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A former Senate Intelligence Committee chairman asserted Sunday that the general who ran the war in Afghanistan said more than a year before the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq (search) that his resources were being shifted in preparation for taking on Saddam Hussein.

Sen. Bob Graham (search), D-Fla., contends that just months into combat in Afghanistan, Gen. Tommy Franks (search) also told him that fighting terrorism in Somalia, Yemen and elsewhere should take priority over invading Iraq.

Graham said Franks told him he thought the United States knew less about the situation in Iraq than did some European governments, and the Bush administration should ask them for advice.

The senator, who is retiring at year's end, said his conversation with the now-retired general came in February 2002, when Graham was chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee.

That was the month that Secretary of State Colin Powell told a House committee that President Bush (search) was considering "the most serious set of options one might imagine" to bring "regime change" in Iraq, including the possibility of doing it alone. At least one European leader, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, said a few days later that Bush had assured him "he harbors no attack plans."

The invasion began March 19, 2003, over the vigorous protests of Germany and most other major U.S. allies except Britain, which joined the invading force. Graham opposed the war.

Graham said on NBC's "Meet the Press" that his meeting with Franks was at the general's headquarters, U.S. Central Command (search) in Tampa, Fla.

"He laid out a very precise strategy for fighting the war on terror," Graham said.

"First, we should win the war in Afghanistan (search). Second, move to Somalia, which as he described was almost anarchy but with a substantial number of Al Qaeda (search) cells; then to Yemen. And that we should be very careful about Iraq, because our intelligence was so weak that we didn't know what we were getting into," Graham said.

Last week, Franks gave fellow Texan Bush a rousing endorsement in a speech at the Republican National Convention. Franks said he had seen in Bush's eyes "the courage to stand up to terrorists and the consistency necessary to beat them."

In "American Soldier," Franks' memoirs published last month, he mentioned none of the points Graham reported in his book. The retired general could not be reached Sunday. There was no immediate response to a message left at Tampa's Central Command headquarters.

Graham wrote of his meeting with Franks in a book, "Intelligence Matters," which goes on sale Tuesday.

In an excerpt read on the program, the senator said Franks told him "his men and resources were being moved to Iraq, where he felt that our intelligence was shoddy. This admission was coming almost 14 months before the beginning of combat operations in Iraq and only five months after the commencement of combat in Afghanistan."

Graham's book also discusses apparent financial ties of Saudi officials with two of the Sept. 11 hijackers.

Graham said the matter was discussed in a 28-page section of the committee's report on the attacks that was kept secret at the request of the White House.

Bush presidential opponent John Kerry (search) called for an investigation.

"We need an independent investigation into these allegations immediately to determine if the very agencies charged with investigating the war on terror have been compromised by White House politics," Kerry said in a statement.

FOX News learned that White House spokesman Trent Duffy read from the Sept. 11 commission report to counter Kerry's claims.

"'There is no evidence of political intervention by the White House.' Maybe [they] ought to read page 329 of the commission report," Duffy said, referencing the report's conclusion about a White House cover up of Saudi ties to the hijacking.

The Associated Press reported in August 2003 that the classified part of the report examined interactions between Saudi businessmen and the royal family that may have intentionally or unwittingly aided Al Qaeda or the suicide hijackers.