I think this should be more readable

Published on Friday, October 14, 2011 by 
<http://ipsnews.net/>Inter Press Service



FBI Account of "Terror Plot" Suggests Sting Operation

by Gareth Porter

WASHINGTON - While the administration of Barack 
Obama vows to hold the Iranian government 
"accountable" for the alleged plot to assassinate 
the Saudi ambassador in Washington, the legal 
document describing evidence in the case provides 
multiple indications that it was mainly the result of an FBI "sting" operation.

This 2004 provided by the Williamson County Jail 
shows Manssor Arbabsiar. Arbabsiar, a U.S. 
citizen who used to live in Corpus Christi, and a 
member of Iran's special foreign actions unit 
known as the Quds Force were charged in New York 
federal court Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2011, with 
conspiring to kill Adel Al-Jubeir, the Saudi 
ambassador to the U.S. Justice Department 
officials say the men tried to hire a purported 
member of a Mexican drug cartel to carry out the 
assassination with a bomb attack while Al-Jubeir 
dined at his favorite restaurant. (AP 
Photo/Williamson County Jail via Corpus Christi 
Caller-Times) Although the legal document, called 
an amended criminal complaint, implicates 
Iranian-American Manssor Arbabsiar and his cousin 
Ali Gholam Shakuri, an officer in the Iranian 
Quds Force, in a plan to assassinate Saudi 
Arabian Ambassador Adel al-Jubeir, it also 
suggests that the idea originated with and was 
strongly pushed by a undercover DEA informant, at the direction of the FBI.

On May 24, when Arbabsiar first met with the DEA 
informant he thought was part of a Mexican drug 
cartel, it was not to hire a hit squad to kill 
the ambassador. Rather, there is reason to 
believe that the main purpose was to arrange a 
deal to sell large amounts of opium from Afghanistan.

In the complaint, the closest to a semblance of 
evidence that Arbabsiar sought help during that 
first meeting to assassinate the Saudi ambassador 
is the allegation, attributed to the DEA 
informant, that Arbabsiar said he was "interested 
in, among other things, attacking an embassy of Saudi Arabia".

Among the "other things" was almost certainly a 
deal on heroin controlled by officers in the 
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Three 
Bloomberg reporters, citing a "federal law 
enforcement official", wrote that Arbabsiar told 
the DEA informant he represented Iranians who 
"controlled drug smuggling and could provide tons of opium".

Because of opium entering Iran from Afghanistan, 
Iranian authorities hold 85 percent of the 
world's opium seizures, according to Iran's Fars 
News Agency. Iranian security personnel, 
including those in the IRGC and its Quds Force, 
then have the opportunity to sell the opium to 
traffickers in the Middle East, Europe and now Mexico.

Mexican drug cartels have begun connecting with 
Middle Eastern drug traffickers, in many cases 
stationing operatives in Middle East locations to 
facilitate heroin production and sales, according 
to a report last January in Borderland Beat.

But the FBI account of the contacts between 
Arbabsiar and the DEA informant does not reference any discussions of drugs.

The criminal complaint refers to an unspecified 
number of meetings between Arbabsiar and the DEA 
informant in late June and the first two weeks of July.

What transpired in those meetings remains the 
central mystery surrounding the case.

The official account of the investigation cites 
the testimony of the informant (referred to in 
the document as "CS-1") in stating, "Over the 
course of a series of meetings, ARBABSIAR 
explained to CS-1 that his associates in Iran had 
discussed a number of violent missions for CS-1 
and CIS-1's purported criminal associates to perform."

The account claims that the mission discussed 
included murdering the ambassador. But no 
specific statement proposing or agreeing to the 
act is attributed to Arbabsiar. "Prior to the 
July 14 meeting, CS- 1 had reported that he and 
Arbabsiar had discussed the possibility of 
attacks on a number of other targets," the account states.

The targets are described as involving "foreign 
government facilities associated with Saudi 
Arabia and with another country…located either in 
or outside the United States", without mentioning 
any discussion of the Saudi ambassador.

