The deadly US-Iranian contest in Iraq

TheJanuary 20 raid on the joint US-Iraqi security “coordination” center in Karbala was even more operationally complex and sophisticated, and therefore worrying for the US commanders in Iraq, than I had understood it to be when I blogged about it on January 22nd.
Today (Friday), AP’s Steven Hurst and Qassim Abdul-Zahra wrote, and the US occupation force’s press office later confirmed, that instead of all five of the US army’s fatal casualties having been killed during the attack on the coordination center itself, only one of them was killed at that time, while the other four were captured from the center, driven away by the assailants, and discovered only later, with fatal gunshot wounds in their heads, at the point some 25 miles away to the east where all or some of the American-style SUV’s used in the assault were abandoned by the assailants, who got away undetected.
The sophistication and scale of the attack has left some people guessing that Iranian or pro-Iranian operatives were involved. If so, the operation may well have started out as an attempt to capture and hold some US soldiers “in response to” the US forces’ capture/arrest of five Iranian government employees in Arbil/Erbil, northern Iraq, on January 11.
If that was the plan, wouldn’t it have made more sense for the assailants to have kept the captured US soldiers alive? (And the question then would be: where? In a “liberated zone” within Iraq, or in Iran?) But anyway, something evidently caused the assailants not to proceed with such a plan, if indeed that had been their first option. What they apparently did succeed in doing was getting away safely from the place in Al-Mahawil District where they abandoned five of their black SUVs along with the bodies of three of the murdered soldiers and the soon-to-be-dead body of the fourth one.
Today, before I saw that AP story on this, I had read this article in the WaPo, which seems to give some relevant background to the whole story of the Arbil “arrests” and the Karbala assault. In it, Dafna Linzer writes,

    The Bush administration has authorized the U.S. military to kill or capture Iranian operatives inside Iraq as part of an aggressive new strategy to weaken Tehran’s influence across the Middle East and compel it to give up its nuclear program, according to government and counterterrorism officials with direct knowledge of the effort.

Linzer dates the decision to adopt the new, tougher policy to,

    Last summer, [when] senior administration officials decided that a more confrontational approach was necessary, as Iran’s regional influence grew and U.S. efforts to isolate Tehran appeared to be failing…

These officials described the previous policy used towards Iranian agents identified in Iraq as one of “catch and release”, which was, “designed to avoid escalating tensions with Iran and yet intimidate its emissaries.”
She wrote:

    Three officials said that about 150 Iranian intelligence officers, plus members of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Command, are believed to be active inside Iraq at any given time. There is no evidence the Iranians have directly attacked U.S. troops in Iraq, intelligence officials said.
    But, for three years, the Iranians have operated an embedding program there, offering operational training, intelligence and weaponry to several Shiite militias connected to the Iraqi government, to the insurgency and to the violence against Sunni factions…

However, she also writes this:

    In Iraq, U.S. troops now have the authority to target any member of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, as well as officers of its intelligence services believed to be working with Iraqi militias. The policy does not extend to Iranian civilians or diplomats. Though U.S. forces are not known to have used lethal force against any Iranian to date, Bush administration officials have been urging top military commanders to exercise the authority.

But the new, more confrontational policy has evidently sparked some serious disagreements within the administration.
Linzer wrote:

    Senior administration officials said the policy is based on the theory that Tehran will back down from its nuclear ambitions if the United States hits it hard in Iraq and elsewhere, creating a sense of vulnerability among Iranian leaders. But if Iran responds with escalation, it has the means to put U.S. citizens and national interests at greater risk in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.
    Officials [unidentified] said [CIA head Michael] Hayden counseled the president and his advisers to consider a list of potential consequences, including the possibility that the Iranians might seek to retaliate by kidnapping or killing U.S. personnel in Iraq.

