Los Angels Times: : "U.S. Gave Intelligence Data to Iraq Three Months Before Invasion"

Home
National Journal: "Why Rove Testified for a Firth Time"
Naitonal Journal: "CIA Leak Prosecutor Focuses on Libby"
National Journal: "Senate Ethics Commitee Clears Shelby"
Naitonal Journal: "Is There a Double Standard on Leaks?"
National Journal: "Rove Assured Bush He Was Not Leaker"
ABC News: "DOJ Official Fired in Wake of ABC News Investigation"
Los Angles Times: "Bleak House"
Los Angeles Times: "Despite Ban, U.S. Arms are Sold to Pakistan"
Los Angeles Times: "U.S. Knew Pakistan Arms Sales Broke Law, Pell Charges"
Los Angeles Times: "Iraq Got U.S. Technology After CIA Warned Baker"
Los Angeles Times: "U.S. Paying Off Bad Iraqi Debt"
Los Angeles Times: "Bush Had Long History in Support of Iraq Aid"
Boston Globe: "Lawyers Battle Over Iran-contra Final Report"
National Journal: "Secret Service Records Prompted Judith Miller to Change Testimony"
National Journal: "Internal Affairs"
National Journal: "Secret Order by Gonzales Granted Extraordinary Power to Aides"
Naitonal Journal: "What Bush Was Told About Iraq"
Naitonal Journal "Key Intelligence Briefing Kept from Congress"
National Journal "Insulating Bush"
National Journal: "Cheney Authorized Libby to Leak Classified Information"
National Journal: "Justice Aide Says He Was Directed to Call Proseucutors"
Washington Post: "A Favor for a Felon"
Los Angeles Times: "High-Tech Aid Flowed As Iraq Built Up Forces"
Los Angeles Times: "U.S. Bent Aid Rules to Gain Turkey's Help In Gulf War"
Washington Post: "Noriega: A Probe That Fizzled"
Los Angeles Times: "Special Counsel Sought on Aid to Iraq"
L.A.Times: "U.S. to OK High-Tech Sales to Iran and Syria"
Boston Globe: "Reagan Tapes Iran-contra Testimony"
"National Journal: "Administration Withheld Emails About Rove"
National Journal: "Cheney's Call"
Los Angeles Times : "Italian Report Suggests U.S. Knew of Bank's Loans for Iraqi Military"
Salon.com: "Clinton administration failed to monitor China's use of missile-technology exports"
Los Angeles Times: "Kuwait, Saudis Supplied Iraq with U.S. Arms"
Los Angeles Times: "Saudi Arms Link To Iraq Allowed"
ABC News "Bush White House Pushed Grant for Former Aid"
ABC News: "White House Involved in U.S. Attorney Firings"
The Hill: "Bush Administration Leaks Bolstered Renzi Reelecton Bid"
Los Angeles Times: "U.S. Loans Indirectly Financed Iraq Military"
Los Angeles Times: "Abuses in U.S. Aid to Iraq Ignored"
Los Angeles Times: "Bush Secret Effort Helped Iraq Build Its War Machine"
Washington Examiner: "The Baron's Last Exit"
Arkansas Times
The American Prospect "The Meeting"
Murray Waas articles on Talking Points Memo
Los Angels Times: : "U.S. Gave Intelligence Data to Iraq Three Months Before Invasion"
Los Angeles Times: "Bush Tied to `86 Bid To Give Iraq Milirary Advice"
Los Angles Times: "Jordan Gave Iraq Broad Military Assistance"
Village Voice: "While You Were Watching Katrina"
New Republic: "Media Specter"
Los Angeles Times: "Iraq Used American-Built Plant to Develop A-Arms"
Los Angeles Times: "Iraq's $5 Billion Windfall Spins Deepening Mystery"
Most recent stories
Murray Waas articles in Time Magazine
Murray Waas articles in the New Yorker
Murray Waas articles in the Nation
Huffington Post: "Former U.S. Attorney Condemns Bush"
Murray Waas articles in the American Prospect
Murray Waas articles in Village Voice
Murray Waas: Articles in the Atlantic
Los Angeles Times: "U.S. to OK High-Tech Sales to Iran and Syria"
Village Voice: "Jack Anderson: An Appreication"
Murray Waas: Articles in the Atlantic
Murray Waas articles in The New Republic
Murray Waas stories on Mike Huckabee
Articles on Justice Department grants programs
Exclusive: Cheney's Interiview with the Special Proseucotr
The United States v. I. Lewis Libby
Articles on prewar intelligence and the Fitzgerald Investigaton
Journalism Criticism by and About Murray Waas
Articles about U.S. Attorney Firings and Alberto Gonzales
Murray Waas articles in New York Magazine
Murray Waas biography

