November 9, 2005
Deputy Prime Minister Ahmed Chalabi
Iraqi National Congress
c/o The
Ritz-Carlton Georgetown
3100 South Street, NW
Washington, DC
20007
Dear Mr. Deputy Prime Minister:
We write to you as members
of the 60 to 70 percent of Americans who believe that this war has been (in the
words of the polling companies) a "mistake," or (in our own words) a criminal
fraud. We resent the role you played in instigating it. We believe you owe an
apology.
You owe an apology not to Judith Miller, whose career is ruined
but who consciously chose to disgrace herself by working with you. Rather, you
owe an apology to the families of the over 100,000 people who have died in this
war, including over 2,000 U.S. soldiers.
Your misinformation campaign
has been exposed:
n "Curveball" was
a fraud and a brother of one of your top lieutenants.
n The 20 secret
WMD sites didn't exist.
You should not only offer an apology, but you should
offer to testify, under oath, in a Congressional committee, on the subjects of
both pre-war claims and wartime spying.
Just last summer, the U.S.
military raided your office in Baghdad after it learned you had passed sensitive
intelligence to Iran. At the time, U.S. Senator Chuck Hagel (R., Neb.) said,
"This is a very, very serious charge. There were a number of us who warned this
administration about [Chalabi].... But the fact is, there were some in this
administration, some in Congress who were quite taken with him."
Why
would anyone distrust you, Mr. Chalabi? Let's list a few reasons:
n The CIA stopped
working with you in the mid-1990s because they didn't think you were being
honest.
n The U.S.
government cut you off again last year, after paying you $33 million, because
our military had decided to raid your office.
n The Los Angeles
Times quotes sources who suspect you of feeding phony or tricked-up sources and
documents to the spies of eight nations.
n Seven of
your aides in Iraq are wanted on charges of blackmail, fraud and other
crimes.
n You've
been convicted of embezzlement and sentenced in absentia to 22 years of prison
with hard labor in Jordan.
n In August of
2004, Iraq issued a warrant for your arrest on charges of counterfeiting.
U.S. Senator Diane Feinstein (D., Cal.) said of you: "I think he's a
charlatan. I think he's a manipulator. I don't believe he's a man that you can
trust. I think we made a horrendous mistake in providing him with tens of
millions of dollars and enabling him to build a corps of infiltrators, allegedly
to give us intelligence, which in many cases was deeply flawed."
Mr.
Chalabi, when you were peddling bogus reasons to launch this catastrophic war,
you said "'I am not seeking any positions - my job will end with the liberation
of Iraq from Saddam's rule." That quote is from the BBC, which added this
commentary: "However, for the Arab media, Mr. Chalabi was the epitome of an
American stooge, a man who sold his soul to the devil."
So you have no
desire to rule, and the people you would be ruling consider you a stooge of the
U.S. And yet, here you are in Washington, apparently to ask for U.S. support to
become ruler of Iraq.
Should we laugh or cry, Mr. Chalabi, that you are
here at the American Enterprise Institute speaking on the topic of "An Insider's
View: Democratic Politics at Work in Iraq." Is democracy now something only for
insiders?
Democracy, to us, is something controlled by the people. The
people of the United States demand an apology, a confession, and the return of
all the money we've spent on you.
Sincerely,
Ann Wright, Career US
Diplomat who resigned in protest of the war;
Malachy Kilbride,DC Anti-War
Network;
Gene Bruskin, Coconvenor, US Labor Against the War;
David
Swanson,Washington Director of Democrats.com, Co-Founder of AfterDowning
Street;
Gael Murphy, Co-Founder of CODE PINK;
Mike Hersh,
Chairperson, Montgomery County Progressive Alliance, Maryland State Coordinator,
Progressive Democrats of America, Organizer, Democracy for America /
Maryland;
Sarah Browning, Coordinator, DC Poets Against the War;
J.E.
