by Gareth Porter
7 Nov 2011
As Israel again ratchets
up its threats to bomb Iranian nuclear facilities, anti-Iran propaganda, which could rally the American people behind
another Middle East war, becomes critical. At this key moment, Gareth Porter takes a deeper look at an alleged Iranian assassination
plot.
At a press conference on Oct. 11, the Obama administration
unveiled a spectacular charge against the government of Iran: The Qods Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps had
plotted to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to the United States, Adel al-Jubeir, right in Washington, DC, in a place where
large numbers of innocent bystanders could have been killed.
High-level officials of the Qods Force were said
to be involved, the only question being how far up in the Iranian government the complicity went.
The U.S. tale of the Iranian plot was greeted
with unusual skepticism on the part of Iran specialists and independent policy analysts, and even elements of the mainstream
media. The critics observed that the alleged assassination scheme was not in Iran’s interest, and that it bore scant
resemblance to past operations attributed to the foreign special operations branch of Iranian intelligence.
The Qods Force, it was widely believed, would
not send a person like Iranian-American used-car dealer Manssor Arbabsiar, known to friends in Corpus Christi, Texas, as forgetful
and disorganized, to hire the hit squad for such a sensitive covert action.
But administration officials claimed they had
hard evidence to back up the charge. They cited a 21-page deposition by a supervising FBI agent in the “amended criminal
complaint” filed against Arbabsiar and an accomplice who remains at large, Gholam Shakuri. [1]
It was all there, the officials insisted: several
meetings between Arbabsiar and a man he thought was a member of a leading Mexican drug cartel, Los Zetas, with a reputation
for cold-blooded killing; secretly recorded, incriminating statements by Arbabsiar and Shakuri, his alleged handler in Tehran;
and finally, Arbabsiar’s confession after his arrest, which clearly implicates Qods Force agents in a plan to murder
a foreign diplomat on U.S. soil.
A close analysis of the FBI deposition reveals,
however, that independent evidence for the charge that Arbabsiar was sent by the Qods Force on a mission to arrange for the
assassination of Jubeir is lacking. The FBI account is full of holes and contradictions, moreover.
The document gives good reason to doubt that Arbabsiar
and his confederates in Iran had the intention of assassinating Jubeir, and to believe instead that the FBI hatched the plot
as part of a sting operation.
Case of the Missing Quotes
The FBI account suggests that, from the inaugural
meetings between Arbabsiar and his supposed Los Zetas contact, a Drug Enforcement Agency informant, Arbabsiar was advocating
a terrorist strike against the Saudi embassy.
The government narrative states that, in the very
first meeting on May 24, Arbabsiar asked the informant about his “knowledge, if any, with respect to explosives”
and said he was interested in “among other things, attacking an embassy of Saudi Arabia.”
It also notes that in the meetings prior to July
14, the DEA informant “had reported that he and Arbabsiar had discussed the possibility of attacks on a number of other
targets,” including “foreign government facilities associated with Saudi Arabia and with another country,”
located “within and outside the United States.”
But the allegations that the Iranian-American
used-car salesman wanted to “attack” the Saudi embassy and other targets rest entirely upon the testimony of the
DEA informant with whom he was meeting. The informant is a drug dealer who had been indicted for a narcotics violation in
a U.S. state but had the charges dropped “in exchange for cooperation in various drug investigations,” according
to the FBI account.
The informant is not an independent source of
information, but someone paid to help pursue FBI objectives.
The most suspicious aspect of the administration’s
case, in fact, is the complete absence of any direct quote from Arbabsiar suggesting interest in, much less advocacy of, assassinating
the Saudi ambassador or carrying out other attacks in a series of meetings with the DEA informant between June 23 and July
14.
The deposition does not even indicate how many
times the two actually met during those three weeks, suggesting that the number was substantial, and that the lack of primary
evidence from those meetings is a sensitive issue.
