Monthly Analysis: June 2006
By: RYAN MAURO (TDCAnalyst@aol.com)
Iraq Document
Release
Documents found in Iraq released by the Pentagon continue to be
translated by Arabic volunteers on the Internet. Among the findings
are:
1) A September 15, 2002 memo from a Fedayeen General to Uday
Hussein discussing the location of a hidden, buried container of
chemicals in Fallujah originally concealed there by Hussein Kamel.
2) Ray Robison, a former Iraq Survey Group employee, reviewed
documents that indicate that, in 1999, a meeting occurred between Taha
Yasin Ramadan, the vice president of Iraq, and Fazlur Rahman, a
Pakistani cleric close to Mullah Omar. During the meeting, Ramadan
states he agrees with Osama Bin Laden’s call for war against America.
Rahman delivers a message from Mullah Omar requesting that Iraq serve
as the intermediary to Russia. The meeting also discusses Iraqi contact
with Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the leader of a faction in Afghanistan that
later allied with Al-Qaeda. Iraq appeared to be acting as an
intermediary between the Taliban and Hekmatyar.
3) A document from 1999 indicates that the Iraqis were hiding a
“neutron source device” that was banned by the UN.
4) Documents from 2000 and 2002 indicate that Iraq had finalized
plans to produce the precursor chemicals used to make sarin and tabun.
This was an operation that is banned by the UN.
5) Frank Gaffney testified to the House Armed Services
Committee at the end of June. He mentioned a point that I’ve noted
before, but I feel it needs to be reiterated repeatedly. The reports of
the Iraq Survey Group found that the Iraqi regime had plans to place
sulfur mustard and sarin in “perfume sprayers and medicine bottles
which they would ship to the United States and Europe.” Is that not a
smoking gun?
It should also be noted that a reader sent the author an
article from US News & World Report, dated October 25, 1999. In the
article, on page 42, a statement corroborates the theory regarding
Russian involvement in the relocation of Saddam’s WMD out of Iraq. The report stated that two Russian “civilian agricultural
advisors”, who are experts in third generation nerve agents, were
working at an Iraqi pesticide plant in the al-Saklawiyah region of
al-Anbar province. They had previously worked under a deputy commander
for the Russian Army Chemical Corps.
Another noteworthy item: In her column, Melanie Morgan stated
that she had spoken to Abdul-Qader Jassim, now the Iraqi defense
minister, in July of 2005 and that he told to her he believed Iraq had
WMD, and had trained and funded terrorists.
Big news was made when a report was declassified from the
National Guard Intelligence Center, which revealed that since 2003,
Coalition forces discovered approximately 500 munitions containing
sarin and mustard, made prior to 1991. There has been a lot of
disinformation about this release:
1) The claim that the munitions are not useable and these
“aren’t the weapons we went to war for” come from an anonymous “senior
Defense Department official” who won’t go on the record. After a
newspaper reported the quote, it was simply regarded as fact by the
majority of the media; no one questioned the agenda of this official or
bothered to verify the veracity of his statement. These ARE the weapons
for which the US went to war! The US has repeatedly cited 550 artillery
shells containing chemical weapons. 2) The claim that the munitions aren’t useable is deceiving.
The intelligence report confirmed the munitions were hazardous and
potentially lethal. Quite the contrary to the claim of the “senior
Defense Department official”, a March 2003 UN report indicated that
“the sulfur mustard contained in artillery shells that had been stored
for 12 years, had been found by UNMOVIC to still be of high purity…” 3) In 1997 and 1998, UN inspectors found a dozen artillery
shells with mustard in them. They also were produced before the Gulf
War and were found to be of 94-97% purity. Middle East Iran’s leadership continued their semi-covert war against the US,
and their preparations for escalation. The government campaign to
recruit “martyrs” claims it has registered over 55,000 volunteers,
including 100 from the Revolutionary Guards, who proclaimed their
intensions to attack American interests. In Iraq, fifty Iranians were
arrested in Baqubah for participating in a string of kidnappings and
murders.
As expected, the nuclear issue continued unabated, with no
change and no reason for Iran to change it. Iranian officials are now
discussing “nuclear fusion” research, which is almost certainly for
thermonuclear weapons since this technology has no known application
for domestic energy applications. Many analysts see this as a new
development, but Reuters correctly pointed noted that, as far back as
1996, President Rafsanjani was discussing research into this area.
