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Intel Estimate Muddied Iran's Nuclear Intent

First Posted: 03/16/09 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 02:05 PM ET

Iran

WASHINGTON, Feb 13 (IPS) - President Barack Obama and Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair did not appear to be on the same page this week when they talked about Iran's nuclear intentions. Obama referred in his news conference to Iran's "development of a nuclear weapon or their pursuit of a nuclear weapon", but Blair said "we do not know whether Iran currently intends to develop nuclear weapons".

Both statements are a reflection of the confusion left by the November 2007 National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran over Tehran's intentions regarding nuclear weapons. That estimate was immediately attacked by the right and disowned by the George W. Bush administration because it revealed that Iran had halted work on nuclear weapons in 2003.

The real problem with the NIE, however, was that it failed to clarify whether the Islamic Republic is determined to have nuclear weapons or only to have the capability to build them as a "hedge" against possible future developments.

The difference between those two possible Iranian strategies can hardly be overestimated. If Iran is actually pursuing nuclear weapons, the United States would have to choose between coercive diplomacy on Iran or accepting its status as a nuclear weapons state and seeking to deter it.

If Iran has a "hedging strategy", however, the United States could take diplomatic steps that would maximise the incentives for Iran to remain a non-nuclear weapons state indefinitely and not risk an international confrontation.

The "scope note" for the 2007 NIE indicated that it was supposed to answer the question, "What are Iran's intentions toward developing nuclear weapons?" But the contents of the estimate itself do not address the issue, according to an intelligence source who has read the entire 140-page estimate. The source could not be identified because he is not authorised to speak about the NIE.

The estimate was drafted primarily by specialists on nuclear weapons in the CIA who have little interest and no expertise in Iranian intentions, according to the source. CIA and State Department analysts on Iran, who do have such expertise, were brought into the discussion only after it was drafted.

Despite the absence of any substantive analysis in the body of the estimate, the "key judgments" of the estimate published in early December 2007 did address the question of Iran's intentions. But those statements revealed two sharply opposed views that could not be reconciled.

On one hand, the document states that ending of the weapons programme in 2003 "indicates Tehran's decision are guided by a cost-benefit approach rather than a rush to a weapon irrespective of the political, economic and military costs."

That straightforward statement of the "hedging" interpretation of Iranian strategy is followed by the suggestion that Iran would extend the halt to its nuclear weapons programme if it were offered "credible" opportunities to achieve its "security, prestige and goals for regional influence".

But that view is contradicted by the next paragraph, which says it would be "difficult" to get the Iranian leadership to "forego the eventual development of nuclear weapons". The reason cited is the alleged "linkage that many within the leadership probably see between nuclear weapons development and Iran's key national security and foreign policy objectives."

Unable to reconcile the two views, the document also expresses uncertainty about which is more accurate. "We do not have sufficient intelligence," it says, "to judge confidently whether Tehran is willing to maintain the halt of its nuclear weapons program indefinitely while it weighs its options, or whether it will or already has set specific deadlines or criteria that will prompt it to restart the program."

The analysts struck a series of other compromise formulas, beginning with a summary statement in the lead paragraph of the key judgments that assesses "with moderate-to-high confidence that Tehran at a minimum is keeping open the option to develop nuclear weapons". That formula managed to include both views of Iran's intentions in the same sentence.

The statement, "[W]e do not know whether [Iran] currently intends to develop nuclear weapons" represents yet another compromise in the NIE.

The 2007 estimate was not the first that was supposed to address the issue of Iran's strategy, only to produce a muddled compromise conclusion. The same thing happened on a 2001 estimate on the nuclear programme and a 2005 "Note to Holders" which updated the 2001 estimate. In both cases, Robert Walpole, the NIO for Strategic and Nuclear Programmes, was responsible for drafting, with the assistance of weapons analysts from the CIA's Weapons Intelligence Non -Proliferation and Arms Control Center (WINPAC).

That lead role gave the weapons analysts a crucial political advantage in the process, according to Paul Pillar, the national intelligence officer on Near East and South Asia during that period. "Who has the lead can make a difference in what gets in the estimate," Pillar said in an interview.

