Where Are Those Iranian
Weapons in
by Gareth Porter
http://www.antiwar.com/porter/?articleid=12883
The
But US officials have failed
thus far to provide evidence that would support that claim, and a long-delayed
When Maj. Gen. Kevin Bergner
was asked that question at a briefing May 8, he did not answer it directly.
Instead Bergner reverted to a standard
Bergner's refusal to address
that question reflects a fundamental problem with the
Reports by the
Although those reports do
not represent all the Mahdi Army caches found, they provide further evidence of
the relative importance of Iranian rockets, mortars and RPGs
in the Mahdi Army arsenal. That is because US military officials are so eager
to publicize any discovery of an Iranian-made weapon system that they would
exploit any opportunity available to do so.
The
Based on weapons caches
discovered over the past 15 mont
Those are essentially the
same mortars and rockets that have turned up in al Qaeda and Sunni insurgent
weapons caches, suggesting that both groups have obtained their heavier weapons
from the international arms market. In fact, 60mm and 120mm mortars were used
by Sunni guerrillas in the very early mont
A
However, Chinese, Yugoslav
and Pakistani 107mm rockets have also been the weapon of choice of Taliban
guerrillas in
The
US officials tried to
capitalize on the increased mortar and rocket attacks on the Green Zone and US
military headquarters last year to argue that they were the result of a rising
tide of Iranian supply of such standoff weapons – particularly 240mm rockets –
to what the US command calls "special groups" of Shiite militiamen.
One US official, who
insisted on being identified only as a "senior official", told this
writer in mid-September 2007 that rockets and mortars provided by Iran since
the beginning of that year – and especially 240 mm rockets – were doing much
greater damage because of their greater accuracy and power compared with the
older Katyusha rockets – mostly from Iraqi stocks –
that had been employed in attacking US bases and the Green Zone in previous
years.
But evidence from the
No 240mm rocket has been
reported found in a Mahdi Army weapons cache over the past year, but a single
warhead for a 240mm rocket was reported to have been found in
After a rocket fired at Camp
Victory on Sep. 11, 2007 killed one and wounded 11 others, US officials told
the news media that the command spokesman, Gen. Bergner, would display
fragments of a 240mm rocket – complete with Iranian markings – at his next
press briefing in order to "show the link between the Iranian weapons and
the damage they are doing".
But Bergner admitted to the
media that there were no discernible Iranian markings on the fragment, and that
a number of countries manufacture 240mm rockets. He was able to assert only
that ordnance experts "assess it is of [sic] consistent with the rockets
of Iranian origin we have seen used in other attacks."
That was a very weak claim,
because Bergner had not provided any evidence to the media that previous
attacks had involved Iranian 240mm rockets either.
When the military
headquarters at
Gen. David Petraeus insisted last October that there is "absolutely
no question" that
In weapons caches reported
from Shiite locations, not a single RPG-29 has been identified. Of the 160 RPG
launchers reported in Mahdi Army caches, along with 800 RPG missiles, none were
identified as Iranian, although some were identified as being Soviet-made. Only
11 were reported to be RPG-7s – a type of launcher that is made by
(Inter Press Service)