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Monday, September 3, 2007

WASHINGTON'S COVERT WAR IN IRAN

Subverting Iran: Washington’s covert war inside Iran


Gregory Elich for Global Research

Much attention has been given to the Bush Administration’s preparations for possible war against Iran as well as its drive to impose sanctions.

Meanwhile, a less noticed policy has been unfolding, one that may intimeprove to have grave consequences for the region. There is a covert warunderway in Iran, still in its infancy, but with disturbing signs of impending escalation.

In the shadowy world of guerrilla operations, thefullextent of involvement by the Bush Administration has yet to berevealed, butenough is known to paint a disturbing picture.

The provision of aid to anti-government forces offers certainadvantages tothe Bush Administration. No effort needs to be expended in winning supportfor the policy. Operations can be conducted away from the public eyeduringa time of growing domestic opposition to the war in Iraq, and international opinion is simply irrelevant where the facts are not well known.

In terms of expenditures, covert operations are a cost-effective means for destabilizing a nation, relative to waging war.

There is nothing new in the technique, and it has proven an effectivemeansfor toppling foreign governments in the past, as was the case withsocialistAfghanistan and Nicaragua. In Yugoslavia, U.S. and British military training and arms shipments helped to build up the secessionist Kosovo Liberation Army from a small force of 300 soldiers into a sizable guerrilla army that made the province of Kosovo ungovernable.

The very chaos that the Westdidso much to create was then used as the pretext for bombing Yugoslavia.

According to a former CIA official, funding for armed separatist groups operating in Iran is paid from the CIA’s classified budget. The aim, claims Fred Burton, an ex-State Department counter-terrorism agent, is “to supply and train” these groups “to destabilize the Iranian regime.”

The largest and most well known of the anti-government organizations isMujahedin-e Khalq (MEK), operating out of Iraq. For years MEQ had launched cross-border attacks and terrorist acts against Iran with the support of Saddam Hussein.

Officially designated a terrorist organization by the U.S.State Department in 1997, and disarmed of heavy weaponry by the U.S.military six years later, Washington has since come to view MEK in adifferent light. Three years ago, U.S. intelligence officials suggested looking the other way as the MEK rearmed and to use the organization todestabilize Iran, a recommendation that clearly has been accepted.

Accusing MEK of past involvement in repressive measures by formerpresidentSaddam Hussein, the current Iraqi government wants to close down Camp Ashraf, located well outside of Baghdad, where many of the MEK fighters are stationed.

But the camp operates under the protection of the U.S.military,and American soldiers chauffeur MEK leaders. The Iraqi government isunlikely to get its way, as the MEK claims to be the primary U.S.source forintelligence on Iran.

U.S. officials “made MEK members swear an oath to democracy and resign from the MEK,” reveals an intelligence source, “and then our guys incorporated them into their unit and trained them.” Reliance on the MEK began under Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld with the direction of Vice President Dick Cheney, and soon MEK soldiers were being used in special operations missions in Iran.

“They are doing whatever they want, no oversight at all,” said one intelligence official of the MEK’s American handlers.

The Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan (PJAK), is another organization that conducts cross-border raids into Iran. Israel provides the group with“equipment and training,” claims a consultant to the U.S. DefenseDepartment, while the U.S. gave it “a list of targets inside Iran of interest to the U.S.”

Aid to guerrilla groups, the consultant reports, is “part of an effort to explore alternative means of applying pressure onIran.”

It has been noted that PJAK has recently shown an impressivegainin capability during its operations, both in terms of size andarmament, afact that can surely be attributed to Western support.

Jundallah (God’s Brigade) is an extremist Sunni organization operatinginSistan-Balochistan province that has been launching armed attacks, planting explosives, setting off car bombs, and kidnapping.

Based in Pakistan,it is unclear if this group is connected with the Pakistani organization of the same name, which has ties with Al-Qaeda.

Jundallah denies that it has any links to either Al-Qaeda or to the U.S. But Iranian officials claim that a recently arrested Jundallah guerrilla has confessed that he was trained by U.S. and British intelligence officers.

There is no way to verify that such a confession has actually taken place, nor its reliability as it may have come as a result of coercion, but the claim would not be inconsistent with U.S. policy elsewhere in Iran.

It is probable that in the coming months the Bush Administration will expand support for anti-government forces in order to more effectively destabilize Iran and gather intelligence. Already U.S. Special Forces are operating in Iran collecting data, planting nuclear sensors, and electronically marking targets.

Separatist forces have cooperated in those efforts. “This looks to be turning into a pretty large-scale covert operation,” comments a former CIA official. U.S. and Israeli officials are establishing front companies to help finance that covert war.

To fully capitalize on ethnic discontent along Iran’s periphery, the U.S. Marine Corps has commissioned a study from defense contractor Hicks and Associates on Iran and Iraq’s ethnic groups and their grievances.

That these separatist organizations clearly engage in terrorism hasn’t deterred the Bush Administration from backing them. The potential for baneful consequences is considerable. CIA support for the anti-Soviet and anti-socialist Mujahedin in Afghanistan spawned a worldwide movement of Islamic extremism.

Western support for ethnic secessionists shattered Yugoslavia and the invasion of Iraq fired the flames of ethnic discordand made a shared life impossible. It remains to be seen if the Bush Administration can succeed in achieving its goal of effecting regime changein Iran.

That process could have devastating consequences for thepeople ofIran. Those officials in the Bush Administration who advocated and implemented covert operations “think in Iran you can just go in and hit the facilities and destabilize the government,” explains a former CIA official.“They believe they can get rid of a few crazy mullahs and bring in the young guys who like Gap jeans, [and] all the world’s problems are solved. Ithinkit’s delusional.”

Gregory Elich is the author of Strange Liberators: Militarism, Mayhem,andthe Pursuit of Profit. Gregory Elich is a frequent Global Research contributor.

http://www.amazon.com/Strange-Liberators-Militarism-Mayhem-Pursuit/dp/1595265708

http://vineyardsaker.blogspot.com/2007/08/subverting-iran-washingtons-covert-war.html

http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=20070323&articleId=5165

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