Part of the credibility crisis afflicting the world’s officialdom is the tendency to issue reports that start with the politically desired conclusion and then twist words and facts accordingly, a problem apparent in a U.N. report on Iran’s alleged nuclear program, as Gareth Porter explains.
By Gareth Porter
Many government reports The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) assessment has cleared the way for the board of governors to end the Agency’s extraordinary investigation into accusations of Iran’s past nuclear weapons work. But a closer examination of the document reveals much more about the political role that the Agency has played in managing the Iran file.
Contrary to the supposed neutral and technical role that Director General Yukiya Amano has constantly invoked and the news media has long accepted without question, the Agency has actually been serving as prosecutor for the United States in making a case that Iran has had a nuclear weapons program.
The first signs of such an IAEA role appeared in 2008 after the George W. Bush administration insisted that the Agency make a mysterious collection of intelligence documents on a purported Iranian nuclear weapons research program the centerpiece of its Iran inquiry.
The Agency’s partisan role was fully developed, however, only after Amano took charge in late 2009. Amano got U.S. political support for the top position in 2009 because he had enthusiastically supported the Bush administration’s pressure on Mohammed ElBaradei on those documents when Amano was Japan’s permanent representative to the IAEA in 2008.
Amano delivered the Agency’s November 2011 report just when the Obama administration needed additional impetus for its campaign to line up international support for “crippling sanctions” on Iran. He continued to defend that hardline position and accuse Iran of failing to cooperate as the Obama administration sought to maximize the pressure on Iran from 2012 to 2015.
When the Obama administration’s interests shifted from pressuring Iran to ensuring that the nuclear agreement with Iran would be completed and fully implemented, Amano’s role suddenly shifted as well. In late June, according to Iranian officials involved in the Vienna negotiations, Secretary of State John Kerry reached agreement with both the Iranians and Amano that the “possible military dimensions” (PMD) issue would be resolved through a report by Amano before the end of the year.
Based on that agreement, Amano would write a report that would reach no definitive conclusion about the accusations of nuclear weapons work but nevertheless bring the PMD inquiry to an end. The report was still far from even-handed. It could not be, because Amano had embraced the intelligence documents that the United States and Israel had provided to the IAEA, around which the entire investigation had been organized.
Dodgy Intelligence Documents
Iran had insisted from the beginning that the intelligence documents given to the IAEA were fraudulent, and ElBaradei had repeatedly stated publicly from late 2005 through 2009 that the documents had not been authenticated. ElBaradei observes in his 2011 memoirs that he could never get a straight answer from the Bush administration about how the documents had been acquired.
Different cover stories had been leaked to the media over the years suggesting that either an Iranian scientist involved in the alleged weapons program or a German spy had managed to get the documents out of Iran.
But in 2013, former senior German foreign office official Karsten Voigt revealed to me in an interview that German intelligence had obtained the documents in 2004 from a sometime source whom they knew to be a member of the Mujahideen E-Khalq (MEK). A cult-like Iranian exile terrorist group, MEK had once carried out terror operations for the Saddam Hussein regime but later developed a patron-client relationship with Israeli intelligence.
Quite apart from the unsavory truth about the origins of the documents, the burden of proof in the IAEA inquiry should have been on the United States to make the case for their authenticity. There is a good reason why U.S. judicial rules of evidence require that “the proponent must produce evidence sufficient to support a finding that the item is what the proponent claims it is.”
But instead Amano has required Iran, in effect, to prove the negative. Since it is logically impossible for Iran to do so, that de facto demand has systematically skewed the entire IAEA investigation toward the conclusion that Iran is guilty of the covert activities charged in the intelligence documents.
And the Agency has reinforced that distorted frame in its final assessment by constantly making the point that Iran possesses technology that could have been used for the development of a nuclear weapon. Every time Iran produced evidence that a technology that the IAEA had suggested was being used for the development of nuclear weapons was actually for non-nuclear applications, the Agency cast that evidence in a suspicious light by arguing that it bore some characteristics that are “consistent with” or “relevant to” work on nuclear weapons.
The “final assessment” uses that same tactic to frame not only Iranian development of various technologies but its organizations, facilities and research activities as inherently suspicious regardless of evidence provided by Iran that they were for other purposes.
