EXTENSIVE RANGE OF COVERT OPERATIONS
ENVISAGED BY US CONGRESS
Street art in Tehran
By Dr. Ismail Salami
October 30, 2011
US secret agenda for
tightening its vice-like grip on the Islamic Republic of Iran has taken on an
apparently new form after the anti-Iran alleged assassination plot against the
Saudi ambassador to the United States, Adel al-Jubeir, raised many eyebrows among
experts and analysts around the world.
With a strong penchant
for pushing for tougher action on Iran, the Obama administration has already
imposed a series of sanctions against the Islamic Republic. However, a
Republican-controlled congressional committee has recently heard testimony
demanding an extensive range of covert operations against the country.
Left: Clinton announcing sanctions. That predatory gleam is back.
The operations, which
range from cyber attacks to political assassinations, are speculated to be
conducted under the feeble excuse that Iran was the alleged architect of an
assassination plot against the Saudi envoy to the United States. By political
assassination, the US congressmen unconsciously mean the liquidation of the
Iranian nuclear scientists, an act they actually started long ago.
Retired Army Gen. John
Keane told a hearing of two key subcommittees of the House Committee on
Homeland Security on Wednesday, "We've got to put our hand around their
throat now. Why don't we kill them? We kill other people who kill others."
Also, Rep. Jackie Speier
(D-Calif.) poured some pearls of wisdom over others and called for "sober,
reasoned discussion."
"Iran's leaders must
be held accountable for their action," she said, "but we cannot take
any reckless actions which may lead to opening another front in the 'War on
Terror,' which the American people do not want and cannot afford."
Naturally, the US
government, in essence, cannot afford to wage another war at least in view of
the economic woes it has wrought upon the American citizens, regardless of
other influencing factors.
The stone that started
rolling fell into the hands of New York Congressman Peter King who made an
extremely bizarre comment. He suggested that the US should kick out Iranian
officials at the UN in New York and in Washington and accused them of being
spies, ignorant of the fact that the UN is considered an independent
international body and that the US has no authority to 'kick out' diplomats
accredited there en masse.
Overwhelmed with a sense
of false eagerness, he renewed the anti-Iran alleged assassination ploy and
said excitedly, "So you have the assassination of a foreign ambassador,
you have the willingness to kill hundreds of Americans ~ this is an act of
war," King said, "I don't think we can just do business as usual or
even carry out sanctions as usual."
The volley of vitriolic
words against Iran which issued from Mr. King reeks of blind enmity long egged
on by other hawks in Washington.
In point of fact, the
anti-Iran moves practically started in 2007 when US Congress agreed to George
W. Bush, the then US president, to fund a major increase in covert operations
against Iran.
According to the
intelligence officials who spoke to the Blotter on ABCNews.com, the CIA was
then given a presidential approval to commence its covert 'black' operations
inside Iran. To that effect, over four hundred million dollars were allocated
in a Presidential Finding signed by George W. Bush.
The ultimate goal of the
finding was to cripple Iran's religious government and the operations involved
throwing support behind minority Ahwazi Arab and Baluchis and other opposition
groups as well as amassing intelligence about Iran's nuclear sites.
Speaking on the condition
of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the subject, the intelligence
officials confirmed that Bush had signed a "nonlethal presidential
finding", giving the CIA carte blanche to engage in any sabotaging
activities including a coordinated campaign of propaganda, disinformation and
manipulation of Iran's currency and international financial transactions in
order to destabilize and eventually achieve regime change in Iran.
"I can't confirm or
deny whether such a program exists or whether the president signed it, but it
would be consistent with an overall American approach trying to find ways to
put pressure on the regime," said Bruce Riedel, a retired CIA senior
official, an expert on Iran and the Middle East (ABCNEWS.com May 22, 2007).
In June 2007, The New
Yorker magazine also ran a similar story by Seymour Hersh, confirming that the
finding had been signed by Bush and intended to destabilize the Islamic
government.
"The Finding was
focused on undermining Iran's nuclear ambitions and trying to undermine the
government through regime change," the article cited a person familiar
with its contents as saying, and involved "working with opposition groups
and passing money."
From an intelligence
point of view, the fact that the US government is resorting to covert black
operations against Iran rules out the possibility of a military strike against
the country.
According to reports, US
ambassadors in Islamabad have repeatedly asked for opening a consulate in the
province of Baluchistan, a suspicious demand from the US. In 2011, the call was
renewed by US ambassador Cameron Munter to Islamabad.
Persistence in this
demand is to be taken seriously. Baluchistan is strategically important as it
is a harbor for the anti-Iran terrorist group, Jundullah, in the first place
and a separatist Pakistani province in the second place.
In fact, Washington
greatly favors the establishment of a 'Greater Baluchistan' which would
integrate the Baluch areas of Pakistan with those of Iran. Military expert
Lieutenant Colonel Ralph Peters suggests that Pakistan should be broken up,
leading to the formation of a separate country: 'Greater Baluchistan' or 'Free
Baluchistan' (June 2006, The Armed Forces Journal).
As a result, this would
incorporate the Baluch provinces of Pakistan and Iran into a single political
entity which can be tailored to suit the interests of Washington.
So it seems that the US
harbors two main ulterior motives if this demand is answered. First, it can
fulfill its dream of establishing the Greater Baluchistan, consolidate firm
presence in this separatist part of Pakistan and secondly, it will be in a
position to avail itself of this influence to carry out its sabotaging
activities within Iran.
Earlier in 2007, the
Blotter on ABCNews.com revealed the role of the US government in backing the
terrorist Iranian group, which is responsible for a number of gruesome
assassinations of the Iranian civilians on the Iran-Pakistan-Afghanistan
border.
The terrorist group
spares no efforts in sowing the seed of terror in the southern Iranian province
of Sistan-Baluchistan and their lust for murder and cruelty knows no remission.
The victims the group has so far claimed include many women and children who
have become the direct target of their killing.
In July 2010, the group
mounted a pair of suicide attacks on a major Shi'ite mosque in the city of
Zahedan, the capital of Iran's Sistan-Balochistan Province, killing dozens of worshipers and wounding over 100 people.
Although US officials
deny any 'direct funding' of the terrorist group, they acknowledge that they
are in contact with the leader of the group on a regular basis. A similar terrorist attack was launched by the same group on a mosque in Zahedan in May
2009, which led to the martyrdom of many worshipers.
Sadly enough, Pakistan's
Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI) implicitly supports the group and reportedly
shelters some of its high-profile members in coordination with the CIA.
Isn't it paradoxical that
Jundullah, a terrorist group and an offshoot of al-Qaeda, is directly funded by
the US government which keeps bandying about its so-called 'war on terror' in
the world?
This is enough to cause
the US to hang its head low in shame and humility.
ED: Sadly the government of the US has lost all sense of shame and certainly humility was off the table decades ago!
Dr.
Ismail Salami is an Iranian
author and political analyst. A prolific writer, he has written numerous books
and articles on the Middle East. His articles have been translated into a
number of languages.
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