Trump's Iran move reminds some of run-up
to Iraq war
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[May 10, 2018]
By Warren Strobel
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Fifteen years after
invading Iraq over weapons of mass destruction and ties to al Qaeda that
both proved non-existent, the United States is again steering toward a
possible confrontation with a Middle East power for suspected work on
nuclear weapons and support for terrorism.
U.S. President Donald Trump's Iran policy sounds hauntingly familiar to
some current and former U.S. officials who witnessed the buildup to the
March 2003 invasion of Iraq, where sectarian and ethnic fractures and
some 5,000 U.S. troops still remain.
More than 4,400 U.S. troops and hundreds of thousands of Iraqis died in
the conflict, which many analysts have called one of the major U.S.
foreign policy debacles of modern times.
"There are disturbing and eerie similarities" in the misuse of
intelligence then and now, said Paul Pillar, who was the top U.S.
intelligence analyst for the Middle East from 2001 to 2005.
"The basic thing that is going on is a highly tendentious,
cherry-picked, 'we know what the conclusion is'" use of intelligence,
Pillar said.
Trump on Tuesday withdrew the United States from a six-nation agreement
with Tehran that limits Iran's nuclear work in return for relief from
economic sanctions.
The president charged that the deal, negotiated under his Democratic
predecessor, Barack Obama, did not address Iran's ballistic missile
program, its nuclear activities beyond 2025 or its role in conflicts in
Yemen and Syria.
Trump made no mention of assessments by the U.S. intelligence community
and the United Nations' International Atomic Energy Agency, which has
nuclear inspectors in Iran, that Tehran is complying with the 2015 deal.
Instead, he cited a cache of Iranian documents made public by Israel on
April 30 that he said showed Iran's leaders lied when they denied ever
pursuing a nuclear weapons project.
While the documents' authenticity has not been challenged by Western
governments and intelligence experts, critics said they added little to
previous assessments that concluded that Iran mothballed its effort to
develop nuclear weapons in 2003. Iran called Israel's allegations
"childish and ridiculous."
Beginning shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United
States, President George W. Bush and top aides made the case for
invading Iraq by citing intelligence that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
had ties to al Qaeda and was secretly developing nuclear, chemical and
biological weapons.
Both claims were proved false. Bush and his aides had exaggerated the
available intelligence, relied on dubious claims from Iraqi exiles and
ignored contradictory information. On some points, the CIA and its
sister intelligence agencies were just wrong.
WHY IRAN IS NOT IRAQ
U.S. officials, as well as analysts in Washington and the Middle East,
cautioned that there were key differences between Bush's Iraq policy and
Trump's approach to Iran.
While Trump's move on Tuesday ratcheted up regional tensions and widened
a rift with U.S. allies in Europe, no one is predicting an American
invasion of Iran.
"The question is are we facing the same scenario that happened in Iraq
with regards to the WMD, and will the region be dragged to war?" said
Faysal Abdul Sater, a Lebanese analyst close to the Iranian-backed group
Hezbollah.
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Iranians walk past a large picture of Iran's late leader Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini (L), and Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei at a park in Tehran, Iran, January 17, 2016. Raheb
Homavandi/TIMA via REUTERS/File photo
"In my view, the situation is different, even if the degree of
hostility has increased" between Gulf countries and Israel on one
hand and Iran on the other, Sater said. "As for a direct attack on
Iran, it is unlikely because it would lead by necessity to a
comprehensive war that none of the parties could bear."
Mark Dubowitz, chief executive of the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies think tank, said the war in Iraq resulted partly from a
perception that economic sanctions on Saddam, imposed after his 1990
invasion of Kuwait, were rapidly losing effectiveness.
"I think the opposite is true now," Dubowitz said, noting that Trump
appeared to favor tougher economic pressure on Iran, not military
action.
Despite the different tools, two U.S. officials familiar with Iran
policy said they believed Trump's ultimate goal in Iran was similar
to the Bush administration's in Iraq: replacing an anti-American
government with a friendly one.
But if the Bush administration's belief that grateful Iraqis would
greet invading U.S. troops with flowers was fanciful, it
is "at least equally naive" to believe that "democracy will take
root in Iran" if the Islamic Republic collapses, one of the
officials said.
Neither Trump nor his hawkish new national security adviser, John
Bolton, has publicly called in recent days for the overthrow of
Iran's theocracy.
Two current and one former U.S. official said America's intelligence
agencies were not being pressured to provide evidence to support the
White House's policy but instead were being ignored.
Retired General Michael Hayden, a former director of both the CIA
and the National Security Agency, called it "remarkable" that Trump
made no mention of U.S. intelligence assessments in his speech
announcing withdrawal from the Iran deal.
Trump's director of national intelligence, Dan Coats, told Congress
in February that the Iran deal had extended the amount of time Iran
would need to produce fissile material for a nuclear weapon and
enhanced the transparency of Iran's nuclear activities.
"It's not that they're being leaned on to provide justifications,"
Hayden said of U.S. intelligence analysts. Trump "neither needs nor
wants justification."
(Reporting by Warren Strobel; Additional reporting by John Walcott
in Washington, Laila Bassam in Beirut and Dan Williams in Jerusalem;
Editing by John Walcott and Peter Cooney)
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