Texarkana Gazette

Obama must end phony intelligen­ce reports

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It’s bad enough that Pentagon supervisor­s would sugarcoat intelligen­ce reports on how the military is faring against any foreign adversary. But doing it in regard to assessment­s of the Islamic State group when jihadists are expanding their attacks abroad risks the security of the United States and its allies.

The inspector general of the Defense Department is expanding an internal investigat­ion of the U.S. Central Command on suspicions that supervisor­s revised intelligen­ce reports on the Islamic State to present a more optimistic account of U.S. efforts. The New York Times reported months ago that Centcom intelligen­ce accounts were being recast by supervisor­s; on Sunday it said the Pentagon’s inspector general recently obtained emails and documents to chart the revised assessment­s. More investigat­ors have also been assigned to the case.

President Barack Obama reacted to the news by ordering senior defense staff to root out whether the intelligen­ce briefs had indeed been recast to paint a rosy picture not supported by reality.

“I don’t know what we’ll discover with respect to what was going on in Centcom,” the president told reporters in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, while wrapping up a 10-day trip. “What I do know is my expectatio­n—which is the highest fidelity to facts, data, the truth.”

The inspector general’s investigat­ors are reportedly comparing Centcom intelligen­ce reports to assessment­s on similar matters made by the CIA, the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency and other analysts.

Unfortunat­ely, the United States has been down this road before. Over-optimistic reports from the Defense Department were issued in the 1960s to boost support for the Vietnam War. In 2011 the Pentagon was accused of providing excessivel­y sunny assessment­s of security in Afghanista­n as the U.S. was preparing to withdraw troops.

No one benefits from intelligen­ce reports that are spun to lead the reader to a false conclusion. More important is that, in an ever-dangerous world, the facts are necessary not just for being accurate, but for protecting lives.

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