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Subject:
From:
Kabir Njaay <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 28 May 2007 22:49:00 +0200
Content-Type:
text/plain
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>
>
>
> "...I was merely responding very mildly to these two anti-Semitic postings
> and without rancour.
>
> "Palestine: Israeli Killing Fields"
> "Bush authorises covert CIA operations to destabilise Iran"..."



Jabou,

I hope you noticed the lie buried in the above statement; there was nothing
"anti-Semitic" in that posting and just for transparency sake, it's copied
below. One must be hallucinating to call this "anti-Semitic":


Bush authorises covert CIA operations to destabilise Iran

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/may2007/iran-m25.shtml

By Peter Symonds

25 May 2007

An ABC News report on Tuesday provided further evidence that the Bush
administration is actively engaged in a covert campaign of destabilisation
aimed at "regime change" in Iran.

According to the American television network, Bush signed a formal
"non-lethal presidential finding" earlier this year authorising "a CIA plan
that reportedly includes a coordinated campaign of propaganda,
disinformation and manipulation of Iran's currency and international
financial transactions".

Based on information from unnamed former and current CIA officials, ABC News
reported that Bush approved the plan "about the time that [Admiral William]
Fallon took over [as head of the Pentagon's Central Command]"—that is, about
mid-March. It also stated that National Security Adviser Steve Hadley and
Deputy National Security Adviser Elliott Abrams both gave the green light
for the operation.

The timing of the plan coincides with a steady stream of articles,
prominently placed in the media, highlighting Tehran's crackdown on women's
dress, arrest of dissidents, alleged nuclear weapons programs and support
for anti-occupation militia operating inside neighbouring Iraq. While it is
impossible to know how many of these reports are direct CIA "plants," they
point to a concerted campaign of propaganda and disinformation. Whatever the
impact inside Iran, such stories serve to poison public opinion in the US
and internationally in preparation for a possible military strike.

ABC News was at pains to point out that "approval of the covert action means
the Bush administration, for the time being, has decided not to pursue a
military option against Iran". Retired CIA official Bruce Riedel said that
in the internal White House debate, "Vice President [Dick] Cheney helped to
lead the side favouring a military strike but I think they have come to the
conclusion that a military strike has more downsides than upsides."

These reassurances count for nothing. The US navy continues to maintain two
aircraft carrier battle groups in the Persian Gulf, which have the capacity
to mount a sustained air assault on Iran. During his visit to the Middle
East earlier this month, Cheney pointedly declared on the deck of the USS
John C. Stennis, just 150 miles off the Iranian coast, "We'll stand with
others to prevent Iran from gaining nuclear weapons and dominating the
region."

The US fleet began extensive exercises in the Persian Gulf on Wednesday, in
a move designed to intensify the pressure on Iran as a UN deadline passed
for Tehran to shut down its uranium enrichment program. Bush has never
withdrawn his menacing threat that "all options are on the table"—in other
words, if diplomatic bullying and covert operations fail, the military
option remains.

It would also be wrong to conclude that covert operations are confined to
the CIA. According to a number of media reports, including detailed articles
from veteran investigative journalist Seymour Hersh, the Pentagon and other
US agencies have been actively targetting Iran since at least 2004. Unlike
the CIA, which—formally at least—requires a presidential finding to mount
"black" operations, the US military has, under Bush, increasingly engaged in
its own covert activities, including the dispatch of special forces units
inside Iran, without any congressional oversight.

There is nothing particularly secret about the Bush administration's
campaign for "regime change". Last year Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
sought and received $75 million for anti-Iranian propaganda broadcasts and
to fund opposition groups inside and outside Iran. In 2005, the figure was
just $10 million. Rice also established an Iranian Affairs office last year,
initially headed by Elizabeth Cheney, the vice president's daughter, to
coordinate policy and provide "pro-democracy funding" for opponents of the
regime. The *Boston Globe* reported in January that a team of top officials
from the Pentagon, State Department, CIA, Treasury and National Security
Council, known as the Iran Syria Policy and Operations Group (ISOG), had
been working for some time to strengthen military alliances against Iran,
finance Iranian dissidents and undermine the country economically.

*US backing for anti-Iranian militias*

While the approved CIA activities may at present be "non-lethal," the same
cannot be said of all US activities inside Iran. In his article last
November entitled "The Next Act: Is a damaged Administration less likely to
attack Iran, or more?", Hersh provided evidence that the Pentagon was
covertly supporting minority Kurdish, Azeri and Baluchi tribal groups as a
means of undermining Tehran's authority in northern and southeastern Iran.
In particular, the US military was collaborating with Israel in backing a
Kurdish armed group—the Party for Free Life—based in northern Iraq to foment
opposition inside the Kurdish regions of Iran and to spy on "targets inside
Iran of interest to the US".

A series of ABC News reports last month stated that the US was actively
backing Jundullah, an armed Baluchi group based in Pakistan, to carry out
cross-border attacks inside Iran. It reported on April 3 that the militia
had been "secretly encouraged and advised by American officials since 2005".
The group was responsible for the bomb blasts in the southeastern city of
Zahedran in February that killed 11 members of the Iranian Revolutionary
Guard.

