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           |  |   Israeli Terrorist Activities:  Is the US Providing Cover for Israeli Attack on 
	Iran?  By Alan Hart Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, January 18, 2012 
 When is a terrorist not a terrorist – and war with Iran or not?
	 Alan Hart views the USA’s traditional tolerance of Israeli terrorist 
	activities – and abuse of the alliance with the US – and wonders whether 
	this tolerance will extend to providing cover for an Israeli attack on Iran, 
	even if this is not endorsed by Washington.Israeli agents recruit terrorists
 The longer and 
	complete form of the first question in the headline is – “When is a 
	terrorist not a terrorist in the eyes of the Obama administration (not to 
	mention all of its predecessors) and the governments of the Western world?”
 
 Answer: When he or she is an Israeli Mossad agent or asset.
 In the case of the 
	assassination of Iranian scientists, the Mossad’s assets are almost 
	certainly members of the Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MKO), also known as 
	the Peoples’ Mujahedin of Iran, which is committed to overthrowing the 
	regime of the ruling mullahs. Many of its activists are based in Iraqi 
	Kurdistan where Mossad has a substantial presence. It does the training 
	there, selects the targets in Iran and provides the bombs and other weapons, 
	and MKO members do the actual killing.
 It’s reasonable to presume 
	that Mossad is more comfortable operating out of Iraqi Kurdistan with 
	Iranian MKO assets than it was when its own agents were posing as CIA 
	officers to recruit members of Jundallah, a Pakistan-based Sunni extremist 
	organization, to carry out assassinations and attacks on installations and 
	facilities in Iran.
 
 Some of the essence of that Israeli false flag 
	operation has been revealed by Mark Perry in an
	
	article for Foreign Policy. His report is based on information 
	he acquired about memos buried deep in the archives of America’s 
	intelligence services which were written in the last years of President 
	George “Dubya” Bush’s administration, plus conversations he had with two 
	currently serving US intelligence officials and four retired intelligence 
	officers who worked for the CIA or monitored Israeli intelligence operations 
	from senior positions inside the US government.
 
		
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					| “It’s amazing what the Israelis thought they could get 
					away with. Their recruitment activities were nearly in the 
					open. They apparently didn’t give a damn about what we 
					thought.” US intelligence official |  |  According to Perry’s sources, one of whom has seen the memos, the Mossad 
	agents who were posing as CIA agents to recruit Jundallah operatives had 
	American passports and were “flush” with American dollars. The memos tell the story of an investigation which debunked reports from 
	2007 and 2008 accusing the CIA, at the direction of the White House, of 
	covertly supporting Jundallah. The investigation apparently showed that the 
	US “had barred even the most incidental contact with Jundallah”.One rule for Israel, another for the rest of the world
 The 
	memos also gave details of CIA field reports on Mossad’s recruitment of 
	Jundallah operatives, mainly in London and “under the nose of US 
	intelligence officials”.
 
	Perry’s sources confessed to being “stunned by the brazenness of Mossad’s 
	efforts.” And one of them said: “It’s amazing what the Israelis thought they 
	could get away with. Their recruitment activities were nearly in the open. 
	They apparently didn’t give a damn about what we thought.”
 I take 
	issue with the first part of that statement. What is really amazing is not 
	what Mossad and almost of Israel’s political and military leaders think 
	they can get away with, but what they know they can get away with 
	because of the Zionist lobby’s control of Congress on all matters relating 
	to policy for the conflict in and over Palestine that became Israel.
 
 And that in turn is why, generally speaking, Israel’s leaders
	
	don’t give a damn about what American administrations think. They come 
	and go but the Zionist lobby’s control of Congress is a permanent fixture. 
	(In private conversation with General Moshe Dayan when he was Israel’s 
	defence minister, I once summed up Israel’s unspeakable but implicit message 
	to the governments of the world in the following way. “We know we shouldn’t 
	have done this but we’ve done it because we also know there’s nothing you 
	can do about it.” Dayan didn’t comment but the look on his face said 
	something like, “You’re right but I’m not going to say so.”)
 
