Preparing
the
Battlefield
The Bush
Administration
steps up its
secret moves
against
Iran.
By
Seymour M.
Hersh
29/06/08 "New
Yorker"
-- -- Late
last year,
Congress
agreed to a
request from
President
Bush to fund
a major
escalation
of covert
operations
against
Iran,
according to
current and
former
military,
intelligence,
and
congressional
sources.
These
operations,
for which
the
President
sought up to
four hundred
million
dollars,
were
described in
a
Presidential
Finding
signed by
Bush, and
are designed
to
destabilize
the
country’s
religious
leadership.
The covert
activities
involve
support of
the minority
Ahwazi Arab
and Baluchi
groups and
other
dissident
organizations.
They also
include
gathering
intelligence
about Iran’s
suspected
nuclear-weapons
program.
Clandestine
operations
against Iran
are not new.
United
States
Special
Operations
Forces have
been
conducting
cross-border
operations
from
southern
Iraq, with
Presidential
authorization,
since last
year. These
have
included
seizing
members of
Al Quds, the
commando arm
of the
Iranian
Revolutionary
Guard, and
taking them
to Iraq for
interrogation,
and the
pursuit of
“high-value
targets” in
the
President’s
war on
terror, who
may be
captured or
killed. But
the scale
and the
scope of the
operations
in Iran,
which
involve the
Central
Intelligence
Agency and
the Joint
Special
Operations
Command (JSOC),
have now
been
significantly
expanded,
according to
the current
and former
officials.
Many of
these
activities
are not
specified in
the new
Finding, and
some
congressional
leaders have
had serious
questions
about their
nature.
Under
federal law,
a
Presidential
Finding,
which is
highly
classified,
must be
issued when
a covert
intelligence
operation
gets under
way and, at
a minimum,
must be made
known to
Democratic
and
Republican
leaders in
the House
and the
Senate and
to the
ranking
members of
their
respective
intelligence
committees—the
so-called
Gang of
Eight. Money
for the
operation
can then be
reprogrammed
from
previous
appropriations,
as needed,
by the
relevant
congressional
committees,
which also
can be
briefed.
“The Finding
was focussed
on
undermining
Iran’s
nuclear
ambitions
and trying
to undermine
the
government
through
regime
change,” a
person
familiar
with its
contents
said, and
involved
“working
with
opposition
groups and
passing
money.” The
Finding
provided for
a whole new
range of
activities
in southern
Iran and in
the areas,
in the east,
where
Baluchi
political
opposition
is strong,
he said.
Although
some
legislators
were
troubled by
aspects of
the Finding,
and “there
was a
significant
amount of
high-level
discussion”
about it,
according to
the source
familiar
with it, the
funding for
the
escalation
was
approved. In
other words,
some members
of the
Democratic
leadership—Congress
has been
under
Democratic
control
since the
2006
elections—were
willing, in
secret, to
go along
with the
Administration
in expanding
covert
activities
directed at
Iran, while
the Party’s
presumptive
candidate
for
President,
Barack Obama,
has said
that he
favors
direct talks
and
diplomacy.
The request
for funding
came in the
same period
in which the
Administration
was coming
to terms
with a
National
Intelligence
Estimate,
released in
December,
that
concluded
that Iran
had halted
its work on
nuclear
weapons in
2003. The
Administration
downplayed
the
significance
of the N.I.E.,
and, while
saying that
it was
committed to
diplomacy,
continued to
emphasize
that urgent
action was
essential to
counter the
Iranian
nuclear
threat.
President
Bush
questioned
the N.I.E.’s
conclusions,
and senior
national-security
officials,
including
Secretary of
Defense
Robert Gates
and
Secretary of
State
Condoleezza
Rice, made
similar
statements.
(So did
Senator John
McCain, the
presumptive
Republican
Presidential
nominee.)
Meanwhile,
the
Administration
also revived
charges that
the Iranian
leadership
has been
involved in
the killing
of American
soldiers in
Iraq: both
directly, by
dispatching
commando
units into
Iraq, and
indirectly,
by supplying
materials
used for
roadside
bombs and
other lethal
goods.
(There have
been
questions
about the
accuracy of
the claims;
the Times,
among
others, has
reported
that
“significant
uncertainties
remain about
the extent
of that
involvement.”)
Military and
civilian
leaders in
the Pentagon
share the
White
House’s
concern
about Iran’s
nuclear
ambitions,
but there is
disagreement
about
whether a
military
strike is
the right
solution.
Some
Pentagon
officials
believe, as
they have
let Congress
and the
media know,
that bombing
Iran is not
a viable
response to
the
nuclear-proliferation
issue, and
that more
diplomacy is
necessary.
A Democratic
senator told
me that,
late last
year, in an
off-the-record
lunch
meeting,
Secretary of
Defense
Gates met
with the
Democratic
caucus in
the Senate.
(Such
meetings are
held
regularly.)
