January 18, 2007
We admit, we were intrigued, but skeptical of the President's assertion that the U.S. military was going to actively start rolling up the Iranian networks operating out of Iraq.
But so far we have to say we've been pleasantly surprised that they're following through so strongly. First was the raid just hours after the President's speech, and now this:
The U.S. military has launched a special operations task force to break up Iranian influence in Iraq, according to U.S. News sources. The special operations mission, known as Task Force 16, was created late last year to target Iranians trafficking arms and training Shiite militia forces. The operation is modeled on Task Force 15, a clandestine cadre of Navy SEALs, Army Delta Force soldiers, and CIA operatives with a mission to capture or kill al Qaeda operatives and Baathist insurgents in Iraq.Why the delay in doing this? We have no idea. But there is the issue of directly naming the Iranians as complicit in killing American soldiers that forces the issue to a military situation. And Iran was always careful to never directly implicate themselves. The situation now however appears to have changed.Task Force 15 killed al Qaeda's leader in Iraq, Abu Musab Zarqawi, last June.
The new classified directive is part of an escalation of military countermeasures against Iran, authorized by President Bush, to strike back at what military officials describe as a widespread web of Iranian influence in Iraq that includes providing weapons, training, and money to Shiite militias.
"It's present, and the issue is how do you deal with it," says a senior U.S. military official. "That's the question of the day. Those networks are something you've got to deal with. You've got to figure out, bottom line, who plans them, who finances them, who brings stuff across the borders."
U.S. military officials have been tracing the growth of Iranian influence through the increased use of Iranian-made explosively formed projectiles (or EFPs) as roadside bombs. When this particularly deadly and distinct variation on the improvised explosive device detonates, it melts and reshapes metal, turning it into what is essentially a deadly dart that punches through a humvee's armor plates.We're happy to see the military taking this more direct approach at taking out the Iranian influence. It'll never diminish completely, especially once the situation settles into a purely political war over the government and oil revenues. But Iraq will have to deal with Iran in it's own way politically once we get them on their feet."When the EFPs start popping up, we know, oh, that's Iran, that's Shia," says one U.S. special operations officer who served in Iraq. A senior American commander in Baghdad adds that the military has been able to trace numbers and manufacture dates back to Iran.
And the use of weapons like EFPs, say soldiers on the ground in Iraq, is spreading.
"They were initially used just down south, where Iran has a lot of influence," says the officer. Now they are moving into Baghdad and areas north of the city as well. "That is a change. If you follow the track of them, it also follows the track of Iranian influence."
In the restive province of Diyala, what has long been a transit point for goods and trafficked arms flowing across the border with Iran, U.S. military operatives have intercepted donkeys carrying Russian antitank mines and other weapons. Iran uses "a certain type of mortar," adds the special operations officer. "We can look at it and say, 'This comes from Iran.' "
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://zeropointblog.com/blog-mt/mt-tb.fcgi/294








