Bush sanctions 'black ops' against Iran

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Bush sanctions 'black ops' against Iran

Tim Shipman – Telegraph.co.uk May 27, 2007

President George W Bush has given the CIA approval to launch covert "black" operations to achieve regime change in Iran, intelligence sources have revealed.

Mr Bush has signed an official document endorsing CIA plans for a propaganda and disinformation campaign intended to destabilise, and eventually topple, the theocratic rule of the mullahs.

Under the plan, pressure will be brought to bear on the Iranian economy by manipulating the country's currency and international financial transactions.

Details have also emerged of a covert scheme to sabotage the Iranian nuclear programme, which United Nations nuclear watchdogs said last week could lead to a bomb within three years.

Security officials in Washington have disclosed that Teheran has been sold defective parts on the black market in a bid to delay and disrupt its uranium enrichment programme, the precursor to building a nuclear weapon.

A security source in the US told The Sunday Telegraph that the presidential directive, known as a "non-lethal presidential finding", would give the CIA the right to collect intelligence on home soil, an area that is usually the preserve of the FBI, from the many Iranian exiles and emigrés within the US.

"Iranians in America have links with their families at home, and they are a good two-way source of information," he said.

The CIA will also be allowed to supply communications equipment which would enable opposition groups in Iran to work together and bypass internet censorship by the clerical regime.

The plans, which significantly increase American pressure on Iran, were leaked just days before a meeting in Iraq tomorrow between the US ambassador, Ryan Crocker, and his Iranian counterpart.

Tensions have been raised by Iran's seizure of what the US regards as a series of "hostages" in recent weeks. Three academics who hold dual Iranian-American citizenship are being held, accused of working to undermine the Iranian government or of spying.

An Iranian-American reporter with Radio Free Europe, who was visiting Iran, has had her passport seized. Another Iranian American, businessman Ali Shakeri, was believed to have been detained as he tried to leave Teheran last week.

The US responded with a show of force by the navy, sending nine warships, including two aircraft carriers, into the Persian Gulf.

Authorisation of the new CIA mission, which will not be allowed to use lethal force, appears to suggest that President Bush has, for the time being, ruled out military action against Iran.

Bruce Riedel, until six months ago the senior CIA official who dealt with Iran, said: "Vice-President [Dick] Cheney helped to lead the side favouring a military strike, but I think they have concluded that a military strike has more downsides than upsides."

However, the CIA is giving arms-length support, supplying money and weapons, to an Iranian militant group, Jundullah, which has conducted raids into Iran from bases in Pakistan.

Iranian officials say they captured 10 members of Jundullah last weekend, carrying $500,000 in cash along with "maps of sensitive areas" and "modern spy equipment".

Mark Fitzpatrick, a former senior State Department official now with the International Institute for Strategic Studies, said industrial sabotage was the favoured way to combat Iran's nuclear programme "without military action, without fingerprints on the operation."

He added: "One way to sabotage a programme is to make minor modifications in some of the components Iran obtains on the black market."

Components and blueprints obtained by Iranian intelligence agents in Europe, and shipped home using the diplomatic bag from the Iranian consulate in Frankfurt, have been blamed for an explosion that destroyed 50 nuclear centrifuges at the Natanz nuclear plant last year.

The White House National Security Council and CIA refused to comment on intelligence matters.


Bush sanctions 'black ops' against Iran - Telegraph





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Interesting read, was a little confused at first but then realised this was when bush was in power.

As for the black ops.. could bush be responsible for messing with votes.. ?? i mean in one province there where more votes cast than what there where people.. maybe this is a ploy to cause civil unrest?? obv if it is.. its definatly working..
 
Yeah but is this going to escalate into all-out war? Already rumblings with Obama being vocal about his feelings towards the election process which isn't going down too well with the Incumbent and the Ayatollah
 
i think Ayatollah's time are over as they are split in two side's Hard lline and reformer's now iranian goverment have singled out UNITED KINGDOM as they have detaind iranian british staff whats next!!


Eight local British embassy staff held in Iran-report - , - Latest news & weather forecasts - MSN News UK


TEHRAN (Reuters) - Eight Iranian employees of the British embassy in Tehran have been detained for active involvement in post-election unrest in the Islamic Republic, the semi-official Fars News Agency said Sunday.
The move is likely to put further strain on relations between London and Tehran. The two are embroiled in an international dispute over Iran's nuclear ambitions and tit-for-tat expulsion of diplomats.
Iran has accused Western powers -- Britain and the United States in particular -- of inciting street protests in the Islamic Republic after a disputed June 12 presidential election. Britain has rejected these accusations.
"Eight local employees at the British embassy who had a considerable role in recent unrest were taken into custody," Fars said, without giving a source. "This group played an active role in provoking recent unrest," Fars said.
Iran's English-language Press TV carried a similar report, citing Iranian sources.
In London, a foreign ministry spokesman said: "We have in the last few days received a number of sometimes confused reports that British nationals or others with British connections have been detained. We continue to raise them with the Iranian authorities."
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced on June 23 that Britain was expelling two Iranian diplomats after Iran forced two British diplomats to leave.
Iran's foreign minister has said Tehran is considering downgrading ties with Britain, and the intelligence minister has said some people with British passports were involved in post-election violence in the Islamic state.
Official results showing hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won re-election by a landslide sparked days of street protests. His defeated moderate challenger, Mirhossein Mousavi, says the vote was rigged.
State media have said 20 people were killed in violence since the vote, and authorities accuse Mousavi of responsibility for the bloodshed. He says the government is to blame.
(Additional reporting by David Milliken in London)
(Reporting by Hashem Kalantari and Fredrik Dahl; editing by Richard Balmforth)
 
Over two year old news?

Ah k. No agenda behind this thread then, eh?
 
FFS.

What a pile of shit stirring nonsense.
 
FFS.

What a pile of shit stirring nonsense.

Explain what u perceive to be nonsense please.

Over two year old news?

Ah k. No agenda behind this thread then, eh?

whats the agenda then? even i didn't know i had one. how perceptive ..

the riechstag was burnt down over two years ago does that mean it didn't happen ?

:Cheers:
 
Explain what u perceive to be nonsense please.



whats the agenda then? even i didn't know i had one. how perceptive ..

the riechstag was burnt down over two years ago does that mean it didn't happen ?

Why cast up 2 year old news?

It's hardly news is it?
 
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