US Deploys Slide Show to Press Case against Iran
Holy shit. Its Powell in front of the UN all over
again. Just look at the set up: Bush White House uses shabby evidence to claim
that there is a secret weapons program; the US intelligence community disowns
the presented evidence and says don't blame us; US says it might go alone if
nobody else supports their line. Can't wait for the IAEA meeting in Vienna,
Sept. 19! -
NiK-----By
Dafna LinzerThe Washington
Posthttp://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/091405F.shtml
Wednesday 14 September
2005United Nations - With an hour-long
slide show that blends satellite imagery with disquieting assumptions about
Iran's nuclear energy program, Bush administration officials have been trying to
convince allies that Tehran is on a fast track toward nuclear
weapons.The PowerPoint briefing,
titled "A History of Concealment and Deception," has been presented to diplomats
from more than a dozen countries. Several diplomats said the presentation,
intended to win allies for increasing pressure on the Iranian government,
dismisses ambiguities in the evidence about Iran's intentions and omits
alternative explanations under debate among intelligence
analysts.
The presenters argue that
the evidence leads solidly to a conclusion that Iran's nuclear program is aimed
at producing weapons, according to diplomats who have attended the briefings and
US officials who helped to assemble the slide show. But even US intelligence
estimates acknowledge that other possibilities are plausible, though
unverified.
The
problem, acknowledged one US official, is that the evidence is not definitive.
Briefers "say you can't draw any other conclusion, and of course you can draw
other conclusions," said the official, who would discuss the closed-door
sessions only on condition of
anonymity.
The
briefings were conducted in Vienna over the past month in advance of a gathering
of world leaders this week at the United Nations. President Bush, who is to
address the annual General Assembly gathering Wednesday, and Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, plan to use the meeting to press for agreement to threaten
international sanctions against
Iran.
The
president's direct involvement marks an escalation of a two-year effort to bring
Iran before the UN Security Council, which has the power to impose sanctions,
unless Tehran gives up technology capable of enriching uranium for a bomb. US
officials have acknowledged that it has been an uphill campaign, with opposition
from key allies who fear a prelude to a military
campaign.
Several
diplomats said the slide show reminded them of the flawed presentation on Iraq's
weapons programs made by then-secretary of state Colin L. Powell to the UN
Security Council in February 2003. "I don't think they'll lose any support, but
it isn't going to win anyone either," said one European diplomat who attended
the recent briefing and whose country backs the US position on
Iran.
Robert G.
Joseph, undersecretary of state for arms control and international security,
acknowledged last week that despite European support, the Bush administration
has traveled a tough road in persuading others that Iran should face
consequences for a nuclear program it built in
secret.
"There's
a great deal of resistance ... on the part of many governments who don't seem to
place, quite frankly, nonproliferation and Iran, a nuclear-armed Iran, at the
top of their priority list," he told a congressional panel last
week.
Several
influential nations such as India, Russia, China, South Africa and Brazil share
US suspicions about Iran's intentions. But they maintain profound differences
with the Bush administration over how to respond, and are apprehensive about the
goals of a US president who has said "all options are on the table," in dealing
with
Tehran.
Three
years ago, the White House used the same annual gathering to put both Iraq, and
the world community on notice. In a toughly-worded speech, delivered six months
before the US invasion of Iraq, Bush warned that the United States would deal
alone, if necessary, with a dictator bent on launching nuclear
weapons.
The US
intelligence community no longer believes Iraq was trying to reconstitute a
nuclear program, as the president said. Those and other US intelligence failures
have remained fresh in the minds of international decision-makers now being
asked to weigh the case of
Iran.
The Iraq
experience has had a "sobering effect" on Iran discussions, said President
Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan, a close ally of the Bush administration. In an
interview, he refused to speculate on whether Iran, whose program was secretly
aided by Pakistan's top nuclear scientist, had been designed for weapons
production. But he said he feels confident Iran's aims are now peaceful and
there was no need for Security Council
action.
Iran's
new president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who is also attending the UN summit, has his
own meetings scheduled in New York, and Iranian officials said he would use the
gathering to mount forceful counterarguments. Iranian diplomats have been in
close contact with countries such as Japan, which relies heavily on Iranian
oil.
The outcome
of both sides' efforts will be tested on Sept. 19, when diplomats from 35
countries meet at the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna to decide
whether to report Iran's case to the Security
Council.
Undersecretary
of State R. Nicholas Burns last night suggested the administration may not be
able to press for a successful vote and was exploring other options. He said the
administration was working "with lots of other governments to devise an
international coalition that will call upon Iran to return to the talks," it
walked away from this summer with European negotiators. "There is a consensus
that Iran has got to return to the
talks."
Iran
insists its nuclear efforts are aimed at producing nuclear energy, not bombs.
The Bush administration contends that the energy program, built in secret and
exposed in 2002, is just a cover. "They cannot be allowed to develop nuclear
weapons under the guise of a civilian nuclear program, which is what they're
trying to do," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said earlier this
month.
A recent
US intelligence estimate found that Iran, mostly through its energy program, is
acquiring and mastering technologies that could also be used for bomb-making.
But there is no proof that such diversion has occurred, the estimate said, and
the intelligence community is uncertain as to whether Iran's ruling clerics have
made a decision to go forward with a nuclear weapons
program.
The
estimate judged Iran to be as much as a decade away from being able to
manufacture the fissile material necessary for a nuclear explosion. A report
issued last week by the International Institute for Security Studies, a
London-based research group, found Iran was 10 to 15 years from the technical
know-how to build a
bomb.
Both
reports are based in large part on the findings of UN nuclear inspectors, now in
their third year of investigating Iran's program. While no proof of a weapons
program has been found, serious questions about Tehran's past work on centrifuge
designs and experiments with plutonium - a key ingredient for a nuclear weapon -
have yet to be adequately addressed and have furthered suspicions that the
country is hiding
information.
With
little new information from the probe, the Bush administration put together its
own presentation of Iran's program for diplomats in Vienna who are weighing
whether to report Iran to the Security
Council.
The
presentation has not been vetted through standard US intelligence channels
because it does not include secret material. One US official involved in the
briefing said the intelligence community had nothing to do with the presentation
and "probably would have disavowed some of it because it draws conclusions that
aren't strictly supported by the
facts."
The
presentation, conducted in a conference room at the US mission in Vienna,
includes a pictorial comparison of Iranian facilities and missiles with photos
of similar-looking items in North Korea and Pakistan, according to a copy of the
slides handed out to diplomats. Pakistan largely supplied Iran with its nuclear
infrastructure but, as a key US ally, it is identified in the presentation only
as "another
country."
Corey
Hinderstein, a nuclear analyst with the Institute for Science and International
Security, said the presence of a weapons program could not be established
through such comparisons. She noted that North Korea's missile wasn't designed
for nuclear weapons so comparing it to an Iranian missile that also wasn't
designed to carry a nuclear payload "doesn't make sense."
Posted: Thu - September 15, 2005 at 10:57 AM