Another tactic the IAEA had used in the past to attack Iran’s credibility is the suggestion that the government actually made a partial confession. In May 2008, the IAEA had claimed in a quarterly report that Iran “did not dispute that some of the information contained in the documents was factually accurate but said the events and activities concerned involved civil or conventional military applications.”
That statement had clearly conveyed the impression that Iran has admitted to details about activities shown in the documents. But in fact Iran had only confirmed information that was already publicly known, such as certain names, organizations and official addresses, as the IAEA itself acknowledged in 2011. Furthermore, Iran had also submitted a 117-page paper in which it had pointed out that “some of the organizations and individuals named in those documents were nonexistent.”
The IAEA resorted to the same kind of deceptive tactic in the final assessment’s discussion of “organizational structure.” It stated, “A significant proportion of the information available to the Agency on the existence of organizational structures was confirmed by Iran during implementation of the Road-map.”
That sentence implied that Iran had acknowledged facts about the organizations that supported the purported intelligence claims of a nuclear weapons research program. But it actually meant only that Iran confirmed the same kind of publicly available information as it had in 2008.
On the issue of whether an Iranian organization to carry out nuclear-weapons research and development had existed, the final assessment again uses suggestive but ultimately meaningless language: “[B]efore the end of 2003, an organizational structure was in place in Iran suitable for the coordination of a range of activities relevant to the development of a nuclear explosive device.”
Similar language implying accusation without actually stating it directly can be found in most of the assessments in the document. In the section on “procurement activities,” the report refers to “indications of procurements and attempted procurements of items with relevance, inter alia, to the development of a nuclear device.”
That language actually means nothing more than that Iranians had sought to purchase dual-use items, but it preserves the illusion that the procurement is inherently suspicious.
EBW and MIP
The use of “relevance” language was, in fact, the IAEA’s favorite tactic for obscuring the fact that it had no real evidence of nuclear weapons work. On the issue of the purported intelligence documents showing that Iran had developed and experimented with Exploding Bridge-Wire (EBW) technology for the detonation of a nuclear weapon, Iran had gone to great lengths to prove that its work on EBW technology was clearly focused on non-nuclear applications.
It provided detailed information about its development of the technology, including videos of activities it had carried out, to show that for the objective of the work was to develop safer conventional explosives.
The IAEA responded by saying “that the EBW detonators developed by Iran have characteristics relevant to a nuclear device.” By that same logic, of course, a prosecutor could name an individual as a suspect in a crime simply because his behavior showed “characteristics relevant” to that crime.
A similar tactic appears in the assessment of the “initiation of high explosives” issue. The 2011 IAEA report had recorded the intelligence passed on by the Israelis that Iran had done an experiment with a high explosives detonation technology called multipoint initiation (MIP) that the Agency said was “consistent with” a publication by a “foreign expert” who had worked in Iran.
That was a reference to the Ukrainian scientist Vyacheslav Danilenko, but he was an expert on producing nanodiamonds through explosives, not on nuclear weapons development. And the open-source publication by Danilenko was not about experiments related to nuclear weapons but only about measuring shock waves from explosions using fiber optic cables.
The 2011 report also had referred to “information” from an unnamed member state that Iran had carried out the “large scale high explosives experiments” in question in the “region of Marivan.” In its final assessment, the Agency says it now believes that those experiments were carried out in a “location called ‘Marivan’,” rather than in the “region of Marivan.”
But although Iran has offered repeatedly to allow the IAEA to visit Marivan to determine whether such experiments were carried out, the IAEA has refused to carry out such an inspection and has offered no explanation for its refusal.
The Agency relies on its standard evasive language to cover its climb-down from the 2011 assessment. “The Agency assesses that the MPI technology developed by Iran has characteristics relevant to a nuclear device,” it said, “as well as to a small number of alternative applications.”
That wording, combined with its refusal to make any effort to check on the one specific claim of Iranian experiments at Marivan, makes it clear that the Agency knows very well that it has no real evidence of the alleged experiments but is unwilling to say so straightforwardly.
The Agency did the same thing in regard to the alleged “integration into a missile delivery system.” A key set of purported intelligence documents had shown a series of efforts to integrate a “new spherical payload” into the existing payload chamber of the Shahab-3 missile.
