain, a parliamentary committee that probed Britain's case for war in Iraq criticized the government Thursday for failing to cooperate fully, and asked lawmakers to consider whether sanctions should apply in the future.
The House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee noted that Prime Minister Tony Blair and several key defense and security chiefs declined to testify about whether the government exaggerated the threat posed by Saddam Hussein.
It also noted that the government refused to provide important intelligence documents on alleged Iraqi weapons of mass destruction.
In its report last year, the committee cleared the government of hyping a September 2002 intelligence dossier on Iraqi weapons.
It also cleared Blair's office of inserting a claim, against the wishes of intelligence chiefs, that Saddam could launch chemical and biological weapons at 45 minutes notice.
İMMIV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Video and Galleries from Iraq After Saddam
- Latest in Iraq After Saddam
- 50 Dead In Iraq's Worst Day Since Exit
- Biden Meets with Key U.S. Leaders in Iraq
- Senate Investigates Blackwater Subsidiary


