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CIA death squads operating in Iraq
By Henry Michaels
8 April 2003
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The longer the Iraq war continues, the more Orwellian the language
and the more sinister the methods adopted by the Bush administration
and its allies. While President Bush and his officials depict
Iraqis resisting the US-led invasion as terrorists
and death squads, CIA and Special Forces assassination
squads are at work in Iraq, seeking to eliminate Iraqi leaders
and other opponents of the US occupation of the country.
In the language of the White House and Pentagon, the thousands
of Iraqi citizens in plainclotheswhether ordinary people,
militia members or soldierswho are resisting the invading
forces in any way they can, are war criminals. But
the undercover US hit squads and other military-intelligence operatives
roaming throughout Iraq in civilian clothes, terrorizing the population,
are heroes in the cause of democracy and liberation.
While the Western media has largely blacked coverage of the
US killers, one report in the Canadian National Post last
week briefly mentioned the presence of special operations troops
in civilian clothes as US Marines reached southern Baghdad. Special
forces were also out in large numbers in their distinctive fighting
gear, which includes baseball caps, jeans, expensive sunglasses
and specially adapted rifles, it noted.
There is a fundamental difference between the Iraqis who are
defending their country and the US, British and Australian special
operations units that are operating secretly, often in civilian
disguise. Whereas the Iraqis are legitimately targeting Allied
military personnel for ambushes, sniper fire and surprise bombings,
the US-led squads are illegally hunting down civilians and government
figures, sabotaging civilian facilities and arming selected local
thugs to execute reprisals, flouting the international laws of
war.
In the face of widespread popular resistance, these unconventional
warfare operations are escalating, but they have been under
way for many months. Well before Bush formally declared war on
Iraq, US intelligence and military operatives were in Baghdad
and throughout Iraq, aiming to locate and kill Saddam Hussein
and other leaders. British and Australian Special Air Services
(SAS) commandos were also active in the west and north of Iraq.
Citing intelligence sources, United Press International reported
last week that the unsuccessful bombing operation to murder Saddam
Hussein and his family and cabinet ministers on March 20 was preceded
by intensive infiltration of CIA agents into Baghdad, the recruitment
of Iraqi spies and the insertion of special operations troops
into the capital.
According to UPI: The March 20 operation involved more
than 300 Special Forces, who moved into the country to join Delta
troops and CIA paramilitaries, these sources said. One former
long-time CIA operative said it was the Delta men, already in
the country, who made the breakthrough for the US attack by infiltrating
a key Baghdad telecommunications center and tapping a fiber optic
telephone line.
It was this that enabled the US clandestine team to locate
Saddam and top leaders at Dora Farm, an Iraqi command and control
complex and a legitimate war target, US officials said. Iraqi
assets [spies], recruited by the agency, played a key part in
the operation by providing priceless information,
relating to the phone system and details of Dora Farm, according
to one former senior CIA official.
Having failed to decapitate the Iraqi government,
such operations nevertheless remain one of Washingtons top
objectives. UPI reported: CIA paramilitary teams, working
with Delta Forces, still are inside Iraq, attempting to kill 30
top Iraqi leaders, including Saddams other son, Uday, who
commands the Iraqi Fedayeen, several US sources said. One administration
official confirmed that US intelligence has the names, addresses
and cell phone numbers of the 30 targets.
Last Wednesday, acting on CIA information, a helicopter formation
raided the Tharthar Palace, one of many residences allegedly used
by Hussein and his sons, about 55 miles outside Baghdad.
Reporting on the unseen war in Iraq conducted by
teams of CIA paramilitary and Special Forces operatives, the Christian
Science Monitor quoted retired US Brigadier General John Reppert:
That is certainly the strategy now. And decapitation as
a strategy works well beyond Saddam Hussein. It takes in his Revolutionary
Council, leaders of his Baath Party, and below that, the four
divisions of the Republican Guard plus the one Special Republican
Guard unit.
As these comments suggest, the special forces targets
extend well beyond the Iraqi leadership. An on-the-spot-report
from the city of Najaf published by the London-based Financial
Times on April 5 provided a glimpse of the methods being employed
in urban areas:
The people of Najaf were introduced to their new government
this weeka virtually unknown opposition group that claims
to represent all Iraqis, cruises around the streets on US special
forces vehicles, and is doing its best to present itself as part
of a spontaneous intifada against the Iraqi regime.
Members of the group, called the Iraqi Coalition for National
Unity (ICNU), rarely stray from their US vehicles and special
forces minders, grinning broadly for cameras from atop Humvees
and raising their weapons in victory.... Co-ordination between
ICNU and US ground forces in Najaf is tight, handled by special
forces and CIA operatives.
Nevertheless, the newspaper reported, the ICNU and its sponsors
had failed to subdue the city, which hosts Shia Muslim holy sites.
US troops patrolled during the day but withdrew at night, looting
by hungry crowds was commonplace, and Shia religious leaders had
refused to negotiate directly with US commanders, regarding them
as an occupying force.
Elsewhere, including in the northern Kurdish areas, allied
operatives are financing and arming tribal leaders, ethnic militias
and local thugs, employing similar techniques to Afghanistan,
where the CIA paid millions of dollars to regional warlords to
fight against the Taliban regime. Im sure weve
got guys with 80-pound rucksacks full of $100 bills,
a former CIA station chief told the Los Angeles Times.
Im sure were buying up some folks.
Well before the war began, huge payments were channeled through
networks of Iraqi agents recruited by the CIA and MI6, the British
spy agency, to encourage uprisings against the Iraqi government.
Up until now, however, these efforts have not borne fruit.
Revealing cover-up at Pentagon briefing
At an April 4 Pentagon media briefing, Army Major General Stanley
McChrystal boasted that the contribution of special forces to
the US operation had been unprecedented. Another senior
official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said more than 10,000
special operations troops were involved in Iraqthe largest
number for any US war since Vietnam.
There was a revealing exchange when a journalist asked the
following question:
Can you help us to understand one of the pointsone
of the arguments made by the administration on the war criminals
tag? Obviously, the administration has seen a number of irregular
practices on the part of the Iraqis. One of them in particular
puzzles me. When they take off their uniforms and fight in civilian
clothes, why is that a war crime? Because US Special Forces do
it and did it in Afghanistanthey didnt behave in the
same way, but why is the act of fighting without a uniform considered
a war crime?
McChrystal could not answer the question, becoming flummoxed
as he tried unsuccessfully to draw a distinction between the tasks
being performed by US personnel and Iraqi civilians. Victoria
Clarke, spokeswoman for Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, quickly
stepped in to shut down the line of questioning.
Id actually like to take that question, because
I dont think youre right about that, she told
the journalist. After a pause, Clarke said the Pentagon would
respond later.
Another journalist asked if US forces were under any special
instructions if they found Saddam Hussein or other senior
Iraqi leader. Clarke immediately told McChrystal, You dont
need to answer his question.
After the press conference, officials said US special forces
in Iraq are wearing uniforms, but declined to say
if they were full uniforms or modified. Clarkes abrupt intervention
at the briefing suggests acute awareness in the administration
that its officials and military commanders are the ones committing
war crimes in Iraq.
The methods being used in Iraq will soon become as notorious
as the CIA-backed coup in Iran in 1953 to install the cruel regime
of the Shah, the Operation Phoenix killing program
in Vietnam, and the 1973 overthrow of the Allende government in
Chile, to name but a few of US imperialisms crimes.
See Also:
US rampage through Baghdad kills thousands
[7 April 2003]
Washingtons colonial regime in
waiting for Baghdad
[7 April 2003]
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