"These are among the most sophisticated and most lethal devices we've
seen," said the senior officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity
because of the delicate intelligence reports describing the bombs.
"It's very serious."

Note that no one is willing to blame the Iranian government even
though they rule Iran with an iron hand and either are condoning
shipment of weapons reaching Iraq from Iran or are actively involved.
 But U.S. acknowledgement of that would require action against Iran
which could easily spiral into active combat involving Iranian forces
and the majority Shiite militias in Iraq against U.S. troops.

Meanwhile, the shaped charges keep coming...

David Bier

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/06/politics/06bomb.html?th&emc=th

August 6, 2005
Some Bombs Used in Iraq Are Made in Iran, U.S. Says
By ERIC SCHMITT

WASHINGTON, Aug. 5 - Many of the new, more sophisticated roadside
bombs used to attack American and government forces in Iraq have been
designed in Iran and shipped in from there, United States military and
intelligence officials said Friday, raising the prospect of increased
foreign help for Iraqi insurgents.

American commanders say the deadlier bombs could become more common as
insurgent bomb makers learn the techniques to make the weapons
themselves in Iraq.

But just as troubling is that the spread of the new weapons seems to
suggest a new and unusual area of cooperation between Iranian Shiites
and Iraqi Sunnis to drive American forces out - a possibility that the
commanders said they could make little sense of given the increasing
violence between the sects in Iraq.

Unlike the improvised explosive devices devised from Iraq's vast
stockpiles of missiles, artillery shells and other arms, the new
weapons are specially designed to destroy armored vehicles, military
bomb experts say. The bombs feature shaped charges, which penetrate
armor by focusing explosive power in a single direction and by firing
a metal projectile embedded in the device into the target at high
speed. The design is crude but effective if the vehicle's armor
plating is struck at the correct angle, the experts said.

Since they first began appearing about two months ago, some of these
devices have been seized, including one large shipment that was
captured last week in northeast Iraq coming from Iran. But one senior
military officer said "tens" of the devices had been smuggled in and
used against allied forces, killing or wounding several Americans
throughout Iraq in the past several weeks.

"These are among the most sophisticated and most lethal devices we've
seen," said the senior officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity
because of the delicate intelligence reports describing the bombs.
"It's very serious."

Pentagon and intelligence officials say that some shipments of the new
explosives have contained both components and fully manufactured
devices, and may have been spirited into Iraq along the porous Iranian
border by the Iranian-backed, anti-Israeli terrorist group Hezbollah,
or by Iran's Revolutionary Guard. American commanders say these bombs
closely matched those that Hezbollah has used against Israel.

"The devices we're seeing now have been machined," said a military
official who has access to classified reporting on the insurgents'
bomb-making abilities. "There is evidence of some sophistication."

American officials say they have no evidence that the Iranian
government is involved. But Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and
the new United States ambassador in Baghdad, Zalmay Khalilzad,
complained publicly this week about the Tehran government's harmful
meddling in Iraqi affairs.

"There is movement across its borders of people and matériel used in
violent acts against Iraq," Mr. Khalilzad said Monday.

But some Middle East specialists discount any involvement by the
Iranian government or Hezbollah, saying it would be counter to their
interests to support Iraq's Sunni Arab insurgents, who have stepped up
their attacks against Iraqi Shiites. These specialists suggest that
the arms shipments are more likely the work of criminals, arms
traffickers or splinter insurgent groups.

"Iran's protégés are in control in Iraq right now, yet these weapons
are going to people fighting Iran's protégés," said Kenneth Katzman, a
Persian Gulf expert at the Congressional Research Service and a former
Middle East analyst at the Central Intelligence Agency. "That makes
little sense to me."

One of Iran's top priorities is to get the United States out of Iraq,
which means keeping up the violence there. At the same time, that
clearly works against their other goal, which is to get religious
Shiites in power and keep them in power. Right now, popular support
for the government of Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, which is
friendly toward Iran, is waning because it cannot deal effectively
with the Sunni-based insurgency.

And while American military intelligence officers believe Iranian
intelligence has a large presence in Iraq, they say it hasn't been
working to destabilize the country.

American commanders say they first saw the use of the new explosives
in the predominantly Shiite area of southern Iraq, including Basra,
but their use by insurgents steadily migrated into Sunni-majority
areas north and west of Baghdad. It was unclear how the transfers were
taking place.

The seizure of the recent arms shipment from Iran was first reported
on Thursday night by NBC News and CBS News.

The influx of the new explosives comes as allied commanders are
stepping up efforts to stop the infiltration of fighters, weapons and
equipment along Iraq's porous borders with Iran and Syria. Ten days
ago, for instance, Iraqi border enforcement agents seized a major
shipment of weapons, apparently small arms, that officials suspect may
have come from Iran, Maj. Gen. J. B. Dutton of the British Marines,
commander of allied forces in southern Iraq, told reporters on Friday
in a conference call from Basra.

More troubling are the broad array of roadside bombs that range from
the improvised explosives made from modified 155-millimeter artillery
shells and other materials to antitank mines like those that military
officials say caused the blast on Wednesday that killed 14 marines and
an Iraqi civilian in western Iraq.

American troops and the insurgents have been engaged for months in an
expanding test of tactics and technology, with the guerrillas building
bigger and more clever devices and the Americans trying to counter
them at each turn.

"The terrorists are trying to adapt to that level of protection that
our forces have; they have been motivated to try to find a way to get
advantage," Brig. Gen. Donald Alston, a military spokesman in Baghdad,
said at a news conference on Thursday. "And occasionally, we're seeing
I.E.D.'s that are sufficiently lethal as to challenge some of the
level of protection."

Military officials say they are thwarting about 40 percent of the
roadside bombs before they detonate, employing a range of
countermeasures from jamming devices that disrupt the frequency of the
explosives' triggers, to heightened patrols. Last week, the military
successfully cleared 115 roadside bombs, General Alston said. But such
bombs remain the No. 1 killer of American troops in Iraq.

"It's not just about the armor that you carry," he said. "It's about
your tactics, and it's about how you evolve and develop those and try
to defend yourself before those things detonate as well."

Edward Wong in Baghdad and David S. Cloud contributed reporting for
this article.





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