Mon
Feb 12 2007
01:01 pm

See, we invaded Iraq because they had active chemical and biological weapons programs and stockpiles, and an advanced nuclear weapons program.

But now, they don't even have a machinist skilled enough to make roadside pipe bombs, so they must be getting them from Iran. That's the only logical conclusion and all the proof you need. That and rock-solid evidence like this.

But never mind about this. And pay no attention to this.

Sven's picture

Col. Sam Gardiner, who

Col. Sam Gardiner, who documented the Iraq sales effort, has been saying for months that if a third carrier group is dispatched to the gulf - probably the Nimitz - we'll have crossed the Rubicon. He says there's no way in hell that would happen for mere sabre-rattling.

Well, guess what...

Johnny Ringo's picture

trouble is...

Its not just about HumVees. NPR had a story about this this afternoon, and apparently these weapons can penetrate the armor of M1 Tanks, just about the toughest armored vehicles on the planet. No amount of up-armoring a HumVee is going to stand up to that.

The NPR reporter also described the evidence presented by the Pentagon for the Iranian weapons supply theory as "part cicumstantial, part compelling." Apparently the armor-piercing disks in these weapons are highly precision machined - the suggestion being that these are weapons of much greater sophistication than Iraqi insurgents would be capable of building. Further, these weapons only seem to be used by Shiite insurgents, suggesting Iranian influence. The reporter also said that the Iranians aren't denying that Iranian weapons may be in theater - they just say that their government is not responsible for it.

Just FWIW.

Hayduke's picture

Anchors Aweigh

>Col. Sam Gardiner, who documented the Iraq sales effort,
>has been saying for months that if a third carrier group
>is dispatched to the gulf - probably the Nimitz - we'll
>have crossed the Rubicon.

"In an interview Sunday, Vice President Dick Cheney acknowledged an aircraft carrier sent to the Persian Gulf sends Iran a strong message that says 'We're here to stay.' Because nothing says 'We're here to stay' like a boat." --Seth Meyers

rikki's picture

I think Iran will start the

I think Iran will start the U.S.-Iran war, if they haven't already.

There has been plenty of evidence of Iranian influence in Iraq and Iranian espionage within British and U.S. government coming out over the past year and longer, all dutifully ignored by mainstream media. If the Rove Wurlitzer is starting to play that tune, it surely indicates some policy tremors, but I don't think this information is being sexed up like with Iraq. This time they don't have to lie.

R. Neal's picture

So you're all for a war with

So you're all for a war with Iran? Or you at least think it could somehow be justified (in the sense of the lowered bar of justification we seem to have adopted with our foreign policy)? And they are a threat to us how, exactly?

rikki's picture

fatalistically resigned

All for it, hell no! I'm all for a major troop drawdown and soliciting help from the international community in stabilizing Iraq or whatever is to become of that region. I'm all for impeaching Cheney and Bush, in whatever order, perhaps Cheney, then Bush, then Cheney again a few times, then Bush again and maybe Clinton once more just for kicks. I'm all for handing Rumsfeld over to the International Criminal Court.

Realistically, though, Iran has us where they want us, and even if we were to withdraw, they'd probably kick us in the ass as we leave to set off another tragicomic overreaction our children will be literally and psychologically paying for for decades to come.

JaHu's picture

Or you at least think it

Or you at least think it could somehow be justified (in the sense of the lowered bar of justification we seem to have adopted with our foreign policy)? And they are a threat to us how, exactly?

The country fell for the lie the first time, I just hope now the majority of people have come to their senses and won't tolerate it again. We wouldn't be in this situation with Iran if Cowboy had kept his guns in his holster the first time.

Adrift in the Sea of Humility

Tamara Shepherd's picture

Rikki: "There has been

Rikki: "There has been plenty of evidence of Iranian influence in Iraq and Iranian espionage within British and U.S. government coming out over the past year and longer."

(Could be you're sitting there typing to answer this question before I ask it...)

Well, I'm surprised by your comments here, too, Rikki. Even I give enough credit to this administration (or at least to the generals running this war) to realize that we absolutely don't have the troops to launch an effort of this sort, whether or not it were somehow warranted.

I had imagined that the only reason we would conceivably get involved in Iran would be if concerns of their enriching uranium to a high enough grade to produce weapons were validated--and even then, not absent the support of a true international coalition.

