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US general fires a new propaganda salvo against Iran
By Peter Symonds
9 October 2007
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The top US commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus, has raised
the propaganda war against Iran another notch levelling new allegations
that the Quds Force of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corp (IRGC)
was responsible for the deaths of US troops in Iraq. The comments
to journalists last weekend at a military base near the Iranian
border come in the wake of persistent leaks in Washington indicating
that the Bush administration is preparing to use counter-terrorism
as the pretext for air strikes on Iran.
Petraeus provocatively declared that Tehrans ambassador
to Baghdad, Hassan Kazemi Qomi, was a member of the elite Quds
Force, which the Bush administration has been contemplating formally
branding as a terrorist organisation. Petraeus acknowledged
that Kazemi had diplomatic immunity and therefore he is
obviously not subject [to scrutiny], but the generals
remarks lay the basis for US demands for the diplomats expulsion
or other punitive actions.
The US military has over the past year seized a number of Iranian
officials, including credentialled diplomats. Last December US
troops detained at least five Iranians, including two diplomats,
and pressured the Iraqi government to expel them on the basis
of unsubstantiated allegations that they were involved in assisting
Shiite militia in Iraq.
In January, just hours after President Bush declared that the
US would seek out and destroy Iranian networks in
Iraq, US Special Forces broke into an Iranian liaison office in
the northern Iraqi city of Irbil. Five Iranian officials were
detained in the pre-dawn raid. Last month, US soldiers detained
Iranian official Aghai Farhadi, who was part of a delegation holding
trade talks with the Kurdish regional government. Farhadi and
the Irbil Five, who the US alleges are Quds Force members, are
still in custody, despite demands for their release by the Iraqi
government. No charges have been laid.
Last week, Lieutenant General Raymond Odierno, the US operational
commander in Iraq, told the Washington Post that militarily,
we should hold onto them [the Irbil Five]. He did not elaborate
on the military value of holding the Iranian officials. But the
newspaper reported in April that during White House discussions
of their fate Vice President Dick Cheney had insisted the Iranian
officials continue to be held to send a message to Tehran that
its actions are monitoredthat is, to use the
five as hostages.
Petraeuss allegations against Irans ambassador
were part of a barrage of other accusations. He accused the IRGC
of being responsible for providing the weapons, the training,
the funding and in some cases the direction for operations that
have killed US soldiers. The IRGC is an 125,000-strong component
of the Iranian military.
In comments to CNN, Petraeus declared: Theres no
question, absolutely no question that Iran is providing advanced
RPGs [rocket-propelled grenades], RPG 29s. It has provided some
shoulder-fired, Stinger-like, air-defence missiles. It has provided
the explosively formed projectiles [roadside bombs] and it has
provided some 244 mm rockets, in addition to mortars, mortar rounds
and other small arms ammunition.
The general also claimed that the Iranians are implicated
in the assassination of some governors in the southern provinces.
He was particularly dismissive of talks between the US and Iranian
ambassadors in Baghdad, sponsored by the US State Department,
over stabilising the US-led occupation of Iraq. Referring to Iranian
assurances, Petraeus declared: We are very much in the show-me
mode right now.
Petraeuss inflammatory remarks add to the growing deluge
of American propaganda accusing Iran of arming and training anti-US
insurgents in Iraq. US officials now routinely brands any attack
on its forces in Shiite areas as the work of Iranian-backed
militia.
Last Friday, air strikes on a predominantly Shiite village
in Diyala province killed at least 25 people. The US military
claimed that the operation had been targetting a Special
Groups commander believed linked to the Quds Force and that
all the victims were Shiite militiamen. An Iraqi police spokesman
and eyewitnesses told AFP that women and children had been killed
and injured in the attack, which levelled at least four houses.
The US campaign recalls the barrage of lies in 2002 and early
2003 that were used as the casus belli for its illegal
invasion and occupation of Iraq. The Pentagons only attempt
to justify its claims of Iranian interference in Iraq was a dossier
presented in February to a select group of journalists in Baghdad.
