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Annals of National Security
Shifting Targets
The Administration’s plan for Iran.
by
Seymour M. Hersh
October 8, 2007
Source:
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/10/08/071008fa_fact_hersh
In a series of public statements in
recent months, President Bush and
members of his Administration have
redefined the war in Iraq, to an
increasing degree, as a strategic battle
between the United States and Iran.
“Shia extremists, backed by Iran, are
training Iraqis to carry out attacks on
our forces and the Iraqi people,” Bush
told the national convention of the
American Legion in August. “The attacks
on our bases and our troops by
Iranian-supplied munitions have
increased. . . . The Iranian regime must
halt these actions. And, until it does,
I will take actions necessary to protect
our troops.” He then concluded, to
applause, “I have authorized our
military commanders in Iraq to confront
Tehran’s murderous activities.”
The President’s position, and its
corollary—that, if many of America’s
problems in Iraq are the responsibility
of Tehran, then the solution to them is
to confront the Iranians—have taken firm
hold in the Administration. This summer,
the White House, pushed by the office of
Vice-President Dick Cheney, requested
that the Joint Chiefs of Staff redraw
long-standing plans for a possible
attack on Iran, according to former
officials and government consultants.
The focus of the plans had been a broad
bombing attack, with targets including
Iran’s known and suspected nuclear
facilities and other military and
infrastructure sites. Now the emphasis
is on “surgical” strikes on
Revolutionary Guard Corps facilities in
Tehran and elsewhere, which, the
Administration claims, have been the
source of attacks on Americans in Iraq.
What had been presented primarily as a
counter-proliferation mission has been
reconceived as counterterrorism.
The shift in targeting reflects three
developments. First, the President and
his senior advisers have concluded that
their campaign to convince the American
public that Iran poses an imminent
nuclear threat has failed (unlike a
similar campaign before the Iraq war),
and that as a result there is not enough
popular support for a major bombing
campaign. The second development is that
the White House has come to terms, in
private, with the general consensus of
the American intelligence community that
Iran is at least five years away from
obtaining a bomb. And, finally, there
has been a growing recognition in
Washington and throughout the Middle
East that Iran is emerging as the
geopolitical winner of the war in Iraq.
During a secure videoconference that
took place early this summer, the
President told Ryan Crocker, the U.S.
Ambassador to Iraq, that he was thinking
of hitting Iranian targets across the
border and that the British “were on
board.” At that point, Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice interjected that
there was a need to proceed carefully,
because of the ongoing diplomatic track.
Bush ended by instructing Crocker to
tell Iran to stop interfering in Iraq or
it would face American retribution.
At a White House meeting with Cheney
this summer, according to a former
senior intelligence official, it was
agreed that, if limited strikes on Iran
were carried out, the Administration
could fend off criticism by arguing that
they were a defensive action to save
soldiers in Iraq. If Democrats objected,
the Administration could say, “Bill
Clinton did the same thing; he conducted
limited strikes in Afghanistan, the
Sudan, and in Baghdad to protect
American lives.” The former intelligence
official added, “There is a desperate
effort by Cheney et al. to bring
military action to Iran as soon as
possible. Meanwhile, the politicians are
saying, ‘You can’t do it, because every
Republican is going to be defeated, and
we’re only one fact from going over the
cliff in Iraq.’ But Cheney doesn’t give
a rat’s ass about the Republican
worries, and neither does the
President.”
Bryan Whitman, a Pentagon spokesman,
said, “The President has made it clear
that the United States government
remains committed to a diplomatic
solution with respect to Iran. The State
Department is working diligently along
with the international community to
address our broad range of concerns.”
(The White House declined to comment.)
I was repeatedly cautioned, in
interviews, that the President has yet
to issue the “execute order” that would
be required for a military operation
inside Iran, and such an order may never
be issued. But there has been a
significant increase in the tempo of
attack planning. In mid-August, senior
officials told reporters that the
Administration intended to declare
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps a
foreign terrorist organization. And two
former senior officials of the C.I.A.
told me that, by late summer, the agency
had increased the size and the authority
of the Iranian Operations Group. (A
spokesman for the agency said, “The
C.I.A. does not, as a rule, publicly
discuss the relative size of its
operational components.”)
“They’re moving everybody to the Iran
desk,” one recently retired C.I.A.
official said. “They’re dragging in a
lot of analysts and ramping up
everything. It’s just like the fall of
2002”—the months before the invasion of
Iraq, when the Iraqi Operations Group
became the most important in the agency.