 Though 
	Israel doesn’t usually comment on reports about Mossad’s activities, a 
	senior government spokesman described Perry’s account of Mossad agents 
	posing as CIA agents as “absolute nonsense”. As I was reading the denial I 
	used a Jimmy Carter expression – “BS” (Bull Shit).
 
		
			| 
				
					| “These are shameful acts by a shameful Israeli government 
					exploiting Iranian terrorists for their own ends. I find it 
					disgusting that Israel can get away with such acts with 
					impunity.” Richard Silverstein, US journalist |  |  After the latest assassination of an Iranian scientist, Rick Santorum, 
	the right-wing religious joker in the pack of Republican presidential 
	hopefuls, said this: “On occasions scientists working on the nuclear 
	programme in Iran turn up dead. I think that’s a wonderful thing.” A different view was offered by Jewish American journalist Richard 
	Silverstein. For his weblog Tikun Olam he wrote this: “These are 
	shameful acts by a shameful Israeli government exploiting Iranian terrorists 
	for their own ends. I find it disgusting that Israel can get away with such 
	acts with impunity.”
 Disgusting it certainly is but there’s no 
	mystery about why Israel can commit crimes, including acts of naked state 
	terrorism, without fear of being called and held to account for them by the 
	UN Security Council. When after the 1967 war it refused to label the Zionist 
	state as the aggressor and require it to withdraw from the newly occupied 
	Arab lands without conditions, it effectively created, at the insistence of 
	the US, two sets of rules for the behaviour of nations: one set for all the 
	nations of the world minus Israel and the other exclusively for Israel. That 
	was the birth of the double standard which is the cancer at the heart of 
	Western foreign policy.
 
 Now let’s pause for a moment to imagine what 
	the response would have been if Iranian agents or assets had assassinated an 
	Israeli scientist (just one) in the Zionist state.
 
 Led by America, 
	Western governments would have bellowed their condemnation of the terrorism 
	and pledged full support for all efforts to hunt the terrorists down and 
	bring them to justice. And they would, of course, have blamed the government 
	of Iran even if there was not one shred of evidence of its authorization. 
	The assassination of an Israeli scientist might even have tipped the 
	Washington decision-making balance in favour of the mad men who want the US 
	either to attack Iran or give Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu the 
	green light to go, with or without nuclear tipped, bunker-busting bombs.
 
 And Israel? How would it have responded? With or without a green light 
	from President Barack Obama it almost certainly would have bombed selected 
	targets in Iran, even if doing so was likely to set the region on fire and 
	do vast damage to Western interests in the region and the whole Muslim 
	world. (As I note in my book
	Zionism: The Real 
	Enemy of the Jews, in the chapter headed “The Liberty Affair – Pure 
	Murder on a Great Day”, the lesson of the
	
	cold-blooded Israeli attack on the American spy ship was that there is 
	nothing the Zionist state might not do, to its friends as well as its 
	enemies, in order to get its own way.)
 
 Now, at the risk of inviting a 
	charge from some and perhaps many readers that I am naive in the extreme, I 
	have to say I am inclined to the view that the Obama administration was 
	telling the truth when it strongly denied any American complicity in the 
	latest Israeli/MKO assassination. The New York Times put it this 
	way:
 
		The assassination drew an 
		unusually strong condemnation from the White House and the State 
		Department, which disavowed any American complicity... “The United 
		States had absolutely nothing to do with this,” said Tommy Vietor, a 
		spokesman for the National Security Council. Secretary of State Hillary 
		Rodham Clinton appeared to expand the denial beyond Wednesday’s killing, 
		categorically denying any United States involvement in any kind of act 
		of violence inside Iran. The New York Times report then quoted Mrs Clinton as saying 
	this: 
		We believe that there has to 
		be an understanding between Iran, its neighbours and the international 
		community that finds a way forward for it to end its provocative 
		behaviour, end its search for nuclear weapons and rejoin the 
		international community, That in my opinion is code for something very like: “This administration 
	is not completely mad. We know that an attack on Iran could have 
	catastrophic consequences for the region and the world. Despite the mounting 
	and awesome pressure we are under from Netanyahu and those who peddle his 
	propaganda here in America, we know that the nuclear problem with Iran must 
	be solved by jaw-jaw and not war-war.”
 How catastrophic the 
	consequences of an Israeli attack on Iran could be for the region and the 
	world has been put into words by Philip Giraldi, currently the executive 
	director of the Council for the National Interest and a former CIA 
	counter-terrorism specialist and military intelligence officer. The scenario 
	he presents under the headline "What 
	war with Iran might look like" takes us all the way to World War III.
 
 So, I believe New York Times reporter Scott Shane was on the 
	right track when he wrote that the statements by US officials appeared to 
	reflect serious concern about the (Israeli/MKO) assassinations of Iranian 
	scientists because they could “backfire” and make Iran’s leaders less 
	willing to talk. And, I add, more willing to give in to those forces in 
	Iran, the Revolutionary Guards in particular, who might well be saying that 
	Iran must possess nuclear weapons for deterrence.
 