And although the FBI account specifies that the
July 14 and 17 meetings were recorded “at the direction of law enforcement agents,” it is carefully ambiguous
about whether or not the earlier meetings were recorded.
The lack of quotations is a crucial problem for
the official case for a simple reason: If Arbabsiar had said anything even hinting in the May 24 meeting or in a subsequent
meeting at the desire to mount a terrorist attack, it would have triggered the immediate involvement of the FBI’s National
Security Branch and its counter-terrorism division.
The FBI would then have instructed the DEA informant
to record all of the meetings with Arbabsiar, as is standard practice in such cases, according to a former FBI official interviewed
for this article. And that would mean that those meetings were indeed recorded.
The fact that the FBI account does not include
a single quotation from Arbabsiar in the June 23-July 14 meetings means either that Arbabsiar did not say anything that raised
such alarms at the FBI or that he was saying something sufficiently different from what is now claimed that the administration
chooses not to quote from it.
In either case, the lack of such quotes further
suggests that it was not Arbabsiar, but the DEA informant, acting as part of an FBI sting operation, who pushed the idea of
assassinating Jubeir. A possible explanation is that Arbabsiar was suggesting surveillance of targets that could be hit if
Iran were to be attacked by Israel with Saudi connivance.
“The Saudi Arabia” and the
$100,000
The July 14 meeting between Arbabsiar and the
DEA informant is the first from which the criminal complaint offers actual quotations from the secretly recorded conversation.
The FBI’s retelling supplies selected bits of conversation — mostly from the informant — aimed at portraying
the meeting as revolving around the assassination plot. But when carefully studied, the account reveals a different story.
The quotations attributed to the DEA informant
suggest that he was under orders to get a response from Arbabsiar that could be interpreted as assent to an assassination
plot. For example, the informant tells Arbabsiar, “You just want the, the main guy.”
There is no quoted response from the car dealer.
Instead, the FBI narrative simply asserts that Arbabsiar “confirmed that he just wanted the ‘ambassador.’”
At the end of the meeting, the informant declares, “We’re gonna start doing the guy.” But again, no response
from Arbabsiar is quoted.
Two statements by the informant appear on their
face to relate to a broader set of Saudi targets than Adel al-Jubeir. The informant tells Arbabsiar that he would need “at
least four guys” and would “take the one point five for the Saudi Arabia.”
The FBI agent who signed the deposition explains,
“I understand this to mean that he would need to use four men to assassinate the Ambassador and that the cost to Arbabsiar
of the assassination would be $1.5 million.” But, apart from the agent’s surmise, there is no hint that either
cited phrase referred to a proposal to assassinate the ambassador.
Given that there had already been discussion of
multiple Saudi targets, as well as those of an unnamed third country (probably Israel), it seems more reasonable to interpret
the words “the Saudi Arabia” to refer to a set of missions relating to Saudi Arabia in order to distinguish them
from the other target list.
Then the informant repeats the same wording, telling
Arbabsiar he would “go ahead and work on the Saudi Arabia, get all the information that we can.” This language
does not show that Arbabsiar proposed the killing of Jubeir, much less approved it.
And the FBI narrative states that the Iranian-American
“agreed that the assassination of the Ambassador should be handled first.” Again, that curious wording does
not assert that Arbabsiar said an assassination should be carried out first, but suggests he was agreeing that the subject
should be discussed first.
The absence of any quote from Arbabsiar about
an assassination plot, combined with the multiple ambiguities surrounding the statements attributed to the DEA informant,
suggest that the main subject of the July 14 meeting was something broader than an assassination plot, and that it was the
government’s own agent who had brought up the subject of assassinating the ambassador in the meeting, rather than Arbabsiar.
The government reconstruction of the July 14 meeting
also introduces the keystone of the Obama administration’s public case: $100,000 that was to be transferred to a bank
account that the DEA informant said he would make known to Arbabsiar.
The FBI deposition asserts repeatedly that whenever
Arbabsiar or the DEA informant mention the $100,000, they are talking about a “down payment” on the assassination.
