Seymour Hersh has a rather astonishing piece in the latest edition of the New Yorker, concluding that, White House bluster notwithstanding, a draft intelligence assessment by the CIA has found “no conclusive evidence, as yet, of a secret Iranian nuclear-weapons program.” (thanks to SKNM for the heads-up) Naturally, the Bush gang isn’t terribly impressed — with either the Hersh article or the alleged CIA report.
White House spokeswoman Dana Perino did not respond directly to Hersh’s assertions, but said the article was another “error-filled piece” in a “series of inaccuracy-riddled articles about the Bush administration.”
“The White House is not going to dignify the work of an author who has viciously degraded our troops, and whose articles consistently rely on outright falsehoods to justify his own radical views,” she said on Monday.
Ad hominem attacks notwithstanding, if Hersh is correct, an eerily familiar pattern is emerging. Indeed, watching Hersh on CNN yesterday, you’d be forgiven for thinking you’ve heard all of this before.
According to Hersh, the White House has reacted with hostility to the CIA’s report and, as it did with Iraq, is bypassing the agency by collecting and compiling its own intelligence for a possible military strike. On CNN yesterday, Hersh said there is an “internecine fight” going on between the CIA and the White House over the intelligence process, “the same fight, by the way, that we had before Iraq.”
At issue between the White House and the CIA is access to secret intelligence on Iran allegedly being provided by the Israelis. According to Hersh’s new article, “The Next Act,” intelligence from “Israeli spies operating inside Iran claimed that Iran has developed and tested a trigger device for a nuclear bomb.” The Israeli report is being used by White House hawks within the administration to refute the CIA and “prove the White House’s theory that the Iranians are on track” to build the bomb. A former senior intelligence officer told Hersh, “The problem is that no one can verify it. We don’t know who the Israeli source is. … Where is the test site? How often have they done it? How big is the warhead — a breadbox or a refrigerator? [The CIA doesn’t] have that.”
Hersh told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer yesterday, “That information is being handled pretty much by the White House and various offices in the Pentagon. And the CIA isn’t getting a good look at the Israeli intelligence. It’s the old word, stovepiping. It’s the president and the vice president. It’s pretty much being kept in the White House.” Hersh’s reporting suggests a breakdown in the intelligence process — similar to the one that occurred prior to the Iraq war — is now happening with regards to Iran and may open to door to possible intelligence manipulation. Before the Iraq war, the White House set up intelligence stovepipes to “get information they wanted directly to the top leadership.”
What’s that definition of “insanity”? Repeating the same mistake over and over, expecting a different result?
This, coupled by the usual media suspects talking up the possibility of war on outlets like Fox News, is probably cause for concern, isn’t it?