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Iran Supported and Secretly Promoted U.S. Invasion of Iraq

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  • Iran Supported and Secretly Promoted U.S. Invasion of Iraq

    Global Politician, NY
    Feb 14 2005


    Iran Supported and Secretly Promoted U.S. Invasion of Iraq

    2/16/2005

    By David Storobin, Esq.
    In what is emerging as a spectacular coup for Iran, it is becoming
    ever more clear that the Islamic Republic not only supported the war
    in Iraq, but actually used its covert agents to help make the case,
    often with falsehoods, for the American invasion.

    In recent days, Iraqi dissident Ahmad Chalabi received support in his
    bid to become Prime Minister of Iraq from Muktada al-Sadr, a Shia
    terrorist with links to Iran. The al-Sadr family has been cooperating
    with Iran and Iran-sponsored Lebanese Hizballah since the overthrow
    of the Shah. Spokespersons for both al-Sadr and Chalabi have
    confirmed cooperation with and support for each other.

    In 2004, Sadr engaged in a massive guerilla and terrorist offensive
    against American troops, hoping they will run from Iraq like they did
    a generation ago from Lebanon after a series of bombings, at least
    some of which were organized by members of the Sadr clan with help
    from the Islamic Republic.

    During the latter years of Saddam's reign, Chalabi emerged as a main
    proponent of invasion of Iraq, often meeting with U.S. officials and
    regularly appearing in Western media. At the same time, it is now
    known, he was cooperating with Iranians and passing to them
    information about the United States. Today, he certainly seems like
    the Ayatollah's choice for Prime Minister of Iraq.

    Chalabi's bid is a long shot and he's probably too unpopular to win
    his struggle for the position of Prime Minister against the two main
    candidates, Ibrahim al-Jafaari of the Islamic Mission ("Dawa") Party
    and Adel Abdul Mahdi of the Supreme Council for the Islamic
    Revolution. Humam Hamoudi, a top official in the Supreme Council, was
    quoted in the New York Times as saying that al-Sadr will support any
    of the three candidates who will emerge as the Prime Minister.
    However, it is also becoming clear that both al-Sadr and Iran are
    keen on increasing Chalabi's power, in hopes that he may emerge as
    the Prime Minister later and for now to be a highly influential
    government official in the new Iraq.

    That Chalabi does not seem overly religious is not as much of a
    problem for Iran, as many may presume. Iran has long cooperated with
    secular, Ba'athist Syrian regime. It supported Armenian Christians in
    their war against Muslim Azerbaijan, and maintains better relations
    with the Christian Greece than their Muslim Turkish rival. The
    Islamic Republic, like any other country, views its self-interest as
    the most important criteria. It is for this reason that it decided to
    embrace the supposedly anti-Islamic nuclear weapons and ignore
    Russia's human rights violations against Chechens and other Muslims.

    So why would Iran be interested in an American invasion of Iraq?

    The enmity between Iran and Iraq is well-known. They fought a bloody
    war in the 1980's with Saddam's military using Weapons of Mass
    Destruction. In fact, it was the Iraqi threat that caused the
    Ayatollahs to re-examine their policy of rejecting nuclear weapons,
    which they originally considered as a violation of Islamic law.

    Iraq was the dominant force in that part of the Middle East and
    weakening it meant it would be easier for Iran to spread its
    influence not just to Iraq, but also to other countries, including
    the predominantly Shia nation of Bahrain. Half of Yemen's population
    is Shia, as is a significant minority in Saudi Arabia, Syria,
    Lebanon, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates and other Arab countries. The
    Shia tend to be poorer and less educated than Sunni Muslims and
    claim, with at least some justification, that they are discriminated
    against. They are, thus, easy preys for pro-Iran guerilla and
    terrorist recruiters.

    At least as importantly, Iran realized that Washington had only one
    "bullet" after the war in Afghanistan and if Saddam were to be
    invaded, the leaders in Tehran (and their allies in Syria) can sleep
    safely at night, knowing the U.S. will be too busy with insurgents in
    Afghanistan and Iraq, and terrorists around the world. Just to be
    sure that Americans will have a bitter taste left in their mouth from
    fighting wars, Tehran and Damascus sponsored anti-American terrorism
    and insurgency in Iraq, guaranteeing casualties and the impression
    that Washington is losing badly. With the United States seemingly in
    trouble in Iraq, it would be unable to bring together an
    international coalition or even build popular support at home to
    attack a much bigger Iran.

    Nor was the government in Tehran concerned that having American
    troops and bases on its western border would enable Washington to
    attack Iran's nuclear facilities. The U.S. already had soldiers,
    bases and a friendly government on the eastern border of Iran in
    Afghanistan, so they could easy bomb the Islamic Republic from the
    East, if that was the Pentagon's decision. While Iran has fairly
    strong ground forces, their air force and air defenses are
    phenomenally outdated and too small. Thus, an air attack by Americans
    from the Afghani bases in the East would almost definitely succeed,
    even if it was necessary to fly all the way to the Iran's western
    border (presuming they had accurate intelligence information as to
    which targets should be hit). Meanwhile, Israel was always a threat
    to attack from the West by flying over Iraq and the impotent Syria
    before reaching the Islamic Republic.

    The American invasion of Iraq made action against Tehran's nuclear
    facilities much less likely. For one, Israel will now have to fly
    over U.S.-dominated Iraq (it is doubtful that Turkey would allow the
    Jewish State to use its air space to bomb Iran, even though it is
    horrified at the prospect of nuclearization of its fundamentalist
    neighbor). As such, Jerusalem will not to move without permission
    from the White House.

    Meanwhile, the White House feels stung by the troubles faced in Iraq
    – troubles caused largely by Iran and that would not exist without
    its financial, military, logistic and intelligence support. Even
    those insurgents and terrorists not affiliated with Tehran and/or
    Damascus, are benefiting from the distraction of American forces. Due
    to their lack of size and money, these insurgents would be quickly
    defeated if the U.S. did not need to focus on terrorists sponsored by
    Iran and Syria.

    Given the daily or even hourly reports of troubles in Iraq, Americans
    simply do not have the will, nor the international support, to deal
    with Iran's nuclear program, and they do not want to risk being
    dragged into a war by being accused of allowing Israel to fly over
    Iraq to bomb nuclear installations in the Islamic Republic. Moreover,
    just like with soldiers, U.S. intelligence agents are also limited
    and the more are tied up in Iraq, the fewer can spy against Iran,
    weakening America's ability to hit the proper targets.

    As such, Iran quietly supported Washington's plans to invade Saddam's
    Iraq and used its collaborator Ahmad Chalabi to promote the idea in
    Western circles. It has scored a double victory: not only did its
    Iraqi rival go down, but now Israel and the United States are now
    less likely to interfere with its nuclear program.

    David Storobin is a New York lawyer who received Juris Doctor (J.D.)
    degree from Rutgers University School of Law. His Master's Thesis
    (M.A. - Comparative Politics) deals with Extremist Movements in the
    Middle East and the historical causes for the rise of fundamentalism.
    Mr. Storobin's book "The Root Cause: The Rise of Fundamentalist Islam
    and its Threat to the World" will be published in 2005.

    http://globalpolitician.com/articles.asp?ID=346

    --Boundary_(ID_qpZspMgdDx4WgJ+1ZUMtaw)--
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