"President Bush warned on Tuesday that Iran remained a threat despite an intelligence assessment that it had halted a covert program to develop nuclear weapons four years ago, as the administration struggled to save a diplomatic process now in disarray." This is a very interesting situation. It is no surprise that the intelligence announcement has seriously disrupted the 'anti-Iran' campaign that Bush & Co. have been carrying out in the UN and bilaterally. Everyone who approved the release of the report, if they had any sense at all, certainly knew that would be the result. My theory after yesterday's posting (http://cyberjournal.org/show_archives/?id=1357) was that a decision had been made not to invade Iran, and that the announcement was the beginning of a new policy and PR line. But now that we see Bush sticking with the old policy line, that theory falls apart, and the plot thickens considerably. So what's going on here? If the White House approved the release of the report, then they were shooting their own anti-Iran campaign in the foot. Why would they do this? They certainly didn't hesitate to censor and manipulate intelligence reports in the lead up to their Iraq invasion. They could easily have blocked this report by declaring it 'classified, national security'. And if the White House didn't approve the release, then we've got a real mystery on our hands. Did all the intelligence agencies get together, along with the NY Times, and decide to stab the White House in the back? That's a conspiracy theory I would be very skeptical about. In either case then, whether the White House did or did not approve the announcement, we end up with a scenario that doesn't make much sense. At the moment, I can come up with only one theory that makes sense and is consistent with what these recent developments. I hope this theory lasts more than 24 hours! We'll see. If it turns out to be on the mark, then "You saw it here first". Here goes, in the form of a story line, and it involves not looking at the "White House" as a single entity... _____________ The 'men behind the curtain', the real decision makers, the money people -- and their inner circle of advisors -- have reached a decision that the Iran invasion plan should be abandoned. Presumably, such a decision also implies other changes in the neocon game plan as well. They then brought Cheney in, told him the news, and said he could either take the fall along with Bush, or he could play his cards as instructed. The guy has brains, need one guess his reply? Cheney then tracked down Bush, on the skeet shoot or wherever he hangs out, and said "We've got a problem; let's talk." He then led him down the garden path..."Here's the thing...this new report came out that we've got to release, otherwise someone will leak it and catch us with our pants down. But it's no problem, you'll be able to handle it. We'll play it down in the press, and then you can come out gangbusters, as you do so well, and explain how this doesn't really change anything. You can do it, boy!" "Whatever", says Bush, "you can count on me to read the prompts as usual. But let's schedule the press briefing after 4, I've got a grudge golf game and a big bet on the line. Remind me later what the report's about." _____________ That is to say, I'm predicting that Bush is being left out to dry, set up as the sacrificial lamb, a part that suits him all too well. Already half the nation and most of the world thinks he's a dangerous fool. If 'they' keep undermining him in the many ways they can, and simply encourage him to 'speak his own mind', he'll destroy himself soon enough. Then someone like Hillary can come in, repudiate (at least in rhetoric) some of the neocons' worst excesses, and everyone will think, "The system works after all, democracy is restored". Cheney? Perhaps he'll sidestep back to Halliburton, and spend his time in his money vault, Scrooge McDuck style. Meanwhile we'll still have our five permanent mega-bases in Iraq, the Patriot Act, Homeland Security, lies about 9/11, an arms race with Russia and China, and our imperialist war machine will be turned on easier targets than Iran, such as Africa. See: "The Pentagon & the re-conquest of Africa" http://cyberjournal.org/show_archives/?id=2900&lists=newslog Fanciful? Got a better theory? Let's see how things develop over the next few days or so... rkm -------------------------------------------------------- Original source URL: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/05/washington/05prexy.html December 5, 2007 Bush Insists Iran Remains a Threat Despite Arms Data By STEVEN LEE MYERS and HELENE COOPER WASHINGTON, Dec. 4 - President Bush warned on Tuesday that Iran remained a threat despite an intelligence assessment that it had halted a covert program to develop nuclear weapons four years ago, as the administration struggled to save a diplomatic process now in disarray. Once again facing criticism over the handling - and meaning - of intelligence reports, Mr. Bush said the new assessment underscored the need to intensify international efforts to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. He said Iran could not be entrusted with acquiring even the scientific knowledge to enrich uranium for peaceful civilian use, explicitly declaring for the first time what has been an underlying premise of the administration's policy. He also appeared to rule out any new diplomatic initiative with the president of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. "Look, Iran was dangerous, Iran is dangerous, and Iran will be dangerous, if they have the knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon," Mr. Bush said during a news conference dominated by questions about the fallout of the assessment, known as a National Intelligence Estimate. "What's to say they couldn't start another covert nuclear weapons program?" The assessment reversed one in 2005 that asserted that Iran was "determined to develop nuclear weapons," with American intelligence agencies now saying that they do not know whether Iran intends to take that step. Mr. Bush said the reversal was based on "a great discovery" by American intelligence agencies, but neither he nor other officials would elaborate. Current and former American and foreign officials said the new findings were based on intercepted communications and accounts provided by individuals with access to information about Iran's nuclear program. Representative Jane Harman, a Democrat of California, said she read the classified version of the report on Tuesday and described the intelligence agencies' work as "a sea change" from the 2005 assessment in the quality of its analysis and presentation of facts. Asked about the basis for the new findings, she said: "I think we have some better sourcing. That's all I can say." Mr. Bush's remarks did little to silence critics, who have accused him of hyping the case for confronting Iran. Nor did it ease concerns of some allies. