April 26, 2017
Two dozen former U.S.
intelligence professionals are urging the American people to demand clear
evidence that the Syrian government was behind the April 4 chemical incident
before President Trump dives deeper into another war.
AN OPEN MEMORANDUM FOR THE
AMERICAN PEOPLE
From: Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity (VIPS)
Subject: Mattis ‘No Doubt’
Stance on Alleged Syrian CW Smacks of Politicized Intelligence
Donald Trump’s new Secretary
of Defense, retired Marine General James “Mad Dog” Mattis, during a recent trip
to Israel, commented on the issue of Syria’s retention and use of chemical
weapons in violation of its obligations to dispose of the totality of its
declared chemical weapons capability in accordance with the provisions of both
the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) and relevant U.N. Security Council resolutions.
“There can be no doubt,”
Secretary Mattis said during a April 21, 2017 joint news conference with his
Israeli counterpart, Minister of Defense Avigdor Lieberman, “in the
international community’s mind that Syria has retained chemical weapons in
violation of its agreement and its statement that it had removed them all.” To
the contrary, Mattis noted, “I can say authoritatively they have retained
some.”
Lieberman joined Mattis in his
assessment, noting that Israel had “100 percent information that [the] Assad
regime used chemical weapons against [Syrian] rebels.”
Both Mattis and Lieberman
seemed to be channeling assessments offered to reporters two days prior, on
April 19, 2017, by anonymous Israeli defense officials that the April 4, 2017
chemical weapons attack on the Syrian village of Khan Shaykhun was ordered by
Syrian military commanders, with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s personal
knowledge, and that Syria retained a stock of “between one and three tons” of
chemical weapons.
The Israeli intelligence
followed on the heels of an April 13, 2017 speech given by CIA Director Mike
Pompeo, who told an audience at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies that, once information had come in about a chemical attack on Khan
Shaykhun, the CIA had been able to “develop several hypothesis around that, and
then to begin to develop fact patterns which either supported or suggested that
the hypothesis wasn’t right.” The CIA, Pompeo said, was “in relatively short
order able to deliver to [President Trump] a high-confidence assessment that,
in fact, it was the Syrian regime that had launched chemical strikes against
its own people in [Khan Shaykhun.]”
The speed in which this
assessment was made is of some concern. Both Director Pompeo, during his CSIS
remarks, and National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster, during comments to the
press on April 6, 2017, note that President Trump turned to the intelligence
community early on in the crisis to understand better “the circumstances of the
attack and who was responsible.” McMaster indicated that the U.S. Intelligence
Community, working with allied partners, was able to determine with “a very
high degree of confidence” where the attack originated.
Both McMaster and Pompeo spoke
of the importance of open source imagery in confirming that a chemical attack had
taken place, along with evidence collected from the victims themselves –
presumably blood samples – that confirmed the type of agent that was used in
the attack. This initial assessment drove the decision to use military force –
McMaster goes on to discuss a series of National Security Council meetings
where military options were discussed and decided upon; the discussion about
the intelligence underpinning the decision to strike Syria was over.
The danger of this rush toward
an intelligence decision by Director Pompeo and National Security Advisor
McMaster is that once the President and his top national security advisors have
endorsed an intelligence-based conclusion, and authorized military action based
upon that conclusion, it becomes virtually impossible for that conclusion to
change. Intelligence assessments from that point forward will embrace facts
that sustain this conclusion, and reject those that don’t; it is the definition
of politicized intelligence, even if those involved disagree.
A similar “no doubt” moment
had occurred nearly 15 years ago when, in August 2002, Vice President Cheney
delivered a speech before the Veterans of Foreign Wars. “There is no doubt that
Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction,” Cheney declared. “There is
no doubt he is amassing them to use against our friends, against our allies and
against us.” The message Cheney was sending to the Intelligence Community was
clear: Saddam Hussein had WMD; there was no need to answer that question
anymore.
The CIA vehemently denies that
either Vice President Cheney or anyone at the White House put pressure on its
analysts to alter their assessments. This may very well be true, but if it is,
then the record of certainty – and arrogance – that existed in the mindset of
senior intelligence managers and analysts only further erodes public confidence
in the assessments produced by the CIA, especially when, as is the case with
Iraq and Weapons of Mass Destruction – the agency was found so lacking. Stuart
Cohen, a veteran CIA intelligence analyst who served as the acting Chairman of
the National Intelligence Council, oversaw the production of the 2002 Iraq
National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) that was used to make case for Iraq
possessing WMD that was used to justify war.
