By Philip Giraldi
February 13, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
Admittedly the news cycle in the
United States seldom runs longer than
twenty-four hours, but that should not
serve as an excuse when a major story
that contradicts what the Trump
Administration has been claiming appears
and suddenly dies. The public that
actually follows the news might recall a
little more than one month ago the
United States assassinated a senior
Iranian official named Qassem Soleimani.
Openly killing someone in the government
of a country with which one is not at
war is, to say the least, unusual,
particularly when the crime is carried
out in yet another country with which
both the perpetrator and the victim have
friendly relations. The justification
provided by Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo, speaking for the administration,
was that Soleimani was in Iraq planning
an “imminent” mass killing of Americans,
for which no additional evidence was
provided at that time or since.
It soon emerged that the Iranian was
in fact in Baghdad to discuss with the
Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi a
plan that might lead to the
de-escalation of the ongoing conflict
between Saudi Arabia and Iran, a meeting
that the White House apparently knew
about may even have approved. If that is
so, events as they unfolded suggest that
the U.S. government might have
encouraged Soleimani to make his trip so
he could be set up and killed. Donald
Trump later dismissed the lack of any
corroboration of the tale of “imminent
threat” being peddled by Pompeo, stating
that it didn’t really matter as
Soleimani was a terrorist who deserved
to die.
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The incident that
started the killing cycle that
eventually included Soleimani consisted
of a December 27th attack on
a U.S. base in Iraq in which four
American soldiers and two Iraqis were
wounded while one U.S. contractor, an
Iraqi-born translator, was killed. The
United States immediately blamed Iran,
claiming that it had been carried out by
an Iranian supported Shi’ite militia
called Kata’ib Hezbollah. It provided no
evidence for that claim and retaliated
by striking a Kata’ib base, killing 25
Iraqis who were in the field fighting
the remnants of Islamic State (IS). The
militiamen had been incorporated into
the Iraqi Army and this disproportionate
response led to riots outside the U.S.
Embassy in Baghdad, which were also
blamed on Iran by the U.S. There then
followed the assassinations of Soleimani
and nine senior Iraqi militia officers.
Iran retaliated when it fired
missiles at American forces,
injuring more than one hundred
soldiers, and then mistakenly shot
down a passenger jet, killing an
additional 176 people. As a consequence
due to the killing by the U.S. of 34
Iraqis in the two incidents, the Iraqi
Parliament also
voted to expel all American troops.
It now appears that the original
death of the American contractor that
sparked the tit-for-tat conflict was not
carried out by Kata’ib Hezbollah at all.
An Iraqi Army investigative team has
gathered convincing evidence that it was
an attack staged by Islamic State. In
fact, the Iraqi government has
demonstrated that Kata’ib Hezbollah has
had no presence in Kirkuk province,
where the attack took place, since 2014.
It is a heavily Sunni area where Shi’a
are not welcome and is instead
relatively hospitable to all-Sunni IS.
It was, in fact, one of the original
breeding grounds for what was to become
ISIS.
This new development was reported in
the New York Times in
an article that was headlined “Was
U.S. Wrong About Attack That Nearly
Started a War With Iran? Iraqi military
and intelligence officials have raised
doubts about who fired the rockets that
started a dangerous spiral of events.”
In spite of the sensational nature of
the report it generally was ignored in
television news and in other mainstream
media outlets, letting the Trump
administration get away with yet another
big lie, one that could easily have led
to a war with Iran.
Iraqi investigators found and
identified the abandoned white Kia
pickup with an improvised Katyusha
rocket launcher in the vehicle’s bed
that was used to stage the attack. It
was discovered down a desert road within
range of the K-1 joint Iraqi-American
base that was hit by at least ten
missiles in December, most of which
struck the American area.
There is no direct evidence tying the
attack to any particular party and the
improvised KIA truck is used by all
sides in the regional fighting, but the
Iraqi officials point to the undisputed
fact that it was the Islamic State that
had carried out three separate attacks
near the base over the 10 days preceding
December 27th. And there are
reports that IS has been increasingly
active in Kirkuk Province during the
past year, carrying out near daily
attacks with improvised roadside bombs
and ambushes using small arms. There
had, in fact, been reports from Iraqi
intelligence that were shared with the
American command warning that there
might be an IS attack on K-1 itself,
which is an Iraqi air base in that is
shared with U.S. forces.
The intelligence on the attack has
been shared with American investigators,
who have also examined the pick-up
truck. The Times reports that
the U.S. command in Iraq continue to
insist that the attack was carried out
by Kata’ib based on information,
including claimed communications
intercepts, that it refuses to make
public. The U.S. forces may not have
shared the intelligence they have with
the Iraqis due to concerns that it would
be leaked to Iran, but senior Iraqi
military officers are nevertheless
perplexed by the reticence to confide in
an ally.
If the Iraqi investigation of the
facts around the December attack on K-1
is reliable, the Donald Trump
administration’s reckless actions in
Iraq in late December and early January
cannot be justified. Worse still, it
would appear that the White House was
looking for an excuse to attack and kill
a senior Iranian official to send some
kind of message, a provocation that
could easily have resulted in a war that
would benefit no one. To be sure, the
Trump administration has lied about
developments in the Middle East so many
times that it can no longer be trusted.
Unfortunately, demanding any
accountability from the Trump team would
require a Congress that is willing to
shoulder its responsibility for truth in
government backed up by
a media that is willing to take on
an administration that regularly
punishes anyone or any entity that dares
to challenge it. That is the unfortunate
reality in America today.