http://news.monstersandcritics.com/middleeast/features/article_1241021.php/I
ran_runs_Iraq_terror_network

 

Iran runs Iraq terror network

WASHINGTON, DC, United States (UPI) -- Newly obtained intelligence reports
indicate Iran is increasing its efforts to destabilize Iraq just as
President George W. Bush is reviewing his policy options.

While Bush is looking at changing key military and political personnel and
is considering deploying 20,000 to 40,000 additional U.S. troops in a
last-ditch effort to try and impose security in the chaos that Iraq has
become, new intelligence reveals Iran may have other plans.

'Al-Quds Force of Iran`s Islamic Revolutionary Guards is stepping up
terrorism and encouraging sectarian violence in Iraq,' says Alireza
Jafarzadeh, president of Strategic Policy Consulting in Washington, an
Iranian dissident who keeps close contact with the Mujahedin-e-Khalq, or
MeK.

It was Jafarzadeh who first revealed the existence of the Islamic Republic`s
clandestine nuclear sites in Natanz and Arak in August 2002.

'There is a sharp surge in Iran`s sponsorship of terrorism and sectarian
violence in the past few months,' said Jafarzadeh at a conference organized
by the Iran Policy Committee, a lobby group pushing to get the MeK off the
State Department`s terrorist list.

Retired U.S. Air Force General Thomas McInerney, an IPC member, said
Jafarzadeh`s presentation was 'powerful evidence' that Iran has become the
primary killer of U.S. forces in Iraq.

The spike in terror activities in Iraq according to Jafarzadeh is the work
of the al-Quds Force, which the Iranian dissident calls 'the deadliest
force' within the Revolutionary Guards. Al-Quds Force is responsible for
what they call 'extra-territorial activities,' which Jafarzadeh says is a
euphemism for terrorism. 

'Nothing but terrorism,' says Jafarzadeh. 'All they do is terrorism. This
deadly force has been heavily involved in Iraq.'

Al-Quds Force is headquartered in the building that once used to house the
U.S. Embassy in Tehran and where American diplomats were held captive for
444 days shortly after the Islamic revolution overthrew the Shah in 1979. It
is from here, according to MeK sources, that al-Quds Force directs all its
activities in Iraq.

They secretly build improvised explosive devises, or IEDs, train, finance
and arm an extensive terrorist network in Iraq, says Jafarzadeh. 'Iran`s
goal is to create insecurity in Iraq and compel the coalition forces to
leave in order to establish an Islamic Republic in Iraq.'

This vast Iranian terrorist network is commanded by a brigadier-general by
the name of Abtahi, who formerly served in Lebanon. Abtahi is based in the
Fajr Base in Ahwaz, in southwestern Iran. He is aided by a number of senior
commanders, according to Jafarzadeh.

'Iran has been heavily involved, to say the least, in Iraq; destabilizing
the situation there, sending arms, ammunition, intelligence agents,
providing training since 2003, not to mention the more than two decades of
opportunity the ayatollahs had to network,' he said.

Al-Quds Force (which means Jerusalem Force) has established a command and
control center in Iraq from where it runs its terror network. The Iraq
network is under the command of Jamal Jaafar Mohammad Ali Ebrahimi, who is
also known as Mehdi Mohandes.

According to the MeK, Mohandes was responsible for planning the bombing of
the U.S. and the U.K. embassies in Kuwait in the 1980s.

Interpol placed Mohandes on its wanted list in 1984. He has not traveled
outside Iran since. Ebrahimi is considered a veteran and senior officer of
the Revolutionary Guards. He has completed the command curriculum at the
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps` Imam Hossein University, and is currently
on the payroll of al-Quds Force.

The new terror network established in Iraq, still according to Jafarzadeh,
was named 'Hezbollah,' after Lebanon`s own Shiite movement with which
Mohandes, aka Ebrahimi, is allegedly in contact. The network is operational
in Basra, in the south, and in the capital, Baghdad. 

Members of the outfit undergo military and 'terrorist' training in Basra.
Their arms and munitions are smuggled to Basra through the Shalamche border
passage. 

Sustaining such a large-scale terror network demands huge sums of money.
According to MeK sources, Abtahi, the brigadier-general, 'sends millions and
millions of dollars from Ahwaz into Iraq every month.' The money is
transported to Iraq by a special courier who picks up the funds in Ahwaz and
carries them across the Shalamche border where 'affiliate' border guards
whisk him through.

Gen. McInerne urged George Bush to confront Iran`s role directly if he wants
to stabilize Iraq.

'Just sending more troops to Iraq doesn`t solve the problem unless you
attack this problem (of Iran`s involvement),' McInerney said. 'And it must
be attacked in a covert way in Iran. We`re going against a very formidable
enemy that thinks we will not respond.'

President Bush`s intended surge in Iraq may be too little, too late in
addressing a situation that requires major surgery rather than a band-aid.
It is comparable to what one observer termed 'the good doctor theory.' That
is when the patient is terminally ill and no amount of medicine or medical
intervention will cure him, but the good doctor feels compelled to
administer drugs to the patient just to feel he is doing something.



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