Gates warned
of the
consequences
if the Bush
Administration
staged a
preëmptive
strike on
Iran,
saying, as
the senator
recalled,
“We’ll
create
generations
of jihadists,
and our
grandchildren
will be
battling our
enemies here
in America.”
Gates’s
comments
stunned the
Democrats at
the lunch,
and another
senator
asked
whether
Gates was
speaking for
Bush and
Vice-President
Dick Cheney.
Gates’s
answer, the
senator told
me, was
“Let’s just
say that I’m
here
speaking for
myself.” (A
spokesman
for Gates
confirmed
that he
discussed
the
consequences
of a strike
at the
meeting, but
would not
address what
he said,
other than
to dispute
the
senator’s
characterization.)
The Joint
Chiefs of
Staff, whose
chairman is
Admiral Mike
Mullen, were
“pushing
back very
hard”
against
White House
pressure to
undertake a
military
strike
against
Iran, the
person
familiar
with the
Finding told
me.
Similarly, a
Pentagon
consultant
who is
involved in
the war on
terror said
that “at
least ten
senior flag
and general
officers,
including
combatant
commanders”—the
four-star
officers who
direct
military
operations
around the
world—“have
weighed in
on that
issue.”
The most
outspoken of
those
officers is
Admiral
William
Fallon, who
until
recently was
the head of
U.S. Central
Command, and
thus in
charge of
American
forces in
Iraq and
Afghanistan.
In March,
Fallon
resigned
under
pressure,
after giving
a series of
interviews
stating his
reservations
about an
armed attack
on Iran. For
example,
late last
year he told
the
Financial
Times that
the “real
objective”
of U.S.
policy was
to change
the
Iranians’
behavior,
and that
“attacking
them as a
means to get
to that spot
strikes me
as being not
the first
choice.”
Admiral
Fallon
acknowledged,
when I spoke
to him in
June, that
he had heard
that there
were people
in the White
House who
were upset
by his
public
statements.
“Too many
people
believe you
have to be
either for
or against
the
Iranians,”
he told me.
“Let’s get
serious.
Eighty
million
people live
there, and
everyone’s
an
individual.
The idea
that they’re
only one way
or another
is
nonsense.”
When it came
to the Iraq
war, Fallon
said, “Did I
bitch about
some of the
things that
were being
proposed?
You bet.
Some of them
were very
stupid.”
The
Democratic
leadership’s
agreement to
commit
hundreds of
millions of
dollars for
more secret
operations
in Iran was
remarkable,
given the
general
concerns of
officials
like Gates,
Fallon, and
many others.
“The
oversight
process has
not kept
pace—it’s
been coöpted”
by the
Administration,
the person
familiar
with the
contents of
the Finding
said. “The
process is
broken, and
this is
dangerous
stuff we’re
authorizing.”
Senior
Democrats in
Congress
told me that
they had
concerns
about the
possibility
that their
understanding
of what the
new
operations
entail
differs from
the White
House’s. One
issue has to
do with a
reference in
the Finding,
the person
familiar
with it
recalled, to
potential
defensive
lethal
action by
U.S.
operatives
in Iran. (In
early May,
the
journalist
Andrew
Cockburn
published
elements of
the Finding
in
Counterpunch,
a newsletter
and online
magazine.)
The language
was inserted
into the
Finding at
the urging
of the C.I.A.,
a former
senior
intelligence
official
said. The
covert
operations
set forth in
the Finding
essentially
run parallel
to those of
a secret
military
task force,
now
operating in
Iran, that
is under the
control of
JSOC. Under
the Bush
Administration’s
interpretation
of the law,
clandestine
military
activities,
unlike
covert C.I.A.
operations,
do not need
to be
depicted in
a Finding,
because the
President
has a
constitutional
right to
command
combat
forces in
the field
without
congressional
interference.
But the
borders
between
operations
are not
always
clear: in
Iran, C.I.A.
agents and
regional
assets have
the language
skills and
the local
knowledge to
make
contacts for
the JSOC
operatives,
and have
been working
with them to
direct
personnel,
matériel,
and money
into Iran
from an
obscure base
in western
Afghanistan.
As a result,
Congress has
been given
only a
partial view
of how the
money it
authorized
may be used.
One of
JSOC’s
task-force
missions,
the pursuit
of
“high-value
targets,”
was not
directly
addressed in
the Finding.
There is a
growing
realization
among some
legislators
that the
Bush
Administration,
in recent
years, has
conflated
what is an
intelligence
operation
and what is
a military
one in order
to avoid
fully
informing
Congress
about what
it is doing.
“This is a
big deal,”
the person
familiar
with the
Finding
said. “The
C.I.A.
needed the
Finding to
do its
traditional
stuff, but
the Finding
does not
apply to
JSOC. The
President
signed an
Executive
Order after
September
11th giving
the Pentagon
license to
do things
that it had
never been
able to do
before
without
notifying
Congress.