But the document contains no statement from either of them linking that $100,000 to any assassination plan. In fact, it provides
details suggesting that the $100,000 could not have been linked to such a plan.
The FBI deposition states that the informant and
Arbabsiar “discussed how Arbabsiar would pay [the informant],” but offers no statement from either individual
even mentioning a “payment,” or any reason for transferring the money to a bank account. Furthermore, it does
not actually claim that Arbabsiar made any commitment to any action against Jubeir at either the July 14 or 17 meetings.
And when the informant is quoted in the July 17
meeting as saying, “I don’t know exactly what your cousin wants me to do,” it appears to be an acknowledgement
that he had gotten no indication prior to July 17 that Arbabsiar’s Tehran interlocutors wanted the Saudi ambassador
dead.
The deposition does not even claim that Arbabsiar’s
supposed handlers had approved a plan to kill Jubeir until after the Iranian-American returned to his native country on July
20.
Nevertheless, Arbabsiar is quoted telling the
informant on July 14 that the full $100,000 had already been collected in cash at the home of “a certain individual.”
Preparations for the transfer of the $100,000 had thus commenced well before the assassination plot allegedly got the green
light.
The amount of $100,000 does not even appear credible
as a “down payment” on a job that the FBI account says was to have cost a total of $1.5 million. It would represent
a mere 6 percent of the full price.
Bearing in mind that the DEA informant was supposed
to be representing the demand of a ruthlessly profit-motivated Los Zetas drug cartel for a high-stakes political assassination
well outside its purview, 6 percent of the total would represent far too little for a “down payment.”
The $100,000 wire transfer must have been related
to an understanding that had been reached on something other than the assassination plan. Yet it has been cited by the administration
and reported by news media as proof of the plot — and key evidence of Iran’s complicity therein. [2]
The Qods Force Connection
The FBI account of the July 17 meeting shows the
DEA informant leading Arbabsiar into a statement of support for an assassination. The informant, obviously following an FBI
script, says, “I don’t know what exactly your cousin wants me to do.”
But the deposition notes “further conversation”
following that invitation for a clear position on a proposal coming from the informant, indicating that what Arbabsiar was
saying did not support the administration’s allegation that assassination plot was coming from Tehran.
After the FBI evidently sought again to get the
straightforward answer it was seeking, however, Arbabsiar is quoted as saying: “He wants you to kill this guy.”
The informant then presents a fanciful plan to
bomb an imaginary restaurant in Washington where Arbabsiar was told the Saudi ambassador liked to dine twice a week and where
many “like, American people” would be present.
“You want me to do it outside or in the
restaurant?” asks the informant, to which question the Iranian-American replies, “Doesn’t matter how you
do it.” At another point in the conversation, Arbabsiar goes further, saying, “They want that guy done. If the
hundred go with him, fuck ‘em.”
These statements appear at first blush to be conclusive
evidence that Arbabsiar and his Iranian overseers were contracting for the assassination of Jubeir, regardless of lives lost.
But there are two crucial questions that the FBI account leaves unanswered: Was Arbabsiar speaking on behalf of the Qods Force
or some element of it?
And if he was, was he talking about a plan that
was to go into effect as soon as possible or was it understood that they were talking about a contingency plan that would
only be carried out under specific circumstances?
The deposition includes several instances of Arbabsiar’s
bragging about a cousin who is a general, out of uniform and involved in covert external operations, including in Iraq —
clearly implying that he belongs to the Qods Force.
Arbabsiar is said to have claimed that the cousin
and another Iranian official gave him funds for his contacts with the drug cartel. “I got the money coming,” he
says.
Subsequently, in one of the most extensive quotations
from the recorded conversations, Arbabsiar says, “This is politics, so these people they pay this government …
he’s got the, got the government behind him … he’s not paying from his pocket.”
