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Reports: policy, not science, drives Bush administration

A report by a group of more than sixty influential scientists, including twenty Nobel laureates, asserts that the Bush administration has systematically distorted scientific facts and findings to support its policy goals. The report, "Scientific Integrity in Policymaking," was written by Seth Shulman and issued on behalf of the Union of Concerned Scientists. The 38-page report states: "A growing number of scientists, policy makers, and technical specialists both inside and outside the government allege that the current Bush administration has suppressed or distorted the scientific analyses of federal agencies to bring these results in line with administration policy."

The findings cover many policy areas, including environmental protection, abstinence/sex education, and pre-war claims that aluminum tubes found in Iraq were to be used for enriching uranium--and thus creating nuclear weapons. In response to an EPA report on the effects of climate change, the report charges that "the Bush administration has sought to exaggerate uncertainty by relying on disreputable and fringe-science reports and preventing informed discussion on the issue."

While acknowledging that previous presidents also engaged in distorting and manipulating science, the report concluded that the Bush administration's efforts to do so were "unprecedented." The White House largely dismissed the report as a politically driven collection of unrelated incidents that do not constitute a pervasive antiscience bias.

Still, many of the report's findings have been independently verified. One high-profile example, Iraq's aluminum tubes, was the subject of a 60 Minutes II segment titled "The Man Who Knew" (February 4, 2004). It featured Houston Wood, a senior scientist at Oak Ridge Laboratories and an authority on uranium enrichment by centrifuge. Wood and virtually all other scientists concluded that there was no link between the tubes and a nuclear program, yet their findings were at odds with Bush administration claims.

While a CIA report advocated the administration's view that the tubes were to be used for developing nuclear weapons, a set of technical experts from the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge, Livermore, and Los Alamos national laboratories reviewed the CIA analysis and disagreed with its findings. Independent investigations by the State Department's intelligence branch and the International Atomic Energy Agency also concluded that the tubes were unsuitable for uranium enrichment.

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This information was presented to Secretary of State Colin and others prior to their remarks on the topic. Yet Powell embraced the discredited CIA report and downplayed the collective scientific position, testifying that "Most U.S. experts think [the tubes] are intended to serve as rotors in centrifuges used to enrich uranium."

Wood stated that politics overrode science in how the information was presented to Congress and the American people. "Science was not pushing this forward. Scientists had made their evaluation, made their determination, and now didn't know what was happening." 60 Minutes II correspondent Scott Pelley asked Wood about Powell's claim: "Do you know even one [expert] who says yes, these are for nuclear weapons?" Wood replied, "I don't know a single one, anywhere." In this case the true scientific consensus was apparently exactly the opposite of what was stated by the administration in making its case for war.

 

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