World
View: The timing of the latest shot in a covert war invites
questions about the role of proxies
By Patrick Cockburn
October
07, 2013 "Information Clearing House - "The Independent" - What
to make of the latest alleged assassination in Iran of a senior
officer in the Revolutionary Guards just as Iran and the US
move towards negotiations? Is it a last-minute attempt by Israel
or the Iranian dissident group the Mojahedin-e-Khalq (MEK) to
sabotage talks – or at least to show that they are still players
in the decades-long struggle between the government in Tehran
and its many antagonists?
The first account on an Iranian website stated that Mojtaba
Ahmadi, the head of Iranian cyber warfare, had been found shot
in the head outside Tehran. The Revolutionary Guards issued
a statement denying that he had been assassinated, but admitted
there had been a "horrific incident" which it was investigating.
The killing appeared to be the latest in a string of killings,
since 2007, in which five Iranians associated with the country's
nuclear programme have been murdered in professional attacks.
Men on motorcycles operating on the basis of good intelligence
have stuck magnetically attachable bombs to their victims' cars.
The timing of Ahmadi's assassination looks suspicious, coming
a few days after the Iranian President, Hassan Rouhani, addressed
the General Assembly of the United Nations and later spoke to
President Barack Obama by telephone. Not everybody on either
side is happy: the head of the Revolutionary Guards, Mohammed
Ali Jafari, even stated openly that, while he agreed with Rouhani's
UN speech, "he should have turned down a telephone conversation
until after the American government had shown its sincerity
towards Iran".
Jafari may be worried that Washington believes it has Iran on
the run because of the devastating impact of economic sanctions.
An obvious motive for carrying out such assassinations is to
demonstrate that the enemies of the Iranian government have
a long reach and can identify and kill top specialists in modern
warfare, notably but not exclusively those involved in the Iranian
nuclear programme. This is in keeping with the plot of so many
spy movies in which a single irreplaceable scientist is targeted
for assassination by the forces of good or evil. In reality,
such uniquely capable scientists, even where they exist, are
extremely well-guarded and seldom drive their own cars. It is
unlikely that any of those killed are the Iranian equivalent
of J Robert Oppenheimer, the mastermind behind America's successful
effort to build an atomic bomb.
Who is doing the killings? A well-sourced and convincing investigation
last year by NBC News in the US concluded that "deadly attacks
on Iranian nuclear scientists are being carried out by an Iranian
dissident group that is financed, trained and armed by Israel's
secret service". It cites two senior Obama administration officials
as confirming that the MEK is responsible for the killings but
denying any US involvement.
Richard Engel and Robert Windrem of NBC quote Mohammad Javad
Larijani, a senior aide to Iran's spiritual leader Ali Khamenei,
as asserting that Israel's secret service, Mossad, trained MEK
members. He claimed that in one case it built a replica of a
nuclear scientist's house so that the killers would be familiar
with it. His information largely came from the interrogation
of a would-be assassin detained in Iran in 2010. Larijani said
that Mossad worked through the MEK because "Israel does not
have direct access to our society. [The MEK], being Iranian
and being part of Iranian society, they have … a good number
of places... to get into touch with people."
The MEK categorically denies any involvement with Israel but
Israeli commentators have confirmed the MEK-Israeli connection.
The MEK is a strange, highly disciplined, cult-like organisation
which began as a militant opponent of the Shah, inspired by
an ideology that is a mixture of Marxism and Islam. After Ayatollah
Khomeini came to power in 1979, the MEK fought a ferocious war
against his clerical regime, basing itself in Iraq with support
from Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq war.
During the Kurdish uprising in 1991, the Kurds blamed the MEK
for blocking their advance against Saddam's forces at a crucial
moment. After the fall of Saddam, the MEK established shadowy
connections with the US occupation authorities, often through
American contractors who had previously worked for Washington
and still had their security clearances, according to Iraqi
officials. This allowed the US to deny it was working with a
group designated as "terrorist" by its own State Department
in 1997 (though that designation was lifted last year).
Nevertheless, the investigative journalist Seymour Hersh says
that, even while it was listed as a foreign terror group, MEK
members received training from the Joint Special Operations
Command in Nevada. During the confrontation between Tehran and
Washington over Iran's nuclear programme, the MEK was attractive
to US intelligence agencies because it already had committed
adherents on the ground in Iran.
The US and Iran have been conducting a covert war against each
other since the fall of the Shah, though its intensity goes
up and down. During the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988), the CIA had
a station in Baghdad that fed satellite surveillance photographs
of Iranian frontline positions to Saddam.
The conflict escalated again during the US occupation of Iraq
(although Iran had quietly welcomed the toppling of its arch
enemy in Baghdad). At the same time, Iran made every effort
to ensure that it, and not America, became the predominant foreign
power in post-Saddam Iraq. Pin-prick attacks by the two sides
were highly visible from 2003 to about 2008, but less evident
during this time was a degree of co-operation, since both sides
wanted to stabilise a Shia-Kurdish government. Likewise today,
neither country has an interest in seeing a reinvigorated al-Qa'ida
establish itself in the Sunni heartlands of western Iraq and
eastern Syria.
The problem with the US-Iranian proxy war is that neither side
quite controls their own proxies to the degree the other side
imagines. It is all very well working through surrogates to
retain deniability, but these have their own interests and may,
in addition, be incompetent, corrupt or simply crazed.
The MEK is not the only player in this murky and violent world.
There are others such as PJAK – the Iranian Kurdish franchise
of the Turkish Kurd PKK group – which is based in the southern
Qandil mountains and has its militants inside Iran. Meanwhile,
in Pakistani Baluchistan, there are militant Sunni groups eager
for money and support from foreign intelligence services.
Some of these groups, whatever their origin, end up as guns
for hire and have so many tactical alliances they must have
difficulty remembering what they are fighting for.
How feasible is a US-Iranian détente? Prospects are a lot better
than they have been for a long time given that US and Iranian
interests in Syria are not so diametrically opposed as they
were six months ago. The Sunni offensive that seemed to carry
all before it in 2011 and 2012 has stalled, at least for now.
But Iran does not want to give the impression that it is caving
in under sanctions and Israel will want to retain its veto over
any future US-Iran deal.
So, whatever the truth about the death of Mojtaba Ahmadi, the
covert war between Iran and its enemies is a long way from ending
© independent.co.uk