Posted by
Dr. Brian Melton on Friday, April 25, 2008 3:59:18 PM
Recently Admiral Mike Mullen responded to questions
regarding new evidence that Iran is equipping and enabling anti-western
terrorists in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Despite announcing that yet another substantial stash of Iranian made
weapons has been found in Iraq, Mullen added (most
likely in response to either an actual question or an anticipated one), "I
have no smoking gun that could prove the highest (Iranian) leadership is involved
in this." Unfortunately, the western
world’s naiveté regarding what constitutes a “smoking gun” actively discourage our
leaders from responding to a threat until it’s too late.
If we presume, for the sake of argument, that a country like
Iran (or North Korea or Syria) or a group like Al Qaeda is indeed actively
attempting to develop or steal weapons of mass destruction or undermine our
efforts in Iraq, there are only two logical times for the United States to take
some kind of forceful preventative diplomatic or military action: Before a group succeeds or afterward. While the particular measures must be
determined by the specific situation, in general, the sooner the United States acts
the better chance it has to minimize any potential loss of life or other
damage. I think all would agree that
acting in some way to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear arsenal is clearly
preferable to figuring out what to do once they announce they have one, or worse,
have already employed it. Unfortunately,
the media, talking heads, academia, etc. believe that our intelligence services
must provide this so-called “smoking gun” before any serious intercession would
be justified. As Admiral Mullen observed
above, no matter what evidence we find, we never seem to find that
all-important piece.
The reason we never can locate it is that, on the whole, we
have a very silly set of unrealistically high expectations for what our spy
services can deliver, most of it bred by watching too much television and too
many movies. We somehow get the idea
into our heads that it’s possible to construct a complete and total image of
any given country’s secrets, motivations, and future actions. We think agents like 007 can penetrate every
level of an opponent’s operation, learn any secrets they like, and then report
back home with some absolutely damning evidence that is not open for
interpretation or deconstruction.
The fact of the matter is that the world of intelligence
gathering and analysis is so complex and the evidence available to us so vast
and yet so incomplete that there will likely never be a “perfectly clear”
picture of what any country is doing or planning at any given time. If an
enemy is paying attention at all, there are an infinite number of ways to
thwart the best efforts of the best equipped spies and most expensive satellites. Even if we or one of our allies manages to
obtain an important piece of information, there is no guarantee that it will be
recognized as such. The small tidbits of
“intelligence” we see the media seize upon periodically represent only a tiny
fraction culled from the mass of chaff and worthless information pouring into
places like the CIA, FBI, and NSA on a daily basis. This, of course, doesn’t even begin to take
into account the fact that most countries also intentionally leak misleading
information to enemy operatives. In the
midst of all this, how can we expect to instantly identify and act on the
“good” while always ignoring the “bad”?
Unfortunately, the only way to know for sure is to wait for the benefit
of hindsight, and at that point it may be far too late (as it was with Pearl
Harbor). The only time we will ever have
a “smoking gun” is after it has been fired, and the crime has been committed.
In many ways, this is a similar situation to what some
lawyers now refer to as the “CSI Effect.”
Juries suffering from this mental aberration somehow expect prosecutors
to be able to reconstruct a case like they do on TV. As one lawyer put it, “They want ‘my
case’ to be worthy of an Emmy. They don’t want to be let down and if they are,
they won’t convict.” As this and other
prosecutors note, CSI is a work of
creative fiction. The evidence used in
real cases is almost never as clean or as clear as it is on TV, and it’s
unrealistic to expect it to be. The
result here is that prosecutors lose cases where the perpetrator is clearly
guilty, all because some fans cling to impractical assumptions they picked up
loafing on the couch.
When applied to foreign affairs, this kind of gullibility
can have serious consequences. Many western
leaders feel trapped by public opinion and wait for a “smoking gun” to appear
before acting. As we’ve seen, this is something that, as
defined by popular misconceptions, will never materialize. As a result, we lose virtually any chance of
dealing with a potential threat before it becomes a full-blown international
crisis that could literally threaten millions of lives.
Of course, I’m not suggesting that the United States should
attack other nations on flimsy or non-existent evidence, only that we have to
have a realistic view of what constitutes “sufficient” grounds to “accuse” (as
the media insists on putting it) a nation of skulduggery and, if necessary,
intervene somehow. I only hope that when
our present and future presidents find themselves in this quandary, they will
have the intestinal fortitude to make the right decision and act forcefully, in
spite of public pressure and political risk.
Those are the kinds of decisions that no president wants to make, but that
will define a real legacy from the perspective of history.