The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
Troops Allowed to Kill Iranians in Iraq
By Dafna Linzer
The Washington Post
© January 26, 2007
Policy on operatives stirs concern among
some U.S. officials
The Bush administration has authorized the
U.S. military to kill or capture Iranian
operatives inside Iraq as part of an aggressive
new strategy to weaken Tehran's influence
across the Middle East and compel it to give
up its nuclear program, according to government
and counterterrorism officials with direct
knowledge of the effort.
For more than a year, U.S. forces in Iraq
have secretly detained dozens of suspected
Iranian agents, holding them for three to
four days at a time. The "catch and release"
policy was designed to avoid escalating tensions
with Iran and yet intimidate its emissaries.
U.S. forces collected DNA samples from some
of the Iranians without their knowledge,
subjected others to retina scans, and fingerprinted
and photographed all of them before letting
them go.
Last summer, however, senior administration
officials decided that a more confrontational
approach was necessary, as Iran's regional
influence grew and U.S. efforts to isolate
Tehran appeared to be failing. The country's
nuclear work was advancing, U.S. allies were
resisting robust sanctions against the Tehran
government, and Iran was aggravating sectarian
violence in Iraq.
"There were no costs for the Iranians," said
one senior administration official. "They
are hurting our mission in Iraq, and we were
bending over backwards not to fight back."
Three officials said that about 150 Iranian
intelligence officers, plus members of Iran's
Revolutionary Guard Command, are believed to
be active inside Iraq at any given time. There
is no evidence the Iranians have directly
attacked U.S. troops in Iraq, intelligence
officials said.
But, for three years, the Iranians have operated
an embedding program there, offering operational
training, intelligence and weaponry to several
Shiite militias connected to the Iraqi government,
to the insurgency and to the violence against
Sunni factions. Gen. Michael V. Hayden, the
director of the CIA, told the Senate recently
that the amount of Iranian-supplied materiel
used against U.S. troops in Iraq "has been quite
striking."
"Iran seems to be conducting a foreign policy with
a sense of dangerous triumphalism," Hayden said.
‘Kill or capture’ program
The new "kill or capture" program was authorized
by President Bush in a meeting of his most
senior advisers last fall, along with other
measures meant to curtail Iranian influence
from Kabul to Beirut and, ultimately, to shake
Iran's commitment to its nuclear efforts. Tehran
insists that its nuclear program is peaceful, but
the United states and other nations say it is
aimed at developing weapons.
The administration's plans contain five "theaters
of interest," as one senior official put it, with
military, intelligence, political and diplomatic
strategies designed to target Iranian interests
across the Middle East.
The White House has authorized a widening of
what is known inside the intelligence community
as the "Blue Game Matrix" -- a list of approved
operations that can be carried out against the
Iranian-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon. And U.S.
officials are preparing international sanctions
against Tehran for holding several dozen al-Qaeda
fighters who fled across the Afghan border in
late 2001. They plan more aggressive moves to
disrupt Tehran's funding of the radical
Palestinian group Hamas and to undermine
Iranian interests among Shiites in western
Afghanistan.
In Iraq, U.S. troops now have the authority to
target any member of Iran's Revolutionary Guard,
as well as officers of its intelligence services
believed to be working with Iraqi militias. The
policy does not extend to Iranian civilians or
diplomats. Though U.S. forces are not known to
have used lethal force against any Iranian to
date, Bush administration officials have been
urging top military commanders to exercise the
authority.
The wide-ranging plan has several influential
skeptics in the intelligence community, at the
State Department and at the Defense Department
who said that they worry it could push the
growing conflict between Tehran and Washington
into the center of a chaotic Iraq war.
Retaliation?
Senior administration officials said the
policy is based on the theory that Tehran
will back down from its nuclear ambitions
if the United States hits it hard in Iraq
and elsewhere, creating a sense of vulnerability
among Iranian leaders. But if Iran responds
with escalation, it has the means to put U.S.
citizens and national interests at greater
risk in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.
Officials said Hayden counseled the president
and his advisers to consider a list of
potential consequences, including the
possibility that the Iranians might seek
to retaliate by kidnapping or killing U.S.
personnel in Iraq.
Two officials said that Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, though a supporter of the
strategy, is concerned about the potential
for errors, as well as the ramifications of
a military confrontation between U.S. and
Iranian troops on the Iraqi battlefield.
In meetings with Bush's other senior
advisers, officials said, Rice insisted
that the defense secretary appoint a senior
official to personally oversee the program
to prevent it from expanding into a
full-scale conflict. Rice got the oversight
guarantees she sought, though it remains
unclear whether senior Pentagon officials
must approve targets on a case-by-case
basis or whether the oversight is more
general.
The departments of Defense and State
referred all requests for comment on the
Iran strategy to the National Security
Council, which declined to address specific
elements of the plan and would not comment
on some intelligence matters.
But in response to questions about the "kill
or capture" authorization, Gordon Johndroe,
spokesman for the NSC, said: "The president
has made clear for some time that we will
take the steps necessary to protect Americans
on the ground in Iraq and disrupt activity
that could lead to their harm. Our forces
have standing authority, consistent with
the mandate of the U.N. Security Council."
‘Iranian and Syrian meddling’
Officials said U.S. and British special
forces in Iraq, which will work together
in some operations, are developing the program's
rules of engagement to define the exact
circumstances for using force. In his last
few weeks as the top commander in Iraq, Army
Gen. George W. Casey Jr. sought to help
coordinate the program on the ground. One
official said Casey had planned to designate
Iran's Revolutionary Guard as a "hostile entity,"
a distinction within the military that would
permit offensive action.