The FBI narrative identifies the person referred
to here as Arbabsiar’s cousin, a Qods Force officer later named as Abdul Reza Shahlai, but again, there is not a single
direct quotation backing the claim. And the reference to “these people” who “pay this government”
suggests that “he” is connected to a group with illicit financial ties to government officials.
This excerpt could be particularly significant
in light of press reports quoting a U.S. law enforcement official saying that Arbabsiar had offered “tons of opium”
to the drug cartel and that he and the informant had discussed what the New York Times called a “side deal” on
the Iranian-held narcotics. [3]
If these reports are accurate, it seems possible
that Arbabsiar approached Los Zetas on behalf of Iranians who control a portion of the opium being smuggled through Iran from
Afghanistan, while seeking to impress the drug cartel operative with his claim to have close ties to the Qods Force through
Shahlai.
But if the DEA informant then pressed him to authenticate
his Qods Force connection, he may have begun discussing covert operations against Iran’s enemies in North America.
The only alleged evidence that Arbabsiar was speaking
for Shahlai and the Qods Force is Arbabsiar’s own confession, summarized in the criminal complaint. But, at minimum,
that testimony was provided after he had been arrested and had a strong interest in telling the FBI what it wanted to hear.
The deposition makes much of a series of three
phone conversations on Oct. 4, 5 and 7 between Arbabsiar and someone who Arbabsiar tells his FBI handlers is Gholam Shakuri,
presenting them as confirmation of the involvement of Qods Force officers in the assassination scheme.
But the FBI apparently had no way of ascertaining
whether the person to whom Arababsiar was talking was actually Shakuri. After the Oct. 4 call, for example, the FBI account
merely records that Arbabsiar “indicated that the person he was speaking with was Shakuri.”
On their face, moreover, these conversations prove
nothing. In the first of the three calls, the person at the other end of the line, whom Arbabsiar identifies to his FBI contact
as Shakuri but whose identity is not otherwise established, asks, “What news … what did you do about the building?”
The FBI agent again suggests, “based on
my training, experience and participation in this investigation,” that these queries were a “reference to the
plot to murder the Ambassador and a question about its status.”
But Arbabsiar is said to have claimed in his confession
that he was instructed by Shakuri to use the code word “Chevrolet” to refer to the plot to kill the ambassador.
In a second recorded conversation, Arbabsiar immediately says, “I wanted to tell you the Chevrolet is ready, it’s
ready, uh, to be done. I should continue, right?”
After further exchange, the man purported to be
“Shakuri” says, “So buy it, buy it.” Despite the obvious invocation of a code word, it remains unclear
what Arbabsiar was to “buy.” “Chevrolet” could actually have been a reference to a drug-related deal,
or a generic plan having to do with Saudi and other targets, or something else.
In a third recorded conversation on Oct. 7, both
Arbabsiar and “Shakuri” refer to a demand by a purported cartel figure for another $50,000 on top of the original
$100,000 transferred by wire earlier. But there is no other evidence of such a demand. It appears to be a mere device of the
FBI to get “Shakuri” on record as talking about the $100,000.
And here it should be recalled that the account
in the deposition shows that the transfer of the $100,000 had been agreed on before any indication of agreement on a plan
to kill the ambassador.
The invocation of a fictional demand for $50,000,
along with the dramatic difference between the first conversation and the second and third conversations, suggests yet another
possibility: The second and third conversations were set up in advance by Arbabsiar to provide a transcript to bolster the
administration’s case.
Terrorist Plot or Deterrence Strategy?
Even if Qods Forces officials indeed directed
Arbabsiar to contact the Los Zetas cartel, it cannot be assumed that they intended to carry out one or more terrorist attacks
in the United States. The killing of a foreign ambassador in Washington (not to speak of additional attacks on Saudi and Israeli
buildings), if linked to Iran, would invite swift and massive U.S. military retaliation.
If, on the other hand, the Qods Force men instructed
Arbabsiar to conduct surveillance of those targets and prepare contingency plans for hitting them if Iran were attacked, the
whole story begins to make more sense.