He added, “The guys now running the
Iranian program have limited direct
experience with Iran. In the event of an
attack, how will the Iranians react?
They will react, and the
Administration has not thought it all
the way through.”
That theme was echoed by Zbigniew
Brzezinski, the former national-security
adviser, who said that he had heard
discussions of the White House’s more
limited bombing plans for Iran.
Brzezinski said that Iran would likely
react to an American attack “by
intensifying the conflict in Iraq and
also in Afghanistan, their neighbors,
and that could draw in Pakistan. We will
be stuck in a regional war for twenty
years.”
In a speech at the United Nations last
week, Iran’s President, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, was defiant. He referred to
America as an “aggressor” state, and
said, “How can the incompetents who
cannot even manage and control
themselves rule humanity and arrange its
affairs? Unfortunately, they have put
themselves in the position of God.” (The
day before, at Columbia, he suggested
that the facts of the Holocaust still
needed to be determined.)
“A lot depends on how stupid the
Iranians will be,” Brzezinski told me.
“Will they cool off Ahmadinejad and tone
down their language?” The Bush
Administration, by charging that Iran
was interfering in Iraq, was aiming “to
paint it as ‘We’re responding to what is
an intolerable situation,’ ” Brzezinski
said. “This time, unlike the attack in
Iraq, we’re going to play the victim.
The name of our game seems to be to get
the Iranians to overplay their hand.”
General David Petraeus, the commander of
the multinational forces in Iraq, in his
report to Congress in September,
buttressed the Administration’s case
against Iran. “None of us, earlier this
year, appreciated the extent of Iranian
involvement in Iraq, something about
which we and Iraq’s leaders all now have
greater concern,” he said. Iran,
Petraeus said, was fighting “a proxy war
against the Iraqi state and coalition
forces in Iraq.”
Iran has had a presence in Iraq for
decades; the extent and the purpose of
its current activities there are in
dispute, however. During Saddam
Hussein’s rule, when the Sunni-dominated
Baath Party brutally oppressed the
majority Shiites, Iran supported them.
Many in the present Iraqi Shiite
leadership, including prominent members
of the government of Prime Minister Nuri
al-Maliki, spent years in exile in Iran;
last week, at the Council on Foreign
Relations, Maliki said, according to the
Washington Post, that Iraq’s
relations with the Iranians had
“improved to the point that they are not
interfering in our internal affairs.”
Iran is so entrenched in Iraqi Shiite
circles that any “proxy war” could be as
much through the Iraqi state as against
it. The crux of the Bush
Administration’s strategic dilemma is
that its decision to back a Shiite-led
government after the fall of Saddam has
empowered Iran, and made it impossible
to exclude Iran from the Iraqi political
scene.
Vali Nasr, a professor of international
politics at Tufts University, who is an
expert on Iran and Shiism, told me,
“Between 2003 and 2006, the Iranians
thought they were closest to the United
States on the issue of Iraq.” The Iraqi
Shia religious leadership encouraged
Shiites to avoid confrontation with
American soldiers and to participate in
elections—believing that a one-man,
one-vote election process could only
result in a Shia-dominated government.
Initially, the insurgency was mainly
Sunni, especially Al Qaeda in
Mesopotamia. Nasr told me that Iran’s
policy since 2003 has been to provide
funding, arms, and aid to several Shiite
factions—including some in Maliki’s
coalition. The problem, Nasr said, is
that “once you put the arms on the
ground you cannot control how they’re
used later.”
In the Shiite view, the White House
“only looks at Iran’s ties to Iraq in
terms of security,” Nasr said. “Last
year, over one million Iranians
travelled to Iraq on pilgrimages, and
there is more than a billion dollars a
year in trading between the two
countries. But the Americans act as if
every Iranian inside Iraq were there to
import weapons.”
Many of those who support the
President’s policy argue that Iran poses
an imminent threat. In a recent essay in
Commentary, Norman Podhoretz
depicted President Ahmadinejad as a
revolutionary, “like Hitler . . . whose
objective is to overturn the going
international system and to replace it .
. . with a new order dominated by Iran.
. . . [T]he plain and brutal truth is
that if Iran is to be prevented from
developing a nuclear arsenal, there is
no alternative to the actual use of
military force.”
