Iraq-Niger Uranium Chronology
Paul Kerr
One of the chief arguments used by the Bush administration to
justify the invasion of Iraq in March 2003 was that Iraq was "reconstituting
its nuclear weapons programs." Central to this argument was
the claim that Iraq attempted to obtain processed uranium from Africa,
and that it attempted to acquire specialized aluminum tubes to enrich
that uranium. Debate continues about the accuracy of the second
assertion. But President George W. Bush's inclusion of the first
claim in his January 28, 2003 State of the Union address has become
particularly contentious as evidence has emerged that it was based
on discredited or misleading information. National Security Adviser
Condoleezza Rice acknowledged June 8 that Bush's claim was based
in part on inaccurate information, and the controversy intensified
when the White House conceded July 7 that the information should
not have been included in the president's speech. Several administration
officials have accepted varying degrees of responsibility for the
statement, including Rice, Director of Central Intelligence George
Tenet, Deputy National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley, and President
Bush.
This chronology details the intelligence that the United States
possessed on reported Iraqi attempts to obtain uranium from Africa,
along with relevant administration statements.
2001-2002
Late 2001 - Early 2002: The United States gathers what Director
of Central Intelligence George Tenet later terms "fragmentary
intelligence" about Iraq's attempts to acquire uranium from
Africa.
Late February 2002: The CIA sends former Ambassador Joseph
Wilson to Niger to investigate reports about Iraq's attempts to
acquire uranium from that country. Wilson later writes in the New
York Times (July 6, 2003) that "it was highly doubtful that
any such transaction had taken place" because Niger's uranium
industry is closely regulated by its government and is controlled
by a consortium of foreign companies monitored by the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Wilson briefs this conclusion to the
CIA when he returns in March, 2002.
Wilson also reports to the CIA that a former Nigerien official
described a businessman's attempt to arrange a meeting between the
former official and an Iraqi delegation as "an attempt to discuss
uranium sales," Tenet says later (July 11, 2003).
CIA officials tell Wilson that his mission to Niger is in response
to an interest expressed by Vice President Dick Cheney. Wilson tells
CNN later (July 7, 2003) that Cheney's office "asked the question
and that office received a very specific response."
Tenet, however, claims later (July 11, 2003) that CIA experts sent
Wilson to Niger "on their own initiative" and the agency
never briefed Wilson's conclusions to senior administration officials.
The CIA distributed a summary of Wilson's trip report to Intelligence
Community entities on March 9, 2002.
March 1, 2002: The State Department Bureau of Intelligence
and Research (INR) sends a memorandum to Secretary of State Colin
Powell stating that claims regarding Iraqi attempts to obtain uranium
from Niger are not credible, according to a knowledgeable government
official.
August 26, 2002: Cheney declares, "we now know that
Saddam has resumed his efforts to acquire nuclear weapons
Many
of us are convinced that Saddam will acquire nuclear weapons fairly
soon."
September 2002: The CIA expresses "reservations"
to British intelligence about information regarding Iraqi efforts
to acquire African uranium after the United Kingdom informs the
agency about its plans to include the allegation in a forthcoming
report about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, according to a
later statement from Tenet (July 11, 2003).
September 24, 2002: The United Kingdom issues a report on
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction program stating "there is
intelligence that Iraq has sought the supply of significant quantities
of uranium from Africa. Iraq has no active civil nuclear power programme
or nuclear power plants, and therefore has no legitimate reason
to acquire uranium."
September/October 2002: U.S. intelligence officials tell
Senate committees about their differences with the British report
regarding the Iraq/uranium claim, according to Tenet (July 11, 2003).
October 2002: The State Department acquires documents about
the Iraq-Niger uranium deal and shares them with "all the appropriate
agencies," according to department spokesman Richard Boucher
(July 17, 2003). A senior administration official, however, claims
(July 18, 2003) that the CIA did not receive the documents until
February 2003.
Early October 2002: A classified National Intelligence Estimate
(NIE), a portion of which was later made public (July 18, 2003)
states: "A foreign government service reported that as of early
2001, Niger planned to send several tons" of uranium to Iraq
and "Niger and Iraq reportedly were still working out arrangements
for this deal, which could be for up to 500 tons of yellowcake [lightly
processed uranium ore]."
The NIE adds, "reports indicate Iraq also has sought uranium
ore from Somalia and possibly the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
We cannot confirm whether Iraq succeeded in acquiring uranium ore
and/or yellowcake from these sources."
The NIE also contains a State Department INR dissent which characterizes
"claims of Iraqi pursuit of natural uranium in Africa"
as "highly dubious."
Rice does not read the INR dissent, according to a senior administration
official (July18, 2003).
October 5-7, 2002: Tenet calls Deputy National Security
Adviser Stephen Hadley to request that a line referring to Iraqi
attempts to obtain "substantial amounts of uranium oxide"
be removed from a draft of a Bush speech scheduled for October 7.