Iran lacks the conventional means to deter attack
by a powerful adversary. In its decades-long standoffs with the United States and Israel, amidst recurrent talk of “preemptive”
strikes by those powers, Iran has relied on threats of proxy retaliation against U.S. and allied state targets in the Middle
East. [4]
The Iranian military support for Lebanon’s
Hizballah, in particular, is widely recognized as prompted primarily by Iran’s need to deter U.S. and Israeli attack.
[5]
In one case in 1994-1995, Saudi Arabian Shi‘a
militants carried out surveillance of potential U.S. military and diplomatic targets in Saudi Arabia, in a way that was quickly
noticed by U.S. and Saudi intelligence. [6]
Although the consensus among U.S. intelligence
analysts was that Iran was preparing for a terrorist attack, Ronald Neumann, then the State Department’s intelligence
officer for Iran and Iraq, noted that Iran had done the same thing whenever U.S.-Iranian tensions had risen.
He suggested that Iran could be using the surveillance
for deterrence, to let Washington know that its interests in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere would be in danger if Iran were attacked.
[7]
Unfortunately for Iran’s deterrent strategy,
however, Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda was also carrying out surveillance of U.S. bases in Saudi Arabia, and in November
1995 and again in June 1996, that group bombed two facilities housing U.S. servicemen.
The bombing of Khobar Towers in June 1996, which
killed 19 U.S. soldiers and one Saudi Arabian, was blamed by the Clinton administration’s FBI and CIA leadership on
Iranian-sponsored Shi‘a from Saudi Arabia, with prodding from Saudi Ambassador Prince Bandar bin Sultan, despite the
fact that bin Laden claimed responsibility not once but twice, in interviews with the London-based newspaper, al-Quds al-‘Arabi.
[8]
Hani al-Sayigh, one of the Saudi Arabian Shi‘a
accused by the Saudi and U.S. governments of conspiring to attack the Khobar Towers, admitted to Assistant Attorney General
Eric Dubelier, who interviewed him at a Canadian detention facility in May 1997, that he had participated in the surveillance
of U.S. military targets in Saudi Arabia on behalf of Iranian intelligence.
But, according to the FBI report on the interview,
al-Sayigh insisted that Iran had never intended to attack any of those sites unless it was first attacked by the United States.
And when Dubelier asked a question later in the interview that was based on the premise that the surveillance effort was preparation
for a terrorist attack, al-Sayigh corrected him. [9]
With threats of an Israeli or U.S. bombing attack
on Iran, with Saudi complicity, mounting since the mid-2000s, a similar campaign of surveillance of Saudi and Israeli targets
in North America would fit the framework of what the Pentagon has called Iran’s “asymmetric warfare doctrine.”
If Arbabsiar spoke of such a campaign in his initial
meeting with the DEA informant, he certainly would have piqued the interest of FBI counter-terrorism personnel. And this scenario
would also explain why the series of meetings in late June and the first half of July did not produce a single statement by
Arbabsiar that the administration could quote to advance its case that the Iranian-American was interested in assassinating
Adel al-Jubeir or carrying out other acts of terrorism.
A plan to conduct surveillance and be ready to
act on contingency plans would also explain why someone as lacking in relevant experience and skills as Arbabsiar might have
been acceptable to the Qods Force.
Not only would the mission not have required absolute
secrecy; it would have been based on the assumption that the surveillance would become known to U.S. intelligence relatively
quickly, as did the monitoring of U.S. targets in Saudi Arabia in 1994-1995.
The Qods Force officials were certainly well aware
that the Drug Enforcement Agency had penetrated various Mexican drug cartels, in some cases even at the very top level. U.S.
court proceedings involving Mexican drug traffickers who were highly placed in the Sinaloa drug cartel between 2009 and early
2011 reveal that the U.S. made deals with leaders of the cartel to report what they knew about rival cartel operations in
return for a hands-off approach to their drug trafficking. [10]
Further underlining the degree to which the cartels
were honeycombed with people on the U.S. payroll, the DEA informant in this case was not merely posing as a drug trafficker
but is reportedly an actual associate of Los Zetas with access to its upper echelons, who has been given immunity from prosecution
to cooperate with the DEA. [11]
When Did Arbabsiar Join the Sting?
