Friday, December 07, 2007

The A-Bomb That Wasn't

With Their Report On Iran's Weaponry - Or Lack Of It - US Spooks Have Launched A Pre-Emptive Intelligence Strike Against The White House

By Simon Tisdall
December 4, 2007 1:02 PM
Guardian

For most people, Washington's second thoughts about the seriousness of the Iranian nuclear "threat" will come as a great relief.

Those in the Bush administration who appeared bent on forcing a military confrontation with Tehran some time next year will now face greater difficulties in making their case.

George Bush's "third world war" is off the agenda - at least for now.

The surprise reversal (pdf) in US official thinking, embodied in the CIA's declassified National Intelligence Estimate (NIE), has also opened up a rare chance for substantive dialogue with Tehran ranging beyond this year's limited talks on Iraqi security.

"I don't think you can overstate the importance of this," said the Republican senator Chuck Hagel. "If we're wise here, if we're careful, I think we have some opportunities."

As Manouchehr Mottaki, Iran's foreign minister, and other moderate conservative Iranian leaders publicly welcomed the US reappraisal today, the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, urged the White House to mount a "diplomatic surge" to capitalise on the unexpected turnabout.

Stephen Hadley, Bush's national security adviser, seemed ready to embrace the idea, although he warned that it took two to tango.

"We need to keep the pressure up but also make clear there is a path for negotiation that will assess Iranian concerns," Hadley said...

Belated US recognition that Iranian policy was being dictated by rational considerations of legitimate national and regional interest, rather than by the dangerous rantings of "mad mullahs", will also go down well in Tehran.

"Our assessment that Iran halted the [bomb-making] programme in 2003, primarily in response to international pressure, indicates Tehran's decisions are guided by a cost-benefit approach rather than a rush to a weapon irrespective of the political, economic and military costs," the NIE said.

"This in turn suggests that 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 programme."


..On a purely personal level, there is little reason to believe that the famously stubborn Bush and his hawkish vice-president, Dick Cheney, will suddenly admit they were wrong, swallow their enmity and make nice with Tehran.

...An affronted Israel, which believes it is in Iran's sights, ... The defence minister, Ehud Barak, flatly rejected the US findings yesterday: "It's apparently true that in 2003 Iran stopped pursuing its military nuclear programme for a time. But in our opinion, since then it has apparently continued that programme."

All the same, Bush will now struggle to make his case for additional international punitive measures against Iran. Russia, China and others, such as Germany, may use the NIE to urge negotiations.

The International Atomic Energy Agency, led by the much criticised Mohamed ElBaradei, will rightly feel vindicated in its careful prior judgments.

And Democratic party presidential candidates will be encouraged in their arguments that Bush and Cheney were exaggerating the problem and spoiling for a fight. Hillary Clinton has been quick to make the point.

The story inside this story will obsess Washington for weeks to come. The extraordinary way in which the NIE was openly published (rather than partially leaked or kept secret, as would normally be the case) took everybody unawares - and possibly Bush, too, who was only told of its final conclusions last week.

On the face of it, the decision to go public looks like a case of high Washington politics - a pre-emptive strike against the White House by intelligence agencies and military chiefs determined not to be suckered, as they were before the Iraq war, into producing intelligence to fit a preordained policy.

That the CIA and others felt able to act in this manner is a measure of Bush's weakness and their own lingering anger over the Iraq WMD debacle...
Related Material:

1.
Miracle: Honest Intel on Iran Nukes: Ray McGovern

2.
Like Iraq, US Intel on Iran Faulty

3.
US Finds Iran Halted Nuclear Arms Effort in 2003

4.
Iran Assessment Jars a Foreign Policy Debate

5.
Iraq All Over: US Intel on Iran Faulty

6.
New Iran Nuke Report Challenges White House

7.
A Blow to Bush's Tehran Policy

8.
Analysis: Iran Study Takes Attack Off the Table

9.
US Showed the World Exhibit A, Iran as Nuclear Threat; Now Exhibit B Upends It

10.
Text: White House Reaction to Iran Report

11.
Europeans See Murkier Case for Sanctions


UpDates For Wednesday, December 7, 2007

1. No Iran Attack? You Sure?: Justin Raimondo

2. Iran NIE Validates Euro Diplomacy: Gareth Porter

3. Bush Refuses to Rule Out Iran Strike


4. IAEA: US Iran Report Matches UN Agency

5. Iran Welcomes US Report, Says Atomic Plans Peaceful

6. Lessons of Iraq Aided Intelligence on Iran

7. Gulf States Urge Peace With Iran

8. Played for Fools Yet Again: About That Iran 'Intelligence' Report

9. Hersh: Bush Told Olmert of Iran Report Two Days Before President Was Allegedly First Briefed on It

10. Hadley: Findings That Iran Hasn't Had Nuke Program in Years Proves We Were Right

11. Clinton Rivals Hammer Her Iran Vote During Debate

12. Text of President Bush's Press Conference on Iran's Nuclear Program

13. Bush: US Must Remain Vigilant on Iran

14. Iran FM Lauds US for Correcting False Nuke Accusation

15. Iran NIE: New Data, New Methods, New Conclusion

16. Europeans Relieved at US Report on Iran

17. Israeli Officials Angrily Reject US Findings on Iran

18. Israeli DM Calls for More Action Against Iran

19. US Nuke Study on Iran Erodes Oil Market Risk

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