US accuses Iran over Iraq bombs

US accuses Iran over Iraq bombs

THE US military has accused the “highest levels” of Iran’s government of supplying increasingly sophisticated roadside bombs to Iraqi insurgents.

Senior defence officials told reporters in Baghdad that the bombs were being used to deadly effect, killing more than 170 US troops since June 2004. The weapons known as “explosively formed penetrators” (EFPs) are capable of destroying an Abrams tank.US claims the bombs were smuggled from Iran cannot be independently verified.The US officials, speaking off camera on condition of anonymity, said EFPs had also injured more than 620 US personnel since June 2004. The weapons had characteristics unique to being manufactured in Iran They said US intelligence analysts believed the bombs were manufactured in Iran and secretly sent to Iraqi Shia militants on the orders of senior officials in Tehran.”We assess that these activities are coming from the senior levels of the Iranian government,” one official said.He pointed the finger at Iran’s elite al-Quds brigade, a unit of the Revolutionary Guards, saying that a senior commander from the brigade had been one of five Iranians seized by US forces in a raid in the Iraqi town of Irbil in January.The defence official said that when the men were captured they had been tying to flush documents down a toilet and that one of them had been contaminated with explosives residue.They had also reportedly shaved their heads to alter their appearance – bags of their hair were found during the raid.Tehran has denied that the captured Iranians are members of the brigade, which Iran does not officially recognise, but which observers say reports directly to Ayatollah Ali Khamanei.The US officials also referred to a raid in Iraq in December in which the security forces said they found inventory sheets of weaponry and equipment that had been brought into Iraq.The US has claimed in the past that Iranian weapons were being used in Iraq, but it has never before accused Iranian government officials of being directly involved.Tehran has repeatedly denied any involvement.BBCThe weapons known as “explosively formed penetrators” (EFPs) are capable of destroying an Abrams tank.US claims the bombs were smuggled from Iran cannot be independently verified.The US officials, speaking off camera on condition of anonymity, said EFPs had also injured more than 620 US personnel since June 2004. The weapons had characteristics unique to being manufactured in Iran They said US intelligence analysts believed the bombs were manufactured in Iran and secretly sent to Iraqi Shia militants on the orders of senior officials in Tehran.”We assess that these activities are coming from the senior levels of the Iranian government,” one official said.He pointed the finger at Iran’s elite al-Quds brigade, a unit of the Revolutionary Guards, saying that a senior commander from the brigade had been one of five Iranians seized by US forces in a raid in the Iraqi town of Irbil in January.The defence official said that when the men were captured they had been tying to flush documents down a toilet and that one of them had been contaminated with explosives residue.They had also reportedly shaved their heads to alter their appearance – bags of their hair were found during the raid.Tehran has denied that the captured Iranians are members of the brigade, which Iran does not officially recognise, but which observers say reports directly to Ayatollah Ali Khamanei.The US officials also referred to a raid in Iraq in December in which the security forces said they found inventory sheets of weaponry and equipment that had been brought into Iraq.The US has claimed in the past that Iranian weapons were being used in Iraq, but it has never before accused Iranian government officials of being directly involved.Tehran has repeatedly denied any involvement.BBC

Stay informed with The Namibian – your source for credible journalism. Get in-depth reporting and opinions for only N$85 a month. Invest in journalism, invest in democracy –
Subscribe Now!

Latest News