The funny thing about presidential credibility is, once it’s gone, you can’t get it back.
U.S. intelligence obtained what officials said was a stolen Iranian laptop in July. Its contents were reportedly devastating, complete with computer simulations and accounts of experiments that made it clear that Iran was working towards the creation of a nuclear warhead. Americans arranged briefings with officials from Britain, France, and Germany, as well as the International Atomic Energy Agency. It didn’t go well (via Kevin).
[D]oubts about the intelligence persist among some foreign analysts. In part, that is because American officials, citing the need to protect their source, have largely refused to provide details of the origins of the laptop computer beyond saying that they obtained it in mid-2004 from a longtime contact in Iran. Moreover, this chapter in the confrontation with Iran is infused with the memory of the faulty intelligence on Iraq’s unconventional arms. In this atmosphere, though few countries are willing to believe Iran’s denials about nuclear arms, few are willing to accept the United States’ weapons intelligence without question.
“I can fabricate that data,” a senior European diplomat said of the documents. “It looks beautiful, but is open to doubt.”
In other words, for our allies around the world, the word of the United States is about as reliable as that of Iran. The Iranians’ denials are viewed with skepticism; the American intelligence is viewed with equal skepticism. They see a dictatorial theocratic regime with terrorist ties and they see us — and they’re not sure who to believe.
Over 40 years ago, JFK dispatched his secretary of state to Paris to meet with DeGaulle to discuss the Cuban missile crisis. Before even being shown photographic evidence, DeGaulle waved the pictures off and said, “No, the word of the president of the United States is good enough for me.”
Today, there isn’t a country on the planet that will accept our word on faith. How many years will it take for the U.S. to recover from Bush’s presidency?
In the context of the Iranian laptop controversy, this means we’re even having to turn to the French as a nation with more credibility than us.
As a measure of the skepticism the Bush administration faces, officials said the American ambassador to the international atomic agency, Gregory L. Schulte, was urging other countries to consult with his French counterpart. “On Iraq we disagreed, and on Iran we completely agree,” a senior State Department official said. “That gets attention.”
I’m sure it does, but it also gets attention that Europe and the IAEA won’t trust us, so we have to encourage them to contact the French to vouch for us.
It’s one of the many realities the right has yet to be able to spin. If there’s an international crisis, and the president needs to rally the free world against a dangerous foe based on intelligence we believe to be true, most people, here and around the world, will wonder about the administration’s veracity and motivations. Even those who want to agree with us will hesitate, knowing that we’ve lied to the world once and may be lying again.
America can’t lead if others won’t follow.