Aha! So now do we see a reason for the timing of some of these leaks to Dafna Linzer??? It certainly looks to me like people in Hayden’s camp– having seen what happened in Karbala last Saturday– were in effect saying to the hot-dogs within the administration: “Told you so!”
By the way, in case you’re interested in knowing which way Condi Rice swung on the hot-dog vs. the relative doves on this issue, Linzer’s reporting indicates clearly that Condi was sitting firmly on the fence there, while trying to keep her rear end well covered…
And if you read further down in her article you can discover some interesting background about the policy shift, including the fact that it was undertaken in connection with the Israel-Hizbullah war of last summer:

    Officials said a group of senior Bush administration officials who regularly attend the highest-level counterterrorism meetings agreed that the conflict provided an opening to portray Iran as a nuclear-ambitious link between al-Qaeda, Hezbollah and the death squads in Iraq.
    Among those involved in the discussions, beginning in August, were deputy national security adviser Elliott Abrams, NSC counterterrorism adviser Juan Zarate, the head of the CIA’s counterterrorism center, representatives from the Pentagon and the vice president’s office, and outgoing State Department counterterrorism chief Henry A. Crumpton.

Linzer quoted an un-named “senior counterterrorism official” as having told her in a recent interview that,

    “Our goal is to change the dynamic with the Iranians, to change the way the Iranians perceive us and perceive themselves. They need to understand that they cannot be a party to endangering U.S. soldiers’ lives and American interests, as they have before. That is going to end.”
    A senior intelligence officer was more wary of the ambitions of the strategy.
    “This has little to do with Iraq. It’s all about pushing Iran’s buttons. It is purely political,” the official said. The official expressed similar views about other new efforts aimed at Iran, suggesting that the United States is escalating toward an unnecessary conflict to shift attention away from Iraq and to blame Iran for the United States’ increasing inability to stanch the violence there.

Linzer also noted this:

    In interviews, two senior administration officials separately compared the Tehran government to the Nazis and the Guard to the “SS.” They also referred to Guard members as “terrorists.” Such a formal designation could turn Iran’s military into a target of what Bush calls a “war on terror,” with its members potentially held as enemy combatants or in secret CIA detention.

… Meanwhile, if you want to see the substance of the news release that the US military people in Iraq put out today about the Karbala incident, here it is:

    At approximately 5 p.m., a convoy consisting of at least five sport utility vehicles entered the Karbala compound. The armed militants wore American-looking uniforms and carried U.S.-type weapons convincing Iraqi checkpoints to allow their passage.
    Once inside the compound, an estimated nine to 12 armed militants engaged the American troops with rifle fire and hand grenades.
    While defending the command post, one Soldier was killed and three others were wounded by a hand grenade thrown into the center’s main office which contains the provincial police chief’s office on an upper floor.
    During the attack in the main building, Soldiers defending it reported hearing a series of explosions in the compound causing the Soldiers to seek cover. Three U.S. military Humvees were damaged from the explosions.
    The attackers broke off the assault withdrawing from the compound with four captured U.S. Soldiers.
    The insurgents then drove out of the Karbala province and into neighboring Babil province, encountering an Iraqi police checkpoint. The sport utility vehicles passed through the checkpoint, but the Iraqi police trailed the vehicles, suspicious of the group.
    After proceeding further east and crossing the Euphrates River, the assailants drove north toward Hillah, abandoning five SUVs, U.S. Army-type combat uniforms, boots, radios and a non-U.S. made rifle.
    Iraqi police in pursuit found the abandoned vehicles and equipment near the Iraqi town of Al Mahawil. [AP says this is about 25 miles from Karbala.]
    Two Soldiers were found handcuffed together in the back of one of the SUVs. Both had suffered gunshot wounds and were dead. A third Soldier was found shot and dead on the ground. Nearby, the fourth Soldier was still alive, despite a gunshot wound to the head. The Iraqi police rushed the severely wounded Soldier to a nearby hospital, but the Soldier died enroute.
    “The precision of the attack, the equipment used and the possible use of explosives to destroy the military vehicles in the compound suggests that the attack was well rehearsed prior to execution,” said Lt. Col. Scott Bleichwehl, spokesman for Multi-National Division-Baghdad.
    “The attackers went straight to where Americans were located in the provincial government facility, by-passing the Iraqi police in the compound,” said Bleichwehl. “We are looking at all the evidence to determine who or what was responsible for the breakdown in security at the compound and the perpetration of the assault.”