Podhoretz concluded, “I pray with all my
heart” that President Bush “will find it
possible to take the only action that
can stop Iran from following through on
its evil intentions both toward us and
toward Israel.” Podhoretz recently told
politico.com that he had met with the
President for about forty-five minutes
to urge him to take military action
against Iran, and believed that “Bush is
going to hit” Iran before leaving
office. (Podhoretz, one of the founders
of neoconservatism, is a strong backer
of Rudolph Giuliani’s Presidential
campaign, and his son-in-law, Elliott
Abrams, is a senior adviser to President
Bush on national security.)
In early August, Army Lieutenant General
Raymond Odierno, the second-ranking U.S.
commander in Iraq, told the Times
about an increase in attacks involving
explosively formed penetrators, a type
of lethal bomb that discharges a
semi-molten copper slug that can rip
through the armor of Humvees. The
Times reported that U.S.
intelligence and technical analyses
indicated that Shiite militias had
obtained the bombs from Iran. Odierno
said that Iranians had been “surging
support” over the past three or four
months.
Questions remain, however, about the
provenance of weapons in Iraq,
especially given the rampant black
market in arms. David Kay, a former
C.I.A. adviser and the chief weapons
inspector in Iraq for the United
Nations, told me that his inspection
team was astonished, in the aftermath of
both Iraq wars, by “the huge amounts of
arms” it found circulating among
civilians and military personnel
throughout the country. He recalled
seeing stockpiles of explosively formed
penetrators, as well as charges that had
been recovered from unexploded American
cluster bombs. Arms had also been
supplied years ago by the Iranians to
their Shiite allies in southern Iraq who
had been persecuted by the Baath Party.
“I thought Petraeus went way beyond what
Iran is doing inside Iraq today,” Kay
said. “When the White House started its
anti-Iran campaign, six months ago, I
thought it was all craziness. Now it
does look like there is some selective
smuggling by Iran, but much of it has
been in response to American pressure
and American threats—more a ‘shot across
the bow’ sort of thing, to let
Washington know that it was not going to
get away with its threats so freely.
Iran is not giving the Iraqis the good
stuff—the anti-aircraft missiles that
can shoot down American planes and its
advanced anti-tank weapons.”
Another element of the Administration’s
case against Iran is the presence of
Iranian agents in Iraq. General Petraeus,
testifying before Congress, said that a
commando faction of the Revolutionary
Guards was seeking to turn its allies
inside Iraq into a “Hezbollah-like force
to serve its interests.” In August, Army
Major General Rick Lynch, the commander
of the 3rd Infantry Division, told
reporters in Baghdad that his troops
were tracking some fifty Iranian men
sent by the Revolutionary Guards who
were training Shiite insurgents south of
Baghdad. “We know they’re here and we
target them as well,” he said.
Patrick Clawson, an expert on Iran at
the Washington Institute for Near East
Policy, told me that “there are a lot of
Iranians at any time inside Iraq,
including those doing intelligence work
and those doing humanitarian missions.
It would be prudent for the
Administration to produce more evidence
of direct military training—or produce
fighters captured in Iraq who had been
trained in Iran.” He added, “It will be
important for the Iraqi government to be
able to state that they were unaware of
this activity”; otherwise, given the
intense relationship between the Iraqi
Shiite leadership and Tehran, the
Iranians could say that “they had been
asked by the Iraqi government to train
these people.” (In late August, American
troops raided a Baghdad hotel and
arrested a group of Iranians. They were
a delegation from Iran’s energy
ministry, and had been invited to Iraq
by the Maliki government; they were
later released.)
“If you want to attack, you have to
prepare the groundwork, and you have to
be prepared to show the evidence,”
Clawson said. Adding to the complexity,
he said, is a question that seems almost
counterintuitive: “What is the attitude
of Iraq going to be if we hit Iran? Such
an attack could put a strain on the
Iraqi government.”
A senior European diplomat, who works
closely with American intelligence, told
me that there is evidence that Iran has
been making extensive preparation for an
American bombing attack. “We know that
the Iranians are strengthening their
air-defense capabilities,” he said, “and
we believe they will react
asymmetrically—hitting targets in Europe
and in Latin America.” There is also
specific intelligence suggesting that
Iran will be aided in these attacks by
Hezbollah. “Hezbollah is capable, and
they can do it,” the diplomat said.
