We have detected that the browser you are using is no longer supported. As a result, some content may not display correctly.
We suggest that you upgrade to the latest version of any of the following browsers:
close notification
Demo
crats sharpened their attacks on the George W Bush
administration yesterday, emboldened by persistent questions over
prewar intelligence on Iraq's pursuit of nuclear, biological and
chemical arms.
US Central Intelligence Agency director George Tenet has taken the
blame for President George W Bush's January claim that Iraq had
tried to buy nuclear material from Africa.
In a surprise statement last week, Tenet said the reference - based
on information from Britain - should not have been included in the
president's January 28 State of the Union address because it had
not been corroborated by US intelligence.
The White House has said that as far as they are concerned, the
issue is over and done with, but Democrats refused to let the
matter die, with the party's biggest guns taking to the floor of
the Senate, holding news conferences, and taking to the airwaves to
keep the controversy alive.
One leading Democrat accused the White House of a broad pattern of
dissemblance in making its case for waging war on Iraq.
"The misleading statement about African uranium is not an isolated
incident. There is a significant amount of troubling evidence that
it was part of a pattern of exaggerations and misleading
statements," Senator Carl Levin of Michigan said on the floor of
the US Senate.
"It was not inadvertent. It was not a slip ... It was calculated.
It was misleading".
Massachusetts senator Ted Kennedy, one of the most senior Democrats
in Congress, decried what he called a "bankrupt" US policy toward
Iraq, which revealed "flawed, distorted and failed intelligence,"
Kennedy told NBC television.
"But there's a broader issue, and that is the failed policy toward
Iraq. It's a bankrupt policy, it's a policy that adrift".
"Some of those in the White House are trying to pin it on George
Tenet. I think the buck stops in the White House," Kennedy
said.
Ohio Representative Dennis Kucinich, one of nine Democrats vying
for the party's presidential nomination, called on the Bush
administration to provide information about what he said is a
number of unsettled questions.
"What about the statements President Bush and others made about
Iraq's "vast stockpiles" of chemical and biological weapons?" he
said. "What about the evidence of the connection between Saddam
Hussein and al-Qaeda? "Could these claims, made repeatedly by the
administration, also be false?" he asked.
The leader of Senate Democrats was more measured in his tone, even
while reprising Democrats' calls for a more expansive
investigation.
"I think before we face the real prospect of lost credibility
abroad and here at home, I think it's critical that we clarify and
make sure everyone understands what is fact and what is not,"
Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota said.
Outside the Congress, former Vermont Governor Howard Dean kept up
his almost daily drumbeat of accusations against the White House
yesterday.
"It only becomes more and more clear every day what a mistake this
administration made in launching a pre-emptive war in Iraq," the
Democratic presidential contender said.
"The evidence mounts that not only did the administration mislead
the American people and the world in making its case for war but
that it failed to plan adequately for the peace.
"Today, we are paying the price in lives lost, in a $100-billion
price tag that only rises daily, and in the toll on our reputation
around the world".
Republican Senator John Cornyn said Democrats are going out of
their way to miss the big picture - that despite the intelligence
gaffe, Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein is no longer in power.
"The fact that rape rooms, mass murders and torture are gone is far
more important to Iraqis that politicians trying to score political
points," the Texas senator said.
"The goals of security, prosperity and democracy are not advanced
by partisan rancor, and I hope my colleagues join me in finding
ways to rebuild Iraq for Iraqis - and stop trying to find ways to
attack our president for political gain". - Sapa-AFP.