Prelude to
an Attack on Iran
By Robert Baer
08/19/07 "Time" -- - Reports that the Bush
Administration will put Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps on the terrorism list can be read in one of two ways:
it's either more bluster or, ominously, a wind-up for a
strike on Iran. Officials I talk to in Washington vote for a
hit on the IRGC, maybe within the next six months. And they
think that as long as we have bombers and missiles in the
air, we will hit Iran's nuclear facilities. An awe and shock
campaign, lite, if you will. But frankly they're guessing;
after Iraq the White House trusts no one, especially the
bureaucracy.
As with Saddam and his imagined WMD, the Administration's
case against the IRGC is circumstantial. The U.S. military
suspects but cannot prove that the IRGC is the main supplier
of sophisticated improvised explosive devices to insurgents
killing our forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. The most
sophisticated version, explosive formed projectiles or shape
charges, are capable of penetrating the armor of an Abrams
tank, disabling the tank and killing the crew.
A former CIA explosives expert who still works in Iraq told
me: "The Iranians are making them. End of story." His
argument is only a state is capable of manufacturing the
EFP's, which involves a complicated annealing process.
Incidentally, he also is convinced the IRGC is helping Iraqi
Shia militias sight in their mortars on the Green Zone. "The
way they're dropping them in, in neat grids, tells me all I
need to know that the Shia are getting help. And there's no
doubt it's Iranian, the IRGC's," he said.
A second part of the Administration's case against the IRGC
is that the IRGC has had a long, established history of
killing Americans, starting with the attack on the Marines
in Beirut in 1983. And that's not to mention it was the IRGC
that backed Hizballah in its thirty-four day war against
Israel last year. The feeling in the Administration is that
we should have taken care of the IRGC a long, long time ago.
Strengthening the Administration's case for a strike on
Iran, there's a belief among neo-cons that the IRGC is the
one obstacle to democratic and a friendly Iran. They believe
that if we were to get rid of the IRGC, the clerics would
fall, and our thirty-years war with Iran over. It's another
neo-con delusion, but still it informs White House thinking.
And what do we do if just the opposite happens — a strike on
Iran unifies Iranians behind the regime? An Administration
official told me it's not even a consideration. "IRGC IED's
are a casus belli for this administration. There will be an
attack on Iran."
— Robert Baer, a former CIA field officer assigned to the
Middle East, is TIME.com's intelligence columnist and the
author of See No Evil and, most recently, the novel Blow the
House Down
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