The claim
was that the
military was
‘preparing
the battle
space,’ and
by using
that term
they were
able to
circumvent
congressional
oversight.
Everything
is justified
in terms of
fighting the
global war
on terror.”
He added,
“The
Administration
has been
fuzzing the
lines; there
used to be a
shade of
gray”—between
operations
that had to
be briefed
to the
senior
congressional
leadership
and those
which did
not—“but now
it’s a shade
of mush.”
“The agency
says we’re
not going to
get in the
position of
helping to
kill people
without a
Finding,”
the former
senior
intelligence
official
told me. He
was
referring to
the legal
threat
confronting
some agency
operatives
for their
involvement
in the
rendition
and alleged
torture of
suspects in
the war on
terror.
“This drove
the military
people up
the wall,”
he said. As
far as the
C.I.A. was
concerned,
the former
senior
intelligence
official
said, “the
over-all
authorization
includes
killing, but
it’s not as
though
that’s what
they’re
setting out
to do. It’s
about
gathering
information,
enlisting
support.”
The Finding
sent to
Congress was
a
compromise,
providing
legal cover
for the
C.I.A. while
referring to
the use of
lethal force
in ambiguous
terms.
The
defensive-lethal
language led
some
Democrats,
according to
congressional
sources
familiar
with their
views, to
call in the
director of
the C.I.A.,
Air Force
General
Michael V.
Hayden, for
a special
briefing.
Hayden
reassured
the
legislators
that the
language did
nothing more
than provide
authority
for Special
Forces
operatives
on the
ground in
Iran to
shoot their
way out if
they faced
capture or
harm.
The
legislators
were far
from
convinced.
One
congressman
subsequently
wrote a
personal
letter to
President
Bush
insisting
that “no
lethal
action,
period” had
been
authorized
within
Iran’s
borders. As
of June, he
had received
no answer.
Members of
Congress
have
expressed
skepticism
in the past
about the
information
provided by
the White
House. On
March 15,
2005, David
Obey, then
the ranking
Democrat on
the
Republican-led
House
Appropriations
Committee,
announced
that he was
putting
aside an
amendment
that he had
intended to
offer that
day, and
that would
have cut off
all funding
for
national-intelligence
programs
unless the
President
agreed to
keep
Congress
fully
informed
about
clandestine
military
activities
undertaken
in the war
on terror.
He had
changed his
mind, he
said,
because the
White House
promised
better
coöperation.
“The
Executive
Branch
understands
that we are
not trying
to dictate
what they
do,” he said
in a floor
speech at
the time.
“We are
simply
trying to
see to it
that what
they do is
consistent
with
American
values and
will not get
the country
in trouble.”
Obey
declined to
comment on
the
specifics of
the
operations
in Iran, but
he did tell
me that the
White House
reneged on
its promise
to consult
more fully
with
Congress. He
said, “I
suspect
there’s
something
going on,
but I don’t
know what to
believe.
Cheney has
always
wanted to go
after Iran,
and if he
had more
time he’d
find a way
to do it. We
still don’t
get enough
information
from the
agencies,
and I have
very little
confidence
that they
give us
information
on the
edge.”
None of the
four
Democrats in
the Gang of
Eight—Senate
Majority
Leader Harry
Reid, House
Speaker
Nancy
Pelosi,
Senate
Intelligence
Committee
chairman
John D.
Rockefeller
IV, and
House
Intelligence
Committee
chairman
Silvestre
Reyes—would
comment on
the Finding,
with some
noting that
it was
highly
classified.
An aide to
one member
of the
Democratic
leadership
responded,
on his
behalf, by
pointing to
the
limitations
of the Gang
of Eight
process. The
notification
of a
Finding, the
aide said,
“is just
that—notification,
and not a
sign-off on
activities.
Proper
oversight of
ongoing
intelligence
activities
is done by
fully
briefing the
members of
the
intelligence
committee.”
However,
Congress
does have
the means to
challenge
the White
House once
it has been
sent a
Finding. It
has the
power to
withhold
funding for
any
government
operation.
The members
of the House
and Senate
Democratic
leadership
who have
access to
the Finding
can also, if
they choose
to do so,
and if they
have shared
concerns,
come up with
ways to
exert their
influence on
Administration
policy. (A
spokesman
for the
C.I.A. said,
“As a rule,
we don’t
comment one
way or the
other on
allegations
of covert
activities
or purported
findings.”
The White
House also
declined to
comment.)
A member of
the House
Appropriations
Committee
acknowledged
that, even
with a
Democratic
victory in
November,
“it will
take another
year before
we get the
intelligence
activities
under
control.” He
went on, “We
control the
money and
they can’t
do anything
without the
money. Money
is what it’s
all about.
But I’m very
leery of
this
Administration.”
He added,
“This
Administration
has been so
secretive.”
One irony of
Admiral
Fallon’s
departure is
that he was,
in many
areas, in
agreement
with
President
Bush on the
threat posed
by Iran.
