Sunday Dec 09, 2007

Double Standard Watch: Stupid Intelligence

Posted by Alan Dershowitz
Comments: 2
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The recent national intelligence estimate that concluded that Iran halted its nuclear weapons program in 2003 is just about the most stupid intelligence assessment I have ever read. It falls hook, line and sinker for a transparent bait-and-switch tactic employed not only by Iran, but by several other nuclear powers in the past.

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. That is what the United States did when it developed the atomic bomb during the Manhattan Project. The second track is to develop nuclear technology for civilian use and then to use the civilian technology for military purposes.

What every intelligence agency knows is that the most difficult part of developing weapons corresponds precisely to the second track, namely civilian use. In other words, it is relatively simple to move from track 2 to track 1 in a short period of time. As Valerie Lincy and Gary Milhollin, both experts on nuclear arms control, put it in a New York Times Op Ed on December 6, 2007:

During the past year, a period when Iran's weapons program was supposedly halted, the government has been busy installing some 3,000 gas centrifuges at its plant at Natanz. These machines could, if operated continuously for about a year, create enough enriched uranium to provide fuel for a bomb. In addition, they have no plausible purpose in Iran's civilian nuclear effort. All of Iran's needs for enriched uranium for its energy programs are covered by a contract with Russia.

Iran is also building a heavy water reactor at its research center at Arak. This reactor is ideal for producing plutonium for nuclear bombs, but is of little use in an energy program like Iran's, which does not use plutonium for reactor fuel. India, Israel and Pakistan have all built similar reactors - all with the purpose of fueling nuclear weapons. And why, by the way, does Iran even want a nuclear energy program, when it is sitting on an enormous pool of oil that is now skyrocketing in value? And why is Iran developing long-range Shahab missiles, which make no military sense without nuclear warheads to put on them?

...the halting of its secret enrichment and weapon design efforts in 2003 proves only that Iran made a tactical move. It suspended work that, if discovered, would unambiguously reveal intent to build a weapon. It has continued other work, crucial to the ability to make a bomb, that it can pass off as having civilian applications.

Duh! What then can explain so obvious an intelligence gaffe. One explanation could lie in the old saw that "military intelligence is to intelligence as military music is to music". But I simply don't believe that our intelligence agencies are populated by the kind of nincompoops who would fall for so obvious an Iranian ploy. The more likely explanation is that there is an agenda hiding in the report.

What then might that agenda be? To find a hidden agenda one should always look for the beneficiaries. Who wins from this deeply flawed report? Well, certainly Iran does, but it is unlikely that Iranian interests could drive any American agenda. Lincy and Milhollin surmise that:

We should be suspicious of any document that suddenly gives the Bush administration a pass on a big national security problem it won't solve during its remaining year in office. Is the administration just washing its hands of the intractable Iranian nuclear issue by saying, "[i]f we can't fix it, it ain't broke"??

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 and whatever the motive this report may well go down in history as one of the most dangerous, misguided and counterproductive intelligence assessments in history. It may well encourage the Iranians to move even more quickly in developing nuclear weapons. If the report is correct in arguing that the only way of discouraging Iran from developing nuclear weapons is to maintain international pressure, then the authors of the report must surely know that they have single-handedly reduced any incentive by the international community to keep the pressure up.

If Neville Chamberlain weren't long dead I would wonder whether he had a hand in writing this "peace in our time" intelligence fiasco.

I wish the intelligence assessment were correct. So does most of the media, which accepted its naïve conclusion with uncritical enthusiasm. The world would be a far safer place if Iran had indeed ended its efforts to develop deliverable nuclear weapons. But wishing for a desirable outcome does not make it so. Pretending that a desirable outcome is happening, when the best information indicates that it's not, only encourages the worst outcome.

The authors of this perverse report, which is influencing policy so immediately and negatively, will have much to answer for if their assessment results in a reduction of pressure on Iran - which is the only nation actually to threaten to use nuclear weapons to attack its enemies - to stop its obvious march toward becoming the world's most dangerous nuclear military power.

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1  |  Mike Germany, Thursday Dec 13, 2007
Talking about double standards. - In this very blog, Dershowitz not long ago defended Bush's controversial pardoning of Libby, a man who back stabbed those pointing to the manipulations in the US intelligence reports concerning the Iraq invasion. Now, Dershowitz himself slamms the agencys as "nincompoops" with IQ's below room temperature. Obviously Alan is more interrested in US intelligence reports fitting into his agenda and less that their content be truthfull. So who's stupid here? Dershowitz or those who fall for his double standards and inconsistency?
2  |  Ned, Wednesday Dec 19, 2007
Prof. Dershowitz, you are right on tartget with most of your argument but I have to criticise one point. You question "why does Iran even want a nuclear energy program, when it is sitting on an enormous pool of oil that is now skyrocketing in value?" Why wouldn't Iran or any country be interested in or allowed to diversify its energy sources and ensure their security. (Assuming its for peacful purposes.) Oil isn't going to last forever, you know. Besides, some of their academic scholars are first rate and wish to be part of the scientific community. Then of course there is Iranian national pride. Wiith all due respect, I'm not telling you how to blog but avoid this line of argument because it's just too easy to shoot down.
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Double Standard Watch Analyses of burning topics by leading American attorney and stalwart defender of Israel Alan Dershowitz

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Recent Comments

Daniel in TX: Dershowitz criticizing Finkelstein's scholarship is like the hunchback of Notre Dame criticizing someone's posture.
Dan, TEXAS: Finkelstein is to be ignored. On the odd occation when it is actually published in a periodical or article that is actually read, it needs to be put in its place. What a schmuk. Indeed, I totally agree with Mr. Leaf who suggests that you sue him for defamation - that will bankrupt it completely.
Martin Leaf F.Hills: Alan, just sue him for defamation. That will bankrupt him financially. He is already bankrupt morally. I will volunteer to help. Otherwise you are giving him more attention than he is worth and it makes you look petty. We have bigger fish to fry. Like Ahmedinijad. The Fink is just a typical sociopath, begging for attention, that criminal defense attorneys see all the time.