'Clean sweep': Bush replaces top general in Middle East who opposed troop surge and Military Campaign Against the US in Iraq by IRGC
Michael Ledeen, Pajamas Media: Conclusive proof of Iran's huge military campaign against the US and allied forces in Iraq, employing the help of both Sunni and Shi'ite groups. Apparently, this new information - which was acquired during the storming of a stronghold in Baghdad - has made it to the desk of Bush, and it seems that this issue will have to be confronted in one way or another now. I've posted some excerpts but it's worth reading the whole thing.
There is no escape from the war Iran is waging against us, the war that started in 1979 and is intensifying with every passing hour. We will shortly learn more about the documents we found accompanying the high-level Iranian terrorist leader we briefly arrested in Hakim’s compound in Baghdad some days ago, and what we will learn–what many key American officials have already learned–is stunning. At least to those who thought that Iran was “meddling” in Iraq, but refused to believe that it was total war, on a vast scale.
Several good journalists are working on this story (see, for example, today’s article by Eli Like in the NY Sun), and the outlines are pretty clear. First, we had good information that terrorists were in Baghdad, and had gone to the compound. We did not know exactly who they were. We entered the compound and arrested everybody who looked like a usual suspect.
One of them told us he was the #3 official of the al Quds unit of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps, a particularly vicious group. He was carrying documents, one of which was in essence a wiring diagram of Iranian operations in Iraq. That wiring diagram included both Shi’ite and Sunni terrorist groups, and was of such magnitude that American officials were flabbergasted. It seems that our misnamed Intelligence Community had grossly underestimated the sophistication and the enormity of the Iranian war campaign.
I am told that this information has reached the president, and that it is part of the body of information he is digesting in order to formulate his strategy for Iraq. If he sees clearly what is going on, he must realize that there can be no winning strategy for Iraq alone, since a lot of ‘Iraqi’ activity—not just lethal materiel such as the latest generation of explosive devices, now powerful enough to penetrate the armor of most of our vehicles—is actually Iranian in origin. We cannot ‘solve’ the Iraqi problem without regime change in Iran.
Those of you who have borne with me for the last few years will not be surprised to hear this; what’s new is the apparently irrefutable evidence that has now providentially fallen into our hands. The policy makers will not like this evidence, because it drives them in a direction they do not wish to go. I am told that, at first, there was a concerted effort, primarily but by no means exclusively from the intel crowd, to sit on the evidence, to prevent it from reaching the highest levels. But the information was too explosive, and it is now circulating throughout the bureaucracy.
Update: Both General Abizaid and General Casey have been replaced.
Admiral William J. Fallon will replace Gen. John Abizaid, US commander in the Middle East, who announced his retirement in December and was expected to leave the post in March. Abizaid was a critic of Bush's efforts to add more troops to Iraq, but the circumstances of his early departure are unclear.
"The president wants a clean sweep," an official told ABC News. According to a Kansas City Star article published December 24, "Commanders have been skeptical of the value of increasing troops. The decision represents a reversal for Casey, the highest-ranking officer in Iraq. Casey and Gen. John P. Abizaid, the top commander in the Middle East, have long resisted adding troops in Iraq. The LA Times recently reported that Abizaid's departure could clear the way for a more aggressive strategy in Iraq.
3 comments:
Dear serendip,
I added your perfect blog in my own blog. i don't know your age however your strong feeling is very amazing for me.
Bardia jan: Thank you for adding my lonly blog to your list of blogs...lol
I'm afraid the mullahs are playing with fire this time and have taken the US restraint(khod-dari) as a weakness. Obviously, they haven't studied the US history and their resolve. Douglas Davis reports that Within the next 12 months, the Americans or the Israelis, possibly both, are likely to launch military strikes aimed at crippling Iran’s nuclear ambitions. Those strikes may come sooner rather than later. And they will probably be nuclear.
Bardia Jan: here is the link to that article:
http://iranvajahan.net/cgi-bin/news.pl?l=en&y=2007&m=01&d=05&a=6
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