|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East : Iran
Is the Bush administration behind the bombings in Iran?
By Peter Symonds
17 February 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Two bombings this week in Zahedan in southeastern Iran are
the latest in a series of incidents involving armed opposition
groups based among the countrys ethnic minorities. The most
recent attacks again raise questions about the activities of the
US military and CIA inside Iran as the Bush administration intensifies
its preparations for war.
The first blast killed at least 11 members of Irans Islamic
Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) who were travelling in a bus
from their housing compound to a military base. After forcing
the bus to stop, the attackers triggered explosives packed in
a car. Another 31 people were injured in the explosion. A further
bombing, followed by sustained clashes between police and an armed
group, was reported yesterday.
Jundallah, a Sunni extremist group based among Irans
Baluch minority, claimed responsibility for the Wednesday bombing.
Iranian police have already rounded up some 65 people allegedly
connected to the organisation, along with explosives and weapons.
Zahedan is the capital of Sistan-Baluchistan province, which borders
Pakistan and Afghanistan and is home to Irans estimated
1-2 million ethnic Baluchis.
According to provincial police chief Brigadier General Mohammad
Ghafari: A video seized from the rebels confirms their attachment
to opposition groups and some countries intelligence services
such as America and Britain. An unnamed Iranian official
told the Islamic Republic News Agency yesterday that one of those
arrested had confessed that the attack was part of US plans to
provoke unrest in Iran. This person who was behind the bombing
confessed that those who trained them spoke in English,
he said.
The Iranian authorities have provided no definitive proof of
US or British involvement with Jundallah. Neither the video nor
any further evidence has been released. However, the attack on
the IRGC bus took place amid a propaganda campaign being waged
by the Bush administration accusing the IRGCs Quds Force
of arming anti-US insurgents in Iraq. President Bush has vowed
to break up alleged Iranian networks and authorised the US military
to kill or capture Iranian agents.
US officials insist that American forces are targetting Iranian
agents inside Iraq, not in Iran itself. No more credibility should
be placed in these denials than in US claims that it has no plans
for attacking Iran. Over the past year, the Bush administration
has boosted its funding for regime change in Iran,
including support for Iranian opposition groups. Moreover, there
are growing signs that Washington is taking an active interest
in exploiting unrest among Irans numerous ethnic minorities
and may be covertly assisting armed groups such as Jundallah.
An article in the latest issue of the Washington Quarterly
entitled Irans ethnic tinderbox noted: According
to exiled Iranian activists reportedly involved in a classified
US research project, the US Department of Defense is presently
examining the depth and nature of ethnic grievances against the
Islamic theocracy. The Pentagon is reportedly especially interested
in whether Iran would be prone to a violent fragmentation along
the same kinds of fault lines that are splitting Iraq and that
helped to tear apart the Soviet Union with the collapse of communism.
Veteran US journalist Seymour Hersh, who has many contacts
in the American intelligence establishment, published several
articles in the New Yorker last year pointing to US activities
inside Iran. In an article last November entitled The Next
Act: Is a damaged Administration less likely to attack Iran, or
more? he wrote:
In the past six months, Israel and the United States
have also been working together with a Kurdish resistance group
known as the Party for Free Life in Kurdistan. The group has been
conducting clandestine cross-border forays into Iran, I was told
by a government consultant with close ties to the Pentagon civilian
leadership, as part of an effort to explore alternative
means of applying pressure on Iran. The Pentagon has established
covert relationships with Kurdish, Azeri and Baluchi tribesmen
and has encouraged their efforts to undermine the regimes
authority in northern and southeastern Iran.
Opposition to Tehran
Various opposition parties and organisations exist among Irans
ethnic minorities that have legitimate grievances about the anti-democratic
methods used not only by the current theocratic Shiite regime,
but by the previous US-backed Shah Reza Pahlavi to suppress dissent.
Such groups not only point to religious, language and ethnic discrimination,
but to economic neglect.
