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WSWS : News
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East : Iran
British marine admitted that captured patrol was spying on
Iran
By Chris Marsden
7 April 2007
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Captain Chris Air, the man in charge of the 15 marines and
sailors captured by Iranian revolutionary guards and released
on April 4, told Sky News that they were on an intelligence-gathering
mission.
The admission, made five days before he was seized in the Shatt
al Arab waterway, was suppressed until after the Royal Navy personnel
were released, according to Sky, so it would not jeopardise
their safety.
Of course, the embargo placed on the story also served to deceive
the public and sustain the propaganda campaign portraying Iran
as having carried out unprovoked aggression against a blameless
British force.
The joint Five News and Sky News interview was
recorded on March 13 aboard HMS Cornwall.
Air informed Sky that his team was on an Interaction
Patrol, during which they board various fishing dhowsostensibly
to search for contraband but also to gain intelligence on Iranian
activity.
This is whats called an IPAT, he told Skys
Jonathan Samuels: An Interaction Patrol whereby we come
alongside or even board the fishing dhows and basically interact
with the crew.
Basically, we speak to the crew, find out if they have
any problems, let them know were here to protect them, protect
their fishing and stop any terrorism and piracy in the area.
Secondly, its to gather int [intelligence]. If
they do have any information, because theyre here for days
at a time, they can share it with us. Whether its about
piracy or any sort of Iranian activity in the area. Obviously,
were right by the buffer zone with Iran.
Its good to gather int on the Iranians, he
added.
When he was asked whether there were any dangers,
Air replied, At the moment, we havent encountered
anyone whos been anything other than compliant....
We are capable of doing non-compliant boardings as well,
he added, however, I think theyd be a bit stupid to
start being aggressive with us because obviously weve got
seven armed Marines....
The gathering of intelligence is an integral part of the combined
operations of the US and Royal Navies involving two aircraft carrier
battle groups patrolling the waters off Iran. The naval presence
has been built up against a political background of United Nations
sanctions imposed on Tehran over its uranium-enrichment programme
and allegations that it is arming and funding the insurgency in
Iraq.
Preparations for a possible military attack on Irans
nuclear facilitieseither by the US or Israelhave been
extensively leaked to the press by sources in Americas security
services.
Under such circumstances, the dispute over whether or not the
British vessels were in Iranian or Iraqi waters when their boats
were boarded is somewhat academic, given the admission that they
were there to spy on Iran. At the very least, it further undermines
the credibility of Britains denials of hostile intent.
The official response of the Blair government to the belated
broadcast of Skys self-censored report was to portray
Airs remarks as uncontroversial.
Defence Secretary Des Browne told Sky News that Modern
military operations all have an element of gathering intelligence.
He further insisted that The UN mandate would clearly empower
the military taskforce to gather information about the environment
in which they were working.
But the governments attempts to claim that the admission
of spying has no significance are belied by the categorical denial
issued by First Sea Lord Admiral Sir Jonathon Band.
In the midst of an extended defence of the 15 from complaints
by ex-military top brass and the right-wing media that the sailors
should not have made admissions of having strayed into Iranian
waters and even should have fought back to evade capture,
Band denied that they had been involved in intelligence-gathering
operations against Iran. We are certainly not spying on
them, he said. The Iranians in that part of Iraqi
territorial waters are not part of the scene.
They werent on combat operations, he added.
The report was all but ignored by the British media after it
was made public. The Daily Mirror ran an article, but with
no editorial comment.
In the aftermath of the sailors release, the government
and the armed forces have sought to reinvigorate their efforts
to turn Iran into a pariah state and to justify their military
aggression in the Gulf.
As the freed sailors arrived back in Britain, Prime Minister
Tony Blair utilised the death of four British soldiers, including
two women, killed in Basra by a roadside bomb, to reiterate his
claim that Iran is arming insurgents.
Now it is far too early to say the particular terrorist
act that killed our forces was an act committed by terrorists
who were backed by any elements of the Iranian regime, so I make
no allegation in respect of that particular incident, he
stated.
But the general picture, as I said before, is that there
are elements, at least, of the Iranian regime that are backing,
financing, arming, supporting terrorism in Iraq and I repeat that
our forces are there specifically at the request of the Iraqi
government and with the full authority of the United Nations.
On Friday, a press conference was organised by the Ministry
of Defence at the Royal Marines Base at Chivenor, north Devon,
attended by six of the sailors. A prepared statement was read
out by Captain Air and Lieutenant Carman accusing the Iranians
of extracting confessions by psychological torture such as being
kept blindfolded, held in isolation and threatened with seven
years in prison.
When questioned by the media, Carman said that one detainee
had been hit but not very hard.
There is no way of verifying the accounts now being provided
by the sailors. But one can safely predict that this will not
stop the British and US media from launching into outragedand
utterly hypocritical, given the torture inflicted upon detainees
held by the US and Britain in Iraqcomment over the coming
days.
Air was asked a question by only one Independent Television
News reporter regarding his earlier admission to Sky News
that his unit was engaged in spying, and responded that his statement
had been misinterpreted.
See Also:
Iran charges Washington with sponsoring
terrorist attacks
[6 April 2007]
Irans release of sailors: A humiliating
episode for Britain
[5 April 2007]
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