By Ray McGovern
TomPaine.com
Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, the publishing ministry of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in Washington, DC. He was a CIA analyst for 27 years and now serves on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).
Wednesday 28 February
2007
We
assess that
At that point McConnell received gratuitous reinforcement from Lt. Gen. Michael Maples, head of the Defense Intelligence Agency. With something of a flourish, Maples emphasized that it was "with high confidence" that DIA "assesses that
After the judgments in the Oct. 1, 2002 estimate assessing weapons-of-mass-destruction in Iraq-judgments stated with "high confidence"-turned out to be wrong, the National Intelligence Council saw a need to define what is meant by "assess."
The council included a glossary in its recent NIE on
When we use words such as 'we assess,' we are trying to convey an analytical assessment or judgment. These assessments, which are based on incomplete or at times fragmentary information are not a fact, proof, or knowledge. Some analytical judgments are based directly on collected information; others rest on previous judgments, which serve as building blocks. In either type of judgment, we do not have 'evidence' that shows something to be a
fact.
So caveat emptor. Beware the verisimilitude conveyed by "we assess." It can have a lemming effect, as evidenced yesterday by the automatic head bobbing that greeted Sen. Lindsay Graham's, R-S.C., clever courtroom-style summary argument at the hearing, "We all agree, then, that the Iranians are trying to get nuclear
weapons."
Quick, someone, please give Sen. Graham the National Intelligence Council's definition
of "we assess."
Shoddy Record on
Small wonder that the commission picked by President George W. Bush to investigate the intelligence community's performance on weapons of mass destruction complained
that
I don't know quite how to answer that because we don't have perfect information or perfect understanding. But the Iranian record, plus what the Iranian leaders have said...lead us to conclude that we have to be highly
skeptical.
A
fresh national intelligence estimate on
And so, yesterday's Senate Armed Forces Committee hearing and all the puzzling over
intelligence on
The Good News: There's
Time
If anything leaps out of all this, it is that there is time to address, in a
sensible way, whatever concerns may be driving
"Five to 10 years from now," Negroponte answered. He then gingerly raised the possibility-avoided like the plague by neocons in good standing-that diplomacy might help. A former diplomat, he may have thought he would be forgiven, but he was relieved and sent back to the State Department a few months later. This is
what he dared to say: :I think that the pace of
Asked by Siegel to explain why the Israelis have suggested a much shorter timeline for
Why Would
In his introductory remarks Armed Forces Committee Chair, Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich.,
expressed a desire to "assess the circumstances in which
McConnell yesterday chose to adopt Negroponte's refreshingly candid approach and reject
the cry-wolf rhetoric of Cheney and the neocons that
While they [the Iranians] are certainly pressing, in my opinion, for a nuclear capability, I think they would see it in the first instance as a deterrent. They are surrounded by powers with nuclear weapons-Pakistan to their east, the
Russians to the north, the Israelis to the west, and us in the
Deterrence? Both Sen. Levin and ranking member John Warner, R-Va., picked up on this, to the dismay of Sen. Graham, who sounded as if he had just come from a briefing by the Israeli extreme right who, with Cheney, are pushing hard for a U.S. strike on Iran's nuclear facilities. Graham said he thought economic sanctions could work and that they were "the only thing left short of military action." For Graham it was very simple. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has denied the Holocaust
and, if
Seldom
have I heard an American senator so openly press the
John Warner objected strongly to the notion that, if sanctions against
Better to Jaw-Jaw Than
War-War
Did you notice? While Cheney was abroad, others persuaded the president to send
representatives next month to a conference in
If Cheney does not sabotage such talks when he gets home, they could lead to direct
negotiations with
The
ultimate aim, in my view, should be a
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