In interviews with current and former
officials, there were repeated
complaints about the paucity of reliable
information. A former high-level C.I.A.
official said that the intelligence
about who is doing what inside Iran “is
so thin that nobody even wants his name
on it. This is the problem.”
The difficulty of determining who is
responsible for the chaos in Iraq can be
seen in Basra, in the Shiite south,
where British forces had earlier
presided over a relatively secure area.
Over the course of this year, however,
the region became increasingly
ungovernable, and by fall the British
had retreated to fixed bases. A European
official who has access to current
intelligence told me that “there is a
firm belief inside the American and U.K.
intelligence community that Iran is
supporting many of the groups in
southern Iraq that are responsible for
the deaths of British and American
soldiers. Weapons and money are getting
in from Iran. They have been able to
penetrate many groups”—primarily the
Mahdi Army and other Shiite militias.
A June, 2007, report by the
International Crisis Group found,
however, that Basra’s renewed
instability was mainly the result of
“the systematic abuse of official
institutions, political assassinations,
tribal vendettas, neighborhood
vigilantism and enforcement of social
mores, together with the rise of
criminal mafias.” The report added that
leading Iraqi politicians and officials
“routinely invoke the threat of outside
interference”—from bordering Iran—“to
justify their behavior or evade
responsibility for their failures.”
Earlier this year, before the surge in
U.S. troops, the American command in
Baghdad changed what had been a
confrontational policy in western Iraq,
the Sunni heartland (and the base of the
Baathist regime), and began working with
the Sunni tribes, including some tied to
the insurgency. Tribal leaders are now
getting combat support as well as money,
intelligence, and arms, ostensibly to
fight Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia.
Empowering Sunni forces may undermine
efforts toward national reconciliation,
however. Already, tens of thousands of
Shiites have fled Anbar Province, many
to Shiite neighborhoods in Baghdad,
while Sunnis have been forced from their
homes in Shiite communities. Vali Nasr,
of Tufts, called the internal
displacement of communities in Iraq a
form of “ethnic cleansing.”
“The American policy of supporting the
Sunnis in western Iraq is making the
Shia leadership very nervous,” Nasr
said. “The White House makes it seem as
if the Shia were afraid only of Al
Qaeda—but they are afraid of the Sunni
tribesmen we are arming. The Shia
attitude is ‘So what if you’re getting
rid of Al Qaeda?’ The problem of Sunni
resistance is still there. The Americans
believe they can distinguish between
good and bad insurgents, but the Shia
don’t share that distinction. For the
Shia, they are all one adversary.”
Nasr went on, “The United States is
trying to fight on all sides—Sunni and
Shia—and be friends with all sides.” In
the Shiite view, “It’s clear that the
United States cannot bring security to
Iraq, because it is not doing everything
necessary to bring stability. If they
did, they would talk to anybody to
achieve it—even Iran and Syria,” Nasr
said. (Such engagement was a major
recommendation of the Iraq Study Group.)
“America cannot bring stability in Iraq
by fighting Iran in Iraq.”
The revised bombing plan for a possible
attack, with its tightened focus on
counterterrorism, is gathering support
among generals and admirals in the
Pentagon. The strategy calls for the use
of sea-launched cruise missiles and more
precisely targeted ground attacks and
bombing strikes, including plans to
destroy the most important Revolutionary
Guard training camps, supply depots, and
command and control facilities.
“Cheney’s option is now for a fast in
and out—for surgical strikes,” the
former senior American intelligence
official told me. The Joint Chiefs have
turned to the Navy, he said, which had
been chafing over its role in the Air
Force-dominated air war in Iraq. “The
Navy’s planes, ships, and cruise
missiles are in place in the Gulf and
operating daily. They’ve got everything
they need—even AWACS are in place and
the targets in Iran have been
programmed. The Navy is flying FA-18
missions every day in the Gulf.” There
are also plans to hit Iran’s
anti-aircraft surface-to-air missile
sites. “We’ve got to get a path in and a
path out,” the former official said.
A Pentagon consultant on
counterterrorism told me that, if the
bombing campaign took place, it would be
accompanied by a series of what he
called “short, sharp incursions” by
American Special Forces units into
suspected Iranian training sites. He
said, “Cheney is devoted to this, no
question.”
A limited bombing attack of this sort
“only makes sense if the intelligence is
good,” the consultant said. If the
targets are not clearly defined, the
bombing “will start as limited, but then
there will be an ‘escalation special.’