The final assessment avoids mention of the technical errors in those studies, which were so significant that Sandia National Laboratories found through computer simulations that not a single one of the proposed redesign efforts would have worked. And it later became apparent that Iran had begun redesigning the entire missile system, including an entirely different reentry vehicle shape from the one shown in the drawings, well before the start date of the purported nuclear weapons work.
But the IAEA was only interested in whether the workshops portrayed in the purported intelligence were in fact workshops used by the Iranian government. Iran allowed the Agency to visit two of the workshops, and the final assessment declares that it has “verified that the workshops are those described in the alleged studies documentation” and that “the workshop’s features and capabilities are consistent with those described in the alleged studies documentation.”
Flawed Computer Modeling
One of the most egregious cover-ups in the assessment is its treatment of the alleged computer modeling of nuclear explosions. The agency recalled that it had “received information from Member States” that Iran had done modeling of “nuclear explosive configurations based on implosion technology.”
Unfortunately for the credibility of that “information,” soon after that 2011 report was published someone leaked a graph of one of the alleged computer modeling efforts attributed to Iran to Associated Press reporter George Jahn. The graph was so similar to one published in a scholarly journal in January 2009 that Scott Kemp, an assistant professor of nuclear science and engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), said he suspected the graph had been “adapted from the open literature.”
Furthermore the information in the graph turned out to be inaccurate by four orders of magnitude. In response to that revelation, a senior IAEA official told Jahn that the Agency knew that the graph was “flawed” as soon as it had obtained it but that IAEA officials “believe it remains important as a clue to Iranian intentions.”
In fact, the official revealed to Jahn that the Agency had come up with a bizarre theory that Iranian scientists deliberately falsified the diagram to sell the idea to government officials of a nuclear explosion far larger than any by the United States or Russia.
That episode surely marks the apogee of the IAEA’s contorted rationalizations of the highly suspect “information” the Agency had been fed by the Israelis. In the final report, the Agency ignores that embarrassing episode and “assesses that Iran conducted computer modeling of a nuclear explosive device prior to 2004 and between 2005 and 2009,” even though it describes the modeling, enigmatically, as “incomplete and fragmentary.”
The assessment further “notes some similarity between the Iranian open source publications and the studies featured in the information from Member States, in terms of textual matches, and certain dimensional and other parameters used.”
Unless the Agency received the “information” from the unidentified states before the dates of the open-source publications, which one would expect to be noted if true, such similarities could be evidence of fraudulent intelligence rather than of Iranian wrongdoing. But the assessment provides no clarification of the issue.
Nuclear Material
On the issue it calls “nuclear material acquisition,” however, the Agency makes a startling retreat from its previous position that has far-reaching implications for the entire collection of intelligence documents. In its 2011 report, the IAEA had presented a one-page flow sheet showing a process for converting “yellow cake” into “green salt” (i.e., uranium that can be enriched) as a scheme to “secure a source of uranium suitable for use in an undisclosed enrichment program.”
But the final assessment explicitly rejects that conclusion, pronouncing the process design in question “technically flawed” and “of low quality in comparison with what was available to Iran as part of its declared nuclear fuel cycle.”
In other words, Iran would have had no rational reason to try to seek an entirely new conversion process and then turn the project over to incompetent engineers. Those were precisely the arguments that Iran had made in 2008 to buttress its case that the documents were fabricated.
The assessment carefully avoids the obvious implication of these new findings, that the anomalies surrounding the “green salt” documents make it very likely that they have were fabricated. To acknowledge that fact would cast doubt on the entire collection. But the surprising backtracking on the “green salt’ evidence underlines just how far the IAEA has gone in the past to cover up awkward questions about the intelligence at the center of the case.
Now that the Obama administration has settled on a nuclear agreement with Iran, the IAEA will no longer have to find contorted language to discuss Iran’s past and present nuclear program.
Nevertheless, the Agency remains a highly political actor, and its role in monitoring and reporting on the implementation of the agreement may bring more occasions for official assessments that reflect the political interest of the U.S.-led dominant coalition in the IAEA board of governors rather than the objective reality of the issue under review.
Gareth Porter, an investigative journalist and historian specializing in U.S. “national security” policy and was the recipient of the Gellhorn Prize for journalism in 2012. His latest book, Manufactured Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare, was published by Just World Books in 2014. [This story first appeared at LobeLog.]
