Thus, while Americans
might take comfort in knowing that there's plenty of time for diplomacy
with Iran, they should be disturbed to find nothing in the prepared
testimony presented by either General Maples or Director McConnell --
and certainly nothing contained in their answers to the questions asked
by the members of the Senate Armed Services Committee -- that could be
considered hard or direct evidence that substantiates the assessment
that "Iran remains determined to develop nuclear weapons."
Given
all the "slam dunk" lies and exaggerations they swallowed about Iraq's
WMD -- and now the curious revision concerning Korea -- Americans
should no longer tolerate unsubstantiated intelligence conclusions.
Neither should they accept tendentious news reporting, such as that
offered by Bill Gertz in the February 28, 2007 issue of the "Moonie"
Washington Times
Rather than raise questions about the lack of
evidence provided by McConnell and Maples - as any serious reporter for
any serious paper should -- Mr. Gertz actually exaggerated the
conclusions reached by McConnell and Maples. Thus, he opened his news
report with the following sentence: "Iran's development of nuclear arms
is 'very dangerous,' and Tehran could deploy the weapons within the
next several years, the nation's most senior intelligence official told
the Senate yesterday." (Bill Gertz, "McConnell Fears Iran Nukes By
2015," Washington Times Feb. 28, 2007)
Is Gertz
English-challenged or logic-challenged? Or is he simply a pimp for the
military industrial complex? How else can one explain his
transformation of McConnell's "Tehran is determined to develop nuclear
weapons" into his own "Iran's development of nuclear arms?"
After
all, neither McConnell nor Maples testified: "Iran is developing
nuclear weapons." The words they used allow for the possibility that
actual "development" has yet to occur. Thus, "determined to develop,"
insofar as it implies intent to develop, is a far cry from actual
development. But, then, if you are Gertz, why quibble, especially when
the goal is to provoke a U.S. attack on Iran?
Although General
Maples expressed "high confidence" that "Iran remains determined to
develop nuclear weapons," the only shard of evidence to support such
confidence was provided by McConnell, who asserted: "We are watching
several states for signs of nuclear weapons aspirations, in part
because of reporting of past contact with A. Q. Khan and his network,
when it was active." Yet, how does that weigh in the balance, when
compared (for example) with the September 2004 fatwa by Ayatollah
Khamenei forbidding Iran's "production, stockpiling, and use of nuclear
weapons?" (Scott Ritter, Target Iran, p. 170)
As we know, A.
Q. Khan admitted to selling his nuclear secrets to Iran. Moreover,
after engaging in deceit, Iran belatedly provided the IAEA with
documents supplied by the Khan network "which included instructions on
the manufacture and molding of uranium metal into hemispherical shapes
needed for any implosion-type weapon." (Ibid, p. 184) Yet, as the IAEA
subsequently concluded: "it had observed nothing in Iran which
indicated the Iranians had ever taken any action in relation to the
activities referred to in the documents." (Ibid, p. 185)

Perhaps,
the DIA Director's "high confidence" is based upon the laptop computer,
which, according to Bush administration officials, contained "internal
computerized working files related to ongoing research and development
on a tri-conic re-entry vehicle for the Iranian Shahib-3 missile," thus
proving "Iranian nuclear warhead design." Yet, according to former
weapons inspector Scott Ritter, such claims "misrepresented" what, in
reality, were designs to upgrade a conventional warhead. (Ibid, p. 183)
But
all of this is mere speculation. Neither McConnell nor Maples cited
such evidence. They cited no evidence at all. Thus, absent any specific
evidence to support Maples's "high confidence" or McConnell's
conclusions, I cannot avoid asking: "Is it the same DIA that concluded
Iraq's pursuit of aluminum tubes provided compelling evidence that Iraq
was in the process of restoring its uranium enrichment capability? Is
this the same DIA that failed to validate 'Curveball's' bogus reporting
about Iraq's biological weapons program?" (Craig R. Whitney, ed., The
WMD Mirage, p. 415, pp.340-41)
Or, worse still, is General
Maples's DIA the same agency that gave Major General James "Spider"
Marks a useless Weapons of Mass Destruction Master Site List,
containing "946 locations where intelligence indicated there were
production plants or storage facilities for chemical, biological or
nuclear-related material in Saddam's Iraq?" (Bob Woodward, State of
Denial, p. 93)
According to Bob Woodward, General Marks had
been tasked with locating, neutralizing and securing each WMD site,
once the invasion of Iraq commenced. And when he asked the "DIA smart
guys" whether site number one was more important than site 946, one of
the people at the table said dismissively: "Of course, General. Why
wouldn't it be?" (Ibid, p. 93, 94)
But when Marks asked
whether the sites had been prioritized by the certainty of their
existence or their importance, "nobody had a real answer." And their
answers were no more specific, when Marks asked: "Was the first site
listed first because they thought it had the most WMD? Or was it
because of the type of WMD -- chemical, biological, nuclear or
missile-related activity or another category? Was it related to the
overall threat of the site? Or was it a matter of how quickly or easily
Saddam could use the WMD? 'How are these things racked and stacked?'
Marks asked." (Ibid, p. 95)
Marks subsequently told General
McKiernan, "I can't get DIA to move. You need to fire me." (Ibid, p.
101) When that didn't work, Marks told McKiernan, "Sir, I can't confirm
what's inside any of these sites." [Ibid] And he made that admission
during the very period, when President Bush, Vice-President Cheney,
Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, Secretary of State, Colin Powell and
National Security Adviser, Condoleezza Rice were bamboozling Americans
into believing that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.
Moreover,
unlike our idiotic and malevolent Vice President -- who requires just
one percent of supporting evidence to act upon his preconceived biases
and who once childishly gushed over a satellite photo purporting to
show (but unable to prove) WMD activity -- Marks looked at similar
photos only to conclude that, when doing so, "You're a pig looking at a
watch." (Ibid, p. 99) Such is the huge uncertainty involved in the
process.
(According to Seymour Hersh, speaking to Amy Goodman
on February 28, 2007, "the core belief of Cheney is that Iran is going
to get the bomb, no matter what the intelligence is . . . and when Iran
gets the bomb, they will give it to Hezbollah to distribute it, and
Washington and New York will be vulnerable." ("Investigative Reporter
Seymour Hersh: US Indirectly Funding Al-Qaeda Linked Sunni Groups in
Move to Counter Iran," Democracy Now!, Feb. 28, 2007)
And,
thus, absent any public evidence to support their "high confidence Iran
remains determined to develop nuclear weapons," Americans -- including
those on the Senate Armed Forces Committee -- should take to heart the
suspicion that America's Intelligence Community is "a pig looking at a
watch."