According to Mr. Cohen, he had
four National Intelligence Officers with “over 100 years’ collective work
experience on weapons of mass destruction issues” backed up by hundreds of
analysts with “thousands of man-years invested in studying these issues.”
On the basis of this
commitment of talent alone, Mr. Cohen assessed that “no reasonable person could
have viewed the totality of the information that the Intelligence Community had
at its disposal … and reached any conclusion or alternative views that were
profoundly different from those that we reached,” namely that – judged with
high confidence – “Iraq had chemical and biological weapons as well as missiles
with ranges in excess of the 150 kilometer limit imposed by the UN Security
Council.”
Two facts emerge from this
expression of intellectual hubris. First, the U.S. Intelligence Community was,
in fact, wrong in its estimate on Iraq’s WMD capability, throwing into question
the standards used to assign “high confidence” ratings to official assessments.
Second, the “reasonable person” standard cited by Cohen must be reassessed,
perhaps based upon a benchmark derived from a history of analytical accuracy
rather than time spent behind a desk.
The major lesson learned here,
however, is that the U.S. Intelligence Community, and in particular the CIA,
more often than not hides behind self-generated platitudes (“high confidence”,
“reasonable person”) to disguise a process of intelligence analysis that has
long ago been subordinated to domestic politics.
It is important to point out
the fact that Israel, too, was wrong about Iraq’s WMD. According to Shlomo
Brom, a retired Israeli Intelligence Officer, Israeli intelligence seriously
overplayed the threat posed by Iraqi WMD in the lead up to the 2003 Iraq War,
including a 2002 briefing to NATO provided by Efraim Halevy, who at the time
headed the Israeli Mossad, or intelligence service, that Israel had “clear
indications” that Iraq had reconstituted its WMD programs after U.N. weapons
inspectors left Iraq in 1998.
The Israeli intelligence
assessments on Iraq, Mr. Brom concluded, were most likely colored by political
considerations, such as the desire for regime change in Iraq. In this light,
neither the presence of Avigdor Leiberman, nor the anonymous background
briefings provided by Israel about Syria’s chemical weapons capabilities,
should be used to provide any credence to Secretary Mattis’s embrace of the “no
doubt” standard when it comes to Syria’s alleged possession of chemical
weapons.
The intelligence data that has
been used to back up the allegations of Syrian chemical weapons use has been
far from conclusive. Allusions to intercepted Syrian communications have been
offered as “proof”, but the Iraq experience – in particular former Secretary of
State Colin Powell’s unfortunate experience before the U.N. Security Council –
show how easily such intelligence can be misunderstood and misused.
Inconsistencies in the
publicly available imagery which the White House (and CIA) have so heavily
relied upon have raised legitimate questions about the veracity of any
conclusions drawn from these sources (and begs the question as to where the
CIA’s own Open Source Intelligence Center was in this episode.) The blood
samples used to back up claims of the presence of nerve agent among the victims
was collected void of any verifiable chain of custody, making their sourcing
impossible to verify, and as such invalidates any conclusions based upon their
analysis.
In the end, the conclusions
CIA Director Pompeo provided to the President was driven by a fundamental
rethinking of the CIA’s analysts when it came to Syria and chemical weapons
that took place in 2014. Initial CIA assessments in the aftermath of the
disarmament of Syria’s chemical weapons seemed to support the Syrian
government’s stance that it had declared the totality of its holding of
chemical weapons, and had turned everything over to the OPCW for disposal.
However, in 2014, OPCW inspectors had detected traces of Sarin and VX nerve
agent precursors at sites where the Syrians had indicated no chemical weapons
activity had taken place; other samples showed the presence of weaponized Sarin
nerve agent.
The Syrian explanation that
the samples detected were caused by cross-contamination brought on by the
emergency evacuation of chemical precursors and equipment used to handle
chemical weapons necessitated by the ongoing Civil War was not accepted by the
inspectors, and this doubt made its way into the minds of the CIA analysts, who
closely followed the work of the OPCW inspectors in Syria.