They had a
good working
relationship,
Fallon told
me, and,
when he ran
CENTCOM,
were in
regular
communication.
On March
4th, a week
before his
resignation,
Fallon
testified
before the
Senate Armed
Services
Committee,
saying that
he was
“encouraged”
about the
situations
in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Regarding
the role
played by
Iran’s
leaders, he
said,
“They’ve
been
absolutely
unhelpful,
very
damaging,
and I
absolutely
don’t
condone any
of their
activities.
And I have
yet to see
anything
since I’ve
been in this
job in the
way of a
public
action by
Iran that’s
been at all
helpful in
this
region.”
Fallon made
it clear in
our
conversations
that he
considered
it
inappropriate
to comment
publicly
about the
President,
the
Vice-President,
or Special
Operations.
But he said
he had heard
that people
in the White
House had
been
“struggling”
with his
views on
Iran. “When
I arrived at
CENTCOM, the
Iranians
were funding
every entity
inside Iraq.
It was in
their
interest to
get us out,
and so they
decided to
kill as many
Americans as
they could.
And why not?
They didn’t
know who’d
come out
ahead, but
they wanted
us out. I
decided that
I couldn’t
resolve the
situation in
Iraq without
the
neighborhood.
To get this
problem in
Iraq solved,
we had to
somehow
involve Iran
and Syria. I
had to work
the
neighborhood.”
Fallon told
me that his
focus had
been not on
the Iranian
nuclear
issue, or on
regime
change
there, but
on “putting
out the
fires in
Iraq.” There
were
constant
discussions
in
Washington
and in the
field about
how to
engage Iran
and, on the
subject of
the bombing
option,
Fallon said,
he believed
that “it
would happen
only if the
Iranians did
something
stupid.”
Fallon’s
early
retirement,
however,
appears to
have been
provoked not
only by his
negative
comments
about
bombing Iran
but also by
his strong
belief in
the chain of
command and
his
insistence
on being
informed
about
Special
Operations
in his area
of
responsibility.
One of
Fallon’s
defenders is
retired
Marine
General John
J. (Jack)
Sheehan,
whose last
assignment
was as
commander-in-chief
of the U.S.
Atlantic
Command,
where Fallon
was a
deputy. Last
year,
Sheehan
rejected a
White House
offer to
become the
President’s
“czar” for
the wars in
Iraq and
Afghanistan.
“One of the
reasons the
White House
selected
Fallon for
CENTCOM was
that he’s
known to be
a strategic
thinker and
had
demonstrated
those skills
in the
Pacific,”
Sheehan told
me. (Fallon
served as
commander-in-chief
of U.S.
forces in
the Pacific
from 2005 to
2007.) “He
was charged
with coming
up with an
over-all
coherent
strategy for
Iran, Iraq,
and
Afghanistan,
and, by law,
the
combatant
commander is
responsible
for all
military
operations
within his
A.O.”—area
of
operations.
“That was
not
happening,”
Sheehan
said. “When
Fallon tried
to make
sense of all
the overt
and covert
activity
conducted by
the military
in his area
of
responsibility,
a small
group in the
White House
leadership
shut him
out.”
The law
cited by
Sheehan is
the 1986
Defense
Reorganization
Act, known
as
Goldwater-Nichols,
which
defined the
chain of
command:
from the
President to
the
Secretary of
Defense,
through the
chairman of
the Joint
Chiefs of
Staff, and
on to the
various
combatant
commanders,
who were put
in charge of
all aspects
of military
operations,
including
joint
training and
logistics.
That
authority,
the act
stated, was
not to be
shared with
other
echelons of
command. But
the Bush
Administration,
as part of
its global
war on
terror,
instituted
new policies
that
undercut
regional
commanders-in-chief;
for example,
it gave
Special
Operations
teams, at
military
commands
around the
world, the
highest
priority in
terms of
securing
support and
equipment.
The
degradation
of the
traditional
chain of
command in
the past few
years has
been a point
of tension
between the
White House
and the
uniformed
military.
“The
coherence of
military
strategy is
being eroded
because of
undue
civilian
influence
and
direction of
nonconventional
military
operations,”
Sheehan
said. “If
you have
small groups
planning and
conducting
military
operations
outside the
knowledge
and control
of the
combatant
commander,
by default
you can’t
have a
coherent
military
strategy.
You end up
with a
disaster,
like the
reconstruction
efforts in
Iraq.”
Admiral
Fallon, who
is known as
Fox, was
aware that
he would
face special
difficulties
as the first
Navy officer
to lead
CENTCOM,
which had
always been
headed by a
ground
commander,
one of his
military
colleagues
told me. He
was also
aware that
the Special
Operations
community
would be a
concern.
“Fox said
that there’s
a lot of
strange
stuff going
on in
Special Ops,
and I told
him he had
to figure
out what
they were
really
doing,”
Fallon’s
colleague
said. “The
Special Ops
guys
eventually
figured out
they needed
Fox, and so
they began
to talk to
him. Fox
would have
won his
fight with
Special Ops
but for
Cheney.”
