NIE: Iran’s Nuclear Intentions, Capabilities
The “unclassified version,” via a pdf file from the National Intelligence Council:
Iran: Nuclear Intentions and Capabilities
OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE
The Director of National Intelligence serves as the head of the Intelligence Community (IC), overseeing and directing the implementation of the National Intelligence Program and acting as the principal advisor to the President, the National Security Council, and the Homeland Security Council for intelligence matters.
The Office of the Director of National Intelligence is charged with:
· Integrating the domestic and foreign dimensions of US intelligence so that there are no gaps in our understanding of threats to our national security;
· Bringing more depth and accuracy to intelligence analysis; and
· Ensuring that US intelligence resources generate future capabilities as well as present results.
NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE COUNCIL
Since its formation in 1973, the National Intelligence Council (NIC) has served as a bridge between the intelligence and policy communities, a source of deep substantive expertise on critical national security issues, and as a focal point for Intelligence Community collaboration. The NIC’s key goal is to provide policymakers with the best, unvarnished, and unbiased information—regardless of whether analytic judgments conform to US policy. Its primary functions are to:
· Support the DNI in his role as Principal Intelligence Advisor to the President and other senior policymakers.
· Lead the Intelligence Community’s effort to produce National Intelligence Estimates (NIEs) and other NIC products that address key national security concerns.
· Provide a focal point for policymakers, warfighters, and Congressional leaders to task the Intelligence Community for answers to important questions.
· Reach out to nongovernment experts in academia and the private sector—and use alternative analyses and new analytic tools—to broaden and deepen the Intelligence Community’s perspective.
NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE ESTIMATES AND THE NIE PROCESS
National Intelligence Estimates (NIEs) are the Intelligence Community’s (IC) most authoritative written judgments on national security issues and designed to help US civilian and military leaders develop policies to protect US national security interests. NIEs usually provide information on the current state of play but are primarily “estimative”—that is, they make judgments about the likely course of future events and identify the implications for US policy.
The NIEs are typically requested by senior civilian and military policymakers, Congressional leaders and at times are initiated by the National Intelligence Council (NIC). Before a NIE is drafted, the relevant NIO is responsible for producing a concept paper or terms of reference (TOR) and circulates it throughout the Intelligence Community for comment. The TOR defines the key estimative questions, determines drafting responsibilities, and sets the drafting and publication schedule. One or more IC analysts are usually assigned to produce the initial text. The NIC then meets to critique the draft before it is circulated to the broader IC. Representatives from the relevant IC agencies meet to hone and coordinate line-by-line the full text of the NIE. Working with their Agencies, reps also assign the level of confidence they have in each key judgment. IC reps discuss the quality of sources with collectors, and the National Clandestine Service vets the sources used to ensure the draft does not include any that have been recalled or otherwise seriously questioned.
All NIEs are reviewed by National Intelligence Board, which is chaired by the DNI and is composed of the heads of relevant IC agencies. Once approved by the NIB, NIEs are briefed to the President and senior policymakers. The whole process of producing NIEs normally takes at least several months.
The NIC has undertaken a number of steps to improve the NIE process under the DNI. These steps are in accordance with the goals and recommendations set out in the SSCI and WMD Commission reports and the 2004 Intelligence Reform and Prevention of Terrorism Act. Most notably, over the last year and a half, the IC has:
· Created new procedures to integrate formal reviews of source reporting and technical judgments. The Directors of the National Clandestine Service, NSA, NGA, and DIA and the Assistant Secretary/INR are now required to submit formal assessments that highlight the strengths, weaknesses, and overall credibility of their sources used in developing the critical judgments of the NIE.
· Applied more rigorous standards. A textbox is incorporated into all NIEs that explains what we mean by such terms as “we judge” and that clarifies the difference between judgments of likelihood and confidence levels. We have made a concerted effort to not only highlight differences among agencies but to explain the reasons for such differences and to prominently display them in the Key Judgments.
Scope Note
This National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) assesses the status of Iran’s nuclear program, and the program’s outlook over the next 10 years. This time frame is more appropriate for estimating capabilities than intentions and foreign reactions, which are more difficult to estimate over a decade. In presenting the Intelligence Community’s assessment of Iranian nuclear intentions and capabilities, the NIE thoroughly reviews all available information on these questions, examines the range of reasonable scenarios consistent with this information, and describes the key factors we judge would drive or impede nuclear progress in Iran. This NIE is an extensive reexamination of the issues in the May 2005 assessment.
