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The Great Intelligence
Scam
By: Micheal
Ledeen
Yesterday’s
big story was the Intelligence Community’s “Estimate,”
according to which Iran unilaterally and secretly suspended
its covert nuclear weapons program back in 2003, and hasn’t
resumed it to date. We don’t know the sources and methods
that underly this analysis, and it may well be that we have
acquired some totally convincing evidence that justifies the
astonishing conclusions of the IC’s assessment. But the
“Estimate” itself is internally unconvincing–different
agencies, notably the National Intelligence Council and the
Department of Energy, are not convinced we have the full
picture, and argue that we may not know whether the “halt”
on which the IC hangs its analytical hat applies to Iran’s
“entire nuclear weapons program.”
In other
words, we seem to know that something was halted, but we
don’t know if that’s the whole story. In Rumsfeld’s famous
words, we don’t know what we don’t know.
The most
interesting part of the “Estimate” is of course its
political and policy implications, which National Security
Adviser Steven Hadley was quick to spell out. In his view,
and in that of many political leaders and pundits, if Iran
does not have a nuclear weapons program, there is no great
urgency to move against the mullahs.
And indeed,
those “intelligence professionals” were very happy to take
off their analytical caps and gowns and put on their policy
wigs:
“Although the officials as a rule, respecting the norms of
their craft, declined to offer policy prescriptions based on
their findings, the most senior official present did cite
the finding that the Iranians are susceptible to
international pressure and say that such pressure should
“continue” as a way to “allow IAEA to have significant
visibility into the program.”
This sort
of blatant unprofessionalism is as common in today’s
Washington as it is unworthy of a serious intel type, and I
think it tells us a lot about the document itself. The “Key
Findings” published yesterday address the obvious question:
why would the Iranians abandon a program that had been in
the works ever since the late 1980s? The IC replies: because
the Iranians are rational, and they respond to international
pressure. They shut down the program because the pressure
was too great. They couldn’t take the risk of even more pain
from the international community.
At this
point, one really has to wonder why anyone takes these
documents seriously. How can anyone in his (there was no
female name on the document, nor was any woman from the IC
present at the press briefing yesterday) right mind believe
that the mullahs are rational? Has no one told the IC about
the cult of the 12th Imam, on which this regime bases its
domestic and foreign policies? Does not the constant chant
of “Death to America” mean anything? I suppose not, at least
not to the deep thinkers who wrote this policy document.
And as for
Iran’s delicate sensitivity to international pressure, just
a few days ago, the European ‘foreign minister’ Javier
Solana was on the verge of tears when he admitted he had
been totally unable to get the Iranians to come clean on
their uranium enrichment program, even though he had told
them that more sanctions were in the works. Yet, according
to the IC, this program–neatly described in a footnote to
the “Estimate” as “Iran’s declared civil work related to
uranium conversion and enrichment—really doesn’t have
anything to do with nuclear weapons. But if that is so, why
are the Iranians so doggedly hiding it from UN inspectors?
This
document will not stand up to serious criticism, but it will
undoubtedly have a significant political impact, since it
will be taken as confirmation of the view that we should not
do anything mean to the mullahs. We should talk to them
instead. And that’s just what the Estimate says:
…some combination of threats of intensified international
scrutiny and pressures, along with opportunities for Iran to
achieve its security, prestige, and goals for regional
influence in other ways, might–if perceived by Iran’s
leaders as credible–prompt Tehran to extend the current halt
to its nuclear weapons program.
Incredibly, the authors of the document claim they can prove
all this: “The impact of international pressure is beyond
dispute, the officials said, a “cause-and-effect”
relationship backed up by an ‘evidentiary trail.’ “
But any
good student who has taken Psych 101 will tell you that it’s
nigh unto impossible to determine someone else’s intentions,
especially when presented by “analysts” who think that
Ayatollah Khamenei and President Rafsanjani are as rational
as the rest of us. This is demeaning to the Iranian
tyrants–for whom their faith is a matter of ultimate
significance–and insulting to our leaders, who should expect
serious work from the IC instead of this bit of policy
advocacy masquerading as serious intelligence.
Source:
The weblog of Michael Ledeen
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