Planners will say that we have to deal
with Hezbollah here and Syria there. The
goal will be to hit the cue ball one
time and have all the balls go in the
pocket. But add-ons are always there in
strike planning.”
The surgical-strike plan has been shared
with some of America’s allies, who have
had mixed reactions to it. Israel’s
military and political leaders were
alarmed, believing, the consultant said,
that it didn’t sufficiently target
Iran’s nuclear facilities. The White
House has been reassuring the Israeli
government, the former senior official
told me, that the more limited target
list would still serve the goal of
counter-proliferation by decapitating
the leadership of the Revolutionary
Guards, who are believed to have direct
control over the nuclear-research
program. “Our theory is that if we do
the attacks as planned it will
accomplish two things,” the former
senior official said.
An Israeli official said, “Our main
focus has been the Iranian nuclear
facilities, not because other things
aren’t important. We’ve worked on
missile technology and terrorism, but we
see the Iranian nuclear issue as one
that cuts across everything.” Iran, he
added, does not need to develop an
actual warhead to be a threat. “Our
problems begin when they learn and
master the nuclear fuel cycle and when
they have the nuclear materials,” he
said. There was, for example, the
possibility of a “dirty bomb,” or of
Iran’s passing materials to terrorist
groups. “There is still time for
diplomacy to have an impact, but not a
lot,” the Israeli official said. “We
believe the technological timetable is
moving faster than the diplomatic
timetable. And if diplomacy doesn’t
work, as they say, all options are on
the table.”
The bombing plan has had its most
positive reception from the newly
elected government of Britain’s Prime
Minister, Gordon Brown. A senior
European official told me, “The British
perception is that the Iranians are not
making the progress they want to see in
their nuclear-enrichment processing. All
the intelligence community agree that
Iran is providing critical assistance,
training, and technology to a surprising
number of terrorist groups in Iraq and
Afghanistan, and, through Hezbollah, in
Lebanon, and Israel/Palestine, too.”
There were four possible responses to
this Iranian activity, the European
official said: to do nothing (“There
would be no retaliation to the Iranians
for their attacks; this would be sending
the wrong signal”); to publicize the
Iranian actions (“There is one great
difficulty with this option—the
widespread lack of faith in American
intelligence assessments”); to attack
the Iranians operating inside Iraq
(“We’ve been taking action since last
December, and it does have an effect”);
or, finally, to attack inside Iran.
The European official continued, “A
major air strike against Iran could well
lead to a rallying around the flag
there, but a very careful targeting of
terrorist training camps might not.” His
view, he said, was that “once the
Iranians get a bloody nose they rethink
things.” For example, Ali Akbar
Rafsanjani and Ali Larijani, two of
Iran’s most influential political
figures, “might go to the Supreme Leader
and say, ‘The hard-line policies have
got us into this mess. We must change
our approach for the sake of the
regime.’ ”
A retired American four-star general
with close ties to the British military
told me that there was another reason
for Britain’s interest—shame over the
failure of the Royal Navy to protect the
sailors and Royal Marines who were
seized by Iran on March 23rd, in the
Persian Gulf. “The professional guys are
saying that British honor is at stake,
and if there’s another event like that
in the water off Iran the British will
hit back,” he said.
The revised bombing plan “could work—if
it’s in response to an Iranian attack,”
the retired four-star general said. “The
British may want to do it to get even,
but the more reasonable people are
saying, ‘Let’s do it if the Iranians
stage a cross-border attack inside
Iraq.’ It’s got to be ten dead American
soldiers and four burned trucks.” There
is, he added, “a widespread belief in
London that Tony Blair’s government was
sold a bill of goods by the White House
in the buildup to the war against Iraq.
So if somebody comes into Gordon Brown’s
office and says, ‘We have this
intelligence from America,’ Brown will
ask, ‘Where did it come from? Have we
verified it?’ The burden of proof is
high.”'
The French government shares the
Administration’s sense of urgency about
Iran’s nuclear program, and believes
that Iran will be able to produce a
warhead within two years. France’s newly
elected President, Nicolas Sarkozy,
created a stir in late August when he
warned that Iran could be attacked if it
did not halt is nuclear program.
Nonetheless, France has indicated to the
White House that it has doubts about a
limited strike, the former senior
intelligence official told me. Many in
the French government have concluded
that the Bush Administration has
exaggerated the extent of Iranian
meddling inside Iraq; they believe,
according to a European diplomat, that
“the American problems in Iraq are due
to their own mistakes, and now the
Americans are trying to show some teeth.
