New York, Mar 29: American intelligence analysts warned the Pentagon before the war in Iraq began that Iraqi paramilitary units would fight back and could pose a significant threat to US-led invading forces, officials said. The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) issued a report last month that said the paramilitary units loyal to Saddam Hussein could threaten rear areas during an allied advance, the officials were quoted as saying by The New York Times.
The CIA report also raised concerns about possibility that paramilitary forces could mount attacks on Iraqi civilians and use other irregular means to try to tie down invading forces.
Analysts at defence intelligence agency, the paper said, also voiced concerns about paramilitary forces in the months leading up to war with Iraq, and warned the military leadership about the threat from guerrilla-style attacks.
Officials were quoted as saying that the issue was also raised by analysts at the national ground intelligence center, another branch of military intelligence.
Still, intelligence officials cautioned the warnings by analysts about paramilitary forces shouldn't be overstated, since other potential threats received much more attention.
"You can't overspin this and say this was considered the biggest threat by the analysts," an official said. "A lot more attention was paid to republican guards and to possible use of weapons of mass destruction. Those were considered biggest problems."
The Times said the fact that analysts raised the issue in intelligence reports but did not make it a dominant theme might help explain why commanders in the field, who might not have read the fine print of every report, were surprised when paramilitary forces first appeared.
Bureau Report