Is there anything new here? It’s such a rehash of propaganda from Fars and Payvand and other Iran regime controlled media sites. Why even bother calling it journalism. Mr. Porter is obviously obsessed with criticizing the MEK – “A cult-like Iranian exile terrorist group. ” The MEK has long turned a corner, is off the terror list (like Cuba which is our newest tourist haven) while Iran is one of only three countries left on the state dept. sponsor of terror list. Better get your facts straight Mr. Porter
Terror list? And whose terror list might that be? Bet Syrian refugees have a rather extensive terror list. Or Libyans. Or Iraqis. And yes, if the neocons get their way, There will be no shortage of homeless Iranians.
THE LIFTING OF SANCTIONS
The US (speaking as it is prone to do as though by
Divine Intervention for the West or for the
—civilized?—“community of nations” etc ) wants
everyone to focus on the military aspects of the recent
agreement with Iran.
When will the part of the agreement referring to the
lifting of sanctions be discussed with equal fervor?
Who will enforce this ? Who/what agency will oversee it?
How will this lifting of sanctions be enforced?
After all, the US has signed the deal.
Let’s not consider further US unilateral increases
of sanctions until those sanctions which in place are
have been lifted to fulfill the agreement are gone.
Shall we expect a prime-time announcement to
the American people from President Obama?
I think it might be preferable for the announcement
of major sanctions to be lifted to be announced with
the President backed (joined) by leading members of
both US political parties. “Bi-partisan”, of course.
After all, we have been told so often that this is
an “historic” agreement!
None of this will happen. Of course not. It is
a “political year” in the US. (Should that be
plural).Isn’t it always a “political year”?
As I wrote previously in this space, the US will soon
violate the so-called “agreement” it has just signed.
As the old saying used to go: “You can’t trust the
Russians”. Now, can you trust the Americans?
Gareth Porter has as always provided detailed and
welcome analysis of the military side of the agreement.
It would be of interest to know what “sanctions” are now
in effect and more about them, and which sanctions
are scheduled to disappear.
There is not much to analyze here as I doubt there are
any plans to lift any sanctions at all. Thus..no “story”.
—Peter Loeb, Boston, MA, USA
The day is coming when the U.S. Sanctions won’t mean a thing, because the world is learning how to live without us.
You are also right about asking ‘when’. By the end of 2016 all deals will be nullified and void. Better yet ask a Native American about U.S. Treaties.
Thanks Mr Porter.
As usual a top notch, facts-based analysis.
I find the “timing” of the “brutal” sanctions imposed upon Iran during the talks, very interesting.
They seem to coincide “precisely” with the uptick in the horrific civil war in Syria the “Neocons” were so anxious to initiate…
Almost as if the sanctions served to “hog tie” Iran’s ability to “aid” Syria and prevent the coalescence and eventual rise of ISIS.
I wonder if that may, indeed, have been the (or a) key “Neocon” strategic objective from the beginning ?
Since Iran had made several overtures to resolve its “uranium enrichment” issues (first through France/Russia then through , I believe, Turkey/ Brazil)…it seems the United States could have come to a fair resolution on the issue without “draconian” sanctions…..Don’t you?
It is very plausible,also, that had Iran been given a “free hand” during the catastrophic Syrian Civil war “, and had “not” been sanctioned…they may well have succeeded in crushing ISIS before it had metastasized into the global threat it is today.
I am starting to wonder how many of the horrific and tragic events growing out of the Neocon induced “Syrian Catastrophe”,… from the rise of ISIS ….to the refugee crisis, ….and even the Paris terror attacks …might well have been “avoided”…..had Iran’s wings “not” been clipped at the self same time ?
It is hard to know….but it is an interesting thing to consider, especially on the back of your fine expose’.
As usual,Zion is at the nexus of the crisis.
As usual, Mr. Porter is as incisive as he is devastating in his summaries and analyses of the issues.
I am familiar with his view on the US’s recent loud objection to Iran’s testing of ballistic-missile technology. However, he explained his view before the Security Council report by a “panel of experts” came out.
