By Helena Cobban
February 10, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - In a key
piece of actual extensive, on-the-ground
reporting, the New York Times’s Alissa
Rubin has raised serious questions about the
official US account of who it was that attacked the
K-1 base near Kirkuk, in eastern Iraq, on December
27. The United States almost immediately accused the
Iran-backed Ketaib Hizbullah (KH) militia of
responsibility. But Rubin quotes by name Brig.
General Ahmed Adnan, the chief of intelligence for
the Iraqi federal police at the same base, as
saying, “All the indications are that it was Daesh”
— that is, ISIS.
She also presents considerable further detailed
reporting on the matter. And she notes that though
U.S. investigators claim to have evidence about
KH’s responsibility for the attack, they have
presented none of it publicly. Nor have they shared
it with the Iraqi government.
KH is a paramilitary organization that operates
under the command of the Iraqi military and has been
deeply involved in the anti-ISIS campaigns
throughout the country.
The December 27 attack killed one Iraqi-American
contractor and was cited by the Trump administration
as reason to launch a large-scale attack on five KH
bases some 400 miles to the west which killed around
50 KH fighters. Outraged KH fighters then mobbed the
US embassy in Baghdad, breaking through an outside
perimeter on its large campus, but causing no
casualties. On January 2, Pres. Trump decided to
escalate again, ordering the assassination of Iran’s
Gen. Qasem Soleimani and bringing the region and the
world close to a massive shooting war.
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The new evidence presented by Rubin makes it look
as if Trump and his advisors had previously decided
on a broad-scale plan to attack Iran’s very
influential allies in Iraq and were waiting for a
triggering event– any triggering event!– to use as a
pretext to launch it. The attack against the K-1
base presented them with that trigger, even though
they have not been able to present any evidence that
it was KH that undertook it.
This playbook looks very similar to the one that
Ariel Sharon, who was Israel’s Defense Minister in
summer 1982, used to launch his wide attack against
the PLO’s presence in Lebanon in June that year. The
“trigger” Sharon used to launch his long-prepared
attack was the serious (but not fatal)
wounding of Israel’s ambassador in London,
Shlomo Argov, which the Israeli government
immediately blamed on the PLO.
Regarding London in 1982, as regarding K-1 last
December, the actual identity of the assailant(s)
was misreported by the government that used it as a
trigger for escalation. In London, the police fairly
speedily established that it was not the PLO but
operatives of an anti-PLO group headed by a
man called Abu Nidal who had attacked Argov. But by
the time they had discovered and publicized that
fact, Israeli tanks were already deep inside
Lebanon.
The parallels and connections between the two
cases go further. If, as now seems likely, the
authors of the K-1 attack were indeed Da’esh, then
they succeeded brilliantly in triggering a bitter
fight between two substantial forces in the
coalition that had been fighting against them in
Iraq. Regarding the 1982 London attack, its authors
also succeeded brilliantly in triggering a lethal
conflict between two forces (one substantial, one
far less so) that were both engaged in bitter combat
against Abu Nidal’s networks.
Worth noting: Abu Nidal’s main backer, throughout
his whole campaign against the PLO, was Saddam
Hussein’s brutal government in Iraq. (The London
assailants deposited their weapons in the Iraqi
embassy after completing the attack.) Many senior
strategists and planners for ISIS in Iraq were
diehard remnants of Saddam’s formerly intimidating
security forces.
Also worth noting: Three months in to Sharon’s
massive 1982 invasion of Lebanon, it seemed to have
successfully reached its goals of expelling the
PLO’s fighting forces from Lebanon and installing a
strongly pro-Israeli government there. But over the
longer haul, the invasion looked much less
successful. The lengthy Israeli occupation of south
Lebanon that followed 1982 served to incubate the
birth and growth of the (pro-Iranian) Hizbullah
there. Today,
Hizbullah is a strong political movement inside
Lebanon that commands a very capable fighting
force that expelled Israel’s last presence from
Lebanon in 2000, rebuffed a subsequent Israeli
invasion of the country six years later, and still
exerts considerable deterrent power against
Israel today…
Very few people in Israel today judge the 1982
invasion of Lebanon to have been a wise move. How
will the historians of the future view Trump’s
decision to launch his big escalation against Iran’s
allies in Iraq, presumably as part of his “maximum
pressure” campaign against Tehran?
This article has been republished with
permission from
Just World News.
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