Ron Suskind, in his 2008 book
The Way of the World, claimed that the Habbush letter had been forged by the
White House, with the co-operation of senior CIA officials, including
Robert Richer, the Associate Deputy Director of Operations. The letter was intended to be used as evidence of a link between al-Qaeda and Saddam Hussein, thereby further justifying the
invasion of Iraq. Suskind goes on to describe what he believes happened next: Richer spoke to John Maguire, a CIA Iraq expert, who said that this plan would not work, as Habbush would not sign anything himself because the
insurgency would harm his family. This, by Suskind's account, led to the
White House telling the CIA to hand-write the letter itself. Suskind's book says that this new order was eventually passed down to the
Iraq Operations Group, who carried it out. Maguire left for Baghdad to help run the CIA station there and was not involved directly in the mission, other than discussing the mission with Richer. Suskind also contends that Habbush, who still carries a $1 million reward for his capture, was secretly resettled in
Jordan by the CIA with $5 million in US taxpayers' money. Suskind claimed to have held tape-recorded interviews with Richer, Maguire, and
Nigel Inkster of the British
Secret Intelligence Service, in which they apparently testified that the White House was behind the forging of the letter. According to a partial transcript of one of Suskind's interviews with Richer, published on Suskind's website, Richer saw a letter on White House stationery that had been passed down the ranks of the CIA – through
George Tenet, then-CIA director, then to
James Pavitt, the deputy director of Operations, then to Pavitt's chief of staff, who passed it on to Richer. The letter, which Richer said might or might not have come from the vice president's office, described a plan to create a forged document and release it "as essentially a representation of something Habbush says". On August 5, 2008, the White House issued a statement on behalf of George Tenet, Robert Richer and John Maguire, addressing Suskind's allegation. Tenet said: The CIA issued its own statement on August 22, 2008, saying that Suskind's allegations regarding Habbush "did not happen", and Tenet followed the same day with a second statement saying that Suskind's charges were "demonstrably false in every regard." Nigel Inkster told the
Guardian that "Mr Suskind's characterisation of our meeting is more the stuff of creative fiction than serious reportage". == Subsequent reactions ==