The Pentagon
consultant
said,
“Fallon went
down
because, in
his own way,
he was
trying to
prevent a
war with
Iran, and
you have to
admire him
for that.”
In recent
months,
according to
the Iranian
media, there
has been a
surge in
violence in
Iran; it is
impossible
at this
early stage,
however, to
credit JSOC
or C.I.A.
activities,
or to assess
their impact
on the
Iranian
leadership.
The Iranian
press
reports are
being
carefully
monitored by
retired Air
Force
Colonel Sam
Gardiner,
who has
taught
strategy at
the National
War College
and now
conducts war
games
centered on
Iran for the
federal
government,
think tanks,
and
universities.
The Iranian
press “is
very open in
describing
the killings
going on
inside the
country,”
Gardiner
said. It is,
he said, “a
controlled
press, which
makes it
more
important
that it
publishes
these
things. We
begin to see
inside the
government.”
He added,
“Hardly a
day goes by
now we don’t
see a clash
somewhere.
There were
three or
four
incidents
over a
recent
weekend, and
the Iranians
are even
naming the
Revolutionary
Guard
officers who
have been
killed.”
Earlier this
year, a
militant
Ahwazi group
claimed to
have
assassinated
a
Revolutionary
Guard
colonel, and
the Iranian
government
acknowledged
that an
explosion in
a cultural
center in
Shiraz, in
the southern
part of the
country,
which killed
at least
twelve
people and
injured more
than two
hundred, had
been a
terrorist
act and not,
as it
earlier
insisted, an
accident. It
could not be
learned
whether
there has
been
American
involvement
in any
specific
incident in
Iran, but,
according to
Gardiner,
the Iranians
have begun
publicly
blaming the
U.S., Great
Britain,
and, more
recently,
the C.I.A.
for some
incidents.
The agency
was involved
in a coup in
Iran in
1953, and
its support
for the
unpopular
regime of
Shah
Mohammed
Reza
Pahlavi—who
was
overthrown
in 1979—was
condemned
for years by
the ruling
mullahs in
Tehran, to
great
effect.
“This is the
ultimate for
the
Iranians—to
blame the
C.I.A.,”
Gardiner
said. “This
is new, and
it’s an
escalation—a
ratcheting
up of
tensions. It
rallies
support for
the regime
and shows
the people
that there
is a
continuing
threat from
the ‘Great
Satan.’ ” In
Gardiner’s
view, the
violence,
rather than
weakening
Iran’s
religious
government,
may generate
support for
it.
Many of the
activities
may be being
carried out
by
dissidents
in Iran, and
not by
Americans in
the field.
One problem
with
“passing
money” (to
use the term
of the
person
familiar
with the
Finding) in
a covert
setting is
that it is
hard to
control
where the
money goes
and whom it
benefits.
Nonetheless,
the former
senior
intelligence
official
said, “We’ve
got
exposure,
because of
the transfer
of our
weapons and
our
communications
gear. The
Iranians
will be able
to make the
argument
that the
opposition
was inspired
by the
Americans.
How many
times have
we tried
this without
asking the
right
questions?
Is the risk
worth it?”
One possible
consequence
of these
operations
would be a
violent
Iranian
crackdown on
one of the
dissident
groups,
which could
give the
Bush
Administration
a reason to
intervene.
A strategy
of using
ethnic
minorities
to undermine
Iran is
flawed,
according to
Vali Nasr,
who teaches
international
politics at
Tufts
University
and is also
a senior
fellow at
the Council
on Foreign
Relations.
“Just
because
Lebanon,
Iraq, and
Pakistan
have ethnic
problems, it
does not
mean that
Iran is
suffering
from the
same issue,”
Nasr told
me. “Iran is
an old
country—like
France and
Germany—and
its citizens
are just as
nationalistic.
The U.S. is
overestimating
ethnic
tension in
Iran.” The
minority
groups that
the U.S. is
reaching out
to are
either well
integrated
or small and
marginal,
without much
influence on
the
government
or much
ability to
present a
political
challenge,
Nasr said.
“You can
always find
some
activist
groups that
will go and
kill a
policeman,
but working
with the
minorities
will
backfire,
and alienate
the majority
of the
population.”
The
Administration
may have
been willing
to rely on
dissident
organizations
in Iran even
when there
was reason
to believe
that the
groups had
operated
against
American
interests in
the past.
The use of
Baluchi
elements,
for example,
is
problematic,
Robert Baer,
a former
C.I.A.
clandestine
officer who
worked for
nearly two
decades in
South Asia
and the
Middle East,
told me.
“The
Baluchis are
Sunni
fundamentalists
who hate the
regime in
Tehran, but
you can also
describe
them as Al
Qaeda,” Baer
told me.
