
In order to rescue their discredited pre-war claims about Iraqi WMDs, congressional republicans and their flying-monkey allied interest groups pressured the Bush administration to put an archive of captured Iraqi documents online, for examination by their partisans looking for data supporting these claims. The rationale is clear: a political benefit.
In the process, they also made available online detailed accounts of pre-1991 nuclear weapons research, including material that could help other researchers avoid mistakes made by the Iraqis. These documents were online for several weeks.
The IAEA protested to American government officials about these documents last week; however, the online archive was not shut down until the New York Times made inquiries yesterday.
From
The New York Times:
The campaign for the online archive was mounted by conservative publications and politicians, who said that the nation’s spy agencies had failed adequately to analyze the 48,000 boxes of documents seized since the March 2003 invasion. With the public increasingly skeptical about the rationale and conduct of the war, the chairmen of the House and Senate intelligence committees argued that wide analysis and translation of the documents — most of them in Arabic — would reinvigorate the search for clues that Mr. Hussein had resumed his unconventional arms programs in the years before the invasion. American search teams never found such evidence.
Snip.
In Europe, a senior diplomat said atomic experts there had studied the nuclear documents on the Web site and judged their public release as potentially dangerous. “It’s a cookbook,†said the diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of his agency’s rules. “If you had this, it would short-circuit a lot of things.â€
Snip.
Thomas S. Blanton, director of the National Security Archive, a private group at George Washington University that tracks federal secrecy decisions, said the impetus for the Web site’s creation came from an array of sources — private conservative groups, Congressional Republicans and some figures in the Bush administration — who clung to the belief that close examination of the captured documents would show that Mr. Hussein’s government had clandestinely reconstituted an unconventional arms programs.
Snip.
The campaign for the Web site was led by the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, Representative Peter Hoekstra of Michigan. Last November, he and his Senate counterpart, Pat Roberts of Kansas, wrote to Mr. Negroponte, asking him to post the Iraqi material. The sheer volume of the documents, they argued, had overwhelmed the intelligence community.
Snip.
On April 18, about a month after the first documents were made public, Mr. Hoekstra issued a news release acknowledging “minimal risks,†but saying the site “will enable us to better understand information such as Saddam’s links to terrorism, weapons of mass destruction and violence against the Iraqi people.†He added: “It will allow us to leverage the Internet to enable a mass examination as opposed to limiting it to a few exclusive elites.â€
Yesterday, before the site was shut down, Jamal Ware, a spokesman for Mr. Hoekstra, said the government had “developed a sound process to review the documents to ensure sensitive or dangerous information is not posted.†Later, he said the complaints about the site “didn’t sound like a big deal,†adding, “We were a little surprised when they pulled the plug.â€
Republicans, their propaganda and their ideoligical zeal are a national security risk.
Don't want wingnuts posting nuke plans online? Then vote Democrat.