This Estimate focuses on the following key questions:
· What are Iran’s intentions toward developing nuclear weapons?
· What domestic factors affect Iran’s decisionmaking on whether to develop nuclear weapons?
· What external factors affect Iran’s decisionmaking on whether to develop nuclear weapons?
· What is the range of potential Iranian actions concerning the development of nuclear weapons, and the decisive factors that would lead Iran to choose one course of action over another?
· What is Iran’s current and projected capability to develop nuclear weapons? What are our key assumptions, and Iran’s key chokepoints/vulnerabilities?
This NIE does not assume that Iran intends to acquire nuclear weapons. Rather, it examines the intelligence to assess Iran’s capability and intent (or lack thereof) to acquire nuclear weapons, taking full account of Iran’s dual-use uranium fuel cycle and those nuclear activities that are at least partly civil in nature.
This Estimate does assume that the strategic goals and basic structure of Iran’s senior leadership and government will remain similar to those that have endured since the death of Ayatollah Khomeini in 1989. We acknowledge the potential for these to change during the time frame of the Estimate, but are unable to confidently predict such changes or their implications. This Estimate does not assess how Iran may conduct future negotiations with the West on the nuclear issue.
This Estimate incorporates intelligence reporting available as of 31 October 2007.
What We Mean When We Say: An Explanation of Estimative Language
We use phrases such as we judge, we assess, and we estimate—and probabilistic terms such as probably and likely—to convey analytical assessments and judgments. Such statements are not facts, proof, or knowledge. These assessments and judgments generally are based on collected information, which often is incomplete or fragmentary. Some assessments are built on previous judgments. In all cases, assessments and judgments are not intended to imply that we have “proof” that shows something to be a fact or that definitively links two items or issues.
In addition to conveying judgments rather than certainty, our estimative language also often conveys 1) our assessed likelihood or probability of an event; and 2) the level of confidence we ascribe to the judgment.
Estimates of Likelihood. Because analytical judgments are not certain, we use probabilistic language to reflect the Community’s estimates of the likelihood of developments or events. Terms such as probably, likely, very likely, or almost certainly indicate a greater than even chance. The terms unlikely and remote indicate a less then even chance that an event will occur; they do not imply that an event will not occur. Terms such as might or may reflect situations in which we are unable to assess the likelihood, generally because relevant information is unavailable, sketchy, or fragmented. Terms such as we cannot dismiss, we cannot rule out, or we cannot discount reflect an unlikely, improbable, or remote event whose consequences are such that it warrants mentioning. The chart provides a rough idea of the relationship of some of these terms to each other.
Confidence in Assessments. Our assessments and estimates are supported by information that varies in scope, quality and sourcing. Consequently, we ascribe high, moderate, or low levels of confidence to our assessments, as follows:
· High confidence generally indicates that our judgments are based on high-quality information, and/or that the nature of the issue makes it possible to render a solid judgment. A “high confidence” judgment is not a fact or a certainty, however, and such judgments still carry a risk of being wrong.
· Moderate confidence generally means that the information is credibly sourced and plausible but not of sufficient quality or corroborated sufficiently to warrant a higher level of confidence.
· Low confidence generally means that the information’s credibility and/or plausibility is questionable, or that the information is too fragmented or poorly corroborated to make solid analytic inferences, or that we have significant concerns or problems with the sources.
Key Judgments
A. We judge with high confidence that in fall 2003, Tehran halted its nuclear weapons program1; we also assess with moderate-to-high confidence that Tehran at a minimum is keeping open the option to develop nuclear weapons. We judge with high confidence that the halt, and Tehran’s announcement of its decision to suspend its declared uranium enrichment program and sign an Additional Protocol to its Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Safeguards Agreement, was directed primarily in response to increasing international scrutiny and pressure resulting from exposure of Iran’s previously undeclared nuclear work.
· We assess with high confidence that until fall 2003, Iranian military entities were working under government direction to develop nuclear weapons.
· We judge with high confidence that the halt lasted at least several years. (Because of intelligence gaps discussed elsewhere in this Estimate, however, DOE and the NIC assess with only moderate confidence that the halt to those activities represents a halt to Iran’s entire nuclear weapons program.)