One would think that the CIA
would operate using the adage of “once bitten, twice shy” when assessing
inspector-driven doubt; U.N. inspectors in Iraq, driven by a combination of the
positive sampling combined with unverifiable Iraqi explanations, created an
atmosphere of doubt about the veracity of Iraqi declarations that all chemical
weapons had been destroyed. The CIA embraced the U.N. inspectors’ conclusions,
and discounted the Iraqi version of events; as it turned out, Iraq was telling
the truth.
While the jury is still out
about whether or not Syria is, like Iraq, telling the truth, or whether the
suspicions of inspectors are well founded, one thing is clear: a reasonable
person would do well to withhold final judgment until all the facts are in.
(Note: The U.S. proclivity for endorsing the findings of U.N. inspectors
appears not to include the Khan Shaykhun attack; while both Syria and Russia
have asked the OPCW to conduct a thorough investigation of the April 4, 2017
incident, the OPCW has been blocked from doing so by the United States and its
allies.)
CIA Director Pompeo’s job is
not to make policy – the intelligence his agency provides simply informs
policy. It is not known if the U.S. Intelligence Community will be producing a
formal National Intelligence Estimate addressing the Syrian chemical weapons
issue, although the fact that the United States has undertaken military action
under the premise that these weapons exist more than underscores the need for
such a document, especially in light of repeated threats made by the Trump
administration that follow-on strikes might be necessary.
Making policy is, however, the
job of Secretary of Defense Mattis. At the end of the day, Secretary of Defense
Mattis will need to make his own mind up as to the veracity of any intelligence
used to justify military action. Mattis’s new job requires that he does more
than simply advise the President on military options; he needs to ensure that
the employment of these options is justified by the facts.
In the case of Syria, the “no
doubt” standard Mattis has employed does not meet the “reasonable man”
standard. Given the consequences that are attached to his every word, Secretary
Mattis would be well advised not to commit to a “no doubt” standard until there
is, literally, no doubt.
For the Steering Group, Veteran
Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
William Binney, Technical
Director, NSA; co-founder, SIGINT Automation Research Center (ret.)
Marshall Carter-Tripp, Foreign
Service Officer (ret) and former Office Division Director in the State
Department Bureau of Intelligence and Research
Thomas Drake, former Senior
Executive, NSA
Bogdan Dzakovic, Former Team
Leader of Federal Air Marshals and Red Team, FAA Security, (ret.) (associate
VIPS)
Philip Giraldi, CIA,
Operations Officer (ret.)
Matthew Hoh, former Capt.,
USMC, Iraq & Foreign Service Officer, Afghanistan (associate VIPS)
Larry C Johnson, CIA &
State Department (ret.)
Michael S. Kearns, Captain,
USAF (Ret.); ex-Master SERE Instructor for Strategic Reconnaissance Operations
(NSA/DIA) and Special Mission Units (JSOC)
Brady Kiesling, former U.S.
Foreign Service Officer, ret. (Associate VIPS)
Karen Kwiatkowski, former Lt.
Col., US Air Force (ret.), at Office of Secretary of Defense watching the
manufacture of lies on Iraq, 2001-2003
Lisa Ling, TSgt USAF (ret.)
Linda Lewis, WMD preparedness
policy analyst, USDA (ret.) (associate VIPS)
Edward Loomis, NSA,
Cryptologic Computer Scientist (ret.)
David MacMichael, National
Intelligence Council (ret.)
Elizabeth Murray, Deputy
National Intelligence Officer for Near East, CIA and National Intelligence
Council (ret.)
Torin Nelson, former
Intelligence Officer/Interrogator (GG-12) HQ, Department of the Army
Todd E. Pierce, MAJ, US Army
Judge Advocate (ret.)
Coleen Rowley, FBI Special
Agent and former Minneapolis Division Legal Counsel (ret.)
Scott Ritter, former MAJ.,
USMC, former UN Weapon Inspector, Iraq
Peter Van Buren, U.S.
Department of State, Foreign Service Officer (ret.) (associate VIPS)
Kirk Wiebe, former Senior
Analyst, SIGINT Automation Research Center, NSA
Lawrence Wilkerson, Colonel
(USA, ret.), Distinguished Visiting Professor, College of William and Mary
(associate VIPS)
Sarah G. Wilton, Intelligence
Officer, DIA (ret.); Commander, US Naval Reserve (ret.)
Robert Wing, former
Foreign Service Officer (associate VIPS)
Ann Wright, Col., US Army
(ret.); Foreign Service Officer (resigned)
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