An American bombing will show only that
the Bush Administration has its own
agenda toward Iran.”
A European intelligence official made a
similar point. “If you attack Iran,” he
told me, “and do not label it as being
against Iran’s nuclear facilities, it
will strengthen the regime, and help to
make the Islamic air in the Middle East
thicker.”
Ahmadinejad, in his speech at the United
Nations, said that Iran considered the
dispute over its nuclear program
“closed.” Iran would deal with it only
through the International Atomic Energy
Agency, he said, and had decided to
“disregard unlawful and political
impositions of the arrogant powers.” He
added, in a press conference after the
speech, “the decisions of the United
States and France are not important.”
The director general of the I.A.E.A.,
Mohamed ElBaradei, has for years been in
an often bitter public dispute with the
Bush Administration; the agency’s most
recent report found that Iran was far
less proficient in enriching uranium
than expected. A diplomat in Vienna,
where the I.A.E.A. is based, said, “The
Iranians are years away from making a
bomb, as ElBaradei has said all along.
Running three thousand centrifuges does
not make a bomb.” The diplomat added,
referring to hawks in the Bush
Administration, “They don’t like
ElBaradei, because they are in a state
of denial. And now their negotiating
policy has failed, and Iran is still
enriching uranium and still making
progress.”
The diplomat expressed the bitterness
that has marked the I.A.E.A.’s dealings
with the Bush Administration since the
buildup to the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
“The White House’s claims were all a
pack of lies, and Mohamed is dismissive
of those lies,” the diplomat said.
Hans Blix, a former head of the I.A.E.A.,
questioned the Bush Administration’s
commitment to diplomacy. “There are
important cards that Washington could
play; instead, they have three aircraft
carriers sitting in the Persian Gulf,”
he said. Speaking of Iran’s role in
Iraq, Blix added, “My impression is that
the United States has been trying to
push up the accusations against Iran as
a basis for a possible attack—as an
excuse for jumping on them.”
The Iranian leadership is feeling the
pressure. In the press conference after
his U.N. speech, Ahmadinejad was asked
about a possible attack. “They want to
hurt us,” he said, “but, with the will
of God, they won’t be able to do it.”
According to a former State Department
adviser on Iran, the Iranians
complained, in diplomatic meetings in
Baghdad with Ambassador Crocker, about a
refusal by the Bush Administration to
take advantage of their knowledge of the
Iraqi political scene. The former
adviser said, “They’ve been trying to
convey to the United States that ‘We can
help you in Iraq.
Nobody knows Iraq better than us.’ ”
Instead, the Iranians are preparing for
an American attack.
The adviser said that he had heard from
a source in Iran that the Revolutionary
Guards have been telling religious
leaders that they can stand up to an
American attack. “The Guards are
claiming that they can infiltrate
American security,” the adviser said.
“They are bragging that they have
spray-painted an American warship—to
signal the Americans that they can get
close to them.” (I was told by the
former senior intelligence official that
there was an unexplained incident, this
spring, in which an American warship was
spray-painted with a bull’s-eye while
docked in Qatar, which may have been the
source of the boasts.)
“Do you think those crazies in Tehran
are going to say, ‘Uncle Sam is here!
We’d better stand down’? ” the former
senior intelligence official said. “The
reality is an attack will make things
ten times warmer.”
Another recent incident, in Afghanistan,
reflects the tension over intelligence.
In July, the London Telegraph
reported that what appeared to be an
SA-7 shoulder-launched missile was fired
at an American C-130 Hercules aircraft.
The missile missed its mark. Months
earlier, British commandos had
intercepted a few truckloads of weapons,
including one containing a working SA-7
missile, coming across the Iranian
border. But there was no way of
determining whether the missile fired at
the C-130 had come from Iran—especially
since SA-7s are available through
black-market arms dealers.
Vincent Cannistraro, a retired C.I.A.
officer who has worked closely with his
counterparts in Britain, added to the
story: “The Brits told me that they were
afraid at first to tell us about the
incident—in fear that Cheney would use
it as a reason to attack Iran.” The
intelligence subsequently was forwarded,
he said.
The retired four-star general confirmed
that British intelligence “was worried”
about passing the information along.
“The Brits don’t trust the Iranians,”
the retired general said, “but they also
don’t trust Bush and Cheney.”
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