That skewed the estimates by minimising the attention given to Iranian intentions, because the weapons specialists had no expertise in analysing the issue. Equally important, weapons analysts saw their main clientele within the government as being the military services and the Pentagon, according to Ellen Laipson, who was involved in the NIE process as a former national intelligence officer for Near East and South Asia and as acting assistant director of Central Intelligence for Analysis and Production in 2001-2002.

Pillar recalled in an interview that it was his "personal assessment" that Iran was pursuing a "hedging strategy" rather than a policy decision to make nuclear weapons. Pillar said he and other Iran analysts who had followed the nuclear programme over the years did not believe it was only for the purpose of energy, but neither did they believe it was aimed at acquiring nuclear weapons. The decision to build a nuclear weapon, he says, "will depend on circumstances of the time, and that's a decision yet to be made."

Pillar and other analysts were also aware of pragmatic arguments made within the Iranian regime against making a bomb. Most of the Iran analysts, according to Pillar, believed that Iran's decision on manufacturing nuclear weapons would be influenced by U.S. policy - and especially by whether the United States was willing to give Iran a firm security guarantee.

The weapons specialists rejected that argument, Pillar recalled: "Some of them would say, 'don't give me that Iranian-decision-yet-to-be-made approach - they've already decided!'"

Pillar says those two conflicting views on the question of Iran's intentions were reconciled through "assessment language that is inevitably a compromise of sorts".

The "key judgments" in the May 2005 "Memo to holders" on Iran's nuclear programme, declassified as part of the "key judgments" for the 2007 estimate, shows how such fudging language was used to reconcile the deep differences over Iranian intentions.

It said the analysts "assess with high confidence that Iran currently is determined to develop nuclear weapons despite its international obligations and international pressure, but we do not assess that Iran is immovable." That formula clearly leaned further toward the weapons analysts than toward the Iran analysts.

Pillar admits that he and Walpole "did kind of a crappy job of bridging the two views" in the 2005 estimate.

It's not clear whether Obama has even been briefed on the distinction between a strategy of manufacturing weapons strategy and a hedging strategy. But given the systematic skewing of intelligence on the issue in the past, he will need to reach beyond Dennis Blair and CIA director Leon Panetta to understand that vital issue

*Gareth Porter is an investigative historian and journalist specialising in U.S. national security policy. The paperback edition of his latest book, "Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam", was published in 2006.

Read more from Inter Press Service.

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WASHINGTON, Feb 13 (IPS) - President Barack Obama and Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair did not appear to be on the same page this week when they talked about Iran's nuclear intentions.
WASHINGTON, Feb 13 (IPS) - President Barack Obama and Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair did not appear to be on the same page this week when they talked about Iran's nuclear intentions.
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01:16 PM on 02/15/2009
News:
You remember Clintons remarks on Obama as s a s i nation?

Reformist presidential candidate Mohammad Khatami has warned against the outcome of "character assassination" in the upcoming elections.

A prominent Principlist newspaper Kayhan in an article Thursday cautioned that Khatami could share the fate of the late Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto "becoming a plaything in the hands of the US and extremist Reformists”.

Khatami, a former Iranian president , reacted to the article by warning that "character assassination always has adverse consequences."

"These moves will only damage our Islamic values," he said in a meeting with university students on Saturday. "We have a long distance to achieve our ideals. It is wise to make use of opportunities and not to turn them into threats."

The Kayhan article also provoked protest of a leading Reformist party, Majme'e Rowhaniyoune-e Mobarez, which called for a change in board of the newspaper.

In an official statement issued on Friday, the prominent body said that raising the issue of physical assassination even if it lacks practical support is not an issue to be taken lightly.

"Publication of such pieces is not in the prestige of the Islamic Republic . Rather, it shows grudge, immorality and violence," said Abdolvahed Moussavi-Lari, a member of the association.