The Obama administration’s account of the
alleged Iranian plot has Arbabsiar suddenly changing from terrorist conspirator to active collaborator with the FBI upon his
Sept. 29 arrest at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York.
He is said to have provided a confession immediately
upon being apprehended, after waiving his right to a lawyer, and then to have waived that right repeatedly again while being
interviewed by the FBI. Then Arbabsiar cooperated in making the series of secretly recorded phone calls to someone he identified
as Shakuri.
For someone facing such serious charges to provide
the details with which to make the case against him, while renouncing benefit of counsel, is odd, to say the least. The official
story raises questions not only about what agreement was reached between Arbabsiar and the FBI to ensure his cooperation but
about when that agreement was reached.
One clue that Arbabsiar was brought into the sting
operation well before his arrest is the DEA informant’s demand in a Sept. 20 phone conversation with Arbabsiar in Tehran
that he either come up with half the $1.5 million total fee or come to Mexico to be the guarantee that the full amount would
be paid.
Yet the FBI account of that conversation shows
Arbabsiar telling the informant, without even consulting with his contacts in Tehran, “I’m gonna go over there
[in] two [or] three days.” Later in the same evening, he calls back to ask how long he would need to remain in Mexico.
Even if Arbabsiar were as feckless as some reports
have suggested, he would certainly not have agreed so readily to put his fate in the hands of the murderous Los Zetas cartel
— unless he knew that he was not really in danger, because the U.S. government would intercept him and bring him to
the United States.
Making the episode even stranger, Arbabsiar’s
confession claims that when he told Shakuri about the purported Los Zetas demand, Shakuri refused to provide any more money
to the cartel, advised him against going to Mexico and warned him that if he did so, he would be on his own.
Further supporting the conclusion that Arbabsiar
had become part of the sting operation before his arrest is the fact there was no reason for the FBI to pose the demand —
through the DEA informant – for more money or Arbabsiar’s presence in Mexico except to provide an excuse to get
him out of Iran, so he could provide a full confession implicating the Qods Force and be the centerpiece of the case against
Iran.
The larger aim of the FBI sting operation, which
ABC News has reported was dubbed Operation Red Coalition, was clearly to link the alleged assassination plot to Qods Force
officers.
The logical moment for the FBI to have recruited
the Iranian-American would have been right after the FBI recorded him talking about wiring money to the bank account and casually
approving the idea of bombing a restaurant and before his planned departure from Mexico for Iran.
The only way to ensure that Arbabsiar would come
back, of course, would be to offer him a substantial amount of money to serve as an informant for the FBI during his stay
in Iran, which he would receive only upon returning.
If Arbabsiar had already been enlisted, of course,
it would also mean the keystone of the case — the wiring of $100,000 to a secret FBI bank account — was a part
of the FBI sting.
FBI Trickery in Terrorism Cases
FBI deceit in constructing a case for an Iranian
terror plot should come as no surprise, given its record of domestic terrorism prosecutions based on sting operations involving
entrapment and skullduggery.
Central to these stings has been the creation
of fictional terrorist plots by the FBI itself. In 2006 the “Gonzales Guidelines” for the use of FBI informants
removed previous prohibitions on actions to “initiate a plan or strategy to commit a federal, state or local offense.”
[12]
Perhaps the most notorious of all these domestic
terrorism sting operations is the case in which Yassin Aref and Mohammed Hossain, leaders of their Albany, New York, mosque,
were sentenced to 15 years in federal prison for allegedly laundering profits from the sale of a shoulder-launched missile
for a Pakistani militant group that was planning to assassinate a Pakistani diplomat in New York City.