Los Angeles Times
March 10, 1992, Tuesday, Home Edition
U.S. GAVE DATA TO IRAQ 3 MONTHS BEFORE INVASION;
PERSIAN GULF: DOCUMENTS SHOW INTELLIGENCE SHARING WITH BAGHDAD LASTED LONGER THAN PREVIOUSLY INDICATED.


BYLINE: By MURRAY WAAS and DOUGLAS FRANTZ, SPECIAL TO THE TIMES; Waas is a special correspondent and Frantz is a Times staff writer.

SECTION: Part A; Page 1; Column 2; National Desk

LENGTH: 942 words

DATELINE: WASHINGTON

The Bush Administration shared intelligence information with the regime of Saddam Hussein until at least May, 1990, three months before Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, according to formerly classified documents.

The intelligence cooperation continued far longer than previously indicated and occurred during a time when Hussein was taking an increasingly belligerent posture in the Persian Gulf region.

The Bush Administration justified continuing to provide Iraq with information on Iranian military activities and other intelligence data as a means of retaining access to elements of the government in Baghdad, according to the documents.

Last fall, a Senate Intelligence Committee report indicated that the panel believed the intelligence sharing ended in 1988 with a cease-fire in the Iran-Iraq war. The committee had received a number of secret briefings by Administration officials on policy toward Iraq.

A committee spokesman declined to comment on the apparent discrepancy Monday, saying only: "We are looking at all the facts."

Iraq began to receive intelligence on Iranian troop movements and other critical issues during the Ronald Reagan Administration as part of the "tilt" toward Iraq during the eight-year war.

Some intelligence experts have speculated that the information later helped Iraq learn how to shelter its weapons from U.S. surveillance during Operation Desert Storm, since the Iraqis knew the types of intelligence available to U.S. agencies.

While the committee report indicated that the panel believed the cooperation had ended with the Iran-Iraq war, the previously classified State Department document dated May 16, 1990, says that the sharing only slowed down after the August, 1988, cease-fire.

That report, addressed to White House National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft, was prepared to present various options on Iraqi policy for consideration at a May 24, 1990, meeting of the White House National Security Council's deputies committee. It set out reasons for continuing the cooperation and for stopping it.

"Intelligence exchanges have waned since the Gulf War cease-fire," said the report. "PRO: They still provide Iraq with limited information on Iranian military activity that would be missed. CON: Ending this contact would close off our very limited access to this important segment of the Iraqi establishment."

The State Department paper indicated that officials at the high-level interagency meeting were going to consider whether to continue the intelligence sharing. The chairman of the deputies committee was Robert M. Gates, now CIA director, who then was President Bush's deputy national security adviser.

Mark Mansfield, a spokesman at the CIA, declined to comment on the documents. "We don't comment on the nature and extent of intelligence arrangements with any countries," he said.

Attempts to obtain comment from the White House were unsuccessful.

The State Department paper and related documents from the NSC were made public Monday by Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez (D-Tex.), chairman of the House Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs Committee, during a statement on the floor of the House.