McNeil, Executive Director of Center on Conscience and War;
Kevin Zeese,
Director, Democracy Rising;
Barbara Cummings, peace activist,San
Diego,CA;
Jeff Norman, Executive Director,U.S. Tour of
Duty;
William Rivers Pitt, Author;
Tim Carpenter, Director, Progressive
Democrats of America;
Medea Benjamin, Co-Founder of Global
Exchange;
Paul Kawika Martin, Organizing and Political Director, Peace
Action;
Bill Moyer, Director of Back Bone Campaign;
Joe Libertelli,
National Advisory Board Member, Progressive Democrats of America;
Mike
Ferner,Co-Chair, Veterans For Peace Impeachment Committee;
John Bonifaz,
Co-Founder of After Downing Street, and constitutional attorney;
Cindy
Sheehan, Co-Founder of Gold Star Families for Peace;
Shay Lohman, peace
activist, Washington, D.C.;
Karen Bradley, mom and activist,Washington,
D.C.;
Richard Bell, longtime activist,
Washington,D.C.;
Ray McGovern, U.S. Army veteran and retired
27-year CIA analyst;
Travis Morales, Organizer for The World Can't
Wait;
Jeff Cohen, Author;
Larry Johnson, Former CIA Officer;
Bob
Fertik, President of Democrats.com;
Eric Hamburg, Producer, "Nixon", the
movie;
Brad Friedman, co-founder VelvetRevolution.us, managing editor
BradBlog.com;
ADD YOUR SIGNATURE AT www.afterdowningstreet.org/chalabi
DISHONORING THE DEAD AT THE AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
Group Hosts Major Misleader of American People on Iraq - (Quotes, Facts and
Background on Chalabi following)
WASHINGTON, DC -- A broad coalition of organizations opposed to the war in
Iraq will be demonstrating from 2PM to 4PM on Wednesday, November 9th against
the appearance of Ahmed Chalabi at the American Enterprise Institute in
Washington.
As an Iraqi exile before the war, Chalabi was one of the principal sources of
intelligence about Iraq and its alleged weapons of mass destruction for
neoconservatives and journalists (especially Judith Miller of the New York
Times). But Chalabi's own record is highly questionable, including a sentence in
absentia by a Jordanian court to 22 years in prison for bank fraud, and
accusations that he has been acting as a double agent for the Iranian
government.
"We know now that President Bush relied on Ahmed Chalabi in putting together
the web of lies that this president used to take us to war," said David Swanson,
Co-Founder of After Downing Street. "The American Enterprise Institute, which
says in its mission statement that it is 'dedicated to preserving and
strengthening the foundations of freedom,' should be ashamed of hosting a man
whose lies have done so much to weaken those foundations."
"We're here today at AEI to remind the American people that President Bush
backed Ahmed Chalabi for puppet leader in Iraq. We should not in fact be seeking
to impose any leader on a sovereign people," said Gael Murphy, Co-Founder of
CODE PINK. "The blood of more than 2,000 dead Americans and tens of thousands of
Iraqis cries out against working with this architect of deceit and death. In a
country truly dedicated to justice and freedom, our leaders should be arresting
Ahmed Chalabi, not feasting with him."
WHAT: Peaceful Nonviolent Protest of Ahmed Chalabi in Washington, D.C.
WHERE: Outside the American Enterprise Institute, where Chalabi will be
speaking on "An Insider's View: Democratic Politics at Work in Iraq." 1150
Seventeenth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. (Farragut North).
WHEN: 2-4 pm ET, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2005
Participating: Working Assets, UFPJ, Code Pink, DC Anti-War Network (DAWN),
DC Poets Against the War, Progressive Democrats of America, Montgomery County
Progressive Alliance and local Maryland DFA chapters, World Can't Wait,
Democracy Rising, Global Exchange, After Downing Street, and Democrats.com.
###
Quotes about Ahmed Chalabi from Sens. Hagel (R) Neb. and Feinstein (D)
Cal.:
CNN LATE EDITION WITH WOLF BLITZER Aired May 23, 2004 - 12:00 ET
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0405/23/le.00.html
SEN. CHUCK HAGEL (R), NEBRASKA: Well, he's a very clever fellow. He's very
smart. He understands power politics as well as anybody in this country. But I
think what we have here is a guy who has a record, like we all do, and that
record has not turned out very well. Trouble has followed him everywhere he's
been, and we have had a clear understanding of that record. There were a number
of us who warned this administration about him. People in the State Department,
others who dealt with him, King Abdullah of Jordan.
