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Iraq
Washington Soon to Release Evidence of Hostile Iranian Activity in Iraq
2007-01-30
Yes, DEBKA, so salt to taste. But, they are often correct. We will see. Some good details, though.
Quote: Their biggest catch was Iranian colonel Fars Hassami, No. 3 in the Revolutionary Guards al Quds BrigadeÂ’s hierarchy, two below the Brigades commander, General Qassem Sulemaini. Officers of the al Quds Brigade also serve with Hizballah combat units in Lebanon and Hamas in the Gaza Strip. The interrogation of Hassami and his four fellow detainees yielded some eye-openers, supplemented by sweeps of their offices and computers.

1. Col. Hassam was found to have been in charge of Iranian operations in northern and central Iraq - from Kurdish Irbil down to the northern outskirts of Baghdad – and all links with Iraq’s Shiite militias, including Moqtada Sadr’s Medhi Army, and Sunni insurgent groups. Hassam was the live wire behind Iran’s military, intelligence and logistic operations in the violence-stricken towns of the northern half of Iraq, Tal Afar, Mosul, Haditha, Kirkuk, Samarra, the Banji refinery town, Tikrit, Ramadi, Falluja and Baquba.

2. This same RG colonel managed an intensive recruitment campaign for the Sadrist Mehdi Army, which controls a large section of Baghdad and against which a combined Iraqi-US crackdown is under preparation. HassamÂ’s recruiting center in Ur (birth town of Abraham) north of Baghdad appealed to volunteers aged 15 to 45. Each was handed $1,500 in cash.

3. A second US raid in Irbil uncovered a stockpile of Iranian weapons. It consisted of 40 tons of explosives, shoulder-borne anti-air missiles, anti-tank missiles, hundreds of automatic rifles and a pile of ordnance made in Iran.

4. Inventories of the weapons and ammo supplied the Medhi Army in Baghdad and Kirkuk by Iran in the last two months were detailed on computer hard disks. Maps showed the locations of anti-air missile positions for shooting down American helicopters.

5. Questioning of the captives yielded the identity of the RGsÂ’ overall commander for orchestrating TehranÂ’s program to dominate Iraq. The name of Col. Bassem Abtakhi struck a familiar chord with the American interrogators. Informed Middle East intelligence circles have come up against him before as the RGs representative attached to the Hizballah command in Lebanon in 2004 and 2005. They were told he now operates out of the Fajr base in Ahwaz, capital of the southern Iranian province of Khozestan.
Let's task a KH-11, stat!
Another familiar face is that of the RG officer nicknamed Mahdi Muhandes (Mahdi the Engineer – a terrorist euphemism for bomb-maker). His real name is Col. Muhammad Ali Ibrahimi and the captured men named him as responsible for smuggling Iranian supplies of arms and military equipment into Iraq. Khalilzad pointed out Wednesday, Jan 24, that Shiite political groups now dominating the Iraqi government had developed close relationships with the Iranian security forces while they were opposing Saddam Hussein. He singled out the biggest Shiite party, SCIRI for mention.
Awww, crap! Can't we find any muzzies who want something other than death?
DEBKAfileÂ’s military sources note that the threat by high US officials of detailed disclosures of IranÂ’s clandestine campaign to control Iraq and its hand in the spiraling sectarian violence further raises the military tensions between Iran and the United States. It adds fuel to the fears in Tehran that Washington may not be satisfied with filing a UN Security Council complaint against IranÂ’s complicity in terrorism, but may also conduct cross-border commando raids against the RGsÂ’ al Quds bases near the Iranian-Iraqi border.
And airstrikes. There and gasoline refineries, missle batteries, nuke facilities, power plants, etc.
Posted by:Brett

#5  LH, there's no set procedure or rule-book for these things, as you well know. Could be that very audacious kinetic action directly against IRGC/Quds people and facilities across the border makes sense - I'd say if an opportunity for same presents itself, it DOES make sense. Recall that the IRGC is basically bereft of any experience in being seriously opposed by an advanced adversary. Methinks they'd be quite unable to take the heat if we were to get serious (I don't consider the usual, marginal approach of plink/counter-plink via detentions and interrogations to be serious in this context).

As for intel, I'd say that quite apart from any bad guys we nab in Iraq, we're surely far ahead of where we were a few years ago. Those mass pilgrimages from Iran to Iraq's Shi'a holy cities has got to be the greatest intelligence opportunity we've faced with an adversary in a long, long time. One just hopes that the community wasn't idle WRT recruiting from the large and able Farsi-speaking American community in the past few years, and that we've fully exploited this windfall. I vaguely recall the Iranians forming some sort of pilgrims' "assistance" council a while back, the clear purpose of which was to try to keep an eye on this mass movement of people. Heh. I'd bet they have not been able to get much of a handle on their little problem there.
Posted by: Verlaine   2007-01-30 21:03  

#4  Iran is one place I don't care about environmental damage from nukes. A dozen or so should clear things up admirably. If Iran tries to retaliate, then make the entire country glow blue at night. The only place in the entire country I might enjoy seeing is Persepolis, and it would probably survive.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2007-01-30 15:42  

#3  It's a slam dunk.
Posted by: Perfesser   2007-01-30 13:37  

#2  1. Im quite sure Ur is in southern Iraq, not north of Baghdad. There is some other geographic fuzziness as well. Id think Debka would at least get that straight

2. We have not heard reports of raids in Sadr City on ammo stockpiles. I presume such raids would come BEFORE any further announcements of intell we got from this guy. Or even before it was announced he was caught. Unless the info was less detailed than im reading Debka to say.

3. The fact that hes being run from over the border doesnt mean we just go ahead and launch an attack over the border. IIUC the world of covert ops doesnt work that way. We did covert ops against the Soviets and friends, and they against us. When you find somebody, you squeeze them for info, then hold them for trade. And you respond with your own covert ops.
Posted by: liberalhawk   2007-01-30 09:47  

#1  Col. Hassam suffers from thinking his sh&t don't stink, but it do. Evil doers are not as smart as they think they are. Say goodbye to Col. Hassam.
Posted by: whatadeal   2007-01-30 08:37  

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