Iranian-made rocket propelled grenades, mortar shells and explosively
formed penetrators were put on display as proof that
Tehran was supplying arms. Asked how he knew that the highest
levels of the Iranian government were involved, the unnamed
American official had to admit that his conclusion was just an
inference.
Britain on board
The escalating war of words against Tehran is in line with
a tactical reorientation in the White House. In a detailed article
last week in the New Yorker, investigative journalist Seymour
Hersh explained that the Bush administration had shifted the pretext
for a war on Iran from the threat of Tehrans alleged nuclear
weapons programs to Iranian meddling in Iraq. According
to Hershs sources, military plans for an air war involving
cruise missiles and precision-guided munitions on IRGC training
camps, supply depots and command and control facilities are well-advanced,
and navy warships and aircraft are already in place.
One reason for the shift in targets is the opposition of Russia
and China to a new UN Security Council resolution over Irans
nuclear facilities. Tougher sanctions have been delayed until
the end of November and it is highly unlikely that either of the
veto-holding powers would agree to UN-sanctioned military action
against Iran. By shifting the casus belli for war, the
White House will undoubtedly claim to be acting out of self-defencein
all likelihood in response to an Iranian incidentprovoked
or manufacturedresulting in the death of American troops.
The change in tactics is also bound up with US efforts to secure
support from close allies. Hersh noted that the proposal had received
the most positive reception from the British government,
but had also had expressions of interest from Australia,
Israel and other countries. However, the British-based Telegraph
claimed yesterday that Prime Minister Gordon Brown had not only
considered the plan, but was on board for US air strikes
on Iran.
The Telegraph reported that Brown had ruled out British
support for an attack on Irans nuclear facilities, but was
supportive of an attack on the IRGC. Pentagon officials
have revealed the President Bush won an understanding with Gordon
Brown in July that Britain would support air strikes if they could
be justified as a counter-terrorist operation. Since then discussions
about what Britain might contribute militarily, to combat Iranian
retaliation that would follow US air strikes, have been held between
ministers and officials in the Pentagon and the Ministry of Defence,
the newspaper stated.
Former top CIA official Vincent Cannistraro told the Telegraph
that, according to his sources in the US military and intelligence,
British warplanes would not be directly involved in the initial
assault. The British have to be a major auxiliary to this
plan. Its not just for political reasons: the US doesnt
have a lot of mine clearing capability in the Gulf. The Dutch
and the British do. There will be renewed discussions with British
defence officials about what role Britain would perform in the
naval sphere. If there was a retaliatory response by the Iranians,
they might close the Straits of Hormuz and that would affect the
entire West, he said.
Brown has attempted to play down the leaks. A Downing Street
spokesman told the media: While we wont comment on
the specifics of conversations between the Prime Minister and
the President of the United States, this is not a version of events
we recognise. The Telegraph added, however, that
a source close to Brown said the two men had talked
about Iran in July.
British support for an air war targetting the IRGC coincides
with a marked escalation in the Bush administrations rhetoric
over Irans activities not only in Iraq but also Afghanistan,
where US officials claim Iran is supplying weapons to its former
enemy, the Taliban. Over the past three months, Iran has been
variously accused of supplying Al Qaeda in Iraq and being behind
rocket attacks on US bases. In his report to the Congress last
month, General Petraeus accused Iran of waging a proxy war
against the US in Iraq.
Both the New Yorker and Telegraph articles claim
that Bush has given no execute order as yet. But the
political momentum building up in Washington for a new military
adventure in Iran is unmistakable. The articles also emphasise
the limited character of the proposed air war. Whatever the initial
calculations and plans, however, any attack on Iran has the potential
to rapidly escalate into an all-out war that could spill over
into a major regional conflict. The Bush administrations
main objective is not the destruction of the IRGC or even Irans
nuclear facilities, but the establishment of unchallenged US dominance
over the Middle East and Central Asia.
See Also:
New Yorker article points to advanced
US preparations for war on Iran
[3 October 2007]
Widening rift between major powers over
Iran's nuclear programs
[1 October 2007]
Iranian president speaks at
Columbia University amidst media frenzy
[25 September 2007]
UN General Assembly meets
under shadow of US threats against Iran
[24 September 2007]
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