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The Significance of
Leaks About the Iranian Nuclear Issue The most important news was two leaks over the weekend. One was in The New York Times, which reported that the IAEA had a secret report that claimed that the Iranians had accumulated all of the data needed to build an atomic bomb and that U.S. intelligence was now re-examining its National Intelligence Estimate, which held that Iran was not actively working on a nuclear weapon. Retired Gen. James Jones, the national security adviser to U.S. President Barack Obama, appeared on television Sunday saying that Washington would rely on its own estimate of the situation, implicitly demoting the IAEA reports importance. Clearly Jones does not want the Obama administration trapped into a rigid position, which acknowledging the reports validity would do. But it also indicates that the leak did not come from the White House, which means that a battle is starting over the intelligence analysis of Irans nuclear capability. Whoever wins that battle defines the parameters of U.S. policy toward Iran. The combined effect of these two leaks, if they are
confirmed, is to deepen the crisis. The combined effect of these two leaks, if they are confirmed, is to deepen the crisis. The first leak basically says that the Iranians are much further along in developing a nuclear weapon and might be approaching the red line. The second report explains the first by saying the Iranians were getting outside support from the Russians. Taken together, the two reports raise questions about Western intelligence capabilities unless this information were well-known to Western intelligence, which would leave only the question of the value of keeping either of these facts secret. The important point, of course, is that in spite of the
relative calm surrounding the negotiations, tensions are ratcheting higher. We will be
discussing this in more detail in our weekly Geopolitical Intelligence Report, but what is
clear for the moment is that there are elements in the West that do not want things to
remain as calm as they are and who are leaking information which, if true, shows the
fragility of the situation. |
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