How Good Is Our Intelligence on Iran? (COMMENTARY MAGAZINE) Max Boot 04/10/12)
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/04/10/u-s-intelligence-on-iran/
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I join my Council on Foreign Relations colleague Elliott Abrams and
my Contentions colleague Jonathan Tobin in expressing reservations
about whether the U.S. government really has the degree of insight
into Iran’s nuclear program claimed in carefully orchestrated leaks
such as this Washington Post article which brags about how stealthy
CIA drones have penetrated deep into Iranian air space.
There is, I fear, not only political spin at work here (the
administration wants to showcase U.S. intelligence capabilities to
ward off an Israeli strike) but also deep-seated hubris on the part
of the intelligence community. Perhaps the CIA has high-level assets
within the Iranian government who for understandable reasons go
unmentioned in the Washington Post article; but if we are indeed
primarily reliant on signals intelligence and aerial surveillance, as
the article implies, then we may be in for a nasty shock.
Indeed, we have experienced such surprises many times before–for
instance, the U.S. intelligence community was caught off guard by the
Pakistani nuclear test in 1998 and the North Korean test in 2006–and
this at a time when U.S. intelligence capabilities were nearly as
advanced as they are today. The reality is that our enemies are aware
of many of our high-tech spying techniques (e.g. a stealth drone
crashed in Iran) and know how to cloak their activities to prevent
the full shape of their efforts from becoming clear.
I would be a lot more convinced by accounts such as the one in the
Post if the anonymous intelligence officials quoted therein expressed
some degree of humility about their ability to penetrate the deepest
recesses of a closed political and military system such as Iran. The
fact that they come across as being so utterly confident in their
judgments makes them paradoxically less trustworthy: They are failing
to question their assumptions just as they failed to question their
assumptions about Iraq’s WMD program prior to the U.S. invasion.
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