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Published 10 Mar, 2008 12:00am

Powell blamed for botching invasion

WASHINGTON, March 9: A former Pentagon official who played a key role in planning the US-led war in Iraq has written a new book accusing former top diplomat Colin Powell, the CIA and other colleagues of botching the invasion and occupation of Iraq, The Washington Post reported on Sunday.

Douglas Feith, who served as under secretary of defence for policy until 2005, alleges that Powell as secretary of state “downplayed” the degree and urgency of Iraq’s threat but was never willing to openly oppose the invasion, the Post wrote.

Feith castigates Powell for failing to secure support from France and Germany for the war and to win Turkey’s approval for US military movements on its territory, saying it amounted to a lack of effort and commitment, according to a copy of the manuscript obtained by the newspaper.

Titled “War and Decision”, the book is still being edited and is scheduled for release next month by HarperCollins, it said.

Feith writes that Powell could have taken a stand and argued with Bush against overthrowing Saddam Hussein, and either persuaded the president or if not, resigned.

Known as a hawk allied with former defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Feith says retired General Tommy Franks showed little interest in planning for the post-invasion occupation and accuses Condoleezza Rice, then national security adviser, as failing to coordinate policy on the war.

Feith was the target of a probe last year by the Pentagon’s inspector-general which found that his office’s intelligence reports before the war were “inconsistent” with other intelligence agencies and found to be “inappropriate” though not unlawful.

Feith defends his intelligence work, alleging the Central Intelligence Agency was producing shoddy reports and ignoring evidence of ties between Saddam and international terrorists.

The former Pentagon official says it was a mistake for President George W. Bush’s administration to put so much emphasis on Saddam’s alleged stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction, which never materialised.

He said secret intelligence reports about weapons programs were not needed to describe the threat posed by Hussein, given his past military adventures and repression.

—AFP

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