Thursday, January 11, 2007

Bush Opens New Front in Iraqi War

During his "I've screwed this up so long I want to screw it up some more" speech to the nation last night, GW made some direct threats towards Iran and Syria. This morning in Iraq, American troops brushed aside our Kurdish "friends" and attacked the Iranian consulate in Erbil.

Now, maybe this is just a poke in the Iranian's chest or it is a sign of more serious intentions. I don't know. But our little Capt. Ahab has been chasing this whale for a long time now, and he just might be desperate enough to go over the edge.



The New York Times


January 11, 2007
5 Iranians Detained at Consular Office
By CHRISTINE HAUSER

American forces backed by helicopters raided the Iranian consulate in the mainly Kurdish city of Erbil in northern Iraq before dawn today, detaining at least five Iranian employees in the building and seizing some property, according to Iraqi and Iranian officials and witnesses.

Kurdish forces were in control of the consulate building when a reporter went there after the raid. There was broken glass on the pavement outside the building, and no sign of the Iranian flag.

A statement from the United States military today did not mention the Iranian consulate specifically, saying only that six people were taken into custody in “routine security operations” in the Erbil area. Other than saying they were “suspected of being closely tied to activities targeting Iraqi and Coalition forces on Jan. 11,” the statement did not say who the people were.

But the American statement did warn that “the Coalition will continue to work with the Government of Iraq to prevent interference by hostile actors in Iraq’s internal security affairs.”

Statements by the Iranian government were more explicit. A Foreign Ministry spokesman, Mohammad Ali Hosseini, said that United States forces arrested five Iranian staff members at the consulate early this morning, and confiscated computers and documents.

The Iranian embassy in Baghdad has sent a letter of protest to the Iraqi Foreign Ministry, Mr. Hosseini told the IRNA news agency.

A statement issued by the presidency office in Kurdistan said the American forces were backed by helicopters.

Noting that the consulate was protected by international agreement and that the regions under Kurdish control have been fairly calm, the statement said the raid “does not help the efforts to bring peace, stability and security to the rest of Iraq.”

The statement suggested that the raid was an unwelcome surprise to the Kurdish authorities. “It is better to inform the Kurdistan government before taking actions against anybody,” it said.

Muhamad Ahmad, a designer who lives near the consulate in Erbil, said he was awakened by the sound of gunfire and helicopters, which is unusual in the relatively calm Kurdish areas of Iraq.

The incident appears to be the most direct recent confrontation between the United States military and Iranian interests in Iraq. American officials have long accused Iran of sending weapons and money into Iraq to fuel violence; in December the American forces detained two Iranian men in Baghdad and accused them of running guns and planning sectarian attacks. The men were later released.

Today’s developments come at a time when tensions are high between Iran and the United States over Iran’s nuclear program, which it says is for energy purposes, and over what Washington has called Iran’s instigation of sectarian and anti-American violence in Iraq. Together with the incident in December, the consulate raid called into question the extent of control the Iraqi state has over its own affairs.

Last night, President Bush rekindled his argument that a withdrawal of American troops from Iraq would, among other things, embolden Iran to develop nuclear weapons. He again accused Iran of contributing “material support” for attacks on American forces.

Today, Gen. Peter Pace, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, said in a news conference in Washington that the United States would act to defend American troops from attackers in Iraq, regardless of the nationality of the attackers.

He said that “with regard to those who are physically present trying to do harm to our troops, regardless of nationality, we will go after them and defend ourselves.”

Asked by a reporter if there would be more raids like the one this morning, the Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, speaking alongside General Pace, said the United States has warned Syria and Iran not to destabilize the Iraqi government.

“But we leave to those who deal with issues of force protection how these raids are going to be taken out,” she said. “I think you’ve got an indication of that in what has been happening, which is, the networks are identified, they are identified through good intelligence. They are then acted upon.”

Mr. Hosseini, the Iranian spokesman, also reacted sharply to the speech Mr. Bush gave last night about Iraq, telling the news agency that the dispatch of more than 20,000 additional American troops to Iraq was intended to prolong the United States occupation, and that it would increase insecurity and tension.

Referring to Mr. Bush’s accusations that Iran and Syria were interfering in Iraq’s domestic affairs, Mr. Hosseini said that Washington was seeking “pretexts for its failed policies” in Iraq.

IRNA also quoted an Iraqi Kurdish security official, whom it did not name, as saying that Kurdish forces were responsible for maintaining security in Erbil, including protecting the consulate. American forces “disarmed the Kurdish guards of the consulate and used force to enter the building,” IRNA quoted the Kurdish official as saying.

Yerevan Adham contributed reporting from Erbil, Iraq, for this article.

No comments:

Blog Archive