Mind War Victory for Iranian Nukes 

By: Clare Lopez


As the United States (U.S.) and Iran move ever
<http://origin.ih.constantcontact.com/fs054/1101618903338/img/51.jpg?a=11018
41608540> closer to the endgame of an exceptionally hostile 28 year
confrontation, it might be useful to step back from the heated rhetoric of
2007 to consider how successfully Iran has managed to string things along
this far without precipitating an actual military strike by the U.S. We need
to recognize that the clerics who run Iran's totalitarian theocracy are past
masters of denial and deception, mind war, and psychological operations. The
ideal outcome of such tactics is achievement of one's national objectives,
the bending of the opponent to one's will, without the use of force or
coercion-in fact, without the opponent even realizing that the outcome was
imposed from without and not his own desired outcome all along. 

This is a regime that kicked off its 1979 coup d'etat by attacking the
American Embassy in Tehran and holding hostage dozens of our diplomats for
over a year. Shortly thereafter, it created in southern Lebanon a proxy
terrorist organization (Hizballah) that not only launched armed attacks on
our ally, Israel, with which we share a mutual defense agreement, but
kidnapped, tortured, and killed our citizens at will throughout the 1980s. 

Next, Iran orchestrated the 1983 bombings of our Embassy and the Marine
barracks in Beirut, that killed hundreds of our citizens and servicemen. The
clerical regime's complicity in the 1996 bombing of the U.S. Air Force
facility at Khobar Khobar Towers
<http://origin.ih.constantcontact.com/fs054/1101618903338/img/54.jpg?a=11018
41608540> Towers in Saudi Arabia is publicly documented, as is its support
and training role (again via Hizballah) for the al-Qa'eda bombers who
destroyed American Embassies in Nairobi, Kenya and Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
in 1998. They likewise were responsible for the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole
in Yemen. Since 9/11, Iran has harbored on its territory dozens of top
al-Qa'eda operatives, including at least one of Usama bin Laden's sons and
the al-Qa'eda military operations commander, Saif al-Adl. 

Since the 2003 launch of Operation Iraqi Freedom, Iran has flooded Iraq with
thousands of Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), Ministry of
Intelligence and Security (MOIS), and irregular Bassij operatives who have
infiltrated Iraq's fledgling government and established liaison with both
Sunni and Shi'a terrorist militias in order to provide the documents,
logistics, training, and weapons that have killed hundreds of American
troops (and thousands of Iraqi civilians). Iranian intent to prevent the
emergence of a stable, democratic Iraq that is self-sufficient and able to
defend itself could not be more clear-nor could its visceral enmity for the
U.S. goal of enabling the emergence of liberal democracy in the Middle East.


And yet, to date, there has been no meaningful official American response to
this litany of provocations that, in fact, amounts to a state of war between
our two nations. No official U.S. acknowledgement that such a state of war
actually exists has yet been forthcoming, despite the accelerating drumbeat
of complaints from our military commanders in Iraq that Iranians there are
involved in direct offensive military operations against American troops.
Soaring rhetoric from President Bush and other administration figures about
supporting the Iranian people's aspirations for freedom and democracy,
standing up to totalitarian Islamo-fascism, and preventing the acquisition
of nuclear weapons by the most dangerous regime in the Middle East simply
has not been matched by action. 

We must ask ourselves, "Why?"

Let us begin to solve this puzzle by looking at Iran's nuclear weapons
program. This is a program that the Ayatollah Khomeini  Khomeini
<http://origin.ih.constantcontact.com/fs054/1101618903338/img/53.jpg?a=11018
41608540> revived in the 1980s as the endless, brutal war with Iraq entered
its eighth year with no end in sight. Although its origins date back to the
1950s, when the U.S. and the Shah's Iran were close allies, under Khomeini
and his successors, the program turned in earnest to acquisition of 'the
bomb'. Even though Iran was an early signatory to the nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) in 1970, once Khomeini gave the green light,
the clerical regime created a clandestine weapons program that has operated
in the shadows ever since. Until the democratic Iranian opposition, the
National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), publicly blew the lid off of
this secret program in 2002, neither the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) nor the public in general knew that the mullahs were pursuing a
nuclear weapons capability. 

How did they keep such a secret from public knowledge for so long? Many of
Iran's clerical leadership studied directly under the Soviet KGB and proved
apt students of their denial and deception, mind war, and psychological
operations tactics. Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, for
instance, is a graduate of the KGB training school, Patrice Lumumba
University in Moscow. 