“These are
guys who cut
off the
heads of
nonbelievers—in
this case,
it’s Shiite
Iranians.
The irony is
that we’re
once again
working with
Sunni
fundamentalists,
just as we
did in
Afghanistan
in the
nineteen-eighties.”
Ramzi Yousef,
who was
convicted
for his role
in the 1993
bombing of
the World
Trade
Center, and
Khalid
Sheikh
Mohammed,
who is
considered
one of the
leading
planners of
the
September
11th
attacks, are
Baluchi
Sunni
fundamentalists.
One of the
most active
and violent
anti-regime
groups in
Iran today
is the
Jundallah,
also known
as the
Iranian
People’s
Resistance
Movement,
which
describes
itself as a
resistance
force
fighting for
the rights
of Sunnis in
Iran. “This
is a vicious
Salafi
organization
whose
followers
attended the
same
madrassas as
the Taliban
and
Pakistani
extremists,”
Nasr told
me. “They
are
suspected of
having links
to Al Qaeda
and they are
also thought
to be tied
to the drug
culture.”
The
Jundallah
took
responsibility
for the
bombing of a
busload of
Revolutionary
Guard
soldiers in
February,
2007. At
least eleven
Guard
members were
killed.
According to
Baer and to
press
reports, the
Jundallah is
among the
groups in
Iran that
are
benefitting
from U.S.
support.
The C.I.A.
and Special
Operations
communities
also have
long-standing
ties to two
other
dissident
groups in
Iran: the
Mujahideen-e-Khalq,
known in the
West as the
M.E.K., and
a Kurdish
separatist
group, the
Party for a
Free Life in
Kurdistan,
or PJAK.
The M.E.K.
has been on
the State
Department’s
terrorist
list for
more than a
decade, yet
in recent
years the
group has
received
arms and
intelligence,
directly or
indirectly,
from the
United
States. Some
of the newly
authorized
covert
funds, the
Pentagon
consultant
told me, may
well end up
in M.E.K.
coffers.
“The new
task force
will work
with the
M.E.K. The
Administration
is desperate
for
results.” He
added, “The
M.E.K. has
no C.P.A.
auditing the
books, and
its leaders
are thought
to have been
lining their
pockets for
years. If
people only
knew what
the M.E.K.
is getting,
and how much
is going to
its bank
accounts—and
yet it is
almost
useless for
the purposes
the
Administration
intends.”
The Kurdish
party, PJAK,
which has
also been
reported to
be covertly
supported by
the United
States, has
been
operating
against Iran
from bases
in northern
Iraq for at
least three
years.
(Iran, like
Iraq and
Turkey, has
a Kurdish
minority,
and PJAK and
other groups
have sought
self-rule in
territory
that is now
part of each
of those
countries.)
In recent
weeks,
according to
Sam
Gardiner,
the military
strategist,
there has
been a
marked
increase in
the number
of PJAK
armed
engagements
with
Iranians and
terrorist
attacks on
Iranian
targets. In
early June,
the news
agency Fars
reported
that a dozen
PJAK members
and four
Iranian
border
guards were
killed in a
clash near
the Iraq
border; a
similar
attack in
May killed
three
Revolutionary
Guards and
nine PJAK
fighters.
PJAK has
also
subjected
Turkey, a
member of
NATO, to
repeated
terrorist
attacks, and
reports of
American
support for
the group
have been a
source of
friction
between the
two
governments.
Gardiner
also
mentioned a
trip that
the Iraqi
Prime
Minister,
Nouri al-Maliki,
made to
Tehran in
June. After
his return,
Maliki
announced
that his
government
would ban
any contact
between
foreigners
and the
M.E.K.—a
slap at the
U.S.’s
dealings
with the
group.
Maliki
declared
that Iraq
was not
willing to
be a staging
ground for
covert
operations
against
other
countries.
This was a
sign,
Gardiner
said, of
“Maliki’s
increasingly
choosing the
interests of
Iraq over
the
interests of
the United
States.” In
terms of
U.S.
allegations
of Iranian
involvement
in the
killing of
American
soldiers, he
said,
“Maliki was
unwilling to
play the
blame-Iran
game.”
Gardiner
added that
Pakistan had
just agreed
to turn over
a Jundallah
leader to
the Iranian
government.
America’s
covert
operations,
he said,
“seem to be
harming
relations
with the
governments
of both Iraq
and Pakistan
and could
well be
strengthening
the
connection
between
Tehran and
Baghdad.”
The White
House’s
reliance on
questionable
operatives,
and on plans
involving
possible
lethal
action
inside Iran,
has created
anger as
well as
anxiety
within the
Special
Operations
and
intelligence
communities.
JSOC’s
operations
in Iran are
believed to
be modelled
on a program
that has,
with some
success,
used
surrogates
to target
the Taliban
leadership
in the
tribal
territories
of
Waziristan,
along the
Pakistan-Afghanistan
border. But
the
situations
in
Waziristan
and Iran are
not
comparable.