The committee is one of a number of congressional committees examining the covert policies by the Reagan and Bush administrations to assist Hussein from the early 1980s until almost the eve of his invasion of Kuwait on Aug. 2, 1990. The committees also are examining whether the Administration provided accurate information to Congress on the Iraqi assistance.

"The revelation that intelligence sharing with Iraq continued well into 1990 . . . raises new questions about the Administration's reporting to the Senate and House Intelligence committees," said Gonzalez. "Based on the fact that the Senate committee report on the Gates nomination contains a misleading date for the end of the intelligence-sharing arrangement, I wonder if they were properly informed."

In 1984, President Reagan signed a National Security Decision Directive authorizing the CIA to share limited intelligence with Iraq, according to the report issued last fall by the Senate Intelligence Committee. Two congressional sources said the committee was told that the first intelligence was shared with Baghdad in December, 1984.

However, the New York Times reported in January that the Reagan Administration had actually begun providing intelligence to Iraq in the spring of 1982. The account quoted a former CIA official as identifying Gates as the CIA officer in charge of preparing the intelligence information for Iraq.

During his confirmation hearings last fall, Gates testified that intelligence data was passed to Baghdad to prevent Iraq from losing the war with Iran. Gates said that the intelligence sharing was carried out "to enhance their (Iraq's) ability to pursue the war."

At his hearings, Gates did not discuss a date when the cooperation ended. But during the hearings, the Senate Intelligence Committee released the report on Iraqi intelligence sharing, which indicated that it had ended in 1988. "Intelligence sharing continued on a sporadic basis until 1988 when the war between Iraq and Iran ended," said the report.

During confirmation hearings for Gates, Sen. Bill Bradley (D-N.J.) raised questions about whether the cooperation with Iraq amounted to a "covert action" that the President was required by law to report to Congress.

A 1975 law prohibits the use of CIA funds for covert activities "unless and until the President finds that each operation . . . is important to the national security of the U.S. and reports in a timely fashion" to the House and Senate Intelligence committees.



PERSON:  SADDAM HUSSEIN  (92%); SADDAM HUSSEIN (92%); ROBERT M GATES  (81%); ROBERT M GATES (81%); GEORGE W BUSH (51%); CHARLES A GONZALEZ  (50%); CHARLES A GONZALEZ (50%); 

ORGANIZATION:  WHITE HOUSE NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL (60%); SENATE INTELLIGENCE COMMITTEE (60%); BUSH ADMINISTRATION (60%); 

COUNTRY:  IRAQ (96%); UNITED STATES (95%); GULF STATES (94%); IRAN (94%); KUWAIT (92%); 

STATE:  INDIAN OCEAN (90%); 

CITY:  BAGHDAD, IRAQ (92%); 

COMPANY:  RONALD REAGAN ADMINISTRATION (83%); STATE DEPARTMENT FEDERAL CREDIT UNION INC (60%);   WHITE HOUSE NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL (60%); SENATE INTELLIGENCE COMMITTEE (60%); BUSH ADMINISTRATION (60%); 

GEOGRAPHIC:  IRAQ (96%); UNITED STATES (95%); GULF STATES (94%); IRAN (94%); KUWAIT (92%);   INDIAN OCEAN (90%);   BAGHDAD, IRAQ (92%); 

SUBJECT: UNITED STATES -- FOREIGN RELATIONS -- IRAQ; INTELLIGENCE SERVICES; BUSH, GEORGE; GATES, ROBERT M  MILITARY OPERATIONS (90%); INTELLIGENCE SERVICES (90%); WAR & CONFLICT (90%); US FEDERAL GOVERNMENT (90%); NATIONAL SECURITY (89%); STATE DEPARTMENTS & FOREIGN SERVICES (89%); DESERT STORM (89%); MILITARY SURVEILLANCE (78%); TALKS & MEETINGS (75%); LEGISLATIVE BODIES (75%); INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS (74%); US DEMOCRATIC PARTY (70%); US PRESIDENTS (68%); 

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
Copyright 1992 The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times

 All Rights Reserved