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Iran
Hawks Down?
By Laura Rozen
December 4, 2007
For months, intelligence reporters have occasionally noted
the absence of a National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on
Iran's nuclear program that was due to Congress last spring.
To some degree, politics and a reported tussle between hawks
and moderates were the presumed reasons for the delay. Such
suspicions were further aroused last month by reports that
Mike McConnell, the U.S. intelligence czar, was insisting
that all future NIEs might remain classified.
Which is why many in Washington were caught off guard today,
as the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
released unclassified key judgments of a new NIE on Iran's
nuclear program. Almost nobody had anticipated how dramatic
some of the findings would be, and how devastating for the
hawks' case for near-term military action against Iran. "We
judge with high confidence that in fall 2003, Tehran halted
its nuclear program," stated the NIE, innocuously titled
"Iran: Nuclear Intentions and Capabilities," in Key Judgment
A.
"Tehran's decision to halt its nuclear program suggests it
is less determined to develop nuclear weapons than we have
been judging since 2005," it continued further down. "Our
assessment that the program probably was halted primarily in
response to international pressure suggests Iran may be more
vulnerable to influence on the issue than we judged
previously."
The intelligence community's judgment that Iran is
responsive to international diplomatic pressure bolstered
those in and outside the administration arguing for
continued tough diplomacy to get Iran to change its
behavior. And it infuriated hawks who'd been arguing for a
more aggressive approach. "The NIE is a breathtaking
repudiation of the policy arguments advanced by
administration hardliners in recent years that Iran's march
toward a nuclear weapons program is relentless and
inexorable," a Democratic Senate staffer who has closely
followed Iran's nuclear program told Mother Jones.
"This is a blockbuster development and requires a wholesale
reevaluation of U.S. policy," said nonproliferation expert
Jon Wolfsthal, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic
and International Studies, in a statement released by the
National Security Network. "This NIE suggests that outside
pressure and scrutiny has turned off Iran's nuclear weapons
program."
Those advocating a tougher line toward Iran naturally had a
different take: "I would say that the new NIE reflects very
nicely the character of the U.S. intelligence community,
which is very highly confident," Patrick Clawson, an Iran
proliferation expert and deputy director for research at the
Washington Institute for Near East Policy, told Mother Jones
with evident sarcasm. "You might think that an agency that
is issuing a report that says its 2005 judgment was wrong
would have a lot of caution about what it says it knows now.
"They were wrong about the nuclear programs of Iraq, Libya,
South Africa, and Pakistan," Clawson continued. "They were
wrong about every nuclear program. And now they come along
and say they were wrong about the Iranian nuclear program
[in 2005] and now they are 'highly confident.' I would think
they would rather be a little humble."
Paul Pillar disagrees. As the former top National
Intelligence Council officer for the Middle East, he knows
his way around the NIE process. "I think the thing reeks
with humility," said Pillar, who is now with Georgetown
University. He characterizes the new NIE's tone as full of
qualifiers: '"We have low confidence on this, moderate
conference on that…' If there is one upfront statement…"
The NIE released today had been held up for more than a
year. At a House Armed Services Committee hearing on global
threats this summer, the CIA's top intel analyst indicated
to Mother Jones during a break that the delay was due in
part to new intelligence that the United States had
obtained. The source of that intelligence has not been
revealed, but comments by national security advisor Stephen
Hadley today suggested the United States had received new
information a few months ago and that a conclusion on the
NIE's findings was reached only last Tuesday. Incidentally,
last Tuesday was the date of a major White House-sponsored
Middle East peace conference held at Annapolis, Maryland.
Further comments by Hadley revealed that administration
principals such as Vice President Cheney had been briefed on
the NIE two weeks ago. Also noteworthy was the fact that, as
reported by the Washington Post's Walter Pincus, McConnell
had recently said he'd decided against releasing
unclassified NIE summaries in the future at all. McConnell
"said that he does not want 'a situation where the young
analysts are writing something because they know it's going
to be a public debate or political debate,'" Pincus
reported.
While that argument may have merit, Pillar noted, McConnell
probably felt he had to release a summary, given the
dramatic conclusions. "Confronted with this particular
judgment on this issue, if I were [director of national
intelligence], I wouldn't sit on it either," he said.
"The primary, number one judgment—that military efforts have
apparently been discontinued in 2003 and still discontinued
as of middle of this year—it is impossible for the community
to sit on a judgment like that," Pillar continued. "That
they have high confidence suggests they have some fairly
good reporting. That is pretty significant."
In a press release today, Dr. Donald Kerr, the top deputy
director for national intelligence, presented the decision
as a correcting of the public record. "The Intelligence
Community is on the record publicly with numerous statements
based on our 2005 assessment on Iran. Since our
understanding of Iran's capabilities has changed, we felt it
was important to release this information to ensure that an
accurate presentation is available."
Senate Intelligence Committee chairman Jay Rockefeller
(D-W.Va.) praised the intelligence community's pro-active
behavior. "The key judgments show that the Intelligence
Community has learned its lessons from the Iraq debacle,"
Rockefeller said in a statement. "It has issued judgments
that break sharply with its own previous assessments, and
they reflect a real difference from the views espoused by
top administration officials."
But the Washington Institute's Clawson said that the new NIE
left out an important fact implied by its findings. It says
nothing, he noted, about what effect the halt in Iran's
nuclear weapons program has on its ability to weaponize
fissile material manufactured for its civilian program. "If
the information they are providing here about Iran's
production of highly enriched uranium is correct," he said,
"the reported halt in the weapons program has no effect."
The NIE estimated that Iran could have enough highly
enriched uranium for a weapon by 2009 at the earliest, "but
this is very unlikely," it stated. "We judge with moderate
confidence Iran probably would be technically capable of
producing enough HEU for a weapon sometime during the
2010-2015 time frame." In other words, the NIE seems to
argue that the Bush administration can defer the decision
about whether to act on Iran's nuclear program to the next
administration—if it chooses.
The Democratic Hill staffer who follows Iran policy closely
offered a note of caution to anyone convinced the NIE would
stymie the hardliners. It could also set back efforts to get
a third round of economic sanctions through the UN Security
Council, he warned, and thereby weaken the effectiveness of
those pushing for a non-military approach. "Failure of the
sanction drive at the UN may give Cheney et al. the
opportunity to convince the president that the diplomatic
route is now closed and the United States must move to more
direct military pressure."
Laura Rozen is Mother Jones' national security
correspondent.
Source: Mother Jones
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