Even if this other concern of Iran's "influence" in Iraq were founded, what new circumstance do you see that would suddenly allow us to open yet another front? Aren't we unable to combat this other real or potential threat?

R. Neal's picture

All for it, hell no! Didn't

All for it, hell no!

Didn't think so. Just checking.

Socialist With A Gold Card's picture

I don't buy it

These accusations are clearly BS.

The Iranians have nothing to gain by provoking the US, but they have everything to gain by defeating the Sunnis (who are the ones really setting off the IEDs against US troops).

Al Maliki's Shiite-dominated government is beholden to Moqtada Al Sadr and his (Iran-funded) militia for its legitimacy. The Shiite Iranians realize this (since they're the ones funding him), and they also realize that they are the ones who stand to gain by eventually pulling Bush's puppet government over to their side. The Iranians aren't fools -- they know full well that whenever the US leaves Iraq, whether it be six months or sixty years from now, the Shiite majority in Iraq will remain intact and will be an easy target for Iran's influence. To engage in attacks on American forces in Iraq would work to empower the Sunnis, Iran's enemy.

Ahmedinijad may be crazy, but the rest of the PTB in Iran aren't. They're patient enough to wait us out.

This is not to be construed in any way as an advocacy of Bush's policies; it's simply a recognition that the Persians are very, very patient. They endured the Western-enthroned Shah for seventy years before having their way with him, and they'll out-wait the West on Iraq too. Whether we stay or leave, the Iranians have already won. I believe the neocons realize this and are therefore eager to trump up any excuse to try and bomb Tehran into submission.

It won't work. Making a martyr of Ahmedinijad is the LAST thing we need to be doing.

--Socialist With A Gold Card


"I'm a socialist with a gold card. I firmly believe we need a revolution; I'm just concerned that I won't be able to get good moisturizer afterwards." -- Brett Butler

Les Jones's picture

rikki:

"There has been plenty of evidence of Iranian influence in Iraq and Iranian espionage within British and U.S. government coming out over the past year and longer, all dutifully ignored by mainstream media."

Damn, rikki. I am continually impressed by your recognition of the objective facts and resistance to blind ideology. Well done.

A few items from my Iran file:

- The Mask Comes Off the Mullahs. Again.
- Arab silence allowed Iran influence in Iraq: FM
- Hizbollah fighter tells Israel he trained in Iran

It's been apparent for awhile that Iran has been using Iraq as a proxy war zone with the U.S.

www.lesjones.com

Sven's picture

Oy vey. Jim Henley provides

Oy vey.

Jim Henley provides the checklist for determining whether this evidence actually exists, and whether it matters.

Josh Marshall provides the next question: Would successful aggressive action against Iran materially improve our current situation in Iraq?

Les Jones's picture

Sven:

In the recent Hezbollah-Israeli conflict, Iran provided arms to Hezbollah to attack Israel. There's quite a bit of evidence that Iran supplied weapons and operatives to insurgency forces in Iraq for years now.

How much of a stretch is it for Iran to provide oh, I don't know, - let's say the nuclear weapons they loudly proclaim they're developing - to a third party that will use them against the mainland U.S.? Anyone with a pulse is concerned about that these days.

www.lesjones.com

Sven's picture

Iran provided arms to

Iran provided arms to Hezbollah to attack Israel.

Choke cough cough. I'm sorry. What were you saying?

There's quite a bit of evidence that Iran supplied weapons and operatives to insurgency forces in Iraq for years now.

Define "quite a bit" and "insurgency forces." Oh, and "evidence."

they loudly proclaim they're developing

...and which the people tasked with making this determination - the people who got Iraq right - say they aren't capable of developing.

rikki's picture

bloody mess

Oh, and "evidence."

I've been reading about Iran's influence in Iraq in the New York Times throughout the past year. I'm a bit surprised people find it hard to believe.

Sven, Les said Iran armed Hezbollah, and you provided a link showing the U.S. armed Israel. Is that supposed to make sense, or did I miss something?

I think it was a horrible mistake to invade and occupy Iraq, but I fear the situation is now slipping out of our control, with Iran rapidly filling the vacuum. Rove might still grip the sound-bite media, but he has no capacity as a military strategist. He's a bullshit artist, and no one wearing boots has any use for him beyond something to kick. If he's planting bogus Iran stories, it's probably a head fake to get the Dems out of position.

