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Former CIA insider blasts Bush
Tells people at church conference that lies led to War in Iraq
By Michael Yoder, Intelligencer Journal Staff
Intelligencer Journal
Published: Oct 23, 2006 8:55 AM EST
LANCASTER COUNTY, PA - Ray McGovern has seen the
inner workings of the intelligence world and believes the United States
is in desperate need of rediscovering its morality. The former CIA
intelligence officer and Iraq War critic addressed the audience at
Lancaster Church of the Brethren Sunday afternoon as the feature
speaker at the Lancaster Interchurch Peace Witness Fall Forum.
His
speech, "Prospects for a Moral U.S. Policy in the Middle East," focused
on the ethical dilemmas facing the American public and lawmakers and
ways to use faith to point the country's moral compass back in the
right direction.
McGovern's group, Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity, has spent the last three years lobbying the
Bush administration to admit to what it calls the "lies" that led to
the Iraq War.
He said the current presidential administration is
in need of a "sanity check," a term he said goes back to his days at
the CIA, when analysts consulted with each other to find the truth.
"Prevarication, disingenuousness, untruthfulness -- they won't do anymore," McGovern said. "We need to call lies 'lies.'"
McGovern
spent 27 years as an analyst in the CIA, preparing the daily security
briefs for the Reagan and George H. W. Bush administrations in the
1980s.
He said he was drawn to the CIA as a group that gave
"straight talk with honest answers" to policy-makers. He said the quote
enshrined on the floor of the CIA's entrance, "You shall know the
truth, and the truth will set you free," is a motto he tried to live.
But now the intelligence community has taken a "faith-based approach" to data about threats, McGovern said.
He
said the two big reasons for going to war with Iraq -- weapons of mass
destruction and a link to al-Qaida -- have both been proven false, and
it was the CIA, along with members of the Bush administration, that
helped lead the country to war.
McGovern cited a July 29, 2001,
speech by now Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in which she said
Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction. He also spoke about
the documented evidence of the Downing Street minutes of 2002, showing
prewar intelligence on Iraq was being shaped to fit a policy to go to
war.
McGovern also said at the start of the Iraq War 69 percent
of Americans believed there was a link between Saddam Hussein and
al-Qaida. He said today 85 percent of American military personnel
serving in Iraq believe there was a link, although no proof has been
provided.
"That was, in my view, unconscionable preying on the
very real trauma we all felt after 9/11 -- deliberately associating
Iraq and Saddam Hussein with it when there was no evidence at all,"
McGovern said.
William Ayres, director of the Center for Global
Citizenship and an associate professor of international relations at
Elizabethtown College, provided a rebuttal to McGovern's speech and
spoke about power in the United States.
Ayres said power has
corrupted the leaders of the country, and today most people don't know
the difference between an opinion and a claim.
"We've become intellectually corrupted," Ayres said. "And that intellectual corruption has contributed to our moral corruption."
Peter
J. Schmiechen, president emeritus of the Lancaster Theological
Seminary, said he wanted to give his own impassioned plea for action
and for Americans to wake up from their "deep sleep."
Schmiechen
said the steps toward a moral policy in the Middle East would begin
with an open and honest debate about motives, but he said that hasn't
happened in the last six years.
He also said the U.S. needs to
talk to its enemies, be aware of the history between Christians and
Muslims and remember the Christian perspective, which holds that
everyone is a sinner.
"I live in a country where the government
claims to make no mistakes, is innocent, is good, and out there there
are evil people who we should destroy," Schmiechen said.
McGovern
said the cowardice of Congress has brought it to passing the Military
Commission Act, describing it as the "enabling act," ending habeas
corpus for people deemed "enemy combatants" and permitting the use of
torture methods.
He said now is the time to go out of the way to
do something to bring back morality and that most Americans have been
reluctant to go out and risk something to make a difference.
"If
there's nothing for which you'd risk that neck, then it has become your
idol," McGovern said. "And necks are not worthy of idol worship."
McGovern said the current presidential administration is in need of a "sanity check."
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