In
Waziristan,
“the program
works
because it’s
small and
smart guys
are running
it,” the
former
senior
intelligence
official
told me.
“It’s being
executed by
professionals.
The N.S.A.,
the C.I.A.,
and the
D.I.A.”—the
Defense
Intelligence
Agency—“are
right in
there with
the Special
Forces and
Pakistani
intelligence,
and they’re
dealing with
serious bad
guys.” He
added, “We
have to be
really
careful in
calling in
the
missiles. We
have to hit
certain
houses at
certain
times. The
people on
the ground
are watching
through
binoculars a
few hundred
yards away
and calling
specific
locations,
in latitude
and
longitude.
We keep the
Predator
loitering
until the
targets go
into a
house, and
we have to
make sure
our guys are
far enough
away so they
don’t get
hit.” One of
the most
prominent
victims of
the program,
the former
official
said, was
Abu Laith
al-Libi, a
senior
Taliban
commander,
who was
killed on
January
31st,
reportedly
in a missile
strike that
also killed
eleven other
people.
A dispatch
published on
March 26th
by the
Washington
Post
reported on
the
increasing
number of
successful
strikes
against
Taliban and
other
insurgent
units in
Pakistan’s
tribal
areas. A
follow-up
article
noted that,
in response,
the Taliban
had killed
“dozens of
people”
suspected of
providing
information
to the
United
States and
its allies
on the
whereabouts
of Taliban
leaders.
Many of the
victims were
thought to
be American
spies, and
their
executions—a
beheading,
in one
case—were
videotaped
and
distributed
by DVD as a
warning to
others.
It is not
simple to
replicate
the program
in Iran.
“Everybody’s
arguing
about the
high-value-target
list,” the
former
senior
intelligence
official
said. “The
Special Ops
guys are
pissed off
because
Cheney’s
office set
up
priorities
for
categories
of targets,
and now he’s
getting
impatient
and applying
pressure for
results. But
it takes a
long time to
get the
right guys
in place.”
The Pentagon
consultant
told me,
“We’ve had
wonderful
results in
the Horn of
Africa with
the use of
surrogates
and false
flags—basic
counterintelligence
and
counter-insurgency
tactics. And
we’re
beginning to
tie them in
knots in
Afghanistan.
But the
White House
is going to
kill the
program if
they use it
to go after
Iran. It’s
one thing to
engage in
selective
strikes and
assassinations
in
Waziristan
and another
in Iran. The
White House
believes
that one
size fits
all, but the
legal issues
surrounding
extrajudicial
killings in
Waziristan
are less of
a problem
because Al
Qaeda and
the Taliban
cross the
border into
Afghanistan
and back
again, often
with U.S.
and NATO
forces in
hot pursuit.
The
situation is
not nearly
as clear in
the Iranian
case. All
the
considerations—judicial,
strategic,
and
political—are
different in
Iran.”
He added,
“There is
huge
opposition
inside the
intelligence
community to
the idea of
waging a
covert war
inside Iran,
and using
Baluchis and
Ahwazis as
surrogates.
The leaders
of our
Special
Operations
community
all have
remarkable
physical
courage, but
they are
less likely
to voice
their
opposition
to policy.
Iran is not
Waziristan.”
A Gallup
poll taken
last
November,
before the
N.I.E. was
made public,
found that
seventy-three
per cent of
those
surveyed
thought that
the United
States
should use
economic
action and
diplomacy to
stop Iran’s
nuclear
program,
while only
eighteen per
cent favored
direct
military
action.
Republicans
were twice
as likely as
Democrats to
endorse a
military
strike.
Weariness
with the war
in Iraq has
undoubtedly
affected the
public’s
tolerance
for an
attack on
Iran. This
mood could
change
quickly,
however. The
potential
for
escalation
became clear
in early
January,
when five
Iranian
patrol
boats,
believed to
be under the
command of
the
Revolutionary
Guard, made
a series of
aggressive
moves toward
three Navy
warships
sailing
through the
Strait of
Hormuz.
Initial
reports of
the incident
made public
by the
Pentagon
press office
said that
the Iranians
had
transmitted
threats,
over
ship-to-ship
radio, to
“explode”
the American
ships. At a
White House
news
conference,
the
President,
on the day
he left for
an eight-day
trip to the
Middle East,
called the
incident
“provocative”
and
“dangerous,”
and there
was, very
briefly, a
sense of
crisis and
of outrage
at Iran.
“TWO MINUTES
FROM WAR”
was the
headline in
one British
newspaper.
The crisis
was quickly
defused by
Vice-Admiral
Kevin
Cosgriff,
the
commander of
U.S. naval
forces in
the region.
No warning
shots were
fired, the
Admiral told
the Pentagon
press corps
on January
7th, via
teleconference
from his
headquarters,
in Bahrain.