SWAGC, I agree with your analysis at first blush, but I just don't feel confident about what is going on. Iran surely doesn't want to provoke us, but having us close at hand serves useful purposes. The "Great Satan" shtick is not so hollow when we are in striking distance, and some of the stolen dollars and goods (like candy from a baby) are probably finding their way to Iran, not unlike obsolete fighter jet parts.

Your point about the patience of the Iranians is well taken, and I'd like to add that they not only invented mathematics, but can also haggle in ways free-market idealists who waltz into stores and pay whatever price is on the sticker can only dream about. I don't fully understand their motives, but I don't trust them, nor do I have any faith in dear leader.

Les, I believe Iran is loudly proclaiming that they are trying to develop a nuclear power infrastructure, not nuclear weapons, so you might be overbidding that suit.

Johnny Ringo's picture

Trust but Verify?

Les, I believe Iran is loudly proclaiming that they are trying to develop a nuclear power infrastructure, not nuclear weapons, so you might be overbidding that suit.

You're not really willing to take them at their word on this, are you? Sure, there's evidence that they really need nuclear power right now, but wouldn't it be cheaper and less provocative for them simply to reinvest in their oil infrastructure? Why develop an entirely new industry that brings international pressure down on them, unless this program, at the end of the day, isn't really about energy?

Unfortunately, patient or not, Iran is currently run by fanatical Islamist clerics and a Holocaust-denying President with apocalyptic visions of conflict with the West. I'd rather not put much faith in their promises regarding the real ends of their nuclear experimentations.

rikki's picture

It's the "loudly

It's the "loudly proclaiming" part I was objecting to. They may be trying to develop weapons, but they might be trying to just be defiant. There is plenty of political value for them in simply pissing us off.

As for their oil infrastructure, I believe there are sanctions precluding the repairs and upgrades they need, and there are either market controls or refinery limitations that make oil more valuable as an export commodity than for consumption.

If they are aiming for weapons, which would take years, just as Iraq was years from being able to make a warhead (blatant lies about mushroom clouds notwithstanding), are they a signatory on the non-proliferation agreement? If so, who has the moral authority to enforce the treaty? Certainly not the U.S., which has been filching on promises for centuries and is currently led by faux cowboy who quite literally mocks the whole notion of international agreements.

Socialist With A Gold Card's picture

The roots of modern Iran

The BBC recently ran a three-part series on the modern history of Iran, exploring its conflicted relationship with the West, the rise and fall of the Shah, the rise of the Islamic Republic, and the role that old anti-Western grudges play in its current government. It's a fascinating series; anyone concerned about the current situation should download and listen to all three parts.

--Socialist With A Gold Card


"I'm a socialist with a gold card. I firmly believe we need a revolution; I'm just concerned that I won't be able to get good moisturizer afterwards." -- Brett Butler

WhitesCreek's picture

Unfortunately, patient or

Unfortunately, patient or not, Iran is currently run by fanatical Islamist clerics and a Holocaust-denying President with apocalyptic visions of conflict with the West. I'd rather not put much faith in their promises regarding the real ends of their nuclear experimentations.

Unfortunately, like it or not, the United States is currently run by fanatical neoconservative right wing fascists and a reality denying president with apocalyptic visions of conflict in the Middle East. I'd rather not put much faith in their promises regarding the real ends of their war experimentations.

Peace

Johnny Ringo's picture

Lovely

But unresponsive to the question at hand. If Iran really has an energy crisis, why not address it by fixing its oil infrastructure? Why would a nation that rests on an ocean of oil not utilize that resource rather than develop an entirely new one, unless their real purpose is the acquisition of nuclear weapons?

Sven's picture

Sven, Les said Iran armed

Sven, Les said Iran armed Hezbollah, and you provided a link showing the U.S. armed Israel. Is that supposed to make sense, or did I miss something?

It's not supposed to make any more sense than Les offering Iran's arming of Hezbollah as evidence of Iran arming Iraqi "insurgents." If this is the standard of proof for starting a war...

There's "evidence" that "insurgents" have obtained US weapons. Chinese weapons. Czech weapons. Russian weapons. Libyan weapons. Italian mafia weapons. Saudi Arabian weapons....

