When all else fails, blame intelligence failures

Josh Marshall did a nice job the other day summarizing the broader dynamic of events leading up to the current [tag]North Korea[/tag] crisis. In sum, Josh said, the Bush gang “ditched an imperfect but working policy. They replaced it with nothing.”

This week, the president and his allies have had a tough time getting around this fairly straightforward formulation. They initially stuck to their old-standby — blame [tag]Clinton[/tag] — but that became untenable when the argument was exposed as being stupid.

So, they’ve opened Door #2: it’s the intelligence community’s fault. The far-right Washington Times’ Bill Gertz has the story.

Recent U.S. [tag]intelligence[/tag] analyses of North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs were flawed and the lack of clarity on the issue hampered U.S. diplomatic efforts to avert the underground blast detected Sunday, according to Bush administration officials.

Some recent secret reports stated that Pyongyang did not have nuclear arms and until recently was bluffing about plans for a test, according to officials who have read the classified assessments.

The analyses in question included a National Intelligence Estimate a consensus report of all U.S. spy agencies produced several months ago and at least two other classified reports on North Korea produced by senior officials within the office of the Director of National Intelligence John D. Negroponte.

The officials said there were as many as 10 failures related to intelligence reporting on North Korean missile tests and the suspected nuclear test that harmed administration efforts to deal with the issue.

According to officials familiar with the reports, the failures included judgments that cast doubt about whether North Korea’s nuclear program posed an immediate threat, whether North Korea could produce a militarily useful nuclear bomb, whether North Korea was capable of conducting an underground nuclear test and whether Pyongyang was bluffing by claiming it could carry one out.

It’s hardly a persuasive case.

First, it’s not at all clear the intelligence was completely wrong. Look at that list again: North Korea may not actually be an immediate threat; North Korea may not be able to produce a militarily useful nuclear bomb; and given this week’s results, North Korea may not be capable of conducting an effective underground nuclear test. The problem here isn’t necessarily one of intelligence; it’s one of policy — namely, that the White House has gone nearly six years without one.

Second, as Kevin Drum explained very well, this leak to the [tag]Washington Times[/tag] is “a pretty transparent effort at buck passing.”

I don’t have any special brief for the intelligence community, which has made its share of mistakes in the past, but the fact is that [tag]Bush[/tag] has spent more than four years waving his arms manically but doing absolutely nothing of any substance about the North Korean threat. Now he’s trying to blame his lack of policy on the intelligence community? Pathetic.

And, finally, I can’t help but notice all the far-right blogs who are absolutely delighted that administration officials leaked classified information to a reporter. These are, of course, the same guys who believe reporters should be fired, news outlets should face investigations, and treason charges are a reasonable response to leaks that make the administration look bad.

You don’t suppose Bush’s more enthusiastic supporters approve of leaks just so long as they serve the White House’s political purposes, do you?

And even MORE pathetic is taking an NIE that was tailored to say what you want, and then using it as blame. But I suppose the spooks are used to that now, because we know that the spooks hate our freedom in the real world.

  • You know what’s really weird? I don’t think Bush or his National Security Team knows why their (non) policies fail. They just go crashing around from one crisis to the next, threatening our enemies, scaring the crap out of us and making themselves look really stupid.

    What’s truly amazing is the we haven’t been nuke yet

  • At some point, a leader has to take responsibility for the failures (if there are failures) of his subordinates. You’d think that an MBA President would have learned that lesson at some point.

  • The analyses in question included a National Intelligence Estimate…

    What a great way to discredit any other NIEs that might come down the pike.

    Question: Given that “faulty intelligence” has been blamed for Sept. 11th, the lack of WMDs in Iraq and now, the fact that North Korea is giving the world a big glowing finger, isn’t it time the US completely overhaul its intelligence gathering organizations? I mean, since ShrubCo is so concerned with our safety and all you’d think they’d want some competent folks gathering the information. [/snark]

    The WaTi is one step below the New York Post in terms of things like accuracy, journalistic integrity…. everything. If you read it there you can bank on the fact that is either a lie or so highly skewed (to the right of course) that it’s nothing more than propoganda draped over a frame work of speculation or rumour spun into truth. The only people who believe it are the same hopeless wanks who get their “facts” from Limpbag and Faux Snooze.

  • Well isn’t the intelligence community supposed to fall on their sword everytime the prez gets into a jamb? He has never made a mistake so there has to be an excuse/explaination. What a bunch of cowards! They had better pray to the diebold god to protect them from the wrath to come. The sad thing is we the people are paying the price

  • I find it amusing that the party of wimps, appeasers and weaklings, the Dems, as led by Clinton, were ready AND willing to smack North Korea with air and other attacks if North Korea took a step past a certain line set by Clinton, but the party of manliness, patriots and strength, The GOP, led by Bush, sat idly by while North Korea openly went beyond the line drawn by Bush. Yes, the GOP is the party of national security and is the only party that can protect us and our interests.

  • I’m inclined to believe our intelligence community is better than we’ve been lead to believe over the past six years. It’s the intelligence of the political community that has failed — repeatedly. The recent daylighting of just how many warnings the Bush Administration had been given prior to 9/11 on OBL and the long known manipulation of intelligence services by the Veeps office proves the intel agencies of the government have been beaten like a red-headed stepchild since Bush took office. They’ve been swiftboated every time political policies caused fiascos.

    Bush is throwing a temper tantrum because all of his speeches on the Axis of Evil failed to yield any results, so it must be the fault of the intel community. Bush’s messianic powers of suggestion keep failing to change the world and no one has told him he needs to heed Teddy Roosevelt’s admonition on foreign policy to speak softly and carry a big stick.

  • I don’t really have much to add to the comments above, many of which are a joy to read, except this:

    This is not helping the morale of the Intelligence Community to be the whipping boy for Boy George II and all his minions.

    At least in the Middle Ages the errant prince was made to watch when the whipping boy, usually a playmate, was whipped in his stead. The Bushites are not only putting the Intelligence Community out to be whipped, they are turning their backs in moral cowardice while it happens.

  • This is not helping the morale of the Intelligence Community to be the whipping boy for Boy George II @ 8.

    This actually touches on a tin foil hat moment I have when ShrubCo plays Blame the Spook:
    1. Shrubby is the son of the former CIA director and the son of a former President. Those guys must have dirt on his Imperial Smirkiness that even I can’t imagine. What happens if they get fed up and start slinging a little shit of their own? Cheney needs pull his hand out of the presidential sphincter and muzzle his monkey.
    2. It is generally a bad thing to annoy people who can kill you. Watching Shrub yap at the spies is like sitting in a bar and watching the drunken little shrimp pick a fight with the guy built like two line backers. You almost can’t bear to watch what happens next. But I guess since some of these people used to work for Daddy he groups all of them with the other servants in that shriveled pea he calls a brain.

  • “It is generally a bad thing to annoy people who can kill you.” – TAIO

    That would be the Special Operations Command down in Florida. If Boy George II were to suggest that they screwed up something big, I’d start worrying (if I was in the Secret Service).

    People have far too big a fear of the operative types over at CIA. Sure they snatch people of streets in Milan and render them to Egypt

    but kill them?

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