Call & Times

Joe Wilson, skeptic on Iraq War intelligen­ce, dies at age 69

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SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Joseph Wilson, the former ambassador who set off a political firestorm by disputing U.S. intelligen­ce used to justify the 2003 Iraq invasion, died Friday, according to his ex-wife. He was 69.

Wilson died of organ failure in Santa Fe, said his former wife, Valerie Plame, whose identity as a CIA operative was exposed days after Wilson’s criticism of U.S. intelligen­ce that Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein was attempting to purchase uranium.

The leak of Plame’s covert identity was a scandal for the administra­tion of President George W. Bush that led to the conviction of vice presidenti­al aide I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby for lying to investigat­ors and obstructio­n of justice.

President Donald Trump pardoned Libby in 2018.

Plame, who is running as a Democrat for Congress – in part as a Trump adversary – called Wilson “a true American hero, a patriot, and had the heart of a lion.” Plame and Wilson moved to Santa Fe in 2007 to raise twin children and divorced in 2017.

Plame’s identity with the CIA was revealed in a newspaper column days after Wilson said in an opinion piece in The New York Times that the Bush administra­tion twisted prewar intelligen­ce on Iraq to justify going to war. Wilson later accused administra­tion officials and political operatives of putting his family at risk.

A Connecticu­t native and graduate of the University of California at Santa Barbara, Wilson’s career with the Foreign Service included posts in a handful of African nations.

He was the senior U.S. diplomat in Baghdad during the first Gulf War, which lasted from 1990 to 1991, and was the last American official to meet with Saddam before the Desert Storm offensive.

Wilson drew intense criticism from Republican lawmakers over his statements regarding Iraq and weapons of mass destructio­n in the leadup to the U.S. invasion. A report by the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee in 2004 pointed to inconsiste­nces.

Wilson dismissed those claims, later authoring the book “The Politics of Truth.”

In a 2003 interview with PBS, he said that the post 9/11 security mission went astray with the full invasion of Iraq.

“The national security objective for the United States was clear; it was disarmamen­t of Saddam Hussein,” he said. “We should have pursued that objective. We did not need to engage in an invasion, conquest and occupation of Iraq in order to achieve that objective.”

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