Les Jones's picture

Sven:

Arming insurgents and arming Hezbollah during Iran's proxy war with Israel are two different things. And if Iran is willing to give Katyusha rockets to Hezbollah to use against Israel, who's to say they won't give nuclear weapons to groups to use against Israel or the U.S. That's the concern. Iran's PM is playing a very dangerous game.

And passively "having obtained" isn't the same as intentionally being supplied with.

www.lesjones.com

R. Neal's picture

who's to say they won't give

who's to say they won't give nuclear weapons to groups to use against Israel or the U.S.

If they do, they will cease to exist. That deterred the Soviets for fifty years.

I suppose the argument is that these guys are crazy and don't care if they are annihilated and thus martyred.

It doesn't seem like a winning strategy for the long-term survival of your religious movement or its people, though. You'd think even the most radical Imams and Mullahs or whatevers could figure that out.

Les Jones's picture

"If they do, they will cease

"If they do, they will cease to exist. That deterred the Soviets for fifty years."

And if the nuke arrives on an ICBM we tracked from Ukraine, that works. If a small nuke goes off in New York harbor, who's to say who gave it to them? That's the problem of renegade groups. The old system of deterrence doesn't work the same way.

I'm also a little more worried about someone with non-secular motivations for using nukes.

"It doesn't seem like a winning strategy for the long-term survival of your religious movement or its people, though. You'd think even the most radical Imams and Mullahs or whatevers could figure that out."

They have. I couldn't find the link, but the NY Times had a big story about the ayatollah's break with Ahmadinejad because of the latter's nuclear saber-rattling and Holocaust rants.

Here's an interesting piece I ran across in my search:

Interesting piece on deterrence now and then. FWIW, this person concludes that attacking Iran's nuclear infrastructure isn't the solution, though his solutions to Iran seem to be the same ones that were tried and failed in North Korea.

www.lesjones.com

Sven's picture

Jeez, Les, I guess we're on

Jeez, Les, I guess we're on the same wavelength.

Arming insurgents and arming Hezbollah during Iran's proxy war with Israel are two different things.

Indeed, they are. Especially considering that Hezbollah is a Shiite militia, and the "insurgents" are Sunni ex-Baathists who hate Iran's guts and are bent on toppling Iraq's Shiia-dominated, Iran-friendy government.

And if Iran is willing to give Katyusha rockets to Hezbollah to use against Israel, who's to say they won't give nuclear weapons to groups to use against Israel or the U.S.

This comes back to whether Iran is actually developing nuclear weapons, no? And if you destabilize the entire Middle East by starting a war with Iran, I'd say the chances that a nuke - supplied by Pakistan or a former Soviet republic - slipping into the hands of terrorists increase substantially.

Small quibble - the Katyushas are the cheap, unguided and often homemade rockets. The Iranians provided the larger, more sophisticated stuff.

And passively "having obtained" isn't the same as intentionally being supplied with.

My point exactly. If the Bushies truly have the goods on the Iranians, they should be willing and able to approach Congress, answer the basic questions I linked to earlier and seek authorization for war. Otherwise, they should STFU and preserve what little credibility our country has left for when its really needed.

Les Jones's picture

"This comes back to whether

"This comes back to whether Iran is actually developing nuclear weapons, no?"

According to an EU report, they are.

Iran will be able to develop enough weapons-grade material for a nuclear bomb and there is little that can be done to prevent it, an internal European Union document has concluded.

In an admission of the international community’s failure to hold back Iran’s nuclear ambitions, the document – compiled by the staff of Javier Solana, EU foreign policy chief – says the atomic programme has been delayed only by technical limitations rather than diplomatic pressure. “Attempts to engage the Iranian administration in a negotiating process have not so far succeeded,” it states.

The downbeat conclusions of the “reflection paper” – seen by the Financial Times – are certain to be seized on by advocates of military action, who fear that Iran will be able to produce enough fissile material for a bomb over the next two to three years. Tehran insists its purposes are purely peaceful.

www.lesjones.com

Andy Axel's picture

Crying wolf

I must admit, I'm hesitant to discuss a lot of this intel on Iran since the pre-war intel on Iraq was so badly (and purposefully, courtesy of the WHIG and OSP) botched.

Credibility is key here, and the notion that Bush was sooooooooo sure that there were WMD in Iraq...

