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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Unanswered questions about the Karbala raid
By Bill Van Auken
6 February 2007
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In its attempt to manufacture a case for military aggression
against Iran, the Bush administration has made wholly unsubstantiated
allegations that Iranian agents were responsible for a January
20 raid conducted on a supposedly secure US facility in the Iraqi
city of Karbala. Five American military personnel were killed
in the raid.
The only rationale given for this charge came from American
officials speaking to the media on condition of anonymity, who
said that the operationcarried out by unidentified individuals
in American uniformswas too sophisticated for
Iraqi opponents of the US occupation to have carried out on their
own.
Why Iran would have an interest in staging such an attack,
and this attack in particular, has never been explained. The five
US soldiers who were killedone of them on the spot and the
four others after being abductedhad been meeting with local
authorities to coordinate security operations for pilgrimsmany
of them Iraniancoming to Karbala for the Shia religious
festival of Ashura.
Moreover, as Juan Cole, professor of Middle Eastern studies
at the University of Michigan, pointed out on his web site, Informed
Comment, whoever carried out the attack dumped the bodies
of the captured Americans as well as the cars used in the raid
in the town of Mahawil, a predominantly Sunni areahardly
a spot likely to be chosen by Iranian-backed Shia militia members.
There has been little new factual reporting on the aftermath
of the raid, aside from remembrances and funerals for the US troops
who were killed. Who carried it out and what their motives were
remain a mystery.
Yet the insinuation of an Iranian connection has been widely
disseminated. The New York Times carried a January 31 article
with the bald headline, Iran May Have Trained Attackers
That Killed 5 American Soldiers, US and Iraqis Say.
Citing unnamed US officials, the Times reported, The
officials said the sophistication of the attack astonished investigators,
who doubt that Iraqis could have carried it out on their ownone
reason a connection to Iran is being closely examined. Officials
cautioned that no firm conclusions had been drawn and did not
reveal any direct evidence of a connection.
One of the officials added that the attacks could be
seen as retribution for three recent American raids in which Iranians
suspected of carrying out attacks on American and Iraqi forces
were detained. In other words, Iranian guilt is deduced
from the raids carried out by US military forces themselves against
Iranian consular officials in Iraq.
Aside from these sensationalist and unfounded charges, the
Times article makes the following interesting observations:
Tying Iran to the deadly attack could be helpful to the
Bush administration, which has been engaged in an escalating war
of words with Iran.
In addition, the Times included this: The unusual nature
of the attack has made it a major topic of discussion in the upper
echelons of the Iraqi government. It has spawned bizarre theories
including the idea that a Western mercenary group was somehow
involved.
What is the basis of this bizarre theory? According
to all accounts of the raid, the dozen or so who carried it out
were waved through checkpoints surrounding the meeting site because
they were traveling in a convoy of SUVs of the type used by American
forces in Iraq, wearing US uniforms and carrying US-style weapons
as well as ID cards. Moreover, they spoke English.
According to the Associated Press, One Iraqi official
said the leader of the assault team was blond.
At this point, no one has provided a credible explanation of
the attack or identified those who carried it out. But the Iraqi
theory reported in the New York Times is certainly no more
bizarre than the claims that Iran was responsible.
In short, if the attackers dressed, acted and looked like Americans
and spoke English, there is always the possibility that they were
indeed Americans.
There are certainly an ample number of Western mercenaries
in Iraq. As the Pentagon revealed last December, there are as
many as 100,000 private government contractors in the country.
Companies like Blackwater USA and DynCorp have thousands of
employeesmany of them former US military personnelunder
arms in Iraq. In a number of instances, government contractors
have been implicated in criminal activity ranging from the torture
of prisoners at Abu Ghraib, to the killing of civilians, to wholesale
embezzlement and graft. They have acted, at least until very recently,
as a law unto themselves, subject to neither Iraqi jurisdiction
nor that of the US military. (See: Civilian
contractors in Iraq placed under US military).
As for a motive, there are any number of possibilities. Reports
of bitter conflicts between uniformed troops and private military
contractorson at least some occasions involving armed violencehave
come out of Iraq. (See: Detention
of US security contractors highlights culture of impunity
in Iraq)
The existence of multi-million-dollar criminally corrupt operations,
such as the one involving the former head of US reconstruction
contracts in the city of Hillah, could certainly generate acts
of murderous violence if anything or anyone threatened to expose
or disrupt them. (See: Iraq
fraud arrests expose criminality of US occupation)
It is also worth noting that the officer killed in the attack,
Capt. Brian Freeman, was known in the military as a vocal opponent
of the war. He had left the US Army in 2004 but was called back
as a member of the Individual Ready Reserve and sent to Iraq as
a civil affairs officer because of the growing shortage of deployable
personnel.
Last December, just a month before he was killed, he took aside
visiting Democratic senators Chris Dodd of Connecticut and John
Kerry of Massachusetts at a Baghdad helicopter-landing zone to
tell them what a disaster the US occupation had become.
But perhaps the most likely potential motive is suggested by
the way in which the attack has been used to accuse Iran of responsibility
for killing US troops.
In this regard, it is useful to recall the startling testimony
delivered last week by former US national security advisor Zbigniew
Brzezinski on the growing danger of a US war against Iran and
what he called a plausible scenario for Washington
launching such military action.
Such a war could begin, Brzezinski warned, with Iraqi
failure to meet the benchmarks, followed by accusations of Iranian
responsibility for the failure, then by some provocation in Iraq
or a terrorist act in the US blamed on Iran, culminating in a
quote/unquote defensive US military action against
Iran . . .
Could the raid in Karbala have been the type of provocation
of which Brzezinski warned?
There is an historical precedent for such staged military actions
being used as the pretext for war. On September 1, 1939, Germanys
Nazi regime used SS troops dressed in Polish uniforms to attack
a German radio station near the border in Upper Silesia. To lend
greater authenticity to this self-assault, concentration camp
inmates were murdered and brought to the scene to provide the
necessary bodies. The provocation paved the way to the defensive
German military invasion of Poland and the outbreak of the Second
World War.
There is no more concrete evidence at this point to substantiate
the case that there was a US source for the Karbala attack than
there is to back up the claim that there was an Iranian one. But
given the record of the Bush administrationthe first major
government to promulgate an international policy of preventive
war since Hitlers Third Reichsuch a scenario
cannot be dismissed out of hand.
See Also:
A political bombshell from Zbigniew Brzezinski:
Ex-national security adviser warns that Bush is seeking a pretext
to attack Iran
[2 February 2007]
Stepped up US preparations for war against
Iran
[1 February 2007]
Iraqs colonial occupier,
the US, denounces foreign meddling
[30 January 2007]
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