As I had noted earlier, the US military’s January 21 press release about the incident stated– as it turns out, quite incorrectly– that “Five U.S. Soldiers were killed and three wounded while repelling the attack.

9 thoughts on “The deadly US-Iranian contest in Iraq”

  1. Say Helena, where do you get the assertion that the killers of the captured US service persons were some how a product of Iranian influence? Have you actually read or heard somebody make this connection?

  2. And he’s going to go on wallpapering this country with grief. And drowning the Middle East in it.
    He has to do the neocons’ bidding. Not that it comes in the shape of “Do this” “Do that”. It’s that he’s so far stepped in blood that returning were as tedious as go o’er. (The line’s from Shakespeare’s Scottish play.) And the fact is that returning – at his present juncture – looks even more tedious than going o’er. Because that why lies his having to admit that he got it wrong, that it was all for naught, that it was one almighty cock-up. His cock-up. That 3,000 American kids are dead and thousands wounded for nothing. That we’re poorer and less safe than before. Whereas pressing on, well, there’s at least a sliver of hope – to his way of thinking – that it might somehow magically come good. Those are his choices. So it’s no wonder that he’s plumping for the course of action he’s plumped for.
    We desperately need to have a dissenting voice in the innermost councils of our government. As you often get in supreme court decisions. A voice arguing why this isn’t a good idea. And both the assenting and the dissenting opinions should be written up and published. And let the “decider” – or one of his lackeys – write up a final report on every decision that office takes on matters of national importance: this is what the “pro” side of my administration advocated and why; this is what the “nay” side advocated and why; and this is the decision I took – and why.
    That sort of achingly obvious clear-sightedness and openness would be a major safeguard against our getting into this kind debacle in the future.

  3. Speaking of Qommie subversion, how about this?
    Iraqi Papers Saturday: “Agents of Tehran”
    Paper Self-Censors Iraq Edition, Hard-Hitting in International Edition
    By Amer Mohsen
    Az-Zaman (London edition) headlined: “Bush authorizes his forces to kill Iranian agents in Iraq”. The front-page story relayed the reports that had appeared in the American media on Friday regarding a top-level order allowing the American army in Iraq to kill and capture Iranian units and agents that have infiltrated the country.
    Stories of Iranian involvement in Iraq have been widely propagated lately, and anti-Iranian Az-Zaman (which has connections to Arab capitals and governments in the Gulf) is enthusiastic to convey these reports. Also on the front page is a piece on a list published by anti-regime Mujahideen Khalq detailing names and information on Iranian agents in Iraq.
    Mujahideen Khalq is a revolutionary Iranian organization that clashed with the Islamic regime in the early years of the revolution, most of its cadres and fighters moved to Iraq where they were hosted by Saddam’s regime, the organization sustained its military activities against the Iranian regime until the American invasion of Iraq.
    The list, Az-Zaman says, exposes the names of over 31,000 “agents” of Tehran who are residing and active in Iraq. The list shows the “Arab” name of each of these individuals, in addition to their “Iranian” names, code names and the amount they receive from Iran each month. The spokesman of the Iranian organization, Jawad Debiran, described the contents of the ‘list’ in a press conference in Germany. Debiran said that these agents are members of the ‘Jerusalem Legion’ (an affiliate of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard), and that they had been recruited inside Iran, and sent to Iraq to institute a “network of terrorism and killing”, Debiran said, according to Az-Zaman.
    To clarify, many Iraqis, especially in Southern Iraq, are of Iranian origins (dating back several generations in many cases); during the rule of Saddam, these Iraqis were stripped of their citizenship and exiled from the country. Many of them have returned since the American invasion, but some Iraqi circles still adopt the Saddam-era discourse of doubting the ‘authenticity’ of these citizens, considering them as ‘Iranians in disguise’.
    ==
    (The rest of it is mostly about journalism at New Baghdad. Also very interesting, but basically a different story.)