In fact, there was no such terrorist plot, and
the alleged crime was the result of an elaborate FBI scam directed against two innocent men. [13] It began when an FBI informant
pretending to be a Pakistani businessman insinuated himself into Hossain’s life and extended him a $50,000 loan for
his pizza parlor.
Only months after the informant had begun loaning
the money did he show Hossain a shoulder-launched missile, and suggest that he was also selling arms to his “Muslim
brothers.” It was a devious form of entrapment; the prosecutors later argued that Hossain should have known the loan
could have come from money made in the sale of weapons to terrorists and was therefore guilty of money laundering.
The FBI approach to entrapping Hossain’s
friend Aref was even more underhanded. Aref was never even made aware of the missile or the phony story of the illegal arms
sale. But on one occasion, when he was present to witness the transfer of loan money, what was later said to have been the
missile’s trigger system was left on a table in the room.
Prosecutors then argued the theory that Aref had
seen the trigger, which looks much like a staple gun, and thus had become part of a conspiracy to “assist in money laundering.”
Many other domestic terrorism cases have involved
deceptive tactics and economic inducements deployed by the FBI to involve American Muslims in fictional terrorist plots. The
Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at New York University’s Law School found more than 20 terrorism cases that
involved some combination of “paid informants, selection of investigation based on perceived religious identity, [and]
a plot that was created by the government.” [14]
This history makes it clear that the Justice Department
and FBI are prepared to go to extraordinary lengths to fabricate terrorism cases against targeted individuals, and that misrepresenting
these individuals’ intentions and actual behavior has long been standard practice.
The trickery and deceit in past “counter-terrorism”
sting operations provides further reason to question the veracity of the Obama administration’s allegations in the bizarre
case of Manssor Arbabsiar.
Gareth Porter is an investigative historian and
journalist specializing in U.S. national security policy. The paperback edition of his latest book, Perils of Dominance: Imbalance
of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam, was published in 2006. [This article was originally published by Middle East Research
and Information Project.]
Notes
[1] The full text of the “amended criminal complaint” is online at: http://www.jdsupra.com/post/documentViewer.aspx?fid=a334ea94-9f4f-4364-8…
[2] See New York Times, October 12, 2011 and Reuters, October 12, 2011.
[3] See New
York Times, October 12, 2011 and Bloomberg, October 12, 2011.
[4] For an official US recognition of Iran’s “assymetric
warfare doctrine” as a tool of deterrence of “any would-be invader,” see Department of Defense, Unclassified
Report on Military Power of Iran, April 2010, p. 1.
[5] See, for example, Michael Young, “Another Israel-Hezbollah
War?” Middle East Security at Harvard, National Security Study Program, February 28, 2008: http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/mesh/2008/02/another_israel_hezbollah_war/
[6] See Los Angeles Times, October 15, 1997 and Steve Coll,
Ghost Wars (New York: Penguin Books, 2004), p. 276.
[7] Gareth Porter, “US Officials Leaked a False Story Blaming
Iran,” Inter Press Service, June 24, 2009.
[8] Gareth Porter, “FBI Ignored Compelling Evidence of Bin Laden
Role,” Inter Press Service, June 25, 2009.
[9] Gareth Porter, “US May Have Concealed Deterrent Aim of Iranian
Plan,” Inter Press Service, October 21, 2011.
[10] New York Times, October 24, 2011.
[11] So said ProPublica reporter
Sebastian Rotella in his podcast of October 18, 2011, online at: http://www.propublica.org/podcast/item/podcast-sebastian-rotella-on-the-…
[12] Center for Human Rights and Global Justice, Targeted and Entrapped: Manufacturing
the “Homegrown Threat” in the United States (New York, 2011), p. 14.
[13] This account of the case is drawn
from Petra Bartosiewicz, “To Catch a Terrorist,” Harper’s (August 2011).
[14] Targeted and Entrapped,
pp. 50-52, fn 17.