“Yes, it’s
more serious
than we have
seen, but,
to put it in
context, we
do interact
with the
Iranian
Revolutionary
Guard and
their Navy
regularly,”
Cosgriff
said. “I
didn’t get
the sense
from the
reports I
was
receiving
that there
was a sense
of being
afraid of
these five
boats.”
Admiral
Cosgriff’s
caution was
well
founded:
within a
week, the
Pentagon
acknowledged
that it
could not
positively
identify the
Iranian
boats as the
source of
the ominous
radio
transmission,
and press
reports
suggested
that it had
instead come
from a
prankster
long known
for sending
fake
messages in
the region.
Nonetheless,
Cosgriff’s
demeanor
angered
Cheney,
according to
the former
senior
intelligence
official.
But a lesson
was learned
in the
incident:
The public
had
supported
the idea of
retaliation,
and was even
asking why
the U.S.
didn’t do
more. The
former
official
said that, a
few weeks
later, a
meeting took
place in the
Vice-President’s
office. “The
subject was
how to
create a
casus belli
between
Tehran and
Washington,”
he said.
In June,
President
Bush went on
a farewell
tour of
Europe. He
had tea with
Queen
Elizabeth II
and dinner
with Nicolas
Sarkozy and
Carla Bruni,
the
President
and First
Lady of
France. The
serious
business was
conducted
out of
sight, and
involved a
series of
meetings on
a new
diplomatic
effort to
persuade the
Iranians to
halt their
uranium-enrichment
program.
(Iran argues
that its
enrichment
program is
for civilian
purposes and
is legal
under the
Nuclear
Non-Proliferation
Treaty.)
Secretary of
State Rice
had been
involved
with
developing a
new package
of
incentives.
But the
Administration’s
essential
negotiating
position
seemed
unchanged:
talks could
not take
place until
Iran halted
the program.
The Iranians
have
repeatedly
and
categorically
rejected
that
precondition,
leaving the
diplomatic
situation in
a stalemate;
they have
not yet
formally
responded to
the new
incentives.
The
continuing
impasse
alarms many
observers.
Joschka
Fischer, the
former
German
Foreign
Minister,
recently
wrote in a
syndicated
column that
it may not
“be possible
to freeze
the Iranian
nuclear
program for
the duration
of the
negotiations
to avoid a
military
confrontation
before they
are
completed.
Should this
newest
attempt
fail, things
will soon
get serious.
Deadly
serious.”
When I spoke
to him last
week,
Fischer, who
has
extensive
contacts in
the
diplomatic
community,
said that
the latest
European
approach
includes a
new element:
the
willingness
of the U.S.
and the
Europeans to
accept
something
less than a
complete
cessation of
enrichment
as an
intermediate
step. “The
proposal
says that
the Iranians
must stop
manufacturing
new
centrifuges
and the
other side
will stop
all further
sanction
activities
in the U.N.
Security
Council,”
Fischer
said,
although
Iran would
still have
to freeze
its
enrichment
activities
when formal
negotiations
begin. “This
could be
acceptable
to the
Iranians—if
they have
good will.”
The big
question,
Fischer
added, is in
Washington.
“I think the
Americans
are deeply
divided on
the issue of
what to do
about Iran,”
he said.
“Some
officials
are
concerned
about the
fallout from
a military
attack and
others think
an attack is
unavoidable.
I know the
Europeans,
but I have
no idea
where the
Americans
will end up
on this
issue.”
There is
another
complication:
American
Presidential
politics.
Barack Obama
has said
that, if
elected, he
would begin
talks with
Iran with no
“self-defeating”
preconditions
(although
only after
diplomatic
groundwork
had been
laid). That
position has
been
vigorously
criticized
by John
McCain. The
Washington
Post
recently
quoted Randy
Scheunemann,
the McCain
campaign’s
national-security
director, as
stating that
McCain
supports the
White
House’s
position,
and that the
program be
suspended
before talks
begin. What
Obama is
proposing,
Scheunemann
said, “is
unilateral
cowboy
summitry.”
Scheunemann,
who is known
as a
neoconservative,
is also the
McCain
campaign’s
most
important
channel of
communication
with the
White House.
He is a
friend of
David
Addington,
Dick
Cheney’s
chief of
staff. I
have heard
differing
accounts of
Scheunemann’s
influence
with McCain;
though some
close to the
McCain
campaign
talk about
him as a
possible
national-security
adviser,
others say
he is
someone who
isn’t taken
seriously
while
“telling
Cheney and
others what
they want to
hear,” as a
senior
McCain
adviser put
it.
It is not
known
whether
McCain, who
is the
ranking
Republican
on the
Senate Armed
Services
Committee,
has been
formally
briefed on
the
operations
in Iran. At
the annual
conference
of the
American
Israel
Public
Affairs
Committee,
in June,
Obama
repeated his
plea for
“tough and
principled
diplomacy.”
But he also
said, along
with McCain,
that he
would keep
the threat
of military
action
against Iran
on the
table.