Both that language and the absence of any 
statement attributed to Arbabsiar imply that the 
Iranian- American said nothing about 
assassinating the Saudi ambassador except in 
response to suggestions by the informant, who was 
already part of an FBI undercover operation.

The DEA informant, as the FBI account 
acknowledges in a footnote, had previously been 
charged with a narcotics offense by a state in 
the U.S. and had been cooperating in narcotics 
investigations – apparently posing as a drug 
cartel operative – in return for dropping the 
charges. The document is notably silent on 
whether the conversation was recorded.

A former FBI official familiar with procedures in 
such cases, who spoke to IPS anonymously, said 
the FBI would normally have recorded all such 
conversations touching on the possibility of terrorism.

The absence of quotes from any of those meetings 
suggests that they do not support the case being 
made by the FBI and the Obama administration.

The account is quite explicit, on the other hand, 
that the Jul. 14 and Jul. 17 meetings were 
recorded at FBI direction. Statements quoted from 
those transcripts show the DEA informant trying 
to induce Arbabsiar to indicate agreement to 
assassinating the Saudi ambassador.

The informant is quoted as saying he would need 
"at least four guys" and would "take the one 
point five for the Saudi Arabia". He declared 
that he "go ahead and work on the Saudi Arabia, 
get all the information we can".

At one point the informant says, "You just want 
the, the main guy." And at the end of the 
meeting, he declares, "[W]e're gonna start doing the guy".

The fact that not a single quote from Arbabsiar 
shows that he agreed to assassinating the 
ambassador, much less proposed it, suggests that 
he was either non-committal or linking the issue 
to something else, such as the prospect of a major drug deal with the cartel.

Arbabsiar's quotes from a Sep. 2 phone 
conversation referring to the cartel as "having 
the number for the safe" and "once you open the 
door that's it" could refer to a drug transaction 
that had been discussed, while the FBI account 
suggest those quotes refer to the assassination 
and "other projects" with the Iranian group.

At the Jul. 17 meeting, the DEA informant 
presented a plan to blow up a restaurant to kill 
the ambassador, with the possible deaths of 
100-150 people, eliciting a lack of concern on 
the part of Arbabsiar about such deaths.

During a visit to Iran in August, Arbabsiar wired 
two equal payments totaling $100,000 to a bank 
account in New York. But he was still under the 
impression that he was about to cash in on a deal with the cartel.

The Washington Post reported Thursday that 
Arbabsiar had told an Iranian-American friend 
from Corpus Christie, Texas, "I'm going to make good money."

There is also circumstantial evidence that 
Arbabsiar may have even been brought into the 
sting operation to help further implicate his 
cousin Gholam Shakuri in the terrorist plot.

Arbabsiar met with his cousin Shakuri in late 
September and told him that the cartel was 
demanding that he, Arbabsiar, go to Mexico 
personally to guarantee payment. That demand from 
the DEA was an obvious device by the FBI to get 
Shakuri and his associates in Tehran to 
demonstrate their commitment to the assassination.

The FBI account indicates that Shakuri told 
Arbabsiar that he was responsible for himself if 
he went to Mexico. That statement would have been 
a warning sign for Arbabsiar, if he still 
believed he was dealing with one of the most 
murderous drug cartels in Mexico, that he would 
be risking his own life for a group that was no 
longer taking responsibility for him.

Yet Arbabsiar flew to Mexico as if unconcerned about that risk.

After his arrest on Sept. 29 Arbabsiar waived the 
right to a lawyer and proceeded to provide a 
complete confession. A few days later, he placed 
a phone call to Shakuri which was recorded "at 
the direction of federal enforcement agents", according to the FBI.





John Johnson
Change-Links Progressive Newspaper
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John Johnson
Change-Links Progressive Newspaper
change-li...@change-links.org
http://change-links.org
Subscribe to our list server. Email  change-links-subscr...@yahoogroups.com
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Cell (818) 681-7448.

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