Daily Kos

Impeachment Watch: Bush Admin Provoked North Korea Crisis On Shaky Intelligence

Wed Feb 28, 2007 at 08:30:14 PM PDT

The Washington Post and the New York Times are both reporting that the Bush Administration's claim that North Korea had a secret uranium program is apparently not based on much solid evidence. The problem is that this is the same intelligence they used to provoke the North Korea crisis in the first place.

According to the Washington Post:

The Bush administration is backing away from its long-held assertions that North Korea has an active clandestine program to enrich uranium, leading some experts to believe that the original U.S. intelligence that started the crisis over Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions may have been flawed.


The chief intelligence officer for North Korea, Joseph R. DeTrani, told Congress on Tuesday that while there is "high confidence" North Korea acquired materials that could be used in a "production-scale" uranium program, there is only "mid-confidence" such a program exists. Meanwhile, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher R. Hill, the chief negotiator for disarmament talks, last week told a conference in Washington that it is unclear if North Korea ever mastered the production techniques necessary for such a program.


If the materials North Korea bought "did not go into a highly enriched uranium program, maybe they went somewhere else," Hill said. "Fine. We can have a discussion about where they are and where they've gone."


The administration's stance today stands in sharp contrast to the certainty expressed by top officials in 2002, when the administration accused Pyongyang of running a secret uranium program -- and demanded it be dismantled at once. President Bush told a news conference that November: "We discovered that contrary to an agreement they had with the United States, they're enriching uranium, with a desire of developing a weapon."

According to the NYT:

Last October, the North Koreans tested their first nuclear device, the fruition of decades of work to make a weapon out of plutonium.


For nearly five years, though, the Bush administration, based on intelligence estimates, has accused North Korea of also pursuing a secret, parallel path to a bomb, using enriched uranium. That accusation, first leveled in the fall of 2002, resulted in the rupture of an already tense relationship: The United States cut off oil supplies, and the North Koreans responded by throwing out international inspectors, building up their plutonium arsenal and, ultimately, producing that first plutonium bomb.


But now, American intelligence officials are publicly softening their position, admitting to doubts about how much progress the uranium enrichment program has actually made. The result has been new questions about the Bush administration’s decision to confront North Korea in 2002.

The pattern is now clear. In all three cases of the "Axis of Evil", the Bush Administration has provoked a crisis based on cooked intelligence.

Surely, impeachment proceedings are in order.

Tags: north korea, george w. bush, axis of evil (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

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