BLITZER: You personally had concerns about him?
HAGEL: I had big concerns about him.
BLITZER: You told the administration, be careful about this guy?
HAGEL: Yes, I did, as well as others. This relationship began not in the Bush
administration, but in the Clinton administration, with Mr. Chalabi. But the
fact is, there were some in this administration, some in Congress who were quite
taken with him and what he had to say. And we are now where we are, in a very,
very difficult, uncomfortable situation. I think listening to him blame Brahimi
and blame Bremer and blame Bob Blackwell says it all. This guy does that. He
makes a life out of that.
[H]e's taken tens of millions of dollars, taxpayers' dollars that we can't
account for most of it. That's why the State Department had to cut off some of
that funding. And then it was transferred to DOD. The vice president's office,
the secretary of defense's office were great supporters of him. So now we find
ourselves, I think, in a very predictable situation. When you deal with people
like this, Wolf, you're going to always have this kind of an outcome and a
result.
BLITZER: Senator Feinstein, I want you to weigh in as well. What do you
think?
SEN. DIANNE FEINSTEIN (D), CALIFORNIA: I think he's a charlatan. I think he's
a manipulator. I don't believe he's a man that you can trust. I think we made a
horrendous mistake in providing him with tens of millions of dollars and
enabling him to build a corps of infiltrators, allegedly to give us
intelligence, which in many cases was deeply flawed. And, I mean, this is a man
who was convicted of bank fraud in Jordan, of more than 10 counts, who left,
went to Iraq, began this. I think he has tremendous personal motives for his own
empowerment. And I think the fact that we fell victim to these manipulations is
unfortunate. I think both Senator Hagel and I should ask that the Intelligence
Committee really have a report from our intelligence agencies as to whether that
is correct or not. I have no way of knowing at this time.
HAGEL: [A]s Senator Feinstein has just noted, there is no way the Senate
Intelligence Committee is not going to be in this. We are in it now. And we'll
have to be in it. This is a very, very serious charge. What other charges may be
out there that we're still not aware of is yet unknown. [I]t is as serious as it
gets. And what is again so ironic, he was on our payroll. He was on our payroll
for years. He was, up until just recently, probably a week ago, the Defense
Department was paying the INC $340,000 a month. Some of us on the committee
asked about that, were concerned about that, not just recently, but over the
last few years. So, when you talk about...
FEINSTEIN: [T]here was a lot of misleading and there's no question but the
United States was misled. We were misled on weapons of mass destruction. We were
misled on the number of troops that could go in. We were misled on the
occupation.
