Trump is making US intelligence parrot his line on Iran – we’ve been here before

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"Trump's Administration Accused of Manipulating Intelligence on Iran"

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In the lead-up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the term "stovepiping" emerged, describing how intelligence was selectively funneled to political leaders, often circumventing standard checks and balances. This process, akin to cherrypicking information, allowed the Bush administration to shape a narrative that supported their belief in the existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. As a consequence, dissenting views were ignored, leading to a flawed assessment process. Today, a similar scenario is unfolding under former President Donald Trump, with key officials such as Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth appearing to engage in stovepiping. Trump's recent statements regarding the destruction of Iran's nuclear facilities have pressured his officials to conform, even as intelligence leaks reveal doubts about the accuracy of these claims. For instance, following U.S. airstrikes on Iranian sites, Trump declared that key nuclear facilities were "obliterated," only to be contradicted by a leaked Defense Intelligence Agency assessment that suggested the strikes had minimal impact on Iran's nuclear capabilities.

As the situation develops, Trump's reliance on personal narratives over established intelligence raises concerns about the credibility of U.S. intelligence on critical international security matters. His director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, acknowledged the significant size of Iran's enriched uranium stockpile but was later pressured to align her statements with Trump's rhetoric. This dynamic reflects a troubling trend where intelligence assessments are reshaped to fit political narratives, effectively stifling genuine inquiry and skepticism. Trump's history of disregarding intelligence in favor of his instincts, particularly regarding Iran and North Korea, suggests a troubling precedent. This environment mirrors the post-Iraq war criticism of the intelligence community's failure to foster dissenting analysis, as the current expectation is for intelligence agencies to align with Trump’s views, undermining the integrity of U.S. intelligence assessments in the process.

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In the run-up to the 2003 US invasion of Iraq, journalists covering the preparations for war became familiar with the concept of “stovepiping”.

The term described the tactic of pushing intelligence to key political decision makers, bypassing checks and balances within the system.

A more familiar word would be cherrypicking: in the case of the Iraq war, the administration of George W Bush believed that Saddam Hussein wasbuilding weapons of mass destruction, and – minded to act on that belief – sought proof of its proposition. Convinced that it was right, it sought to streamline information that confirmed its bias. What fell by the wayside were conflicting views.

Because intelligence is ultimately about assessing the likelihood of things which are difficult to know, stovepiping means a finger is put on the scale – and that process of assessment becomes flawed.

If all this sounds uncannily familiar, it is becauseDonald Trumpand some of his most senior officials – including the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, Vice-President JD Vance, the CIA director, John Ratcliffe, and defence secretary, Pete Hegseth – appear to be stovepiping in the crudest way.

While the Bush administration, supported by the government of Tony Blair in Britain, turned the intelligence justification for war into a slippery PR exercise that entangled senior intelligence and military officials, Trump has applied the same approach he does to everything.

Now, hissweeping statements over the damage done to Iran’s nuclear facilitieshave turned into an inevitable test of loyalty for his officials who have scrambled to toe the line, even asintelligence leaks have raised doubtsover the veracity of his claims.

After the US airstrikes on Isfahan, Natanz and Fordo, Trump said on Saturday that “Iran’s key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated”. But on Tuesday a leaked assessment by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) concluded that the attacks probably only set back the nuclear program by a few months – and that much of Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium (HEU) may have been moved before the strikes.

His ego piqued, Trump and those around him have made ever more outlandish claims: the attack was historically equivalent to the Nagasaki and Hiroshima bombs; the operation was the most sophisticated in human history.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) also said Iran’s stockpile of HEU could not be accounted for. But Trump denied that the HEU had been moved, posting on social media: “Nothing was taken out of facility.” On Friday, Hegseth followed suit, saying he wasunaware of intelligencesuggesting the material had been moved.

The world has become used to Trump’s tantrums, but the trustworthiness of the intelligence – before and after the attack – is profoundly important because it speaks to the credibility of the US on the most important issues of international security.

Indicative, and more important than Trump’s outbursts over the level of damage, has been the way in which the intelligence justifying the attack has been reshaped.

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In testimony to Congress earlier this year, Tulsi Gabbard, Trump’s director of national intelligence, reflected the intelligence community’s official view.

She conceded that Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium was of a size “unprecedented for a state without nuclear weapons”, but the spy agencies’ assessment was thatIranhad not recommenced work on building a nuclear weapon since that effort was suspended in 2003.

Bullied by Trump, who last week dismissed her assessment,Gabbard quickly fell into line, claiming her remarks had been taken out of context by “dishonest media” and that Iran could have been on the brink of making a weapon within “weeks or months”.

Trump’s attack on Iran, as a Rolling Stone headline memorably put it last week, was based on “vibes not intel”.

Pressed by NBC why theTrump administrationhad chosen to ignore the intelligence estimate, Vance appeared to confirm this, saying: “Of course we trust our intelligence community, but we also trust our instincts.”

While the vice-president framed it as a collective stance, the reality is that Trump has long distrusted the US intelligence community – a friction that dates back to his first term, when he pushed back at claims that Russian hackers had interfered to help him get elected, and appeared willing to believe Vladimir Putin’s word over his own spy agencies.

In that same period, Trump dismissed intelligence assessments and pulled the US out of theJoint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the 2015 nuclear deal signed between Iran and other countries. He also appeared to prefer his own “vibes” over intelligence assessments of North Korea’s eagerness for detente.

It is that history of trusting his own feelings above the US intelligence community that appears to add weight to the suspicion Trump was personally swayed by Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu,whose claims on Iran’s nuclear weaponshe has often parroted.

Trump’s intervention on the issue of the damage done to Iran’s nuclear facilities is also crucially important. By setting out the narrative that the spy agencies are loyally expected to adhere to, Trump is slamming shut a door on actual investigation and intelligence-gathering.

Proper curiosity and scepticism, Trump and those around him have made clear, will not be rewarded but could be damaging to careers.

In the postmortem of the Iraq war, much attention was focused on the shutting down of debate within US and UK intelligence agencies – not least the lack of a culture of oppositional “red team” analysis designed to challenge orthodox assumptions.

As the US president attempts to bend intelligence to his instincts, the problem now is not that there is no “red team”, but that the entire intelligence community is now expected to be Team Trump.

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Source: The Guardian