John Bolton Rips Up The NIE
“That such a flawed product could emerge after a drawn-out bureaucratic struggle is extremely troubling. While the president and others argue that we need to maintain pressure on Iran, this “intelligence” torpedo has all but sunk those efforts, inadequate as they were. Ironically, the NIE opens the way for Iran to achieve its military nuclear ambitions in an essentially unmolested fashion, to the detriment of us all.” -John Bolton
John Bolton has an article in today’s Washington Post in which he sytematically takes apart the NIE report on the Iranian nuclear weapons development program. In addition to pointing out the biases in the report’s authors, as we showed you yesterday, I have posted some main points of the flaws he found in the report, and you can read his entire article here.
First, the headline finding — that Iran halted its nuclear weapons program in 2003 — is written in a way that guarantees the totality of the conclusions will be misread. In fact, there is little substantive difference between the conclusions of the 2005 NIE on Iran’s nuclear capabilities and the 2007 NIE. Moreover, the distinction between “military” and “civilian” programs is highly artificial, since the enrichment of uranium, which all agree Iran is continuing, is critical to civilian and military uses. Indeed, it has always been Iran’s “civilian” program that posed the main risk of a nuclear “breakout.”
Second, the NIE is internally contradictory and insufficiently supported. It implies that Iran is susceptible to diplomatic persuasion and pressure, yet the only event in 2003 that might have affected Iran was our invasion of Iraq and the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, not exactly a diplomatic pas de deux. As undersecretary of state for arms control in 2003, I know we were nowhere near exerting any significant diplomatic pressure on Iran. Nowhere does the NIE explain its logic on this critical point. Moreover, the risks and returns of pursuing a diplomatic strategy are policy calculations, not intelligence judgments. The very public rollout in the NIE of a diplomatic strategy exposes the biases at work behind the Potemkin village of “intelligence.”
Third, the risks of disinformation by Iran are real. We have lost many fruitful sources inside Iraq in recent years because of increased security and intelligence tradecraft by Iran. The sudden appearance of new sources should be taken with more than a little skepticism. In a background briefing, intelligence officials said they had concluded it was “possible” but not “likely” that the new information they were relying on was deception. These are hardly hard scientific conclusions. One contrary opinion came from — of all places — an unnamed International Atomic Energy Agency official, quoted in the New York Times, saying that “we are more skeptical. We don’t buy the American analysis 100 percent. We are not that generous with Iran.” When the IAEA is tougher than our analysts, you can bet the farm that someone is pursuing a policy agenda.
Fourth, the NIE suffers from a common problem in government: the overvaluation of the most recent piece of data. In the bureaucracy, where access to information is a source of rank and prestige, ramming home policy changes with the latest hot tidbit is commonplace, and very deleterious.
Fifth, many involved in drafting and approving the NIE were not intelligence professionals but refugees from the State Department, brought into the new central bureaucracy of the director of national intelligence.
There has to be a presidential candidate that would sign this guy up to take the NIE and State Dept. apart, one bureaucratic lifer at a time.
December 6th, 2007 at 1:31 pmMr. Bolton is the MAN! Hopefully Fred Thompson and Big John can do the right thing together with Duncan Hunter as Sec of Offence/Defence
December 6th, 2007 at 1:39 pmWhile he was Ambassador to the UN, I walked by him on the street. I would’ve said, “Give ‘em Hell!” or something like that, but by the time I was sure it was him we’d passed each other.
Interestingly, he didn’t have a security detail, at least one that I could see. Most diplos rarely walk the streets. Door to door limo service is the norm. Occasionally, I’ll see one around the UN, almost always with armed guards.
Dress a Marine in a suit, and what do have? A Marine in a suit. You’d have to be blind to miss it, but most people seem to cultivate selective blindness.
Does the fact that I can tell someone is armed and ready to act violently at the first hint of trouble say anything about me, and is it a common ability?
December 6th, 2007 at 11:52 pm