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    1. The Madness of Crowds
      John Steele Gordon
      November 2008
    2. Obama's Leftism
      Joshua Muravchik
      October 2008
    3. Putin and the Polite Pundits
      Arthur Herman
      October 2008
    4. Sending Iran's Regrets
      Michael J. Totten
    5. 1948, Israel, and the Palestinians: Annotated Text
      Efraim Karsh
  1. The Madness of Crowds
    John Steele Gordon
    November 2008
  2. Obama's Leftism
    Joshua Muravchik
    October 2008
  3. Putin and the Polite Pundits
    Arthur Herman
    October 2008
  4. 1948, Israel, and the Palestinians: Annotated Text
    Efraim Karsh
  5. Sending Iran's Regrets
    Michael J. Totten

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commentary's blogs: the horizon | contentions | connecting the dots
« Michael Scheuer Watch #12: Expletive Deleted
Loose French Nukes »

Surprise, Surprise — Kaboom!

11.12.2007 - 8:02 AM

As early as 1965, the U.S. intelligence community began reporting that India was capable of producing a nuclear weapon and would detonate one “within the next few years.” Nearly a decade later, India tested its first nuclear bomb. Despite months of preparation around the test site, the CIA missed signs of the impending blast and failed to warn policymakers in advance, depriving them of any possibility of persuading India not to go ahead.

As we learn from a top-secret CIA post-mortem released to the public earlier this month (click here to enter the CIA library, and click once again on the document dated 7/1/1974 to read the heavily redacted report), the failure to connect the dots was due to two factors: “inadequate priority against an admittedly difficult target,” and “lack of adequate communications among those elements of the [intelligence] community, both collectors and producers, whose combined talents were essential to resolving the problem.

Today, Iran is also a difficult target. Will Iran one day in the not too distant future surprise us with a nuclear test? Pakistan is another difficult target. Will a Pakistan mired in chaos one day in the not too distant future surprise us with one of its weapons coming loose?

By the logic of things, the U.S. intelligence community doesn’t know what it doesn’t know about both countries. By the same logic, it also doesn’t know what it doesn’t know about its own continuing internal coordination problems. Despite massive efforts to foster better sharing of information, including especially the establishing of a new layer of bureaucracy over the intelligence community –– the Office of the Director of National Intelligence –– the possibility of communication lapses remains alive. Periodic failure is in the nature of the intelligence business, and connecting the dots is not an activity at which the U.S. in recent years has done particularly well.

The lesson for policymakers is obvious. On the one hand, they must rely on intelligence to formulate policy. On the other, they must bear in mind that intelligence can be badly flawed and formulate policies that take into account the ever-present possibility of unpleasant surprise.

»Back to Connecting the Dots »Back to Commentary

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This entry was posted on Monday, November 12th, 2007 at 8:02 AM and is filed under Connecting the Dots. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One Response to “Surprise, Surprise — Kaboom!”

  1. 1
    Dave Says:
    November 13th, 2007 at 10:59 AM

    ‘failure to connect the dots was due to two factors’

    Both factors come down to incompetence, of the ‘who cares’ kind.

    I believe it’s not a coincidence that the entrenched bureaucracies of our government are deeply anti-conservative and are also relatively incompetent at protecting us from security risks.

    These two realities are just different facets of the same jewel. After all, ‘failure to prioritize’ is just a way of saying that it isn’t important to them. They have different priorities, like figuring out how to neutralize Bush and politically damage him in the process.

    I don’t write these things lightly; they are sickening realizations, and I am more certain than ever that one day in the not too distant future an Islamic fundamentalist will shout “allahu akhbar!” and one of our cities will disappear.

    Or more than one.

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