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enough credit? how about any credit? things couldn't be weirder. 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Serve, Marxism" <[email protected]> 
To: "Faulkner, Charles" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Sunday, June 22, 2014 7:35:59 AM 
Subject: Re: [Marxism] Iran: If US serious about fighting terrorism it must 
launch air strikes 

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On 6/22/14 9:40 AM, Joseph Catron wrote: 
> 
> It's clear that there's confusion in the ranks, but I suspect Khamenei, 
> who has the final word anyway, intended his statement as a cue for some 
> others to shut it. 

I don't see why it is so far-fetched to see an Iran-USA bloc against 
Sunni fighters. After all, Iran and the USA backed the Northern Alliance 
against the Taliban in 2001. 


Iran helped overthrow Taliban, candidate says 
By Barbara Slavin, USA TODAY, 6/9/2005 

Members of Iran's Revolutionary Guards fought alongside and advised the 
Afghan rebels who helped U.S. forces topple Afghanistan's Taliban regime 
in the months after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the guards' former 
leader says. 

In an interview by e-mail, Mohsen Rezaie, a candidate in Iran's 
presidential elections next week, says the United States has not given 
Iran enough credit. He says Iran played an "important role in the 
overthrow of the Taliban" in 2001 (Related: Full text of interview). 

Even before U.S. forces entered Afghanistan, Iran backed the Northern 
Alliance, a loose coalition of warlords and militias from the Tajik, 
Uzbek and Hazara minorities. The alliance fought the ruling Taliban, a 
regime dominated by majority Pashtuns that imposed a harsh Sunni Islamic 
government. 

Current and former U.S. troops and officials confirm Iranians were 
present with the Northern Alliance as U.S. forces organized the rebels 
in 2001. They say U.S. forces had no interaction with the Iranians. They 
deny the Iranians made meaningful contributions on the battlefield. 

Rezaie is the first to claim that Iran played a key role in capturing 
the Afghan capital, Kabul, at the climax of the war. 

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman says he has "no knowledge of (Iranian) 
assistance." The CIA refused to comment. 

Former CIA Afghan team leader Gary Schroen says there were two Iranian 
guard colonels attached to a Northern Alliance commander, Bismullah 
Khan, outside Kabul when U.S. Special Forces arrived in September 2001. 

Schroen, author of First In: An Insider's Account of How the CIA 
Spearheaded the War on Terror in Afghanistan, says, "There was never any 
(U.S.) interaction (with the Iranians), but we saw them." He downplayed 
the Iranian role. 

"We knew they were on the ground," says John McLaughlin, former deputy 
director of the CIA. 

Two officers who served with Task Force Dagger, the Special Forces group 
that conducted the first U.S. military operations in Afghanistan, say 
they knew Iranian agents or troops were present. 

One, an Army Special Forces officer, says Iranians in the Northern 
Alliance stronghold of Mazar-e-Sharif were sabotaging U.S. efforts by 
competing for the loyalty of local warlords. An Army Special Forces 
battalion commander says he encountered an Iranian intelligence agent in 
Kunduz, scene of one of the war's biggest battles. A third Army officer 
says U.S. forces reported the presence of Iranians in the city of Herat 
with alliance leader and warlord Ismail Khan. All three spoke on 
condition they not be named. 

Predominantly Shiite Iran nearly went to war against the Taliban after 
the massacre of Afghan Shiites and nine Iranians in Mazar-e-Sharif in 1998. 

The Bush administration became the prime backer of the Northern Alliance 
after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Defense Secretary Donald 
Rumsfeld told CBS' Face the Nation on Nov. 11, 2001, two days before the 
fall of Kabul, that there were places in Afghanistan "where there are 
some Iranian liaison people, as well as some American liaison people" 
working with the same Afghan forces. 

James Dobbins, a former State Department official who worked with 
diplomats from Iran and other Afghan neighbors to create the first 
post-Taliban government, says the Iranians "were equipping and paying 
the Northern Alliance. Russia and India were also helping, but at the 
time, Iran was the most active." 

It is unclear how many Iranians were present at the fall of Kabul. 
Rezaie says "some" guard commanders were there. "They were special 
forces for urban warfare (with) experience ... during the Iran-Iraq War 
(1980-88). They were very effective and active ... but American Army 
propaganda quickly claimed most of these achievements in its own name." 

The Bush administration would have been loath to praise the Iranians, in 
particular the Revolutionary Guards. The guards are Iran's main vehicle 
for supporting groups the United States regards as terrorists, such as 
Hezbollah in Lebanon, says Kenneth Katzman, an Iran expert at the 
Congressional Research Service in Washington. 

In 2002, President Bush labeled Iran a member of an "axis of evil" along 
with Iraq and North Korea. 

After the fall of the Taliban, Iran offered to help train and equip a 
new Afghan army, Dobbins says. The offer was rebuffed by the Bush 
administration, which accused Tehran of giving safe passage to fleeing 
members of al-Qaeda, backing Palestinian militants and trying to develop 
nuclear weapons. 

Rezaie, 50, one of eight candidates permitted to run by Iran's clerical 
regime, appeared to be underlining Iran's role to draw attention to his 
candidacy and show a desire to improve relations with the United States. 
Other candidates in the election, including the front-runner, former 
president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, promise they would improve ties 
broken 25 years ago while Iran was holding U.S. diplomats hostage. 

Rezaie says that "everything is possible" to restore relations. He 
praised the late Ronald Reagan and former Secretary of State Madeleine 
Albright for reaching out to Iran and says, "If they (the Americans) 
make us a rational offer," he will push for closer cooperation. 

Contributing: Sean D. Naylor of Army Times, an independent publication 
owned by Gannett 


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