Growing Pessimism on Iraq
Doubts Increase Within U.S. Security Agencies
By Dana Priest and Thomas E. Ricks
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, September 29, 2004; Page A01
A
growing number of career professionals within national security agencies
believe that the situation in Iraq is much worse, and the path to success much
more tenuous, than is being expressed in public by top Bush administration
officials, according to former and current government officials and assessments
over the past year by intelligence officials at the CIA and the departments of
State and Defense.
While
President Bush, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld
and others have delivered optimistic public appraisals, officials who fight the
Iraqi insurgency and study it at the CIA and the State Department and within
the Army officer corps believe the rebellion is deeper and more widespread than
is being publicly acknowledged, officials say.
People
at the CIA "are mad at the policy in Iraq because it's a disaster, and
they're digging the hole deeper and deeper and deeper," said one former
intelligence officer who maintains contact with CIA officials. "There's no
obvious way to fix it. The best we can hope for is a semi-failed state hobbling
along with terrorists and a succession of weak governments."
"Things
are definitely not improving," said one U.S. government official who reads
the intelligence analyses on Iraq.
"It
is getting worse," agreed an Army staff officer who served in Iraq and
stays in touch with comrades in Baghdad through e-mail. "It just seems
there is a lot of pessimism flowing out of theater now. There are things going
on that are unbelievable to me. They have infiltrators conducting attacks in the
Green Zone. That was not the case a year ago."
This
weekend, in a rare departure from the positive talking points used by
administration spokesmen, Secretary of State Colin L. Powell acknowledged that
the insurgency is strengthening and that anti-Americanism in the Middle East is
increasing. "Yes, it's getting worse," he said of the insurgency on
ABC's "This Week." At the same time, the U.S. commander for the
Middle East, Gen. John P. Abizaid, told NBC's
"Meet the Press" that "we will fight our way through the
elections." Abizaid said he believes Iraq is
still winnable once a new political order and the Iraqi security force is in place.
Powell's
admission and Abizaid's sobering warning came days
after the public disclosure of a National Intelligence Council (NIC)
assessment, completed in July, that gave a dramatically different outlook than
the administration's and represented a consensus at
the CIA and the State and Defense departments.
In
the best-case scenario, the NIC said, Iraq could be expected to achieve a
"tenuous stability" over the next 18 months. In the worst case, it
could dissolve into civil war.
The
July assessment was similar to one produced before the war and another in late
2003 that also were more pessimistic in tone than the administration's
portrayal of the resistance to the U.S. occupation, according to senior
administration officials. "All say they expect things to get worse,"
one former official said.
One
official involved in evaluating the July document said the NIC, which advises
the director of central intelligence, decided not to include a more rosy scenario "because it looked so unreal."
White
House spokesman Scott McClellan, and other White House spokesmen, called the
intelligence assessment the work of "pessimists and naysayers"
after its outlines were disclosed by the New York Times.
President
Bush called the assessment a guess, which drew the consternation of many
intelligence officials. "The CIA laid out several scenarios," Bush
said on Sept. 21. "It said that life could by lousy. Life could be okay.
Life could be better. And they were just guessing as to what the conditions
might be like."
Two
days later, Bush reworded his response. "I used an unfortunate word,
'guess.' I should have used 'estimate.' "
"And
the CIA came and said, 'This is a possibility, this is a possibility, and this
is a possibility,' " Bush continued. "But
what's important for the American people to hear is reality. And the reality's
right here in the form of the prime minister. And he is explaining what is happening
on the ground. That's the best report."
Rumsfeld, who once dismissed the insurgents as
"dead-enders," still offers a positive portrayal of prospects and
progress in Iraq but has begun to temper his optimism in public. "The path
towards liberty is not smooth there; it never has been," he said before
the Senate Armed Services Committee last week. "And my personal view is
that a fair assessment requires some patience and some perspective."
This
week, conservative columnist Robert D. Novak criticized the CIA and Paul
Pillar, a national intelligence officer on the NIC who supervised the
preparation of the assessment. Novak said comments Pillar made about Iraq
during a private dinner in California showed that he and others at the CIA are
at war with the president. Recent and current intelligence officials
interviewed over the last two days dispute that view.
"Pillar
is the ultimate professional," said Daniel Byman,
an intelligence expert and Georgetown University professor who has worked with
Pillar. "If anything, he's too soft-spoken."
"I'm
not surprised if people in the administration were put on the defensive,"
said one CIA official, who like many others interviewed would speak only
anonymously, either because they don't have official authorization to speak or
because they worry about ramifications of criticizing top administration
officials. "We weren't trying to make them look bad,
we're just trying to give them information. Of course, we're telling them
something they don't want to hear."
As
for a war between the CIA and White House, said one intelligence expert with
contacts at the CIA, the State Department and the Pentagon, "There's a
real war going on here that's not just" the CIA against the administration
on Iraq "but the State Department and the military" as well.
National
security officials acknowledge that the upcoming presidential election also
seems to have distorted the public debate on Iraq.
"Everyone
says Iraq certainly has turned out to be more intense than expected, especially
the intensity of nationalism on the part of the Iraqi people," said Steven
Metz, chairman of the regional strategy and planning department at the U.S.
Army War College. But, he added, "I don't think the political discourse
that we're in the middle of accurately reflects anything. There's a
supercharged debate on both sides, a movement to out-state each side."
Reports
from Iraq have made one Army staff officer question whether adequate progress
is being made there.
"They
keep telling us that Iraqi security forces are the exit strategy, but what I
hear from the ground is that they aren't working," he said. "There's
a feeling that Iraqi security forces are in cahoots with the insurgents and the
general public to get the occupiers out."
He
added: "I hope I'm wrong."
Staff writers Walter Pincus
and Robin Wright contributed to this report.