Iraqi
WMDs Anyone?
Washington Post Makes Unfounded Claims Of
Iranian Supplies To Insurgencies
By Moon Of Alabama
The
Washington Post falls back into its 2005 mode of
blaming Iran for the capabilities of a local
insurgency. This time it is not Iraq where Iran
is allegedly providing to insurgents, but
Bahrain.
Old and
debunked claims are hauled up and propaganda
from the U.S. proxy Sunni dictatorship is cited
as "evidence". It is a top-right front-page
story in the Sunday edition and thereby
"important". It is also fake news.
The headline:
U.S. increasingly sees Iran’s hand in the arming
of Bahraini militants.The
core:
The
report, a copy of which was shown to The
Washington Post, partly explains the growing
unease among some Western intelligence
officials over tiny Bahrain, a stalwart U.S.
ally in the Persian Gulf and home to the
Navy’s Fifth Fleet. Six years after the
start of a peaceful Shiite protest movement
against the country’s Sunni-led government,
U.S. and European analysts now see an
increasingly grave threat
emerging on the margins of the uprising:
heavily armed militant cells supplied and
funded, officials say, by Iran.
The
authors insert caveats:
While Bahraini officials frequently accuse
Tehran of inciting violence,
the allegations often have
been discounted as exaggerations by a
monarchy that routinely cites terrorism as a
justification for cracking down on Shiite
activists.
But
after noting that Bahraini authorities
notoriously lie the authors regurgitate
approvingly the claims of exactly those
authorities:
...
the country’s investigators said in a
confidential technical assessment ... a copy
of which was shown to The Washington Post
...
That is
supported, the authors say, by:
...
interviews with current and former
intelligence officials ...
Surly,
"current and former intelligence officials" are
paragons of truth and veracity and whatever they
claim MUST be true.
At
issue is the detection of one basement workshop
in Bahrain where someone is using "$20,000
lathes and hydraulic presses" to produce shaped
charges and also stored a pile of C4 explosives.
A
$20,000 lathe is at the lower end of low-quality
professional tooling. Hydraulic presses can be
made from car jacks. How to make hollow charges
and explosive formed penetrators (EFPs) is
described in the CIA's
Explosives for Sabotage Manual
which the U.S. translated and distributed for
decades in Afghanistan and elsewhere. C4
explosives of various origins, including from
Iran, are available on black weapon markets
throughout west-Asia.
Source:
CIA Handbook
Nothing
of the above points to the conclusion that these
are "cells supplied and funded .. by Iran". The
only connection to Iran the Bahrani police found
and which is noted in the piece is:
One of
the six caches “involved C-4 in its original
Iranian military packaging,” the report
said.
The
piece does not note where the C4 in the other
five caches came from. A detailed chemical
analysis will be able to find the "signatures"
of the chemical production facilities. If only
one of six explosive caches comes from an
Iranian manufacturer the problem Bahrain has on
hand with the C4 is hardly of Iranian origin. So
why are the manufacturing origins of the other
five caches of explosives not mentioned at all?
Did those caches come from the U.S. or from
Saudi factories?
But the
problems with the piece do not end there.
After
noting how unreliable Bahrain official claims
are, it discussed at length such Bahraini
claims.
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After
describing the cheap equipment used to make
shaped charges in Bahrain it
goes on to explain how Iran, and only Iran,
gives those to insurgencies. It quotes some guy
from the Zionist propaganda shop Washington
Institute who:
saw
echoes in Bahrain of Iran’s practice
of supplying tank-crushing EFPs to Iraqi
Shiite militias, which used the
devices in an effort to create no-go zones
around Shiite strongholds.
Iran did not and does not supply EFPs to Iraqi
insurgents. The Iraqis made those themselves.
That was documented here and elsewhere even
ten years ago:
For
quite a while this story has been debunked
by reports about EFP manufacturing in Iraq.
These were substantiated, while the "Iran
provides EFPs" meme was never proven by any
evidence.
There were
pieces in the
Wall Street Journal,
Los Angeles Times
and by
Reuters.
Doubts about the Iran origin of EFPs have
also been raised in the
New York Times.
NBC news had U.S. officials at least partly
walking back
their claims. The
Columbia Journalism Review,
Inter Press Service
and Newshogger
Cernig ran
good summary stories including many sources.
We also discussed the
'evidence'
here.
The
WaPo story, though on today's Sunday paper's
frontpage, has a (web-)dateline of April 1. That
is probably the only reliable claim it carries.
There
is no evidence that Iran provides for a Shia
insurgency in Shia majority-Sunni ruled Bahrain
just as there is no evidence that it supplies
Zaidi fighters in Yemen who fight Al-Qaeda and
its Saudi sponsors.
But
there is by now a steady stream of Saudi and
U.S. propaganda that makes such claims. These
claims sound awfully similar to the claims made
before the war on Iraq of (non-existing) Iraqi
weapons of mass destruction. To find such again
on page one of the Sunday edition of a major
newspaper is more than disturbing.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.