Tehran's blood-soaked hands


http://washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070711/EDITORIAL/107
110014 
As American and Iraqi casualties mount, U.S. military commanders have become
increasingly willing to criticize Tehran's role in fueling the violence in
Iraq - something senators would do well to bear in mind this week while
going on about the need to withdraw or "redeploy" American troops there.
According to Brig. Gen. Kevin Bergner, Tehran had a direct role in a Jan. 20
attack on the Karbala Provincial Joint Coordination Center in which five
American soldiers were killed - four of them murdered after being abducted
by Iranian-backed radicals who wore American-style uniforms and carried
forged identity cards.


Gen. Bergner revealed at a July 2 press conference that Tehran's terrorist
proxy, the Lebanese group Hezbollah, is involved in organizing and training
Iraqi jihadists called Special Groups who attack American soldiers in Iraq.
He added that the Quds Force, a special unit of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps that specializes in financing and arming terrorist movements, is
spending up to $3 million per month to bring groups of up to 60 Iraqi
insurgents at a time to three training facilities near Tehran. At those
camps, jointly operated by the Quds Force and Hezbollah, they are taught how
to carry out bombings and kidnappings and use rockets, mortars and
improvised explosive devices to kill and maim American troops.


In March, coalition forces in Iraq captured Ali Mussa Daqduq, a Hezbollah
explosives specialist, near Basra. Initially Mr. Daqduq pretended to be a
deaf mute, but he began to talk when he realized that his captors had
learned his identity: A 24-year veteran of Hezbollah, he had commanded a
special operations unit and headed Hezbollah boss Hassan Nasrallah's
security detail. In May 2006, he traveled to Tehran to meet with senior Quds
Force officials and observe members of the Special Groups in training.


According to the June 4 issue of Aviation Week and Space Technology, a U.S.
spy satellite operating over Iran found a mockup of the Karbala facility
attacked on Jan. 20. "The U.S. believes that the discovery indicates Iran
was heavily involved in the attack, which relied on a fake motorcade to gain
entrance to the compound," Aviation Week reported. "The duplicate layout in
Iran allowed attackers to practice procedures to use at the Iraqi compound,
the Defense Department believes."


Indeed, Gen. Bergner's detailed briefing is just the latest evidence of
Tehran and Hezbollah's malevolent roles in Iraq dating back to 2003. Shortly
before the U.S.-led coalition deposed Saddam Hussein in March of that year,
Hezbollah's radio station, al-Manar, broadcast a speech by Sheikh Nasrallah
telling American troops that "our slogan was and will remain death to
America."After the war began, al-Manar broadcast video that ended with
suicide bombers blowing themselves up and likening President Bush to Adolf
Hitler. In October 2005, British Prime Minister Tony Blair said that
improvised explosive devices being used to kill British soldiers in Iraq
were of a type that had been used by Iran's Revolutionary Guards and
Hezbollah.


Similarly, Iran had an interesting relationship with Abu Musab Zarqawi, the
brutal terrorist killed by coalition forces in June 2006. After being
wounded in combat against U.S. military forces in Afghanistan in 2001,
Zarqawi fled to Iran and subsequently made his way to Syria and Lebanon for
meetings with Hezbollah. Early in 2006, journalist Kenneth Timmerman told us
that Zarqawi on occasion crossed the border into Iran when coalition forces
closed in on him. After Zarqawi's al Qaeda in Iraq organization bombed the
Golden Mosque in Samarra on Feb. 22, 2006, Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad tried to exploit the tragedy to foment violence against the
United States and Israel, calling the bombing an act committed by "a group
of defeated Zionists and occupiers."


One might think that the fact that an aspiring nuclear-weapons state like
Iran was waging a proxy war to kill and maim American service personnel
would be of some enduring interest to the mainstream media and politicians
who like to talk about how much they "support the troops." But Gen.
Bergner's speech was basically a two- or three-day story, giving everyone
time to return to the "more important" news of the day - like the firing of
federal prosecutors and finding a graceful way to slink out of Iraq.

 
 
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