The CIA sends a memorandum to Hadley and White House speechwriter
Michael Gerson October 5, asking them to remove a similar line referring
to Iraq's attempted acquisition of "500 metric tons of uranium
oxide from
Africa."
The CIA also sends a memorandum to the White House October 6 providing
additional detail about the Iraq/uranium claim and noting the U.S.
Intelligence Community's differences with Britain over the intelligence.
The memorandum is passed to both Hadley and Rice.
Per the CIA's request, no reference to Iraqi uranium procurement
attempts appears in Bush's October 7 speech.
Hadley and White House Communications Director Dan Bartlett reveal
these details in a July 22, 2003 press briefing.
December 19, 2002: A State Department fact sheet charges
Iraq with omitting its "efforts to procure uranium from Niger"
from its December 7 declaration to the United Nations weapons inspectors.
UN Security Council Resolution 1441, adopted November 8th, 2002,
required Iraq to submit a declaration "of all aspects of its
[weapons of mass destruction] programmes." The declaration
is supposed to provide information about any prohibited weapons
activity since UN inspectors left the country in 1998 and resolve
outstanding questions about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programs
that had not been answered by 1998.
The fact sheet is "developed jointly by the CIA and the State
Department," according to a letter (April 29, 2003) from the
State Department to Congressman Henry Waxman. Boucher later says
(July 14, 2003) that the Niger information was "prepared in
other bureaus of the State Department," but does not say which
bureaus were involved. The fact sheet was not cleared by the State
Department's intelligence bureau, according to knowledgeable sources.
The IAEA requests information from the United States on the uranium
claim "immediately after" the fact sheet's release, according
to a June 20, 2003 letter from the IAEA to Waxman. This information
is not supplied until February 4, 2003, according to a later (July
1, 2003) State Department letter to Waxman.
2003
January 2003: White House staff members decide to include
a reference to Iraqi attempts to procure uranium from Africa in
the State of the Union speech. During a discussion about the intelligence
on this matter, National Security Council staff member Robert Joseph
insists that information about the uranium procurement attempt be
included in the speech, according to later accounts from several
U.S. senators investigating the claim. But Alan Foley, director
of the DCI's Center for Weapons Intelligence, Nonproliferation,
and Arms Control, expresses concern about the intelligence. Foley
eventually agrees to a change that appears in the final draft of
the speech. According to Bartlett's later briefing, Tenet does not
review the speech and Rice and Hadley do not recall the October
memorandums or a phone call from Tenet while putting together the
State of the Union remarks together.
Joseph later recalls the exchange differently believing it was
only about a question of whether to cite the British report or the
NIE in the State of the Union address, Bartlett says in his July
briefing.
Powell reviews the State of the Union address but does not raise
any objections to it, Boucher says July 14, 2003.
January 20, 2003: President Bush submits a report to Congress
stating Iraq omitted "attempts to acquire uranium" from
its December 7 declaration to the UN.
January 23, 2003: National Security Adviser Condoleezza
Rice writes in The New York Times that Iraq's declaration "fails
to account for or explain Iraq's efforts to get uranium from abroad."
A White House report issued the same day asserts that Iraq's weapons
declaration "ignores efforts to procure uranium from abroad."
January 26, 2003: Powell asks, "Why is Iraq still trying
to procure uranium and the special equipment needed to transform
it into material for nuclear weapons?" during a speech in Switzerland.
January 27, 2003: IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei
tells the UN Security Council that IAEA inspectors "have to
date found no evidence that Iraq has revived its nuclear weapons
programme since the elimination of the programme in the 1990s."
January 28, 2003: President Bush asserts that "the
British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought
significant quantities of uranium from Africa" during his State
of the Union address.
January 29, 2003: Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld states
in a press briefing that Iraq "recently was discovered seeking
significant quantities of uranium from Africa."
February 4, 2003: State Department officials give the IAEA
the information the agency requested about Iraq's attempts to obtain
uranium from Niger, telling the agency that it "cannot confirm
these reports and [has] questions regarding some specific claims."
February 5, 2003: Powell presents evidence, based on U.S.
intelligence, about Iraq's prohibited weapons programs to the UN
Security Council. He does not mention Iraqi attempts to obtain uranium
from Africa.
February 14, 2003: ElBaradei reports to the Security Council
that "We have to date found no evidence of ongoing prohibited
nuclear or nuclear related activities in Iraq," adding that
"a number of issues are still under investigation and we are
not yet in a position to reach a conclusion about them."
March 7, 2003: IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei tells
the UN Security Council that the documents allegedly detailing uranium
transactions between Iraq and Niger are "not authentic"
and "these specific allegations are unfounded."
March 9, 2003: Powell acknowledges that the documents concerning
the alleged Iraq-Niger uranium deal might be false.
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