		
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					| “At executive level it [the Obama administration] is, I 
					think, in a state of something close to total panic about 
					what to do to prevent an Israeli attack on Iran if Netanyahu 
					is not bluffing.” |  |  My guess is that US officials are also concerned by the possibility that 
	more assassinations could provoke an Iranian response which would give 
	Israel the pretext to attack. (It’s by no means impossible that the main 
	purpose of the assassinations is to provoke an Iranian response to give 
	Israel the pretext for an attack.) That brings me to my own speculation about what is really going on behind 
	closed doors in the Obama administration. At executive level it is, I think, 
	in a state of something close to total panic about what to do to prevent an 
	Israeli attack on Iran if Netanyahu is not bluffing.
 My reading of 
	Obama’s latest turn of the sanctions screw on Iran is that it’s his way of 
	not only putting more pressure on the ruling mullahs. It’s also his way of 
	saying to Netanyahu something like: “Give me more time to solve the Iranian 
	nuclear problem by all means other than war.”
 
 Obama needs more time 
	not only to try to get serious and substantive talks with Iran going but 
	also to establish beyond any doubt whether Israeli threats to attack Iran’s 
	nuclear facilities are a bluff (to put pressure on the US) or not. In an 
	article for the Israeli newspaper Haaretz under the headline 
	"Israel and US at odds over timetables and red lines for Iran", Avi 
	Issacharoff and Amos Harel wrote:
 
		Do [Israeli Defence Minister
		
		
		Ehud] Barak 
		and Netanyahu really intend to attack on their own, or is Israel only 
		trying to prod the West into more decisive action? That is the 
		million-dollar question. It has been discussed intermittently for the 
		past three years and it seems that Washington does not have a 
		satisfactory answer to it. In a few days time General Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the US Joint 
	Chiefs of Staff, is scheduled to arrive in Israel for talks with Ehud Barak, 
	Chief of Staff Lieutenant-General Benny Gantz and other senior Israeli 
	defence and intelligence officials. 
		
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					| “My guess is that whatever he may say in public after his 
					meetings, [Chairman of US Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin] 
					Dempsey will tell the Israelis in private that if they go to 
					war with Iran they will be on their own.” |  |  Dempsey knows that when US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta met with 
	Netanyahu and Barak last November, they refused to give him a commitment 
	that Israel would not attack Iran without informing America of its intention 
	to do so. If I am right about the panic in the Obama administration, my guess is 
	that Dempsey will try to obtain the commitment Panetta failed to get. What 
	if Dempsey does not succeed?
 My guess is that whatever he may say in 
	public after his meetings, Dempsey will tell the Israelis in private that if 
	they go to war with Iran they will be on their own. The US, I can almost 
	hear him saying, will not become engaged except to defend its own national 
	interests if and as necessary “because the American people, most of them, 
	are tired of war”. He could add “and we don’t have the money to pay for it”.
 
 An interesting question for the coming days is something like this: what 
	if Dempsey returns to Washington without being able to give 
	behind-closed-doors assurance that Israel (despite what it might continue to 
	say to the contrary in public for propaganda purposes) will not go it alone 
	with an attack Iran?
 
 In theory there is a card President Obama could 
	play. He could put Israel on public notice that if it attacked Iran and if 
	as a consequence America’s own bests interests were harmed, the US would 
	have to rethink its relationship with the “Jewish state”. A statement to 
	that effect would imply that the days of America’s unconditional support for 
	Israel right or wrong could be coming to an end.
 
 But that’s not a 
	statement Obama could make this side of November’s presidential election. 
	So, if Netanyahu is not bluffing, and if he was determined to bomb Iran’s 
	nuclear facilities before November’s election, there’s nothing Obama could 
	do to stop him, even knowing that the end game could be, as Giraldi 
	speculated, World War III.
 
 My own view has always been that Netanyahu 
	is bluffing to the extent that even he is not crazy enough to order an 
	Israeli attack on Iran without a green light from the US and American cover 
	and participation.
 
 I hope I am right. If I am it could be that 
	General Dempsey will return to Washington with the news Obama wants and 
	needs: that without a green light from the US, Israel will not bomb Iran’s 
	nuclear facilities.
 
	http://www.redress.cc/americas/ahart20120116 
 
 
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