Alexis Debat, a senior fellow on counterterrorism at the Nixon Centre, told
ABC News that* *Jundullah leader Abd el Malik Regi "used to fight with the
Taliban. He's part drug smuggler, part Taliban, part Sunni activist."
According to this week's report, US officials deny any "direct funding" of
Jundullah but "say the leader of Jundullah was in regular contact with US
officials." In other words, in its efforts to bring about "regime change" in
Iran, the Bush administration is collaborating with Sunni extremists
associated with the Taliban, which is the main target of the US "war on
terror" in neighbouring Afghanistan.

In his most recent article, in February, entitled "The Redirection," Hersh
says the Bush administration has enlisted the support of the Saudi monarchy
and other Sunni states such as Jordan in a bid to counter the influence of
Shiite Iran across the Middle East. As the article points out, the US might
not be "directly funding" groups like Jundullah and other Sunni extremist
militia, but autocratic Saudi Arabia is able to secretly provide large
amounts of money, as it did to Al Qaeda in the 1980s in the CIA's war
against the Soviet-backed regime in Afghanistan.

Hersh also highlighted the role of Deputy National Security Adviser Elliott
Abrams, a prominent neo-conservative who was an active participant in the
Reagan administration's illegal arming of the right-wing Nicaraguan contras
through the covert sale of weapons to Iran in the 1980s. Abrams eventually
pled guilty to lying under oath to cover up the Iran-contra scandal. His
past crimes were no hindrance, however, to his appointment by Bush as deputy
national security adviser with a special brief for "global democracy
strategy"—that is, for undermining regimes targetted by the administration.

According to Hersh's sources, Abrams has used his experiences to bypass
congressional oversight of a series of clandestine operations, not only
inside Iran, but directed against pro-Iranian groups such as Hezbollah in
Lebanon. Access to funds appears to have been no problem, as a Pentagon
consultant explained: "There are many, many pots of black money, scattered
in many places and used all over the world on a variety of missions." Other
US officials pointed out that the billions of dollars unaccounted for during
the first months of the US occupation of Iraq had been "a vehicle for such
transactions".

*Iran reacts*

Commenting to ABC News about Bush's secret presidential finding, Vali Nasr,
a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, warned: "I think
everybody in the region knows that there is a proxy war already afoot with
the United States supporting anti-Iranian elements in the region as well as
opposition groups within Iran. And this covert action is now being escalated
by the new US directive, and that can very quickly lead to Iranian
retaliation and a cycle of escalation can follow."

A senior US State Department official admitted to the *Washington Post* that
the US was funding oppositionists, albeit indirectly. "We saw early on the
problem we would pose if we tried to support them directly. We didn't want
to get them into hot water. That's why we're doing it through third
countries," he said.

Already the Iranian government has seized on the US campaign to justify its
own political witch-hunt, including the roundup of political opponents as
"spies" and "US agents". US-based Human Rights Watch analyst Hadi Ghaemi
told the *Washington Post* last month: "Dozens of Iranian activists are
paying the price since the announcement of the $75 million and practically
everyone who has been detained over the past year has been interrogated
about receiving this money. They [the authorities] are obsessed with the
perception that the US is fuelling a velvet revolution through this money."

A broad range of activists have been detained and interrogated, including
teachers, women's rights campaigners, labour organisers, students,
journalists and intellectuals. "When the US announces its support for civil
society movements, it becomes a ready tool for the Iranian government to use
against independent activists. It's really been counterproductive," Fariba
Davoodi Mohajer, a women's rights activist, told the newspaper.

Several visiting foreign academics and journalists have also been caught up
in the security dragnet, including Radio Farda correspondent Parnaz Azima
and Haleh Esfandiari, from Washington's Woodrow Wilson Centre. Both hold
dual US-Iranian citizenship and were visiting family members in Iran.
Esfandiari, who has become something of a cause célèbre in American ruling
circles, was formally detained on May 8, after being prevented from leaving
the country, and has been accused of trying to foment a "soft revolution"
and spying for the US and Israel.

While the Iranian regime has offered no evidence to justify its repressive
measures, the outrage expressed by the Bush administration and congressional
Democrats is completely hypocritical. Secretary of State Rice declared last
week that Esfandiari should be released immediately, saying her case
demonstrated that the Iranian regime "does not treat its people... very
well." State Department spokesman Sean McCormack dismissed Iranian
accusations that the academic was seeking to overthrow the Iranian
government as "poppycock" and "utter nonsense".

Whether or not Esfandiari is involved, Rice's perspective is certainly
"regime change" in Tehran. Moreover, with the complicity of the Democrats,
the Bush administration has arbitrarily detained without trial, and in many
cases tortured, thousands of people in Iraq, Afghanistan and the US itself,
including five Iranian officials seized from an Iranian liaison office in
northern Iraq in January.

The campaign for "regime change" in Iran has nothing to do with defending
"democracy" or the political rights of the Iranian population. Its sole
purpose is to advance US strategic and economic interests. Iran not only
contains huge reserves of oil and gas, it sits at the strategic crossroads
of the resource-rich regions of Central Asia and the Middle East.

US and Iranian officials are due to meet next week in Baghdad to discuss the
deteriorating security situation confronting American occupation forces in
Iraq. The meeting is unlikely to ease the escalating tensions between the
two countries.

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