  4. Let us review a few facts here. (1) The American military has placed in power the Iraqi Shiites who favor Iran. (2) The American military has for four years served principally as a Shiite-Kurdish militia killing Sunnis for the Shiites who favor Iran and Kurds who favor independence from Iraq. (3) The American military has only attacked one Shiite militia: that of Moqtadr al-Sadr who doesn’t favor Iran and wants to maintain a unified, independent Iraq.
    So, given that the American military has done nothing but promote the interests of Iran in Iraq, what possible reason would Iran have for harming or opposing the American military that has stupidly damn near destroyed itself doing for free what Iran would gladly pay it to do? Disciplined, useful, self-financing idiots like that don’t come along every century, you know. No wonder Israel doesn’t want Iran horning in on its traditional American dupe.
    George Orwell had a great term for this sort of solipsistic schizophrenia. He called it “doublethink” or “protective stupidity.” Why would any Iranian in his-or-her right mind want to do anything at all to discourage Sheriff-Dick-and-Deputy-Dubya’s America from pursuing such a humiliatingly self-destructive “goal”? Without a doubt, America now has its worst political/military “leadership” in at least the last half-century. This explains why our friends don’t respect us and our enemies don’t fear us. It also explains why our political and military “leadership” keep telling us just the opposite about our friends and enemies: namely, that if we stop acting so bloody stupid and sensibly leave Iraq that this will only cause our friends to lose heart and embolden our enemies. Protective stupidity, indeed — or what Sheriff Dick “last throes” Cheney would call “enormous successes.”

  5. “Senior administration officials said the policy is based on the theory that Tehran will back down from its nuclear ambitions if the United States hits it hard in Iraq and elsewhere”
    This is the most ludicrous explanation they’ve floated yet. It makes no sense at all. Cheney and Abrams must have given each other high-fives after coming up with this bit of Orwellian nonsense.
    “the United States is escalating toward an unnecessary conflict to shift attention away from Iraq and to blame Iran for the United States’ increasing inability to stanch the violence there.”
    Cheney, Abrams and their neocon buddies are simply proceeding according to their original plan. If you watched the pathetic Wolf Blitzer’s attempt to interview Dick on CNN, then you know that the Veep is totally unaware of anything having gone awry in Iraq. As far as he’s concerned, it’s a tremendous success. And the coming war with Iran will be another tremendous success.
    Michael, with respect and appreciation for your views, I suspect Iranian agents were involved in the Karbala operation, probably to make a point about how easy it would be for them to bury our little expeditionary force in the sands of Iraq, should things get out of hand. Either that, or it was some kind of bizzare fragging incident.

  6. Those sneaky Iranians are further undermining our efforts in Iraq by covertly providing medical care to Iraqis who lack access to doctors and hospitals (because they’ve been bombed, killed or driven out by the war we started).
    This is the same kind of under-handed tactics the Iranians taught to their lackeys in Lebanese Hezbollah, like going around helping people get food, pay their bills, find jobs, things like that. It’s creeping Islamo-socialism!
    “We will not allow hegemony of a hostile regime to have power over this area,” says Khalilzad. Except for, you know, us.
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/25/AR2007012502087.html

  7. I suspect Iranian agents were involved in the Karbala operation, probably to make a point about how easy it would be for them to bury our little expeditionary force in the sands of Iraq,
    Now when the fire touch your feet you starting talking about Iran!!
    When Iraqi killed, ethnic cleansing, Iraqi women lost their rights, land and house grabs by Iranians in Karablah Najaf, and elsewhere.
    When Iranian control the universities in Basra and some other areas, when Badar and Mahdy do the killing assassinations of Iraqis, no one cares just now when FIVE AMERICANS killed suddenly the tune and talking start about Iran, Hezbollah tactics in Iraq!! Keep telling every day I am “Serving Israel Nicely”!!
    Strange people and strange world… Good luck in Iran sorry Iraq after 4 years of Iranians penetration and controlled Iraq…

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