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(V. Kremler, RT) |
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Iran insists the US was backing the leader of an armed Sunni group
heading an insurgency in the country who was captured earlier this
week. Washington denies the claims.
Abdolmalek
Rigi says he was on his way to the Manas air base in Kyrgyzstan to meet
with a US official when he was seized – sparking further mystery over
American use of the facility in the Central Asian country.
It's not the first time the Manas airbase has hit the headlines, and all for the wrong reasons.
The latest allegation is from Iran claiming the facility is an
American front to transport terrorists to undermine the Iranian
government.
Read more
“The Americans promised to give us aid, they said they would
cooperate with us and give me arms and machine guns. They told me in
Kyrgyzstan they had a base called Manas near Bishkek and that in a
place like this some high ranking American person could come and we
could make an agreement about making personal contacts,” Abdolmalek Rigi said.
This statement comes in a televised confession on Iranian state TV.
Officials claim when they captured the terrorist leader he was carrying
a fake Afghan passport.
“The Americans said that Iran was going its own way and they
said their problem at the present is Iran, not Al-Qaeda, not the
Taliban, but Iran,” Abdolmalek Rigi said. “One of the CIA
officers said that it was too difficult for them to attack Iran
militarily but they plan to give aid and support to all anti-Iranian
groups that have the capability to wage war and create difficulty for
this Islamic state.”
The confession has sparked criticism from those who let the United States set up shop in their backyard.
“The US is setting a precedent of double standards which manifests
itself in the backing of Sunni terrorists who fight against the
legitimate government of Iran to create a separatist state in the south
of the country. It's sad that the US air base has now become a transit
corridor for pro-American militants from Sunni insurgent groups which
organize attacks in Iran,” says political analyst Toktogul Kakchekeev.
The Jundallah group confirmed the arrest of Abdolmalek Rigi and now
is accusing the US and other foreign intelligence services of helping
the Iranian government capture its leader.
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Abdolmalek Rigi says he was on his way to the Manas air base in Kyrgyzstan to meet with a US official when he was seized. |
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“The Jundallah group or The Rigi Brothers organization – it is a
family firm, you might say – which operates as a terrorist organization
and is widely thought to be based in Pakistan, but it operates in Iran
on the other side of that border,” explained investigative
journalist Webster Tarpley, who is sure there is an extra twist to the
story involving Pakistan, which possibly gave the militant leader away.
The Jundallah group is believed to be engaged in drug smuggling and organizing terror acts.
They are accused of blowing up top Iranian Revolutionary Guard officers last year.
“This Abdolmalek Rigi was the number one most wanted terrorist on the Iranian most wanted list,” he said.
Despite the fact that the details of Abdolmalek Rigi’s arrest remain unclear, “either
way it is a tremendous victory for the Iranians because they
essentially decapitated this very threatening terror group,” believes Tarpley.
The CIA's Dark Ties
Webster Tarpley said that western political observers, like Seymour
Hersh of The New Yorker and Brian Ross of the BBC, believe that the
Jundallah group was on the CIA payroll.
“This is the US$400 million in Iran’s Regime Change
Act approved under [George W.] Bush. This guy has been meeting with, as
some say, NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer who met this
terrorist and certainly NATO generals in Afghanistan,” accused Tarpley
and added that “they [Jundallah group] operate as an arm of NATO
strategy in the entire region.”
In Webster Tarpley’s opinion, this episode is part of the battle for
Belujistan, a critical area for Iran for hydrocarbon transit to China.
It appears, said Tarpley, that the goal of the offensive of the US
in the Helmand province of Afghanistan is Iran’s economic interests. By
announcing the offensive in Helmand province, they “wanted to drive the Taliban to Pakistan,” cutting Iranian exports to China through Pakistani seaports.
Dr. Seyed Mohammad Marandi of the University of Tehran claims that
the US is being hypocritical and that Iranians are happy after
Abdolmalek Rigi was captured.
“They were not only supporting this particular terrorist
organization…[…] For many years, they’ve carried out many thousands of
terrorist attacks on Iran, as well as other terrorist groups such as
Pi-juk and so on,” Marandi told RT. “What is extraordinary about this
particular terrorist organization, that has the backing of the United
States, is that they carry out some of the most brutal murders, they
cut people’s heads off on television and it does not get any coverage
on BBC or CNN or in The New York Times, which is itself pretty
extraordinary, but the murders that they carried out have angered the
Iranians for the last few years. And it was a major victory for the
Iranian intelligence organizations that they were able to capture the
leader and his deputy the other day.”
Investigative journalist, Wayne Madsen, also posits there is a connection between the US and the group.
“What [Rigi] has stated on Iranian television is that he was there to meet a top US official,” says Madsen. “And
the word I get from Asian intelligence services is that person was
President Obama’s special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard
Holbrooke who happened to have been in Bishkek at the same time.”
Meanwhile, the US State Department strongly denies any involvement with Rigi and released this statement to RT:
“We view the arrest of Mr Rigi as a positive step to prevent
potential attacks against innocent civilians. The US strongly condemns
all forms of terrorism, including those that target Iran. Any
allegations of US involvement are absurd. The US does not sponsor or
support terrorism,” US State Department spokesperson Darby Holladay said.
Also, the Obama Administration has repeatedly said relations with
Iran have to begin with renewed diplomacy, a sentiment that has critics
growing increasingly more skeptical.
“I think it’s quite obvious that the United States is being very hypocritical,” Dr. Seyed Mohammad Marandi says. “They
are not only supporting this terrorist organization but they were also
supporting the MEK for a number of years, they have carried out many
terrorists attacks in Iran over the last three decades.”
Russia Today