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a Republican, said he was perplexed by the new assessment and suspicious of the new evidence. "We should all look under the hood of these intelligence reports," he said. Mr. Bush and his senior aides spent the day trying to hold together the already fragile coalition of world powers seeking to rein in Iran's nuclear ambitions. Mr. Bush telephoned President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, who has voiced skepticism about an aggressive American effort to punish and isolate Iran. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice also telephoned her counterparts from the five other countries that have been pursuing United Nations sanctions against Iran to urge that the coalition continue work on a new round of increasingly tighter sanctions. "This report is not an 'O.K., everybody needs to relax and quit' report," Mr. Bush said. "This is a report that says what has happened in the past could be repeated and that the policies used to cause the regime to halt are effective policies. And let's keep them up. Let's continue to work together." There were already signs that that effort had been complicated by the new report. R. Nicholas Burns, the under secretary of state for political affairs, held a teleconference call Tuesday morning with his counterparts from France, Germany, China, Britain and Russia. "We're all flabbergasted," one European diplomat said of the report generally. "You get such a surprise, and then you sit together and consider how to move forward. To be on safe ground, we decided to keep moving forward" with the effort to press for further sanctions. A senior administration official said the intelligence assessment on Iran was a setback in the effort to persuade China to endorse a new round of sanctions at the United Nations Security Council. While there had been indications over the weekend that the Chinese might drop their opposition to such a move, it appeared on Tuesday that they were reconsidering again, the official said. The new intelligence assessment, the official said, "gives the Chinese an opportunity to get off the hook." Mr. Bush opened himself to new criticism over his credibility when he said that the director of national intelligence, Mike McConnell, alerted him about new intelligence about Iran's weapons program in August but did not explain what it was in detail. As recently as October, Mr. Bush continued to warn darkly of Iran's nuclear weapons threat, invoking World War III, despite the new information. He responded to a question about that on Tuesday by saying he had received the final assessment, with its drastically altered findings, only last week. "That's not believable," said Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr. of Delaware, the Democrat who is chairman of the foreign relations committee and a candidate for president. "I refuse to believe that. If that's true, he has the most incompetent staff in American, modern American history and he's one of the most incompetent presidents in modern American history." While many officials, lawmakers and diplomats focused on the halting of Iran's weapons program, Mr. Bush emphasized the report's finding that "a growing amount of intelligence indicates Iran was engaged in covert uranium conversion and uranium enrichment activity" from the late 1980s until the freezing of that effort in 2003. Mr. Bush's senior aides describe that as the first evidence of what many officials had only suspected. "And so I view this report as a warning signal that they had the program," Mr. Bush said. "They halted the program. And the reason why it's a warning signal is that they could restart it." Critics, though, blamed the administration's hard line and harsh language for compounding Iran's determination and undermining diplomatic efforts. They called on the administration to make a more concerted diplomatic effort to persuade Iran's government to abide by its commitments to the International Atomic Energy Agency. "Their actions have been totally self-defeating," Mr. Biden said of the Bush administration. "Every time they rattle the saber, what happens is the security premium for oil goes up. It raises the price of oil. It puts more money in the pocket of Ahmadinejad and the very people we think are the bad guys." Mr. Bush maintained that the administration had made offers to Iran as part of the European Union's diplomatic efforts as long ago as 2003, including promising American support for membership in the World Trade Organization and an easing of sanctions to allow the sale of spare airplane parts. "What changed was the change of leadership in Iran," he said, referring to the elections in Iran in 2005. "We had a diplomatic track going, and Ahmadinejad came along and took a different tone. And the Iranian people must understand that the tone and actions of their government are that which is isolating them." Flynt Leverett, a Middle East expert at the New America Foundation who served on the National Security Council under Mr. Bush, said the president had consistently ruled out any real entreaty to Iran that could resolve the international deadlock over its nuclear ambitions. "The really uncomfortable part for the administration, aside from the embarrassment, is the policy implication," Mr. Leverett said of the assessment. "The dirty secret is the administration has never put on the table an offer to negotiate with Iran the issues that would really matter: their own security, the legitimacy of the Islamic republic and Iran's place in the regional order." Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company -- -------------------------------------------------------- Posting archives: http://cyberjournal.org/show_archives/?lists=newslog Escaping the Matrix website: http://escapingthematrix.org/ cyberjournal website: http://cyberjournal.org How We the People can change the world: http://governourselves.blogspot.com/ Community Democracy Framework: http://cyberjournal.org/DemocracyFramework.html Moderator: •••@••.••• (comments welcome) -- -------------------------------------------------------- Posting archives: http://cyberjournal.org/show_archives/?lists=newslog Escaping the Matrix website: http://escapingthematrix.org/ cyberjournal website: http://cyberjournal.org How We the People can change the world: http://governourselves.blogspot.com/ Community Democracy Framework: http://cyberjournal.org/DemocracyFramework.html Moderator: •••@••.••• (comments welcome)