WASHINGTON: President Bush faced questions on Tuesday about whether he knew of intelligence that Iran had ended its nuclear arms program when he warned in October that Teheran could trigger World War III.
"Can't you be accused of hyping this threat?" Bush was asked at a news conference a day after his administration released the NIE report.
"I was made aware of the NIE last week," Bush replied. But it was his next remark that drew attention from Democrats, the news media and intelligence experts: "In August, I think it was (US intelligence chief) Mike McConnell came in and said, 'We have some new information.' He didn't tell me what the information was."
Increasingly strident US rhetoric over Iran's nuclear program reached a peak on October 17 when Bush warned that a nuclear-armed Iran could lead to World War III.
A day later, Vice-President Dick Cheney announced his own warning of "serious consequences" for Iran if it refused to abandon its nuclear activities. The comments stirred fears of a possible US military confrontation with Iran and helped send world oil prices soaring toward the $100 a barrel mark.
On Tuesday, some former intelligence officers said Bush and other top White House officials were probably briefed about the intelligence findings long before the NIE was published.
"I can't imagine that McConnell ... would tell the president about this and not tell him what the information actually said," remarked Flynt Leverett, a former member of Bush's National Security Council. "I think they certainly played fast and loose with the facts," he said in an interview with CNN.
Democrats pounced on Bush with accusations that he had deliberately misrepresented the threat posed by Iran, just as they have said he exaggerated the threat posed by prewar Iraq.
"What's shocking today is that apparently he knew about this estimate a month or more before he made those statements," said US Senator Jack Reed, a Rhode Island Democrat.
"I don't think that shows a responsible use of intelligence."
Source: China Daily/Agencies
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