Clearly also, a totalitarian regime is far better able to conceal and
obfuscate than an open society with free speech, an energetic media, and
demanding electorate. Scientists within a police state like Iran's often are
co-opted to their work from university, graduation from which can be a
privilege that may only be available (or affordable) to those who agree to a
regime's 'offer'. Laboratories, research facilities, and production plants
are built behind an opaque wall of secrecy that includes remote or disguised
locations, electronic fences, dual-use programs, buried bunkers, and
pervasive intelligence and security supervision. 

A massive and intricate web of front companies and undercover operatives
seeks out blueprints, components, know-how, and precursor materiel from
willing violators of international non-proliferation regimes across the
world.  Kahn
<http://origin.ih.constantcontact.com/fs054/1101618903338/img/58.jpg?a=11018
41608540> The A.Q. Khan network and North Korea both are known to have
provided critical assistance to Iran's nuclear weapons program. For a price,
so have numerous individuals and companies in Europe, Asia, the Middle East,
and even the U.S. Some of the collection work is overt, such as the trolling
that goes on at most professional scientific conferences or in libraries and
on the Internet. Some of it is completely clandestine and involves the usual
spotting, assessing, developing, and recruiting that comprise most
national-level intelligence programs. Top scientific talent is lured away
from collapsing nuclear programs such as those in South Africa, Russia, and
other places in the former Soviet Union. 

Government spokesmen carefully frame any references to the clandestine
facilities to deflect and discourage investigative interest or follow-up. An
internal media that is completely dominated by the security services
complies with the government-issued script on any issue even remotely
related to the program. A well-rehearsed cadre of English-speaking
academics, NGO and think tank staffers, and writers fans out across the
world to murmur soothing reassurances at Western universities, human rights
organizations, and on television interview shows about the 'peaceful
intentions' and 'guaranteed rights' of Iran's 'civilian' nuclear development
program. And finally, top level national and international institutions are
infiltrated with operatives and what used to be called 'fellow travelers'
who can influence important policy decisions that might affect the program.


Obviously, such a program involves a huge commitment of  Iranian national
resources over a period of many years, which indicates just how important
the acquisition of nuclear weapons actually is for this regime.
Understanding the scope of Iran's efforts to convince the world it had no
nuclear weapons program must lead to the inescapable conclusion that this is
a regime that will do literally anything to keep this program moving
forward; there are simply no possible incentives the international community
can offer that would ever convince this regime to give up what it perceives
as the sina qua non of its very existence.

Once the world realized, thanks to the Iranian resistance, what the Iranian
regime had been up to for all those years, however, Tehran changed tack on a
dime. The next phase of its denial and deception, mind war, and
psychological operations campaign began.  With satellite photography showing
nuclear facilities at the Saghand uranium mines, Isfahan conversion plant,
Natanz enrichment site, and Arak heavy water plutonium project now posted to
the Internet, Iran plausibly could no longer deny the existence of its
nuclear program. Moreover, in reluctant response to a steady barrage of NCRI
revelations, the IAEA eventually was prodded to mount a desultory schedule
of inspections. 

What Iran's canny leadership could and did deny, however, was the essential
nature of its efforts to build a forbidden weapons program. Taken by
surprise by the NCRI revelations (that were based on the extensive
clandestine intelligence collection program inside Iran run by NCRI member
organization, the Mujahedeen-e Khalq or MEK), the mullahs were forced to
fall back. 

They have now admitted that they actually did have a nuclear program, but
had concealed it from international authorities at the IAEA for fourteen
years because they feared that American and other countries' animosity
towards their regime might deny them their NPT-given right to develop a
legitimate nuclear power industry. Thus, the mullahs lunged quickly for the
sympathy of Third World and other rogue regime elements whom they
intuitively understood would applaud their defiance of Western and
international organizations labeled as 'oppressive.' In this way, the new
regime line deftly positioned the Iranian nuclear program within the
legitimate confines of the NPT, but at the same time garnered instant
international support by self-designating Iran as an oppressed member of the
developing world 'victim class'. 

Incredibly, much of the world bought it all, lock, stock, and barrel! With
Europeans in the lead, the international community rushed to proffer
dialogue, incentives, and negotiations naively intended to secure Iran
firmly within a largely illusiory system of voluntary restrictions on
nuclear weapons proliferation and development. Incredulous protestations by
American Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton and others served
mainly to confirm Iran's persecution complex. This is mind war conducted at
a very sophisticated level indeed. 

