Tehran insider tells of US black ops
By an Asia Times Online Special Correspondent
04/24/06 "Asia
Times" -- --
TEHRAN - A former Iranian ambassador and Islamic Republic
insider has provided intriguing details to Asia Times Online
about US covert operations inside Iran aimed at destabilizing
the country and toppling the regime - or preparing for an
American attack.
"The Iranian government knows and is aware of such infiltration.
It means that the Iranian government has identified them [the
covert operatives] but for some reason does not want to show
[this]," said the former diplomat on condition of anonymity.
Speaking in Tehran, the ex-Foreign Ministry official said the
agents being used by the US "were originally Iranians and not
Americans" possibly recruited in the United States or through US
embassies in Dubai and Ankara. He also warned that such actions
will engender "some reactions".
"Both sides will certainly do something," he said in a reference
to Iran's capability to stir trouble up in neighboring Iraq and
Afghanistan for the occupying US troops there.
Veteran US journalist Seymour Hersh wrote in a much-discussed
recent article in The New Yorker magazine that the
administration of President George W Bush has increased
clandestine activities inside Iran and intensified planning for
a possible major air attack as the crisis with Iran over its
nuclear program escalates.
Hersh wrote that "teams of American combat troops have been
ordered into Iran, under cover, to collect targeting data and to
establish contact with anti-government ethnic-minority groups".
The template seems identical to the period that preceded US air
strikes against the Taliban regime in Afghanistan during which a
covert Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) campaign distributed
millions of dollars to tribal allies.
"The Iranian accusations are true," said Richard Sale,
intelligence correspondent for United Press International,
referring to charges that the US is using the Mujahideen-e Khalq
(MEK) organization and other groups to carry out cross-border
operations. "But it is being done on such a small scale - a
series of pinpricks - it would seem to have no strategic value
at all."
There has been a marked spike in unrest in Kurdistan, Khuzestan
and Balochistan, three of Iran's provinces with a high
concentration of ethnic Kurdish, Arab and Balochi minorities
respectively. With the exception of the immediate
post-revolutionary period, when the Kurds rebelled against the
central government and were suppressed violently, ethnic
minorities have received better treatment, more autonomy and
less ethnic discrimination than under the shah.
"The president hasn't notified the Congress that American troops
are operating inside Iran," said Sam Gardiner, a retired US Army
colonel who specializes in war-game scenarios. "So it's a very
serious question about the constitutional framework under which
we are now conducting military operations in Iran."
Camp Warhorse is the major US military base in the strategic
Iraqi province of Diyala that borders Iran. Last month, Asia
Times Online asked the US official in charge of all overt and
covert operations emanating from there whether the military and
the MEK colluded on an operational level. He denied any such
knowledge.
"They have a gated community up there," came the genial reply.
"Not really guarded - it's more gated. They bake really good
bread," he added, smiling.
But that is contrary to what Hersh was told by his sources,
According to him, US combat troops are already inside Iran and,
in the event of air strikes, would be in position to mark
critical targets with laser beams to ensure bombing accuracy and
excite sectarian tensions between the population and the central
government. As of early winter, Hersh's source claims that the
units were also working with minority groups in Iran, including
the Azeris in the north, the Balochis in the southeast, and the
Kurds in the northwest.
Last week, speaking on the sidelines of a Palestinian solidarity
conference, Major-General Yehyia Rahim Safavi, the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) commander, sent a warning to
the US and British intelligence services he accuses of using
Iraq and Kuwait to infiltrate Iran. "I tell them that their
agents can be our agents too, and they should not waste their
money so casually."
On April 9, Iran claimed to have shot down an unmanned
surveillance plane in the southwestern province of Khuzestan,
according to a report in the semi-official Jumhuri Eslami
newspaper. US media have also reported that the US military has
been secretly flying surveillance drones over Iran since 2004,
using radar, video, still photography and air filters to monitor
Iranian military formations and track Iran's air-defense system.
The US denied having lost a drone.
This new mission for the combat troops is a product of Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's long-standing interest in expanding
the role of the military in covert operations, which was made
official policy in the Pentagon's Quadrennial Defense Review,
published in February. Such activities, if conducted by CIA
operatives, would need a Presidential Finding and would have to
be reported to key members of Congress.
The confirmation that the US is carrying out covert activities
inside Iran makes more sense out of a series of suspicious
events that have occurred along Iran's borders this year. In
early January, a military airplane belonging to Iran's elite
Revolutionary Guards went down close to the Iraqi border. The
plane was carrying 11 of the Guard's top commanders, including
General Ahmad Kazemi, the commander of the IRGC's ground forces,
and Brigadier-General Nabiollah Shahmoradi, who was deputy
commander for intelligence.
Although a spokesman blamed bad weather and dilapidated engines
for the crash, the private intelligence company Stratfor noted
that there are several reasons to suspect foul play, not least
of which was that any aircraft carrying so many of Iran's elite
military luminaries would undergo "thorough tests for technical
issues before flight". Later, Iran's defense minister accused
Britain and the US of bringing the plane down through
"electronic jamming".
"Given all intelligence information that we have gathered, we
can say that agents of the United States, Britain and Israel are
seeking to destabilize Iran through a coordinated plan,"
Minister of Interior Mustafa Pour-Mohammadi said. This sentiment
was echoed on websites such as AmericanIntelligence.us, where
one reader commented, "We couldn't have made a better hit on the
IRGC's leadership if planned ... sure it was just an accident?"
Then, in late January, a previously unknown Sunni Muslim group
called Jundallah (Soldier of Allah) captured nine Iranian
soldiers in the remote badlands of Sistan-Balochistan province
that borders Afghanistan and Pakistan. And in mid-February,
another airplane crashed just inside Iraq after taking off from
Azerbaijan and transiting Iranian airspace. The Iranian Mehr
news agency reported that the "passengers on board were possibly
of Israeli origin". It added that US troops have restricted
access to the site to Iraqi Kurdish officials and that Western
media were reporting the passengers aboard as having been
German.
The Iranian government has not sat idly by and just taken these
breaches of sovereignty. Early this month, an unidentified
source in the Interior Ministry was quoted by the hardline
Kayhan newspaper as saying that the leader and 11 members of the
Jundallah group had been killed by Iranian troops. Then last
Friday, Iranian missile batteries shelled Iranian Kurdish rebel
positions inside Iraqi territory. They were targeting a militant
group called PJAK that seeks more autonomy for Iran's Kurdish
population and has been operating out of Iraq since 1999.
The former Iranian ambassador argues that in the event that US
pressure on Iran continues, "the end of the tunnel" for
President Mahmud Ahmadinejad's administration is "weaponization
of the [nuclear] technology ... and a military strike".
"The Americans are pushing Iran to become a nuclear state. Iran
just wants to be a supplier of nuclear fuel. But [with their
threats] they are pushing it further."
Copyright 2006 Asia Times Online Ltd
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