· We assess with moderate confidence Tehran had not restarted its nuclear weapons program as of mid-2007, but we do not know whether it currently intends to develop nuclear weapons.
· We continue to assess with moderate-to-high confidence that Iran does not currently have a nuclear weapon.
· Tehran’s decision to halt its nuclear weapons program suggests it is less determined to develop nuclear weapons than we have been judging since 2005. Our assessment that the program probably was halted primarily in response to international pressure suggests Iran may be more vulnerable to influence on the issue than we judged previously.
B. We continue to assess with low confidence that Iran probably has imported at least some weapons-usable fissile material, but still judge with moderate-to-high confidence it has not obtained enough for a nuclear weapon. We cannot rule out that Iran has acquired from abroad—or will acquire in the future—a nuclear weapon or enough fissile material for a weapon. Barring such acquisitions, if Iran wants to have nuclear weapons it would need to produce sufficient amounts of fissile material indigenously—which we judge with high confidence it has not yet done.
C. We assess centrifuge enrichment is how Iran probably could first produce enough fissile material for a weapon, if it decides to do so. Iran resumed its declared centrifuge enrichment activities in January 2006, despite the continued halt in the nuclear weapons program. Iran made significant progress in 2007 installing centrifuges at Natanz, but we judge with moderate confidence it still faces significant technical problems operating them.
[Footnote: 1 For the purposes of this Estimate, by “nuclear weapons program” we mean Iran’s nuclear weapon design and weaponization work and covert uranium conversion-related and uranium enrichment-related work; we do not mean Iran’s declared civil work related to uranium conversion and enrichment.]
· We judge with moderate confidence that the earliest possible date Iran would be technically capable of producing enough HEU for a weapon is late 2009, but that this is very unlikely.
· We judge with moderate confidence Iran probably would be technically capable of producing enough HEU for a weapon sometime during the 2010-2015 time frame. (INR judges Iran is unlikely to achieve this capability before 2013 because of foreseeable technical and programmatic problems.) All agencies recognize the possibility that this capability may not be attained until after 2015.
D. Iranian entities are continuing to develop a range of technical capabilities that could be applied to producing nuclear weapons, if a decision is made to do so. For example, Iran’s civilian uranium enrichment program is continuing. We also assess with high confidence that since fall 2003, Iran has been conducting research and development projects with commercial and conventional military applications—some of which would also be of limited use for nuclear weapons.
E. We do not have sufficient intelligence to judge confidently whether Tehran is willing to maintain the halt of its nuclear weapons program indefinitely while it weighs its options, or whether it will or already has set specific deadlines or criteria that will prompt it to restart the program.
· Our assessment that Iran halted the program in 2003 primarily in response to international pressure indicates Tehran’s decisions are guided by a cost-benefit approach rather than a rush to a weapon irrespective of the political, economic, and military costs. This, in turn, suggests that some combination of threats of intensified international scrutiny and pressures, along with opportunities for Iran to achieve its security, prestige, and goals for regional influence in other ways, might—if perceived by Iran’s leaders as credible—prompt Tehran to extend the current halt to its nuclear weapons program. It is difficult to specify what such a combination might be.
· We assess with moderate confidence that convincing the Iranian leadership to forgo the eventual development of nuclear weapons will be difficult given the linkage many within the leadership probably see between nuclear weapons development and Iran’s key national security and foreign policy objectives, and given Iran’s considerable effort from at least the late 1980s to 2003 to develop such weapons. In our judgment, only an Iranian political decision to abandon a nuclear weapons objective would plausibly keep Iran from eventually producing nuclear weapons—and such a decision is inherently reversible.
F. We assess with moderate confidence that Iran probably would use covert facilities— rather than its declared nuclear sites—for the production of highly enriched uranium for a weapon. A growing amount of intelligence indicates Iran was engaged in covert uranium conversion and uranium enrichment activity, but we judge that these efforts probably were halted in response to the fall 2003 halt, and that these efforts probably had not been restarted through at least mid-2007.
G. We judge with high confidence that Iran will not be technically capable of producing and reprocessing enough plutonium for a weapon before about 2015.