Quick Facts on Ahmed Chalabi:
"[In 1977, Chalabi] was sentenced in absentia by a Jordanian court to 22
years in prison." - The BBC
Washington officials suspect that "Chalabi had all along been duping the
Americans by spying for the Iranians." - The BBC
"U.S. officials say that electronic intercepts of discussions between Iranian
leaders indicate that Chalabi and his entourage told Iranian contacts about
American political plans in Iraq. There are also indications that Chalabi has
provided details of U.S. security operations." - Newsweek
"According to one U.S. government source, some of the information Chalabi
turned over to Iran could 'get people killed.'" - Newsweek
"Administration officials say Chalabi may be working both sides in an effort
to solidify his own power and block the advancement of rival Iraqis."- Newsweek
Chalabi sat "behind First Lady Laura Bush during this year's State of the
Union speech." - The Nation
"[F]or the Arab media, Mr Chalabi was the epitome of an American stooge, a
man who sold his soul to the devil." - The BBC
Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska called allegations of Chalabi's
collaboration with Iran "[A] very, very serious charge. There were a number of
us who warned this administration about [Chalabi].... But the fact is, there
were some in this administration, some in Congress who were quite taken with
him." - The Nation
The Bush Administration paid Chalabi "more than $33 million in taxpayer
money" over a four-year period during which he "was the key window into Iraq for
the White House, as well as top reporters such as the New York Times's Judith
Miller." - The Nation
"The CIA had stopped using Chalabi as a source in the mid-1990s after his
political organization of exiles was accused of deception and incompetence." -
The Nation
"Chalabi was shamelessly resurrected inside the Beltway by neoconservatives,
including Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, Douglas Feith and other Bush
officials...." - The Nation
"Mr Chalabi was also blamed for advising the Provisional Coalition Authority
to dissolve the Iraqi army and the Baath party - two decisions that were
criticised by many as responsible for the breakdown in law and order and
alienating large sectors of Iraqi society." - The BBC
"At least seven Chalabi aides are wanted on charges of blackmail, fraud and
other crimes [because] Bush political appointees in charge of Iraq allowed
Chalabi to run wild. Chalabi and his family and cronies have been granted
control over Iraq's banking system and the crucial de-Baathification
process...." - The Nation
More Background on Chalabi:
The BBC:
"Profile: Ahmed Chalabi," the BBC, April 28, 2005: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/2925785.stm
"Chalabi left Iraq in 1956 and lived mainly in the US and London, except for
a period in the mid-1990s when he tried to organise an uprising in
Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq. The venture ended in failure with hundreds of
deaths. Soon after, the INC was routed from northern Iraq after Saddam Hussein's
troops overran its base in Irbil. A number of party officials were executed and
others - including Mr Chalabi - fled the country."
"Petra Bank, which became a leading private bank in [Jordan], collapsed in
1990 amid allegations of financial impropriety by Mr Chalabi. Two years later,
he was convicted of embezzlement and sentenced in absentia by a Jordanian court
to 22 years in prison with hard labour."
Chalabi "discounted the possibility he would take a role in any future
government. 'I am not seeking any positions - my job will end with the
liberation of Iraq from Saddam's rule,' he said before the start of the US-led
war. He did not attend the first US-brokered meeting of Iraqi representatives to
start shaping a future government of the country, sending a representative
instead. However, for the Arab media, Mr Chalabi was the epitome of an American
stooge, a man who sold his soul to the devil."
"Mr Chalabi was also blamed for advising the Provisional Coalition Authority
to dissolve the Iraqi army and the Baath party - two decisions that were
criticised by many as responsible for the breakdown in law and order and
alienating large sectors of Iraqi society."
In mid-May, "American officials announced then that the monthly payment of
more than $300,000 to Mr Chalabi's party, the Iraqi National Congress, was to be
stopped."
"Monitoring Media Reports," The BBC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/not_in_website/syndication/monitoring/media_reports/2291649.stm
"[Chalabi] was sentenced in absentia by a Jordanian court to 22 years in
prison with hard labour for bank fraud after the 1990 collapse of Petra Bank,
which he had founded in 1977."
"In May 2004, Mr Chalabi's home and offices were raided. He denounced the
raid, which he said was carried out by American agents and Iraqi police, as
politically motivated."
"There were whispers from Washington that Mr Chalabi had all along been
duping the Americans by spying for the Iranians."
"[H]e and his organisation were one of the sources for intelligence about
Iraq's weapons of destruction capability that is now widely viewed as faulty."
"In August 2004, Mr Chalabi and his nephew Salem Chalabi had arrest warrants
issued against them while they were outside Iraq. The charges against Ahmed
Chalabi relate to alleged counterfeiting activities. He denies the charges."
Newsweek:
Mark Hosenball, "Intelligence: A Double Game," Newsweek,
May 10, 2005: http://msnbc.msn.com/id/4881157/
"Has Chalabi given 'sensitive' information on U.S. interests to Iran? He
denies it, but the White House is wary."
"Ahmad Chalabi, the longtime Pentagon favorite to become leader of a free
Iraq, has never made a secret of his close ties to Iran. Before the U.S.
invasion of Baghdad, Chalabi's Iraqi National Congress maintained a
$36,000-a-month branch office in Tehran - funded by U.S. taxpayers."