Recently, an Iranian intelligence officer defected, and
according to reports, spoke of additional concealed nuclear sites.
According to this official, there is a plant 20 kilometers northeast of
Tehran, near the Lashgarak Dam that is a centrifuge uranium enrichment
plant. It is underground and has nine tunnels beneath a lake that are
disguised as bridge pilings. The site is 2200 square meters large, and
is code-named Zirzamin 27. The official also discussed another possible
site at a fish farm 60 kilometers north of the Bushehr nuclear reactor
that was completed 6 - 8 months ago.
One of the most frustrating things for Iraqi Shiites – at least
from the opinions of those that e-mail me – is the notion that all
Shiites are loyal to the mullahs. It should be noted that in mid-June,
500 Shiite followers of Mohammed al-Hassai threw stones and set fire to
the Iranian embassy in Basra, after the Iranians labeled him an enemy
to Islam.
A recent story that should have been widely broadcast by the
mainstream media but, not unexpectedly, wasn’t, reported that Qatar had
arrested 100 Syrian workers and 5 Syrian intelligence officers who were
trying to destabilize the country. According to the story, the group
was led by Assef Shawkat, the head of Syrian military intelligence.
In late June, as Israel prepared to retaliate against Hamas for
the kidnapping of an Israeli soldier, the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade,
loyal to the Fatah of Mahmoud Abbas, passed out a leaflet that
proclaimed the success of a three-year effort to produce chemical and
biological weapons. They warned that at least twenty weapons had been
developed and, that the weapons would be used against Israeli forces,
if they invaded. Later, the group claimed that the weapons were used,
but there was no confirmation on the Israeli side. The Al-Zarqawi Documents The death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi has been a major morale booster
for the troops and Iraqis, a tremendous intelligence asset, and
possibly, a real turning point where historians may see this as the
beginning of the end of the insurgency. However, there’s a lot of
debate about a document, supposedly found in Zarqawi’s safehouse.
It is a battle plan, yet provides no new details. It states
that “time is now beginning to be of service to the American forces and
harmful to the resistance.” It further states that the insurgency is
being severely damaged by (1) the training of Iraqi security forces,
(2) massive arrests and seizures of weapons, (3) Coalition efforts
against their sources of funding, (4) divisions inside the insurgency
and (5) a lack of new recruits. The insurgency is losing support, and
the Iraqi National Guard is reducing American casualties. With regard to retaliatory efforts, the document calls for
damaging American relations with the Shia, particularly Ayatollah
Al-Sistani. It also urges that the insurgents must overcome the “gloomy
situation” by (1) using a media campaign to win support, (2)
infiltrating the National Guards, (3) using disrupting threats and
framing Iran, (4) blaming Iran and Shiites for kidnappings and
bombings, and (5) trying to provoke a war with Iran. The document makes
it appear as if Iran is an enemy, not an asset to the terrorists, which
we know is not true. As Dr. Michael Ledeen noted, the document does not reveal any
new information and covers Iran’s tracks. There are also reports that
Iran gave the information on Zarqawi’s location to the Jordanians, who
passed it on to the Coalition command. If true, then there is a strong
possibility that the Iranians planted the document. And, as Ledeen
notes, no one stated that the document was found at Zarqawi’s
safehouse. The Iraqis are using the document to demonstrate that the
insurgency is dying, but the media reports of it being found in the
safe house are not accurate, since that claim was nver stated by anyone
and, has not been authenticated. Asia This month, Ronald Montapertu, a DIA analyst at the Pacific Command,
admitted to giving top-secret information to China. Chinese spies
appear to be well infiltrated throughout the US government, military,
intelligence community, and scientific and industrial communities. It
is high time that a rigorous counter-intelligence overhaul and campaign
against this infiltration be set in motion immediately. The left wing has taken the lead on the Darfur issue and is
demanding an end to the genocide and war there. The UN released a
report on international arms sales that shows China has been a supplier
of weapons and ammunition to the regime-backed militias and rebels in
Sudan. China is profiting off of the war there, and this needs to be
condemned internationally.
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