Khatami has emerged as a fierce critic of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, saying that the current administration has pursued "aggressive policies" that provide the grounds for hostile powers to justify working against the country.
10:40 AM on 02/15/2009
The United States and Israel have nuclear weapons, two of the Worlds primary terrorist countries, Why therefore wouldn't the Iranians want the same blackmailing ability.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NWBrunette
Blessed Girl
11:35 PM on 02/14/2009
Its so much fun to write muddy stuff that anyone can interpret anyway they want and claim they're being truthful to the message. Might as well write abstract poetry. Whatever happened to like actually infiltrating, learning the language, the culture, spending time, cultivating contacts... rather than just sitting in an office listening to speeches?
05:45 PM on 02/14/2009
It has been clear from day 1 of the "Iranian Nuclear Crisis" that this is not really about Iran developing nuclear weapons at all-it is about preventing any nation in the greater Middle East from becoming strong enough, militarily, economically, or diplomatically, from challenging Israeli hegemony in the region as well as thwarting the long term U.S. plans to grab the resources of Central Asia.
Now, with Russia resurgent and flexing its muscles in its own backyard, the U.S. must secure the Kremlin's help in marginalizing Iran-a strategy that may or may not work, but will certainly go nowhere should Israel precipitate a conflict with an airstrike (which will have no other aim or effect than that of drawing Washington into the fray-a catastrophic scenario.
In any case, a stable Iran with a small nuclear detterent to the Israeli arsenal is preferable to starting a catastrophic war-even though there is no hard evidence that Iran intends to develop nuclear weapons.
Pakistan, with scores of nukes, is much more unstable and dangerous than Iran.
04:09 PM on 02/14/2009
All information points to no nuclear weapons program in Iran.
This is alarmist bullcrap from the MIC.
04:14 PM on 02/14/2009
Nice try-but you're not even close. All available information points to just the opposite. According to a new article in the LA Times- http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-usiran12-2009feb12,0,4465766.story

"Often overlooked in the NIE, officials said, was that Iran had not stopped its work on other crucial fronts, including missile design and uranium enrichment. Many experts contend that these are more difficult than building a bomb.

Iran's advances on enrichment have become a growing source of alarm. Since 2004, the country has gone from operating a few dozen centrifuges -- cylindrical machines used to enrich uranium -- to nearly 6,000, weapons experts agree.

By November, Iran had produced an estimated 1,400 pounds of low-enriched uranium, not nearly enough to fuel a nuclear energy reactor, but perilously close to the quantity needed to make a bomb."
05:28 PM on 02/14/2009
Let's see the same level of concern over Israel's 200 nuclear weapons. That's the obvious reason that Iran, Syria and possibly others want them.
08:56 PM on 02/14/2009
what is the source of the LA times article.---who clock are they spinning.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vesaversa1
Stupid is forever, ignorance can be fixed.
12:56 PM on 02/14/2009
Enough with the vague reporting of Iran intention of nuclear weapons, when the world know they are on the verge of developing one in the near future unless they are stop.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blood1
11:23 AM on 02/14/2009
So the question continues to be: who is correct? The history of the CIA and National Intel is not great or even good.

As we have no direct proof...and no direct communication with Iran, shouldn't we start there. If Pres. Obama does open talks with Iran, what do we have to loose?

We should start moving past all the war mongering rhetoric and start acting like adults in a very complex world. A decision against this action will only result is shoe throwing and sabbard ratting...and irresponsible.
09:08 PM on 02/14/2009
the bbc comments regularly on iran

they go into what iran says , and what it means

and how the same message is translated in the US.

it is almost comical.
11:02 AM on 02/14/2009
this reminds me of the Iraq WMD's you hear the same things repeated so many times that it becomes the truth, as of now, am inclined to think Iran is developing nuclear weapons, but on closer inspection there is no basis for this, its just been repeated over and over again. Iran has agreed to cooperate with Mohammed el baradei, they are doing everything on the up and up, they keep insisting they do not want to manufacture nuclear weapons, remember sadam saying he doesnt have wmd's? its a sad state of American politics if a dictator like Saddam ends up being the one telling the truth. Israel is behind this anti Iran strategy and once again at the expense of the US they use this to advance their cause.
03:57 PM on 02/14/2009
Where do you come up with this information? It is demonstrably false that Iran has always cooperated with the IAEA. Just read a newspaper. They're on the up and up? Really? How do you know? That's not what any major intelligence organization believes. They believe just the opposite. And because Iran insists that it is not manufacturing nuclear weapons, you automatically assume that its true? The fact is that no one really knows- there is a lot of speculation but your conclusions clearly aren't based on any evidence either.
09:10 PM on 02/14/2009
intelligence agencies would never fudge the truth would they? slam dunk no way.
09:45 AM on 02/14/2009
The central point of this discussion is usually, purposely, I believe, not mentioned.

