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Will covert US plans bring regime
change in Iran?
"There is the perception in the Gulf that Iran is really on the rise,"
said Emile El-Hokayem, research fellow at the Stimpson Centre, a
Washington think tank. Washington wants to prepare for a
potential showdown."
What Mr. Hokayem said was simply part of a wider and covert US
plan, as described the Age in its recent editorial, to prevent
Iran from carrying on with its nuclear activities, a plan that
also includes providing Arab allies such as Saudi Arabia, the
United Arab Emirates and Bahrain with extensive military aid.
Judging by the US’s failure in Iraq and the recent US-backed UN
resolution imposing economic sanctions on Tehran, it is apparent
that, one way or the other, the US has its sights firmly set on
bringing regime change to Iran.
A team of US officials has been assigned the task of carrying
out the US covert plan against the Iranian regime for over a
year now. Among methods pursued by the group, known as the Iran
Syria Policy and Operations Group (ISOG), is coordinating with
Iranian dissidents as well as inflaming international outrage
against Iran and its nuclear program, which the US alleges is
being used as a guise for hidden developments aimed at producing
nuclear weapons.
The group, modeled on the Iraq Policy and Operations Group, set
up in 2004 to twist information and co-ordinate US action in
Iraq, claims and publicizes the claim that Iran played a key
role in the 1994 attack on a Jewish center in Buenos Aires,
Argentina that led to the death of 85 people and wounded 300
others.
On July 18th 1994 at the Jewish-Argentine Mutual Association
community center in Buenos Aires, an attack resulted in the
complete destruction of the seven-storey building and shocked
the Jewish community in Argentina, the largest in Latin America.
The probe was surrounded by rumors and accusations of cover-ups,
as well as lack of competence and lack of will to do anything
concrete to catch the attackers.
While the alternative media focuses on the nuclear threat posed
by the Middle East’s most dangerous nuclear country, Israel, the
mainstream media refuses to blame the real terrorists and
persistently portrays Iran as the “real” nuclear threat.
Even in UK, a key US ally, the BBC and other so-called liberal
media outlets demonstrate their ability to “manufacture consent”
for elite interests.
Back to the Iran Syria Policy and Operations Group and the
involvement of the US officials with it and the extensive aid
they provide such group with, it’s said that Pentagon officials
plan to request from the Congress, probably next month, to
increase funding for transfers of military hardware to allies in
the Persian Gulf, in an attempt to accelerate plans for joint
military activities.
Their request, according to The Age, will include more advanced
missile-defence systems and early-warning radar to prevent or
detect Iranian missile strikes. The US financing of the
so-called pro-democracy activities in Iran reached $A107 million
last year, and is expected to double this year, according to the
senior State Department official.
Contrary to repetitive claims by the US that it’s not seeking to
overthrow the Iranian regime, like it did more than three years
ago in Iraq, one former US official who attended a preliminary
meeting of the Iran Syria Policy and Operations Group, supported
the opinion that the goal of the group is to oust the Iranian
regime.
The group's task, i.e. isolating the Islamic Republic, is
consistent with the American President and his persistence not
to engage in talks with Iran and Syria "Iran is the key to
everything at the strategic level — the biggest problem we have
faced in a long time," said a State Department official involved
in the group. The ISOG, headed by Elizabeth Cheney, seeks
encouraging "regime change in Iran. It's no secret that Cheney
has over $80 million at her disposal to promote democracy in
Iran. But ISOG isn't simply about promoting democracy.
It's about helping to craft official policy, doing so not with
one but two countries in its sights," Lawrence F. Kaplan wrote
April 10, 2006, in The New Republic Online. "The question is
whether democratic reform can be achieved before Iran becomes a
nuclear power," which is "Cheney's job," Sarah Baxter wrote
March 5, 2006, in the UK's Times. "In the State Department she
is referred to as the 'freedom agenda co-ordinator' and the
'democracy czar' for the broader Middle East."
The US “democratic mission” has disgracefully failed in Iraq,
and is likely to fail in Iran.
Source: Aljazeera
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