H. We assess with high confidence that Iran has the scientific, technical and industrial capacity eventually to produce nuclear weapons if it decides to do so.
And they thoughtfully append this chart for comparison with their last authoritative assessment:
So there it is.
5 Responses to “NIE: Iran’s Nuclear Intentions, Capabilities”
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December 4th, 2007 at 12:15 pm
So, essentially, Iran is not actively pursuing a nuclear weapon, but they were until 2003, even though they weren’t supposed to, and vehemently denied they were (along with their numberless apologists, pacifists, and other assorted anti-American rabble).
They remain capable of producing a weapon within 10 years, if only they wanted to, and given the Khomeini Regime’s obsession with nuclear weapons, undeoubtedly now will since the political circus that is and will continue to blare over this will provide them with enough cover to do so. It’s not like the UN will know (or care) if they do restart their nuke program, and if the next NIE says “Hey, Iran restarted its program last week!” well, we all know that’s the report that won’t be believed. Critics will come out of the woodwork (and the kitchen, it’s not like they’re really hiding), howling that the report has been “politically massaged” by the Bush Administration in order to save his legacy, extend American hegemony, pursue our racist war against Islam, pick your Lefty rationale, it’ll sprew from the MSM like green vomit (no, not green, but red, that’s their favorite color these days anyway).
For anyone with two brain cells to rub together, this report is in no way an exoneration of Iran. It confirms suspicions that Iran indeed DID have a nuclear weapons program, something Iran and its apologists have been denying all along. It also claims that Iran has not abandoned its desire to obtain nuclear weapons “given the linkage many within the leadership probably see between nuclear weapons development and Iran’s key national security and foreign policy objectives.” Therefore, continued pursuit of that nuclear weapon is only a political decision away — a political decision resting firmly in the hand of a fanatical, terror-supporting/exporting regime which takes every opportunity to demonize Israel, the United States, and after that, all things Western. PHEW, we can all relax now! We can put this problem on the back burner for at least a decade, and get back to important things like who’s Britney’s new baby daddy, and why Katie Holmes got that crazy new haircut! It’ll be just like the 90s, and we all know how well that turned out.
December 4th, 2007 at 12:45 pm
I concur Invertigo, why is everything hunky-dory now that it looks like they won’t technically have a weapon until 2009-2015? Is the plan to just put this on the back burner until they do? What a ridiculous proposition. I can say with moderate confidence that a baby won’t have the finger dexterity to pull a trigger for a few months, so sure lets let him play with the loaded gun until then.
Alternatively I am surprised by the lack of connection being made to the date of 2003. So in March of 2003 The US and her allies make it clear we will not allow a radical, terrorist supporting country to create and have nuclear weapons. Then, coincidently, Libya and now we find out Iran both terminate their nuclear programs that same year. All because we have a bumbling idiot in the White house. Yay, for bumbling idiots.
December 4th, 2007 at 1:25 pm
First – what a load of BS. As a signatory of the NPT, Iran could have received sanctioned international support in developing nuclear power – and could have done so much faster. Instead they had a secret program for 18 years and continue to play games as they get caught on evidence of a possible nuclear weapons program – delay, relent to pressure and then continue to limit or stop fulfilling the obligations and agreements they agreed to. Add the statements of Ahmadinijad and the IAEA of continued activity, non-cooperation and secrecy, one would think the experts would lean to the probability that the Iranians are still working the weapons program. But, I suppose the embarrassment of their continued inability to penetrate and collect leads them to wash over this. Or is there a political angle here? Duh!
The lack of context and “out of the box” consideration is troubling. I wonder if the real intel analysts worked on this or is this the agency heads and academic “experts” massaging the report more for political considerations than national security?
They are hanging their piece on their assessment that the program was stopped in 2003. The report then goes on to concede that they judge that the halt lasted several years but follow up with less assurance (weasel words “moderately confidence”) that the program had not restarted as of mid 2007. So if it hasn’t restarted – how do they explain the subsequent non-cooperation by the Iranians with the IAEA inspectors? They don’t. Don’t continued running of centrifuge cascades constitute the potential continuation of a program that may be weapons related? What of the observed infrastructure development that inspectors have not been allowed to check?