[cue "Nope! No weapons here!" [RAUCOUS LAUGHTER] from the 2004 WHCA dinner. Hard cut to Joe Lieberman in stitches.]

...leaves very little wiggle room for the US and its tenuous coalition on the international stage. (Is the Blair government is ready for another go? Can Howard be bullied into joining the Coalition of the Billing? Find out!)

Doesn't it trouble y'all that Bush was so wrong before? Doesn't that leave even a scintilla of hesitation? Or is this a case in which we feel confident that we can perfect our mistakes by repeating them, expecting different results?

I know that it's a major plank in the statement of principles for a New Murrican Century that we fight simultaneous wars in multiple theaters of conflict, but we've BTDT at this point.

Bush burned his political capital in Baghdad before the first non-existent flower wilted. Starting war in Iran, using the same flimsy GWOT casus belli as before, would be the lamest of lame duck manuvers.

____________________________

Recursive blogwhore.

Les Jones's picture

BTW

As far as the whole "insurgents" terminology (that admittedly I used) let's just say there are folks in Iraq from various factions trying to kill U.S. forces and undermine Iraq democracy.

For an example of Iran arming people who are killing U.S. forces, see here. Sniper rifles that Steyr sold and shipped to Iran have been found in the hands of people who used them to kill American GIs. So there's your smoking gun.

www.lesjones.com

Sven's picture

They may be trying to

They may be trying to develop weapons, but they might be trying to just be defiant.

Or it may be a domestic political ploy.

Or they may be building up capacity to try when the US screws up and gives them room to wiggle out of the NPT.

Or they may be trying and be incapable.

Or this may all be irrelevant, and the real reason the Bushies are trying to play up the threat is because it has handed Iran an excellent strategic hand.

R. Neal's picture

let's just say there are

let's just say there are folks in Iraq from various factions trying to kill U.S. forces and undermine Iraq democracy

Then let's start killing the bastards instead of riding around in under-armored vehicles providing easy targets for them.

What kind of winning strategy is that? What morons came up with that? The same morons who got us in to this without a plan or even a clue and got all these people killed?

Les Jones's picture

"Then let's start killing

"Then let's start killing the bastards instead of riding around in under-armored vehicles providing easy targets for them. What kind of winning strategy is that? What morons came up with that? "

Yep. It's frustrating. It's been obvious for a long time that Iran and Syria have been a big part of the problem, and Bush botched it by not addressing it. He's finally talking about it now, and this morning on Drudge that Iraq is finally going to close its borders with Iran and Syria.

But, yeah, the Iranian and Syrian problem should have been dealt with a long time ago.

www.lesjones.com

Sven's picture

EU report? We've officially

EU report? We've officially entered the twilight zone.

Again, if the Bushies, the EU or anyone else have the cards, they should be laid on the fookin' table. But they don't. They. Don't. It's all speculation, subject to mystical interpretation of the Iranian motives (not to mention our own strategic goals). We may as well be using Tarot cards.

The IAEA's Mohamed El Baradei - the guy the Bushies blew off on Iraq and the guy who tried to warn them about the Niger forgeries - said today about what we know:

I don't see a military solution of the Iranian issue. First of all, as far as we know what Iran has now today is the knowledge. We do not know that Iran has the industrial capacity to enrich uranium. We don't know, we haven't seen indication or concrete proof of a nuclear weapons program. So I don't see that people talk about a military solution. I don't know what they mean by that. You cannot bomb knowledge, as I said before. I think it would also be completely counter productive."

Sven's picture

let's just say there are

let's just say there are folks in Iraq from various factions trying to kill U.S. forces and undermine Iraq democracy.

Yeah, let's just say that. We don't need to understand what's really going on, who we're supporting and who we're fighting against. No matter that the guy who has the tightest relationship with Iran, lords over a militia that was trained in Iran, armed by Iran and is completely loyal to Iran, gets invited to the fucking White House.

Details are for suckers.

ANGRYWOLF's picture

A war with Iran would be a disaster...

I think the American people would revolt...and it would be impossible for Bush to explain his rationale....The REPUBLICAN PARTY would become persona non grata everywhere except in Texas and the south...sorry, we're apparently stuck with those guys...we'll see if Bush , Cheney, etc etc..if they're stupid enough to actually do it.

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