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You're Fired (Again)
A suave, University of Chicago-trained mathematician, Chalabi and his controversial exile group, the Iraqi National Congress, were major players in Washington during the run up to the Iraq War. Leading neoconservatives and some top Bush officials--mainly in the Pentagon and Vice President Dick Cheney's office--promoted Chalabi as a pro-Western democrat. Some supporters dubbed him "the George Washington of Iraq." Chalabi, who for years had lived in exile in the West, claimed he could unite his country after the ouster of Saddam. But many top officials in the State Department and CIA deeply distrusted Chalabi. They regarded him as a duplicitious double-dealer who was feeding the U.S. government and media with phony intelligence about Saddam's weapons programs and ties to terrorism in order to build a case for war.
When weapons of mass destruction failed to materialize after the invasion, Chalabi's star faded. In the spring of 2004, the administration cut ties with him, in part because of persistent questions about his links to Tehran. The Defense Intelligence Agency and the National Security Agency asked the FBI to investigate allegations that Chalabi or one of his aides had leaked ultrasecret information to his Iranian contacts about how U.S. intelligence had cracked an Iranian intelligence code. The Iraqi police, assisted by the U.S. personnel, even raided Chalabi's Baghdad headquarters. But no charges were filed against him and Chalabi claimed the codebreaking story was fabricated by his antagonists in the CIA and the U.S. media.
According to a new book by Aram Roston, an investigative reporter for NBC News, one of Chalabi's alleged Iranian contacts was Brig. Gen. Ahmed Foruzandeh, a commander of the Quds Force. In January, the Bush administration designated Foruzandeh a terrorist supporter and financier, freezing any assets he might have in the U.S. and banning any transactions between him and anyone inside the United States.
Roston reports that a Chalabi aide confirmed that Chalabi--who regularly visited Iran during Saddam's rule and once maintained an office in Tehran--met with Foruzandeh at least twice before the U.S. invasion. Roston quotes an unnamed former CIA official describing Foruzandeh as "an intelligence officer of a hostile service which is directly involved with operations that kill Americans." (Click here to read extracts from Roston's book, "Ahmed Chalabi: The Man Who Pushed American to War.")
The Bush administration has repeatedly accused Foruzandeh's Quds Force of smuggling weapons to renegade Shiite military units inside Iraq--including crude but deadly parts for roadside antipersonnel and antitank bombs known as EFPs (explosively formed penetrators). The official Treasury Department statement blacklisting Foruzandeh charges that he "leads terrorist operations" against U.S. and Iraqi forces and that he has directed "assasinations of Iraqi figures." The Treasury Department also alleges that as of mid-February 2007, Foruzandeh a ordered Iranian intelligence officers under his command to continue to stoke sectarian violence in Iraq and that he was responsible for establishing training courses in Iran for Iraqi militias to "increase their ability to combat Coalition Forces." The Treasury order claims that this training for Iraqi insurgents included "courses in guerilla warfare, light arms, marksmanship, planting improvised explosive devices and firing anti-aircraft missiles."
Markham, Chalabi's lawyer, provided NEWSWEEK with a statement Chalabi previously gave to NBC News about his relations with Foruzandeh. "All top Iraqi leaders who visit Tehran meet regularly with Iranian revolutionary guards, including this individual," he said. "To illustrate this: some of the Iraqi leaders who met with President Bush as recently as 2007 have met with [Foruzandeh] and did so before and afer their meetings with President Bush. Moreover, the U.S. itself has met with many individuals it has decried as having some something wrong. The object of any meetings I attend is to promote the stability that my country needs, and speaking to people from various points of view sometimes moves the process in a favorable direction."
Terror Watch appears weekly on Newsweek.com
© 2008
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Member Comments
Posted By: Mwalimu @ 05/17/2008 12:31:05 AM
Comment: This report fails in one important area - Ahmed Chalabi's big point man in Washington was none other than John McCain. Charlie Black, the chief of McCain's campaign staff, was a lobbyist for Ahmed Chalabi. John McCain even talked former president Bill Clinton into supporting him. Chalabi's lies and misinformation got us into the war in Iraq. And this is what John McCain touts as experience. Experience is meaningless if it merely proves mental incompetence. That applies to John McCain
Posted By: Italian Revolutionary @ 05/16/2008 10:45:53 AM
Comment: It's time to put the wooden stake through this guy's heart. His "nothing up my sleeve" sleazeball tactics are so apparent that I can't imagine anyone with an IQ above 90....oh, nevermind.
Garibaldi
Posted By: Italian Revolutionary @ 05/16/2008 10:43:44 AM
Comment: Time to put the wooden stake throught this guy's heart. How anyone with an IQ over 90....oh, nevermind.
GP