Israeli defense minister misrepresents U.S. intelligence
to
bolster the case for war
August
17, 2012
It
should surprise no one to learn that when intelligence agencies talk to other
intelligence agencies as part of a liaison relationship there are certain rules
in place, even though they are frequently unspoken.
During
the Cold War the most productive such relationship that the United States had
was not with obvious candidates like the British or Germans. It was with the
Norwegians, who ran a chain of listening posts that were able to pick up
signals and other valuable information drawn from the heart of the Soviet
nuclear and ballistic missile programs.
The
U.S. knew all about the latest Russian technical developments, and both
Washington and Oslo kept quiet about what they were up to.
But
sometimes the temptation to use highly sensitive classified intelligence
obtained from a friend is overwhelming?
On
August 9, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak confirmed Israeli media reports that a new National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) from the United
States on the Iranian nuclear program had “included new and alarming
intelligence” that had led to the judgment that “Iran has made surprising,
notable progress in the research and development of key components of the
military nuclear program.”
He
described the source as an intelligence report “being passed around senior
offices.”
Barak
concluded that the new report means that Israel and the United States now have
the same view of developments in Iran, meaning that both now believe that the
country’s nuclear program has a military component which makes Iran
unambiguously a threat.
“Militarization”
has become something of a buzzword in the debate over Tehran’s intentions. It
can mean a couple of things, most obviously that some research or development
is taking place that can plausibly only be linked to creation of a nuclear
weapon.
Or
it could mean that certain developments in the nuclear area have been linked to
corresponding advances in ballistic missile engineering, meaning that there
might be a program to work clandestinely on a bomb while simultaneously
upgrading Iran’s missiles to provide a mechanism to deliver the weapon on
target as soon as it is available.
Barak’s
remarks sparked considerable commentary worldwide, suggesting that Israel and
the United States, who appear to have been seeking a casus belli for attacking Iran, at last
have found their smoking pistol enabling them to do so.
But
there were some serious problems with the story, and the CIA and Office of
National Intelligence initiated some immediate pushback over Barak’s apparent
exposure of classified information provided to Israel by Washington.
Intelligence
insiders noted immediately that there has not, in fact, been a new NIE on Iran.
Barak
apparently intentionally called the report he had seen an NIE to heighten the
impact and veracity of what he was saying. An NIE is the consensus product of
the entire U.S. intelligence community and the views contained in it are
endorsed by the Director of National Intelligence, James Clapper.
Barak
clearly felt that he needed the gravitas
of an NIE because there have been two previous NIEs, in 2007 and 2011, that
have concluded that Iran does not have a nuclear weapons program and has not
made the political decision to initiate one.
So
it became clear that Ehud Barak was talking about something else. It turns out
that the CIA routinely shares what is referred to as finished intelligence with
Israel, and among those reports there have been several examining possible advances in Iranian missile
development, to include an examination of intelligence suggesting that there might be some engineering of a warhead
that might be capable of
carrying a small nuclear device, if
such a weapon were ultimately to become available
Finished
intelligence consists of reports that are produced in great quantity addressing
a variety of issues. They are not unlike the types of reports generated
by the various think tanks in Washington and at major universities, being
generally academic in tone though carefully drafted to avoid any revelation of
the sources and methods contributing to the document. Finished intelligence is
frequently passed by CIA to friendly intelligence liaison services and is
generally classified “Secret.”
So
Barak was quite possibly misrepresenting a U.S. intelligence-generated report
to serve his own purposes, and he was also leaking information that had been
given to him in confidence with the understanding that he would only use it to
guide internal Israel deliberations, not to discuss it with the media.
The
CIA was reportedly furious over the leak and, in an unusual move, the White
House quickly gave a green light for the National Security Council to actually
rebuke Israel, with an NSC spokesman commenting that “We continue to assess that Iran
is not on the verge of achieving a nuclear weapon.”
So
Israel was saying that the Iranian threat had been demonstrated based on U.S.
intelligence while Washington claimed the contrary. It all might have ended
there, but intelligence leaks have a tendency to spill over and turn out to be
difficult to contain.
The
Obama White House felt compelled to assuage Israeli fears over Iran’s alleged
nukes. On Friday press spokesman Jay Carney told the media (and the Israelis) that the
U.S. “would know if and when Iran made” a decision to build a weapon.
“We have eyes ~ we have visibility into the program, and we would know if and when Iran made what’s called a breakout move towards acquiring a weapon.”
Carney’s
unnecessary elaboration of United States intelligence capabilities vis-à-vis Iran
caused the intel community to go ballistic for a second time in two days.
If
there is one thing that an intelligence organization never does it is to reveal
what it can and cannot do.
Now
Iran, which already knew that it was being monitored closely, probably has a
pretty good idea where its vulnerabilities lie because the White House has told
them where to look.
Marc
Ambinder, a national security specialist who writes for The Atlantic, explains how it works:
“the CIA’s ops arm, the National Clandestine Service, along with the US military, are devoting thousands of person-hours per day working along the periphery of the country, scrutinizing and seizing cargo shipments bound for Iran, tapping the black market for nuclear supplies and buying up spare parts, and maximizing the collection of Iranian signal traffic … it has a high-definition picture of the current state of the nuclear program and would be able to much more quickly identify if, say, scientists began to create the material needed to manufacture the lens and tamper system that would induce the fission in a bomb.“What’s most valuable here is the US mastery of obscure but vital types of intelligence collection that spooks call ‘MASINT’~ or measurement and signature intelligence. MASINT sensors on satellites, drones, and on the ground can detect everything from the electromagnetic signatures created by testing conventional missile systems to disturbances in the soil and geography around a hidden nuclear facility to streams of radioactive particles that are byproducts of the uranium enrichment process.“Put together, the US has a good handle on the nuclear supply chain; it knows what Iran has and doesn’t have; it has a good handle on who needs to be where in order for certain things to happen; it knows, probably through National Security Agency signals collection, a lot about the daily lives and stresses of Iran’s nuclear scientists.”
If
Marc Ambinder has figured out in some detail how the U.S. collects its most
sensitive intelligence on Iran, the Iranians have almost certainly come to the
same conclusions. This means that they can move to address their vulnerabilities
and can work harder to shield their intentions if they actually are developing
a weapon, possibly doing so with outside technical help from the sophisticated
friendly foreign intelligence services of Russia and China.
As
for the Israelis, a foolish attempt to use U.S.-provided intelligence to
further demonize a country that has already been effectively blackened will
prove counter-productive.
Israel
and its friends in Congress have long been demanding that CIA and NSA provide
them with raw instead of finished intelligence.
Raw
intelligence is information that comes in as it is collected, indicating the
sources and methods used. It is extremely valuable because it is transparent
and not subject to analysis, but it is also highly vulnerable to disruption if
it is in any way exposed.
The
resistance within the intelligence community to providing the Israelis anything
of that nature has just hardened, with credit going to Ehud Barak for leaking
information in an attempt to obtain some political mileage to bolster his
country’s incessant arguments in favor of war.
Philip Giraldi, a former CIA
officer, is executive director of the Council for the National
Interest.
God's Word will never fail, Jesus said: If therefore the son shall make you free, you shall be free indeed. Eid fitr mubarak. Free Palestine. Free the world from the devil's weasels.
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