The report settles on international pressure as the reason for the halt in 2003. Perhaps for the sake of brevity (or to weasel out of explaining their lack of real intelligence) this report ignores other explanations for the perceived halt in Iran’s nuclear weapons program – like they had developed or stole or bought the technology they needed and were only faced with the need for sufficient highly enriched uranium to move forward with completion of basic warheads deliverable on the current medium range ballistic missiles already developed. To reinforce the possibility, consider the nuclear proliferation trade North Korea, China and AQ Kahn were engaged during this time.
Another possibility for the “halt” was to move to more secure locations unidentified by the IAEA after the started inspections of the sites that had been discovered and lead to their signing of the oh so precious “Additional Protocol to its Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Safeguards Agreement” (which proved useless in following years as the Iranians stopped complying to those very same agreements…) If our Intelligence agencies had good intelligence they would be able to refute these possibilities, but instead they don’t address them at all – a pretty serious oversight on such an important assessment.
The report then goes on to concede that they judge that the halt lasted several years but follow up with less assurance (weasel words “moderately confidence”) that the program had not restarted as of mid 2007. So, if it hasn’t restarted – how do they explain the subsequent non-cooperation by the Iranians with the IAEA inspectors? They don’t. How soon we forget – only just last year the Iranians were working with two pilot enrichment cascades of 164 each – now they have 3000, according to the IAEA – just as Ahmadinijad said they would and he is clear that their goal is 60,000. They claim to have improved the model centrifuge in use to produce more and be more reliable. This is dual use technology and we have not been able to determine if they are being used only for low enrichment because of Iranian non cooperation.
This is a politically motivated report to overstate a case they can’t make. Sadly, if this is truly the best they can produce, we are in a pickle – our national security is poorly served by this intelligence (or lack of) because they really can’t give our decision makers more than flimsy estimates. In the end it really boils down to what is in the classified report we should hope we won’t read in some newspaper.
December 4th, 2007 at 1:55 pm
Excellent comment, invertigo2004.
“It confirms suspicions that Iran indeed DID have a nuclear weapons program, something Iran and its apologists have been denying all along”
Exactly, and this is the part that most reporting seems to gloss.
Iran disclosed it’s nuclear facility at Natanz on Feb. 9th, 2003 and invited the IAEA to inspect the facility (according to the terms of the Non-Proliferation Treaty). Is it incredulous that this coincides with the NIE assertion that Iran’s secret HEU program was suspended in 2003? Hardly - remember, that until Feb. 2003 Iranian nuclear ambitions were known, but the development of facilities to enrich uranium to high levels were thought to have been successfully quashed.
The announcement in 2003 that the Natanz facility was operational was not so much a shock from a developmental standpoint - the Iranians had sought nuclear technology as far back as the 1960’s: Rather, the shock was that Iran had received technical help and fissible material from the Chinese and Russians and that this technical know-how is easily convertable from civilian to military use. And, as the IAEA’s Dr. El Baradi pointed out, Iran has not fully disclosed the method and means of producing the amount of fissbile material it had on-hand during the 2003 inspections (thus implying secret nuclear facilities).
Basically, the NIE seems to substantiate the current situation - it takes into effect the official Iranian stance (not currently working on military nuclear programme), known intelligence from in-country (that military-grade uranium has been detected), and future likelihood of development (military nuclear programme was ‘halted’, not dismantled).
There is another scenario that could be contrary to Iran succumbing to international pressure; Iran could be playing the ‘Iraqi WMD’ gambit. In this gambit, Iran suspends her military nuclear program, while sending her military nuclear scientists to friendly countries (Russia, China, etc…) . Thus any attempt to destroy nuclear sites would be met with political blow-back upon the bombing country (The US, Israel, the West in general) for bombing ‘civilian’ sites. While the world heaps shame and ridicule on the US for bombing a civilian nuclear station (with all the political and environmental fall-out that would come from such a bombing campaign), Iran quickly and openly builds a military programme to counter the ‘aggresive and erroneous’ actions of the American bully.
Of course, the way around the gambit is by releasing stuff like the NIE, thus putting Iran on the defensive to explain why they aren’t now open to IAEA inspections.
Arctain
December 4th, 2007 at 4:00 pm
By the way, I’m not even sure if the US knows whether Israel has nuclear weapons or not.
And yet we can be dead (emphasis on dead) certain that Iran does not have them, or is not in the process of attaining them?