Casey's designated successor, Army Lt. Gen.
David H. Petraeus, told Congress in writing
this week that a top priority will be
"countering the threats posed by Iranian
and Syrian meddling in Iraq, and the
continued mission of dismantling terrorist
networks and killing or capturing those who
refuse to support a unified, stable Iraq."
Advocates of the new policy -- some of whom
are in the NSC, the vice president's office,
the Pentagon and the State Department -- said
that only direct and aggressive efforts can
shatter Iran's growing influence. A less
confident Iran, with fewer cards, may be
more willing to cut the kind of deal the Bush
administration is hoping for on its nuclear
program. "The Iranians respond to the
international community only when they are
under pressure, not when they are feeling
strong," one official said.
With aspects of the plan also targeting Iran's
influence in Lebanon, Afghanistan and the
Palestinian territories, the policy goes
beyond the threats Bush issued earlier this
month to "interrupt the flow of support
from Iran and Syria" into Iraq. It also
marks a departure from years past when
diplomacy appeared to be the sole method
of pressuring Iran to reverse course on
its nuclear program.
R. Nicholas Burns, the undersecretary of
state for political affairs, said in an
interview in late October that the United
States knows that Iran "is providing support
to Hezbollah and Hamas and supporting
insurgent groups in Iraq that have posed
a problem for our military forces." He
added: "In addition to the nuclear issue,
Iran's support for terrorism is high up on
our agenda."
Burns, the top Foreign Service officer in
the State Department, has been leading
diplomatic efforts to increase international
pressure on the Iranians. Over several
months, the administration made available
five political appointees for interviews,
to discuss limited aspects of the policy,
on the condition that they not be identified.
Officials who spoke in more detail and
without permission -- including senior
officials, career analysts and policymakers --
said their standing with the White House
would be at risk if they were quoted by
name.
The decision to use lethal force against
Iranians inside Iraq began taking shape
last summer, when Israel was at war with
Hezbollah in Lebanon. Officials said a
group of senior Bush administration officials
who regularly attend the highest-level
counterterrorism meetings agreed that the
conflict provided an opening to portray
Iran as a nuclear-ambitious link between
al-Qaeda, Hezbollah and the death squads
in Iraq.
Among those involved in the discussions,
beginning in August, were deputy national
security adviser Elliott Abrams, NSC
counterterrorism adviser Juan Zarate, the
head of the CIA's counterterrorism center,
representatives from the Pentagon and the
vice president's office, and outgoing State
Department counterterrorism chief Henry A.
Crumpton.
At the time, Bush publicly emphasized
diplomacy as his preferred path for dealing
with Iran. Standing before the U.N. General
Assembly in New York on Sept. 19, Bush spoke
directly to the Iranian people: "We look to
the day when you can live in freedom, and
America and Iran can be good friends and close
partners in the cause of peace."
Two weeks later, Crumpton flew from Washington
to U.S. Central Command headquarters in Tampa
for a meeting with Gen. John P. Abizaid, the
top U.S. commander for the Middle East. A
principal reason for the visit, according to
two officials with direct knowledge of the
discussion, was to press Abizaid to prepare
for an aggressive campaign against Iranian
intelligence and military operatives inside
Iraq.
Information gleaned through the "catch and
release" policy expanded what was once a
limited intelligence community database on
Iranians in Iraq. It also helped to avert a
crisis between the United States and the Iraqi
government over whether U.S. troops should be
holding Iranians, several officials said, and
dampened the possibility of Iranians directly
targeting U.S. personnel in retaliation.
‘No traction’
But senior officials saw it as too timid.
"We were making no traction" with "catch and
release," a senior counterterrorism official
said in a recent interview, explaining that it
had failed to halt Iranian activities in Iraq
or worry the Tehran leadership. "Our goal is to
change the dynamic with the Iranians, to change
the way the Iranians perceive us and perceive
themselves. They need to understand that they
cannot be a party to endangering U.S. soldiers'
lives and American interests, as they have before.
That is going to end."
A senior intelligence officer was more wary of
the ambitions of the strategy.
"This has little to do with Iraq. It's all about
pushing Iran's buttons. It is purely political,"
the official said. The official expressed similar
views about other new efforts aimed at Iran,
suggesting that the United States is escalating
toward an unnecessary conflict to shift attention
away from Iraq and to blame Iran for the United
States' increasing inability to stanch the
violence there.
But some officials within the Bush administration
say that targeting Iran's Revolutionary Guard
Command, and specifically a Guard unit known
as the Quds Force, should be as much a priority
as fighting al-Qaeda in Iraq. The Quds Force is
considered by Western intelligence to be tasked
directly by Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei, to support Iraqi militias, Hamas
and Hezbollah.
Likened to Nazis
In interviews, two senior administration officials
separately compared the Tehran government to the
Nazis and the Guard to the "SS." They also
referred to Guard members as "terrorists."
Such a formal designation could turn Iran's
military into a target of what Bush calls a
"war on terror," with its members potentially
held as enemy combatants or in secret CIA detention.
Asked whether such a designation is imminent,
Johndroe of the NSC said in a written response
that the administration has "long been concerned
about the activities of the IRGC and its components
throughout the Middle East and beyond." He added:
"The Iranian Revolutionary Guards Quds Force is
a part of the Iranian state apparatus that
supports and carries out these activities."
Staff writer Barton Gellman and staff researcher
Julie Tate contributed to this report.
© 2007 The Washington Post Company
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Last Modified:
February 3, 2007