Most Baluchis, for instance, belong to the Sunni Islamic secta
minority in predominantly Shiite Iran. The province of Sistan-Baluchistan
is one of the most economically backward in the country. Large
areas are mountainous or desert, and Iranian security forces have
fought a long-running war to halt smuggling and drug running across
the border with Afghanistan and Pakistan. Unemployment is estimated
to be 30-50 percent, which is high even by Iranian standards,
and poverty is widespread.
Jundallah is a shadowy organisation formed in 2003 and led
by a 23-year-old, Abdulmalak Rigi. Iranian officials allege that
it has links with Al Qaeda but have provided no proof. Even if
true, such a connection does not preclude the groups involvement
with US intelligence, which was responsible for helping to establish
Al Qaeda in the 1980s in its holy war against the Soviet-backed
regime in Afghanistan. Jundallah almost certainly has connections
with armed Baluch separatists fighting in Pakistan.
Over the past year, Jundallah has claimed responsibility for
a series of attacks on Iranian officials and security forces.
In an interview with the British-based Telegraph in January
2006, spokesman Abdul Hameed Reeki boasted that the group had
1,000 trained fighters. While denying any connection with the
US or Pakistani governments, he made a definite appeal for Western
aid. Jundallah fighters, he declared, had the dedication needed
to defeat the Iranian armyparticularly if some help were
to prove forthcoming from the West.
Reekis appeal reflects the venal calculations of sections
of the Baluch elite who, like their counterparts among Irans
Azeri, Kurdish, Arab and other minorities, are considering the
potential benefits of aligning themselves with Washington in a
military conflict with Iran. US support for such layers has the
potential to create an even greater catastrophe than in neighbouring
Iraq, where the American-led invasion has triggered an escalating
sectarian civil war.
In its comment on Wednesdays bombing, Stratfor certainly
considered this latest attack against IRGC guards was likely
carried out by armed Baluch nationalists who have received a boost
in support from Western intelligence agencies. The think
tank, which has close connections to US intelligence and military
circles, went on to point to an escalating covert war being waged
by the US and Israel to destabilise the Iranian regime.
The US-Iranian standoff over Iraq has reached a high
level of intensity. While the hard-line rhetoric and steps toward
negotiations absorb the medias attention, a covert war being
played out between Iran on the one side, and the United States
and Israel on the other, will escalate further. While Israel appears
to be focused on decapitating Irans nuclear program through
targeted assassinations, the United States has likely ramped up
support for Irans variety of oppressed minorities in an
attempt to push the Iranian regime towards a negotiated settlement
over Iraq, Stratfor wrote.
Israels targeting assassinations is a reference
to the suspicious death last month of top Iranian nuclear scientist
Ardeshir Hassanpour. In an article entitled Israeli Covert
Operations in Iran, Stratfor noted that while the official
announcementa week after the scientists deathclaimed
Hassanpour died of overexposure to radiation, the details were
murky. Citing Stratfor sources close to Israeli intelligence,
the article declared that Hassanpour was in fact a Mossad
target and pointed to allegations of Mossads involvement
in the killing of top Iraqi scientists during the 1980s.
While no proof has surfaced of the direct involvement of American
intelligence agencies in the latest bombing in Zahedan, the US
is certainly engaged in inflaming ethnic and political opposition
inside Iran. Stratfor offers the rather benign interpretation
that the purpose of such reckless and illegal activities is simply
to press Tehran to reach a negotiated settlement with the US over
its list of demands. Even if that were the case, the US military
build-up in the Persian Gulf, its propaganda campaign and tightening
economic restrictions against Iranalong with its covert
activities inside the countryall serve to heighten a conflict
that could rapidly spiral out of control.
See Also:
US "diplomacy" on Iran: thuggery
and threats of war
[15 February 2007]
At White House press conference, Bush
escalates war threats against Iran
[15 February 2007]
Stop the US war drive against Iran!
[14 February 2007]
Bush administration concocts a dossier
for war against Iran
[13 February 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |