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Topic started on 4-9-2006 @ 06:16 AM by Mdv2
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September 2002, the month in which Bush for the first time made public statements on a new enemy of democracy: Iraq. Though, the actual (clandestine)
war against Iraq had already begun in June 2002, Operation Southern Focus, an operation for intelligence gathering and weakening the Iraqi
military / air defense system. The operation was not disclosed until the formal war in Iraq had been going on for approximately six months.
Is there currently a similar scenario going on in Iran?
That’s might very well be the case.
Retired colonel Gardiner asked an Iranian official on a conference in Berlin: ''You are accusing Americans of conducting operations in your
country, and which have even shot up Revolutionary Guardians’’ The Iranian official answered: ''We've captured some of the units, and
they've confessed to be working with the Americans."
Of course it’s hard to determine the credibility of an Iranian official, but read the following sources carefully.
COL. SAM GARDINER: Well, the evidence is beginning to accumulate that a decision has already been made to use military force in Iran.
…
It was an operation called Southern Focus, and the only guidance that the military -- or the guidance that the military had from Rumsfeld was
keep it below the CNN line. His specific words. The evidence that we've already --
AMY GOODMAN: Keep it below what?
COL. SAM GARDINER: The CNN line. In other words, I don't want this to appear on CNN, okay? That was his guidance to the military, you can begin to
bomb Iraq, but don't let it appear on CNN.
…
We know that there is a group in Iraq, a Kurdish group called the Party for Free Life in Kurdistan, that crosses the border from Iraq into Iran, and
they have taken credit for killing numbers of revolutionary guard military people.
…
Now, the question that really follows from that is “Who authorized that?” See, there is no congressional authorization to conduct combat
operations against Iran. There are a couple of possibilities. One of them is that it's being justified under the terrorism authorization that
occurred in 2001. The problem with that is that you would have to prove a connection to 9/11. I don't think you can do that with Iran.
The second possibility is that it's being done under the War Powers Act. I don't want to get too technical, but the War Powers Act would
require the President to notify the Congress 60 days after the use of military force or invasion or putting military forces in a new country under
that legislation, and the President hasn't notified the Congress that American troops are operating inside Iran. So it's a very serious question
about the constitutional framework under which we are now conducting military operations in Iran.
AMY GOODMAN: And, Colonel Sam Gardiner, finally, Israel. Where does Israel fit into this picture?
COL. SAM GARDINER: …. I think Israel has convinced the United States that it is better for the United States to do it by itself, rather than to have
Israel do it, in terms of the potential reactions in the Middle East. So I think Israel's policy statements are, you know, it's a world problem
that translates to being it is an American problem that has to be dealt with.
Full transcript
www.newyorker.com... 2005-01-17
The Administration has been conducting secret reconnaissance missions inside Iran at least since last summer. Much of the focus is on the
accumulation of intelligence and targeting information on Iranian nuclear, chemical, and missile sites, both declared and suspected. such targets that
could be destroyed by precision strikes and short-term commando raids. “The civilians in the Pentagon want to go into Iran and destroy as much of
the military infrastructure as possible,” the government consultant with close ties to the Pentagon told me.
And:
A participant in the war game is CIA veteran Ray McGovern. He is aware that there are clandestine strategies being pursued which parallel
these visible ones.
And:
Hersh: 'If the order were to be given for an attack, the American combat troops now operating in Iran would be in position to mark the critical
targets with laser beams, to insure bombing accuracy and to minimize civilian casualties. As of early winter [2005], I was told by the government
consultant with close ties to civilians in the Pentagon, the units were also working with minority groups in Iran, including the Azeris, in the
north, the Baluchis, in the southeast, and the Kurds, in the northeast. The troops “are studying the terrain, and giving away walking-around money
to ethnic tribes, and recruiting scouts from local tribes and shepherds,” the consultant said.
The source fits perfectly with another article I found, and with the statement Cheney made: ''no CIA will be publically involved''. According to
that source, the US deliberately did not secure a terrorist organization called MEK during the invasion of Iraq, and let them basically keep their
camps in Iraq, because they could be used during a similar operation as Southern Focus to execute CIA missions.
[edit on 4-9-2006 by Mdv2]
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reply posted on 4-9-2006 @ 06:18 AM by Mdv2
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The Pentagon is bypassing official US intelligence channels and turning to a dangerous and unruly cast of characters in order to create strife
in Iran in preparation for any possible attack, former and current intelligence officials say.
“These guys are nuts,” this intelligence source said. “Cambone and those guys made MEK members swear an oath to Democracy and resign from the
MEK and then our guys incorporated them into their unit and trained them.”
Stephen Cambone is the Undersecretary of Defense Intelligence. His office did not return calls for comment.
Rumsfeld under instructions from Cheney, began using the group on special ops missions into Iran to pave the way for a potential Iran
strike.
Although the specifics of what the MEK is being used for remain unclear, a UN official close to the Security Council explained that the newly renamed
MEK soldiers are being run instead of military advance teams, committing acts of violence in hopes of staging an insurgency of the Iranian Sunni
population.
We asked how long the MEK agents have been active in the region under the guidance of the US military civilian leadership, the UN official explained
that the clandestine war had been going on for roughly a year and included unmanned drones run jointly by several agencies
Source
Rumsfeld foresaw the problem that could occur of the cooperation between the US government and a terrorist organization. Not that hard to solve. By
giving the participating MEK terrorist new identities they were formally no MEK terrorists any longer. The article further says Britain believes that
the MEK terrorist organization is behind the attacks on the southern Iranian border; they strongly condemn any cooperation with terrorist
organizations.
Quite contradictory, on one side the Bush Admin. says ''We do not negotiate with terrorists'', but on the other side, they do [probably] cooperate
with them.
[edit on 4-9-2006 by Mdv2]
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reply posted on 4-9-2006 @ 06:34 AM by Flyer
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Of course they do, they cooperate with anyone when its in their best interests. Dont forget what they did with the Nazis, rather than bring the war
criminals to justice, they took them to the US and got them to work for their own government.
They also worked with Bin Laden when it was in their best interests.
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reply posted on 20-9-2006 @ 06:20 AM by Souljah
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Excellent Find!
It's good to find events such as this, where their own words speaks against them.
It is the good old "Enemy of my Enemy is my Friend" tactic, which has been used for along time; actually if we remember Russian invasion of
Afganistan, the US supported local Mujahideen, since they were the enemy of Russia. But that's another story - but with similar roots, such as is the
case of MEK.
Yep, the silent war aganst Iran is already under way...
I wonder what will be the "trigger event" to cause the full scale attack.
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reply posted on 20-9-2006 @ 10:34 AM by bg_socalif
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Just another "proxy" of convenience, like the Mujahideen in Afghanistan was during the Soviet invasion/occupation, among others.
A few interesting tidbits on the MeK/PMOI/NLA/NCRI, or whatever you want to call them...
library.nps.navy.mil...
www.cfr.org...
www.iran.mojahedin.org...
www.time.com...
It's kinda interesting that the group is basically run by women.
We're still finding and blowing up bunkers of their weapons that Saddam gave them, over 100 so far.
We have about a few thousand of them (the militia) locked up here, awaiting repatriation to other countries. Some renounce the group and are
separated from the rest. Then the UN tries to get them repatriated as well.
In the town of Ashraf, "The Museum of Martyrs of Iranian Resistance" and the Museum of "A Decade of Mullah's Regime's Terrorism Against the
PMOI" are pretty interesting, though of course slanted to their own agenda.
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reply posted on 21-9-2006 @ 12:26 PM by Mdv2
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In addition to socalif:
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (MEK) is the largest and most militant group opposed to the Islamic Republic of Iran. Also known as the People’s
Mujahedeen Organization of Iran, MEK is led by husband and wife Massoud and Maryam Rajavi. MEK was added to the U.S. State Department’s list of
foreign terrorist groups in 1997.
MEK was founded in the 1960s by a group of college-educated Iranian leftists opposed to the country’s pro-Western ruler, Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
Although the group took part in the 1979 Islamic revolution that replaced the shah with a Shiite Islamist regime, MEK’s ideology, a blend of Marxism
and Islamism, put it at odds with the postrevolutionary government. In 1981, the group was driven from its bases on the Iran-Iraq border and resettled
in Paris, where it began supporting Iraq in its eight-year war against Khomeini’s Iran. In 1986, MEK moved its headquarters to Iraq where it
received its primary support to attack the regime in Iran. During the 2003 Iraq war, U.S. forces cracked down on MEK’s bases in Iraq, and in June
2003 French authorities raided an MEK compound outside Paris and arrested 160 people, including Maryam Rajavi.
External Aid
When Saddam Hussein was in power, MEK received the majority of its financial support from the Iraqi regime. It also used front organizations, such as
the Muslim Iranian Student’s Society, to collect money from expatriate Iranians and others, according to the State Department’s counterterrorism
office. Iraq was MEK’s primary benefactor. Iraq provided MEK with bases, weapons, and protection, and MEK harassed Saddam’s Iranian foes. MEK’s
attacks on Iran traditionally intensified when relations between Iran and Iraq grew strained. Iraq encouraged or restrained MEK, depending on
Baghdad’s interests.
Source
Guess why Wolfowitz and Rumsfeld did not want this terrorist group to be totally cleared out. They did take their heavy weaponry, though now the
members are apparently integrated in the US army for intelligence and clandestine sabotage operation in Iran. Ironic, fighting a war on terrorism by
using terrorists.
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