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Troop surge paves way for wider war
Bush authorizes shoot-to-kill policy against Iranians in Iraq
By Jerry White
29 January 2007
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The Bush administration has authorized US military forces in
Iraq to hunt down and kill Iranian government personnel operating
in that country, according to a report that first appeared in
the Washington Post last Friday. The newspaper said President
Bush authorized the new kill or capture program last
fall during a meeting with his most senior advisors, which also
resulted in the approval of a series of other measures aimed at
destabilizing the Iranian regime.
The existence of the program was confirmed by Bush Friday.
He told reporters that it just makes sense that if somebody
is trying to harm our troops and stop us from achieving our goal,
or killing innocent citizens in Iraq, that we will stop them.
The White House and the Pentagon have long claimed that Iranian
military and intelligence operatives in Iraq have provided supplies
for roadside bombs and technical assistance for attacks against
US troops. Not a shred of evidence has ever been presented to
substantiate these claims.
The targeting of Iranian citizens has one purpose: to provoke
a military confrontation with Iran. The revelations about the
program follow the bellicose threats against Iran and Syria made
by Bush in his January 10 speech, when he said American military
forces would seek out and destroy the networks providing
advanced weaponry and training to our enemies in Iraq. The
next day, US forces raided the Iranian consulate in the northern
Iraqi city of Irbil, detaining at least five diplomatic employees.
Shortly afterwards the US dispatched an additional aircraft carrier
battle group, armed with nuclear weapons, to Iranian waters in
the Persian Gulf.
These provocations against Iran underscore the fact that Bushs
decision to send 21,500 additional troops to Iraq has nothing
to do with stabilizing the situation in the countrya proposition
that no serious observer considers achievable through such a deployment.
On the contrary, faced with a military and political debacle in
Iraq, the White House intends to extend the war to Iran and its
population of 70 million people.
According to the Post report, for more than a year US
forces in Iraq have secretly detained dozens of Iranians, holding
them for three to four days at a time, while collecting DNA samples
from some without their knowledge and subjecting others to retina
scans and other identification methods before letting them go.
However, starting last August, top administration officialsincluding
deputy national security advisor Elliott Abrams, NSC counterterrorism
adviser Juan Zarate, outgoing State Department counterterrorism
chief Henry Crumpton and several representatives from the vice
presidents office and the Pentagoncalled for the replacement
of the catch and release policy with a much more confrontational
approach.
There were no costs for the Iranians, one senior
administration official told the newspaper. They were hurting
our mission in Iraq, and we were bending over backwards not to
fight back. Another counterterrorism official
added, Our goal is to change the dynamic with the Iranians,
to change the way Iranians perceive us and perceive themselves.
They need to understand that they cannot be a party to endangering
US soldiers lives and American interests, as they have before.
That is going to end.
Under the new policy, US troops have the authority to target
any member of Irans Revolutionary Guard, as well as officers
of its intelligence services believed to be working with Iraqi
militias. While allegedly not targeting diplomats and civilians,
the new order will have the effect of placing a target on any
Iranian found in Iraq. In addition to the hundreds of Iranian
government personnel in Iraq, thousands of Iranian religious pilgrims
visit the Shiite holy cities in southern Iraq each year, along
with many others engaged in trade, including the export of electricity,
refined oil and other products.
Though US forces are not known to have killed any Iranians
yet, the Post reports, Bush administration officials
have been urging top military commanders to exercise the authority.
During interviews with the newspaper two unnamed senior
administration officials, both compared the Tehran government
to the Nazis and the Revolutionary Guard to the SS.
They also referred to the Guard members as terrorists,
a designation that would at the very least subject Iranian personnel
in Iraq to indefinite detention as enemy combatants
in a secret CIA prison.
In comments to the US Congress last week, the new US commander
of military operations in Iraq, Army Lt. Gen. David Petraeus said
a top priority will be countering the threats posed by Iranian
and Syrian meddling in Iraq, and the continued mission of dismantling
terrorist networks and killing or capturing those who refuse to
support a unified, stable Iraq. From the standpoint of White
House and Pentagon, as well as the US media, the devastation wrought
by the US occupation does not constitute meddling
in Iraqs affairs. However, Iranwhich has a long history
of cultural, economic and political ties with its western neighboris
denounced as a foreign influence.
The Post reported that the decision to ratchet up the
anti-Iranian operation coincided with the Israeli invasion of
Lebanon last summer, which failed to defeat the Hezbollah militia
forces. Officials said a group of senior Bush administration
officials who regularly attend the highest-level counterterrorism
meetings agreed the conflict provided an opening to portray Iran
as a nuclear-ambitious link between al-Qaeda, Hezbollah and the
death squads in Iraq.
Like the propaganda campaign during the run-up to the invasion
of Iraq, the vilification of Iran is filled with transparent lies,
including suggestions that Tehran supports al-Qaeda, a Sunni fundamentalist
terror group hostile to Shiite-dominated Iran. Acknowledging the
fabricated character of the administrations charges, a senior
intelligence officer wary of the new strategy told the Post,
This has little to do with Iraq. Its all about pushing
Irans buttons. It is purely political. He went on
to suggest that the US was escalating toward an unnecessary conflict
with Iran to shift attention away from Iraq and blame Iran for
the US failure there.
There are sharp tactical divisions within the US political
establishment over extending the war to Iran and the implications
that such a reckless move would have for the long-term interests
of American imperialism. Within the top echelons of the Bush administration,
however, it is apparent a consensus has emerged that the only
means to salvage the disaster in Iraq is to extend the war.
Although the regime in Tehran assisted the US invasion of Afghanistan
and is aligned with the same Shiite conservatives the US brought
to power in Baghdad, Irans increasing regional influenceparticularly
in the aftermath of the toppling of the Baathist regime of Saddam
Husseinis considered an unacceptable obstacle to US plans
to exert hegemony over the oil-rich Middle East. Because of this
there is considerable support in Washington for a war against
Iranwithin both the Republican and Democratic partiesdespite
the massive opposition of the American people and world public
opinion to such a crime.
Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the Democratic majority leader,
said he backed the kill or capture policy toward Iranians
operating in Iraq. We want the American troops protected
in Iraq, he said in a question-answer session at the Capitol.
Whatever it takes to protect them is something were
certainly interested in. But for the president to escalate this
conflict outside Iraq is something he has to come back and ask
us permission to do.
For some time, leading Democrats have criticized the invasion
of Iraq for diverting US military and financial resources
from the war on terror and squandering public support
for other wars more vital to American interests, including against
Iran. The chief concern, however, is that if the Bush administration
takes unilateral action against Iran it will provoke a massive
political crisis in the US.
See Also:
Iranian president faces mounting internal
opposition
[24 January 2007]
Rices Middle East tour: Arab regimes
back US war drive in Iraq and Iran [19 January 2007]
US forces carry out provocative raid
on Irans consulate in northern Iraq
[12 January 2007]
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