The real protagonists in this saga of maneuver and deception are the
MEK/NCRI. A steady procession of their revelations, many of them eventually
validated by the IAEA and other methods, continued to expose Iran's massive
construction projects, now shown to include underground, hardened bunkers
and tunnels obviously designed to conceal and protect a nuclear program that
Iran stubbornly, but with increasing difficulty, tried to insist was for
'peaceful purposes.' So, Iran's D&D, mind war, and psy ops teams changed
gears again. 

As speculation about an eventual Israeli or U.S. military strike against
Iran's nuclear weapons facilities swirled with increasing intensity in the
2006-2007 timeframe, word went out from Tehran that the deeply-buried and
concrete-reinforced bunkers were out of reach for anything short of tactical
nuclear weapons. But if either country were foolish enough to try the kind
of military strike that took out Iraq's Osirak nuclear reactor in 1981, Iran
was prepared to launch devastating missile attacks against Israel, unleash
Hizballah operational cells across the Western world, and intensify lethal
assistance to terrorist groups fighting against U.S. and coalition troops in
Iraq. In any case, it was asserted, any attack on Iran by Western forces
would only propel the Iranian people to rally behind its leadership, all
animosity towards a regime that arrests, jails, tortures, and kills them
with impunity instantly forgotten. 

And once again, many in the U.S. and elsewhere bought it, prefering to
accept a diagnosis of impotence rather than challenge the arrogance of the
Iranian regime. Regime change was dismissed as 'too hard', 'unrealistic'.
Journal and op-ed pieces began to appear and slick Iranian 'experts'
suddenly swarmed the media to speculate how best to 'contain' and 'deter' a
nuclear-armed Iran. 'Living with a nuclear Iran' became the mantra of radio
talk shows, think tank panel presentations, and even found an echo within
U.S. administration and military circles. Secretary of State  Condi Rice
<http://origin.ih.constantcontact.com/fs054/1101618903338/img/63.jpg?a=11018
41608540> Condoleezza Rice fairly begged the Iranian regime to attend
high-level talks in Baghdad, the UN Security Council (UNSC) in October 2007
postponed discussions about additional sanctions for Iran, and U.S.
commanders in Iraq, hunkered down under fire from Iranian-produced
munitions, plaintively insisted that Iran was 'out of their area of
responsibility'. 

The Iranian mind war operation thus celebrated a seminal victory over its
despised international adversaries without having to fire a single shot. By
clever application of denial and deception, mind war, and psychological
operations tactics, the Iranian regime succeeded in changing global
perceptions about its nuclear program. After being caught red-handed of
violating the provisions of the nuclear NPT over a fourteen year period,
Iran was able to gain the total acquiescence of the international community
for the concept of an Iranian nuclear power program and, even more stunning,
an acceptance of a nuclear weapons-armed Iran that is allied with al-Qa'eda
and a horde of other terrorist groups. Incredible as it may seem, Iran has
shifted the thinking of world leaders completely away from its culpability
for having and concealing a secret nuclear weapons program and into a
subservient position from which it is the party deterred from even
considering military strikes against Iran.

The beauty of Iran's mind war victory is that neither the U.S. nor the
international community even seem to realize it's been maneuvered into total
alignment with Iran's ideologically-driven objectives for geo-strategic
expansionism. 

Clare M. Lopez is a strategic policy and intelligence expert with a focus on
Middle East, homeland security, national defense, and counterterrorism
issues. She was an operations officer with the Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA), serving domestically and abroad for 20 years in a variety of
assignments. 

Clare is currently the Vice President of the International Intelligence
Summit organization and was formerly, the Director of The Iran Policy
Committee.  She speaks and writes widely on Middle East, counter-terrorism
and WMD issues. 



        


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



--------------------------
Want to discuss this topic?  Head on over to our discussion list, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]
--------------------------
Brooks Isoldi, editor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.intellnet.org

  Post message: osint@yahoogroups.com
  Subscribe:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Unsubscribe:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material whose use has 
not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. OSINT, as a part of 
The Intelligence Network, is making it available without profit to OSINT 
YahooGroups members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the 
included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of 
intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, 
techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other 
intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes 
only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material 
as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use 
this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' 
you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Reply via email to