"INC representatives, including Chalabi himself, paid regular visits to the
Iranian capital. Since the war, Chalabi's contacts with Iran may have
intensified: a Chalabi aide says that since December, he has met with most of
Iran's top leaders, including supreme religious leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
and his top national-security aide, Hassan Rowhani."
"But U.S. intelligence agencies have recently raised concerns that Chalabi
has become too close to Iran's theocratic rulers. NEWSWEEK has learned that top
Bush administration officials have been briefed on intelligence indicating that
Chalabi and some of his top aides have supplied Iran with sensitive information
on the American occupation in Iraq."
"U.S. officials say that electronic intercepts of discussions between Iranian
leaders indicate that Chalabi and his entourage told Iranian contacts about
American political plans in Iraq. There are also indications that Chalabi has
provided details of U.S. security operations."
"According to one U.S. government source, some of the information Chalabi
turned over to Iran could 'get people killed.' (A Chalabi aide calls the
allegations "absolutely false.") Why would Chalabi risk his cozy ties to
Washington by cuddling up to Iran's fundamentalist rulers? Administration
officials say Chalabi may be working both sides in an effort to solidify his own
power and block the advancement of rival Iraqis."
The Nation:
Robert Scheer, "Chalabi's Long, Costly Charade," The
Nation (posted online) May 25, 2004: http://www.thenation.com/doc/20040607/scheer0525
"Can it get any more bizarre? Only a few weeks before Washington's
long-promised hand-over of the keys to Iraq, we discover that the lackey the
Pentagon only recently had in mind to manage this very valuable property for the
United States is suspected by us of being a world-class con artist and, worse, a
spy for America's enemies in Iran."
"Nobody is speaking on the record yet, but US intelligence officials are
making it clear to a variety of preeminent news sources that Ahmad Chalabi, a
longtime darling of the neoconservatives who dragged the U.S. into this war, not
only fed Western intelligence sources false information about Saddam Hussein's
Iraq but is accused of having passed on US secrets to Iran, possibly through his
security and intelligence chief, who is now a fugitive."
"'This is a very, very serious charge,' Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel of
Nebraska said on Sunday, noting that his Senate Intelligence Committee will be
investigating it. 'There were a number of us who warned this administration
about [Chalabi].... But the fact is, there were some in this administration,
some in Congress who were quite taken with him.'"
"We might start investigating which Bush official arranged for this hustler -
already on the lam for a decade from major banking fraud convictions in Jordan -
to sit behind First Lady Laura Bush during this year's State of the Union
speech. Was the Secret Service watching her purse?"
"Too harsh? Not by a long shot. The CIA had stopped using Chalabi as a source
in the mid-1990s after his political organization of exiles was accused of
deception and incompetence. However, over the last four years, Chalabi was
shamelessly resurrected inside the Beltway by neoconservatives, including
Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, Douglas Feith and other Bush officials who were
leading the campaign to invade Iraq."
"Granted more than $33 million in taxpayer money over that four-year period -
funding that was cut off only days before Iraqi police backed by US troops
raided his home and office last week - Chalabi was the key window into Iraq for
the White House, as well as top reporters such as the New York Times's Judith
Miller. She mined him for a long string of now-discredited front-page scoops on
Iraq's much-touted weapons of mass destruction."
"Chalabi is now suspected of having 'gamed' the intelligence agencies of
eight nations using phony or tricked-up sources and documents, according to
intelligence sources cited in the Los Angeles Times."
"Yet even as post-invasion searches and interrogations proved Chalabi's hoary
claims completely wrong, and even as Chalabi continued his longtime practice of
cozying up to the ayatollahs in Iran during frequent visits to Tehran, the Bush
political appointees in charge of Iraq allowed Chalabi to run wild. Chalabi and
his family and cronies have been granted control over Iraq's banking system and
the crucial de-Baathification process, as well as the upcoming trial of Saddam
Hussein. The result? At least seven Chalabi aides are wanted on charges of
blackmail, fraud and other crimes."
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