When the US military command accused the Iranian
Quds Force last January of providing the armor-piercing EFPs (explosively formed
penetrators) that were killing US troops, it knew that Iraqi machine shops had
been producing their own EFPs for years, a review of the historical record of
evidence on EFPs in Iraq shows.
The record also shows that the US command had considerable evidence that
the Mahdi army had gotten the technology and the training on how to use it from
Hezbollah rather than Iran.
The command, operating under close White House supervision, chose to deny these
facts in making the dramatic accusation that became the main rationale for the
present aggressive US stance toward Iran. Although the George W. Bush administration
initially limited the accusation to the Quds Force, it has recently begun to
assert that top officials of the Iranian regime are responsible for arms that
are killing US troops.
British and US officials observed from the beginning that the EFPs being
used in Iraq closely resembled the ones used by Hezbollah against Israeli forces
in Southern Lebanon, both in their design and the techniques for using them.
Hezbollah was known as the world's most knowledgeable specialists in EFP manufacture
and use, having perfected them during the 1990s in the military struggle against
Israeli forces in Lebanon. It was widely recognized that it was Hezbollah that
had passed on the expertise to Hamas and other Palestinian militant groups after
the second Intifada began in 2000.
US intelligence also knew that Hezbollah was conducting the training of Mahdi
army militants on EFPs. In August 2005, Newsday published a report from
correspondent Mohammed Bazzi that Shi'ite fighters had begun in early 2005 to
copy Hezbollah techniques for building the bombs, as well as for carrying out
roadside ambushes, citing both Iraqi and Lebanese officials.
In late November 2006, a senior intelligence official told both CNN and the
New York Times that Hezbollah troops had trained as many as 2,000 Mahdi
army fighters in Lebanon.
The fact that the Mahdi army's major military connection has always been with
Hezbollah rather than Iran would also explain the presence in Iraq of the PRG-29,
a shoulder-fired anti-armor weapon. Although US military briefers identified
it last February as being Iranian-made, the RPG-29 is not manufactured by Iran
but by the Russian Federation.
According to the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, RPG-29s were imported from
Russia by Syria, then passed on to Hezbollah, which used them with devastating
effectiveness against Israeli forces in the 2006 war. According to a June 2004
report on the well-informed military website Strategypage.com, RPG-29s were
already turning up in Iraq, "apparently smuggled across the Syrian border."
The earliest EFPs appearing in Iraq in 2004 were so professionally made that
they were probably constructed by Hezbollah specialists, according to a detailed
account by British expert Michael Knights in Jane's Intelligence Review
last year.
By late 2005, however, the British command had already found clear evidence
that the Iraqi Shi'ites themselves were manufacturing their own EFPs. British
Army Major General J. B. Dutton told reporters in November 2005 that the bombs
were of varying degrees of sophistication.
Some of the EFPs required a "reasonably sophisticated factory," he
said, while others required only a simple workshop, which he observed, could
only mean that some of them were being made inside Iraq.
After British convoys in Maysan province were attacked by a series of EFP bombings
in late May 2006, Knights recounts, British forces discovered a factory making
them in Majar al-Kabir north of Basra in June.
In addition, the US military also had its own forensic evidence by fall 2006
that EFPs used against its vehicles had been manufactured in Iraq, according
to Knights. He cites photographic evidence of EFP strikes on US armored vehicles
that "typically shows a mixture of clean penetrations from fully-formed
EFP and spattering..." That pattern reflected the fact that the locally
made EFPs were imperfect, some of them forming the required shape to penetrate
but some of them failing to do so.
Then US troops began finding EFP factories. Journalist Andrew Cockburn reported
in the Los Angeles Times in mid-February that US troops had raided a
Baghdad machine shop in November 2006 and discovered "a pile of copper
discs, 5 inches in diameter, stamped out as part of what was clearly an ongoing
order."
In a report on Feb. 23, NBC Baghdad correspondent Jane Arraf quoted "senior
military officials" as saying that US forces had "have been finding
an increasing number of the advanced roadside bombs being not just assembled
but manufactured in machine shops here."
Nevertheless, the Bush administration decided to put the blame for the EFPs
squarely on the Quds Force of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, after
Bush agreed in fall 2006 to target the Quds Force within Iran in order to make
Iranian leaders feel vulnerable to US power. The allegedly exclusive Iranian
manufacture of EFPs was the administration's only argument for holding the Quds
Force responsible for their use against US forces.
At the Feb. 11 military briefing presenting the case for this claim, one of
the US military officials declared, "The explosive charges used by Iranian
agents in Iraq need a special manufacturing process, which is available only
in Iran." The briefer insisted that there was no evidence that they were
being made in Iraq.
That lynchpin of the administration's EFP narrative began to break down almost
immediately, however. On Feb. 23, NBC's Arraf confronted Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno,
who had been out in front in January promoting the new Iranian EFP line, with
the information she had obtained from other senior military officials that an
increasing number of machine stops manufacturing EFPs had been discovered by
US troops.
Odierno began to walk the Iranian EFP story back. He said the EFPs had "started
to come from Iran," but he admitted "some of the technologies"
were "probably being constructed here."
The following day, US troops found yet another EFP factory near Baquba, with
copper discs that appeared to be made with a high degree of precision, but which
could not be said with any certainty to have originated in Iran.
The explosive expert who claimed at the February briefing that EFPs could only
be made in Iran was then made available to the New York Times to explain
away the new find. Maj. Marty Weber now backed down from his earlier statement
and admitted that there were "copy cat" EFPs being machined in Iraq
that looked identical to those allegedly made in Iran to the untrained eye.
Weber insisted that such Iraqi-made EFPs had slight imperfections which made
them "much less likely to pierce armor." But NBC's Arraf had reported
the previous week that a senior military official had confirmed to her that
the EFPs made in Iraqi shops were indeed quite able to penetrate US armor. The
impact of those weapons "isn't as clean," the official said, but they
are "almost as effective" as the best-made EFPs.
The idea that only Iranian EFPs penetrate armor would be a surprise to Israeli
intelligence, which has reported that EFPs manufactured by Hamas guerrillas
in their own machine shops during 2006 had penetrated eight inches of Israeli
steel armor in four separate incidents in September and November, according
to the Intelligence and Terrorism Center in Tel Aviv.
The Arraf story was ignored by the news media, and the Bush administration
has continued to assert the Iranian EFP charge as though it had never been questioned.
It soon became such an accepted part of the media narrative on Iran and Iraq
that the only issue about which reporters bothered to ask questions is whether
the top leaders of the Iranian government have approved the alleged Quds Force
operation.
(Inter Press Service)