Israel has some 200 nuclear weapons.

Given that fact, it's rational for Iran, Syria and other in-range states to develop at least the "hedge" capability mentioned.

All the pressure should be put on Israel to give up its nuclear capability, which represents the introduction of WMD into this region. Once that happens, then we can rationally expect the others to forgo nukes.

The US has the power to force Israel to do this. Israel can not long survive without massive US aid.

One final point -- the Jericho 3 missile can hit targets in Europe, as well as Iran.

Israel is a stable country, we are told. Really? It's loaded with right-wing nuts and active fascist parties. Wold any of these consider a Masada-like nuclear Götterdämmerung if it achieves power andIsrael is defeated in some future battle?

Something to think about.
12:33 AM on 02/14/2009
Gee, I'm /so/ glad Bush and Cheney didn't routinely scrub intel analyses in order to hammer them into the shape they wanted. Or drove off career intel agents so as to stack the agencies with barely qualified partisan opportunists. Or outed by leaking to the press the identity of an undercover CIA operative who was specifically tasked with keeping an eye out for business transactions that might suggest that other countries were pursuing nuclear weapons technology. Gee, I'm glad none of that happened and now, thanks you our uncompromised, reliable network of intelligence agencies, the new President can begin his term with an accurate assessment of such things.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Hirnlego
09:16 PM on 02/13/2009
What rubbish. Selling more death and destruction.

Telling the truth is indeed a revolutionary act.. Orwell only got it wrong on the year.
08:52 PM on 02/13/2009
Can't understand why we are confused about their intentions. They've made themselves fairly clear.
http://allanerickson.wordpress.com/2009/02/11/new-book-focuses-on-real-iranian-ambitions/
05:13 AM on 02/14/2009
Relying on Rosenberg for logic? If one considers AIPAC a reliable source of information, then you can accept this garbage. Garbage it is!
10:15 AM on 02/14/2009
I bet you listen to Bill O'Reeeeally for balance, too.
08:28 PM on 02/13/2009
Gareth Porter does some amazing work. He's a great Investigative Journalist. Now, on the substance of this article, I am not surprised. It is very easy for the DEFENSE DEPARTMENT and the PENTAGON to skew a National Intelligence Estimate toward Regime Change and Hyper-Militarization. As an Elder Brother, who knows when any of my brothers or sister lies to me, I know that such compromised language really means that Iran isn't seeking nuclear weapons at all. Anytime someone has to work the so hard to not tell the Truth bluntly, then falsehoods are being imposed. The bottom line of this article is that the Truth and a Lie cannot be reconciled, and the many compromises that the CIA and the Intelligence Community made to reconcile the Truth and Lies just prove that someone couldn't accept a Reality in which Iran is actually trying to advance itself peacefully and not trying to be a Nuclear State.

Malcolm X was right, a war-mongering people or government cannot understand the language of Peace. I hope Obama doesn't get sucked in. Let us seek PEACE in OUR TIME and PEACE for ALL TIME.... AMEN!
09:23 PM on 02/14/2009
i fear obama has been hooked----- he refused to answer the simple question posed but helen? at the press conference . she asked which countries in the middle east have nuclear weapons.

i have seen simon perez joke about the weapons factory where the nukes are made .they laugh because the installation is referred to as a textile mill or some such cover.it was an admission they had nukes and this was where they were made.

so why cant obama state the obvious.--- israel has nukes ---- i dont know if iran does and for sure iraq doen't
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SPQR1775
07:34 PM on 02/13/2009
The only way to gauge anyones intention is to sit and talk with them face to face. Anyone can have a weapon, the issue is will they use it? Iran having a weapon doesn't mean anything. America is the only country on the planet to have used any advance weapon on another nation and I am not talking bombs I am talking genius technology like Hyrogen and Stealth. We really don't have a leg to stand on and neither does Israel!
06:10 PM on 02/13/2009
so now it's okay to assume that Iran has nukes. I guess it depends on who the president is.
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eden4barack08
Yes WE can!!!
02:08 PM on 02/14/2009
What a twisted deduction. Sheeesh.