WASHINGTON, March 31, 2005

Report Rips Intel Agencies

Commission Calls Prewar Judgments 'Dead Wrong'

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  • Video Experts On Intel Weakness

    Bob Schieffer spoke with the heads of the commission that issued a report on the U.S.'s intel agencies. Former Sen. Charles Robb and retired judge Lawrence Silberman say there needs to be an overhaul.

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    • The commission was led by Democrat Charles Robb, left, a former senator from Virginia, and Republican Laurence Silberman, a retired federal appeals court judge.

      The commission was led by Democrat Charles Robb, left, a former senator from Virginia, and Republican Laurence Silberman, a retired federal appeals court judge.  (AP)

    • President Bush said he shared the commisson's conclusion that the U.S. intelligence community needs fundamental change.

      President Bush said he shared the commisson's conclusion that the U.S. intelligence community needs fundamental change.  (AP)

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(CBS/AP) 
The president will meet with his Cabinet this afternoon, intending to send the signal that he's serious about shaking up the way the intelligence agency does business, reports CBS News White House Correspondent Bill Plante.

The report does not accuse the administration of manipulating the intelligence. The commission noted that it wasn't authorized to investigate how policy-makers used this information.

"The daily intelligence briefings given to you before the Iraq war were flawed," it said. "Through attention-grabbing headlines and repetition of questionable data, these briefings overstated the case that Iraq was rebuilding its WMD programs."

In an implicit swipe at the Bush administration, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said the report did not review how federal policymakers used the intelligence they were given.

"I believe it is essential that we hold both the intelligence agencies and senior policymakers accountable for their actions," Reid said.

The unclassified version does not go into significant detail on the intelligence community's assessment of countries such as Iran, North Korea, China and Russia because commissioners did not want to tip the U.S. hand about what is known.

In a classified portion, sources say the report charges U.S. Agencies have done a poor job of developing sources to get information on the nuclear programs of North Korea and Iran, Plante reports.

"Across the board, the intelligence community knows disturbingly little about the nuclear programs of many of the world's most dangerous actors," the report said. "In some cases it knows less now than it did five or 10 years ago."

Sen. Pat Roberts, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said he was pleased by the report and indicated that it concludes all inquiries into intelligence used to make the case for going to war with Iraq.

"I don't think there should be any doubt that we have now heard it all regarding prewar intelligence," the Kansas Republican said. "I think that it would be a monumental waste of time to re-plow this ground any further."

Rep. Ike Skelton of Missouri, the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, said the failures were widespread.

"I don't think you can blame any one person, although the buck does stop at the top of every one of these agencies," Skelton said. "But quite honestly, the fault is spread out across all the agencies."

The commission was formed by Mr. Bush a year ago to look at why U.S. spy agencies mistakenly concluded that Iraq had stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction, one of the administration's main justifications for invading in March 2003.

"We conclude that the intelligence community was dead wrong in almost all of its prewar judgments about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction," the report said. "This was a major intelligence failure."

The main cause was the intelligence community's "inability to collect good information about Iraq's WMD programs, it said, and serious errors in analyzing what information it could gather and a failure to make clear just how much of its analysis was based on assumptions rather than good evidence.

"On a matter of this importance, we simply cannot afford failures of this magnitude," the report said.

©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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