I would really appreciate it if he would let us know, if he would, what he thinks about:
1) The character and validity of the report’s conclusion that the tests violated the UNSC resolution;
2) The competence of this “panel of experts,” as well as the nationalities, possible affiliations, etc.;
3) How it might play out on the Security Council;
4) Whether or not the US will be in a position to contemplate new sanctions on Iran, based on an assumed technical validity of the report; and
5) If Iran would have the option of considering unilateral US sanctions outside the UN a violation of the nuclear deal.
Unless he prefers to write another piece on this issue!
The essay by Mr. Porter was an interesting one, but the issue you raise is much more relevant in terms of current events.
Mr. Porter appears to believe that the Obama administration is a rational bunch who won’t seize on a fake issue to slow down or even halt the sanctions against Iran. I hope he’s right, but all the evidence I’ve seen indicates BHO is either a neocon puppet or is himself a secret supporter of Greater Israel.
Iran is a crucial player in the Syrian war. If Iran can be bullied into stopping Russian aircraft and missiles from transiting that nation, Russia’s war in Syria becomes very difficult indeed. That’s because Turkey could (and probably would) proceed to halt Russian ships from going through the Turkish Straits.
So the Obama crazies shaking down Iran on a totally fabricated issue makes perfect sense because it might well allow the Good Terrorists to win in Syria after all.
I’m getting quite worried that the neocons (aka Israeli Patriots) are willing to start a local nuclear war to get their way. Worst of all, bad as Obama is on these issues, he’s probably a perfect saint compared with a President Hillary or President Cruz.
Hi Zachary,
You’re right about my “special request” to Mr. Porter. It was a kind of Hail Mary, though I hope he will write something about the artificial spat at the Security Council concerning the missiles test.
On your other point about the “rational bunch” in the Obama administration, I would agree with you if you meant that today’s warmongers are operating under indefensible goals and assumptions. You may have meant this, but let me play devil’s advocate to express something else on my mind.
My view is that rational is rational only in relation to a goal. Politicians and bureaucrats, when they are doing their job, believe they are working rationally toward their stated or unstated goals. Those goals may be destructive, self-serving, short-sighted, and so on. But the means could be at once “rational” and yet self-serving and ultimately self-destructive.
I think we have acquired a distorted view of what “rational” and “intelligent” mean. I am not referring to you but just as general observation. My fear is that calling opponents “irrational” not only gets them off the hook with a “plea of insanity,” but trivializes the sheer destructiveness of their acts and the icy determination with which they carry on.
I am reminded of a classical book called The Roots of War (1971) by Richard J. Barnet, whom I mentioned before. It was one of the first “expensive” books I bought with my own money as a young man, at the height of the Vietnam War. Barnet demonstrated that the bureaucrats and the policy executors of war were the “cream of American society.” Educated, highly intelligent…and very rational. But they had no inkling why exactly they were doing what they were doing. Forget moralizing. They were prisoners of something bigger than them, something that dictated the precise goals toward which they had faithfully to work.
Maybe it all comes down to misplaced “faith”: either you believe or you don’t. The foreign-supported Wahhabi terrorists may well be the most rational people on earth, as far as their warped ideology goes. I would have mistaken them as the army of the Devil himself, if their ideology were not a transparent cover for foreign intervention on behalf of the real crazies in Saudi Arabia, Israel and the “rational West.”
In fact, we routinely characterize everything “Western” as “rational,” as if no one else has been rational since the dawn of man; and as if the foundations of every branch of modern science (mathematics, medicine, astronomy, philosophy all the way down to the concept of the algorithm we need for our computers) had not been lain before the Western dominance of the last century and a half, the shortest imperial reign in history.
I have said this too in my posts before, but we live only from day to day in our little “rational” Internet worlds!
So, I doubt if it’s really wise assuming that my opponent is irrational, or for that matter, the perpetrators of the genocide of Native Americans or the enslavers of Africans, some of whom were actually learned in the higher culture of a multi-religious Islamic civilization, according to the history books. And I mean learned precisely in many of that philosophical tradition and those sciences and legal jurisprudence.
I share your fear of a nuclear event in that region and I believe Israel will be the country that detonates it. How Russia reacts is the great joker in the deck. I wouldn’t presume to predict their response, whether Putin is still in charge or not. I don’t know how we will respond either, but if it is president Cruz or Trump making the call I would bet on a greater war. Kind of scary when you take it to its’ logical conclusion. I’ve been thinking about Costa Rica for a while now. Might be time.