In December
of 2007, I wrote an article about the National Intelligence Estimate that had
just concluded that Iran had abandoned its nuclear weapons program back in
2003. The immediate effect of this pollyannaish report was to diminish the need
for tough sanctions against Iran and to take the military option off the table.
We now know that the conclusion reached in the report was categorically false
and that those who issued the report knew it was false. I entitled my December
2007 article “Stupid Intelligence,”
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alan-dershowitz/stupid-intelligence_b_75663.html)
because I argued that its author had fallen hook, line and sinker for a
transparent bait and switch tactic employed by Iran.
The tactic is
obvious and well-known to all intelligence officials with an IQ above room
temperature. It goes like this: There are two tracks to making nuclear weapons:
One is to conduct research and develop technology directly related to military
use...[T]he second track is to develop nuclear technology for civilian use and
then to use the civilian technology for military purposes.
It was clear
to many perceptive readers of the report, and to most other intelligence
agencies, that Iran had simply and deceptively opted for the second track, and
had certainly not abandoned its nuclear weapons program.
It now turns
out that at the time this “stupid intelligence” estimate was released, our
intelligence agencies were aware that the Iranians were building a secret
military facility buried deep in the mountains near the holy city of Qom. The
United States recently disclosed the existence of this facility (after Iran was
forced to acknowledge its existence) and its firm conclusion that it could be
used only for the development of a nuclear weapons program. If the intelligence
community knew then what they know now, then its 2007 National Intelligence
Estimate was not only stupid. It was dishonest.
It seems
clear in retrospect, as it seemed clear to me at the time, that those who
released this deeply flawed report had a political agenda. As I wrote two years
ago:
My own view
is that the authors of the report were fighting the last war. No, not the war
in Iraq, but rather what they believe was Vice President Cheney’s efforts to go
to war with Iran. This report surely takes the wind out of those sails. But
that was last year’s unfought war. Nobody in Washington has seriously
considered attacking Iran since Condoleezza Rice and Robert Gates replaced
Cheney as the foreign policy power behind the throne.
Whatever the
agenda was, it is improper--indeed it is illegal--for intelligence agencies to
try to influence policy through a hidden agenda. Their job is to report
truthfully to the elected policy makers so that they can make policy.
The time has
come to withdraw the false and dangerous 2007 report, to admit it was wrong,
and substitute an intelligent, honest, objective and up to date report on how
close Iran now is to being able to construct a deliverable nuclear bomb. The
issue of how to deal with the threat posed by an apocalyptic, terrorist nation
about to obtain nuclear weapons is too important to be left to politicized
intelligence agencies with hidden agendas.
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