Posted by
Always To The Right on Wednesday, February 07, 2007 12:21:48 AM
This report republished with attribution to Strategic Forecasting, Inc. at www.stratfor.com.
U.S.-Iranian Tensions and an Abduction in Baghdad
By George Friedman and Kamran BokhariIraqi officials said
Tuesday that gunmen wearing Iraqi army uniforms kidnapped an Iranian Embassy
official in central
Baghdad on Sunday. Jalal Sharafi, a second secretary at
the Iranian Embassy, was abducted from the Karrada district while on his way
to a ribbon cutting at a new branch of an Iranian state-owned bank.
According to witnesses and unnamed Iraqi officials, gunmen wearing
uniforms of the Iraqi army's elite 36th Commando Battalion -- part of the
Iraqi Special Operations Forces Brigade, an aggressive unit that specializes
in counterinsurgent operations -- were involved in the snatch. They
reportedly used two of their vehicles to block Sharafi's car and then seized
him. During the ambush, nearby Iraqi police -- apparently suspecting a
kidnapping was taking place -- opened fire on one of the vehicles and brought
it to a halt. The four gunmen inside -- all with official Iraqi military
identification -- were arrested.
The story did not end there,
however. On Monday, individuals showing official Iraqi government badges
arrived at the police station where the gunmen were being detained and
claimed to have authority to transfer them to the serious crimes police unit.
It was later discovered that the suspects never arrived.
Iran has
accused the
United States of engineering the abduction through the
Sunni-controlled Defense Ministry; the U.S. military has denied any
involvement in the matter.
Given the tactical details of the
operation and the geopolitical backdrop, there are two possible explanations
for the incident. One is that Sunni insurgents are responsible: They have the
means and motivation to pull off such an operation, and any number of Sunni
factions would be interested in carrying out an abduction like this. But the
United States has a motive as well.
It is important to note that
Sharafi's position at the embassy is the kind of diplomatic posting that
frequently would be a cover for intelligence operatives. So if he were an
Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and Security operative of some importance,
kidnapping him would disrupt Iranian operations as the U.S. security
offensive in
Baghdad gets under way. Second, the
United States has been very
public in saying it intends to become more aggressive toward Iranian covert
operations as part of its effort to bring pressure against
Tehran. U.S.
intelligence has substantially ramped up the collection of information on
Iran -- a move that would serve whether the goal was to actually attack
Iran,
plan negotiations or just try to figure out the mind of
Tehran. The snatch of
a second secretary would fit into this effort.
This is not the first
incident of this kind. In January, U.S. forces arrested five officials from
an Iranian diplomatic office in Arbil, a northern city, and have been holding
them ever since -- a maneuver that fits with the Bush administration's
strategy of demonstrating that
Washington has the ability to weaken the
Iranian position in
Iraq. In an act of apparent retaliation, Shiite militants
attacked the Provincial Joint Coordination Center in the southern city of
Karbala on Jan. 20, and after a 20-minute gunbattle, abducted five U.S.
soldiers, who later were killed. The operatives spoke English, had U.S.
military uniforms and identification cards and arrived in armored white GMC
suburbans. Using their English-language skills, the gunmen were able to arm
themselves at a local police station and then penetrate multiple layers of
security before opening fire on a U.S. civil affairs team.
At this
point, this much is clear: No matter who is actually responsible for the
Sharafi abduction, it will further heighten U.S.-Iranian tensions and could
force
Tehran to retaliate against the pressure being generated by the
United
States. The Iranians will blame the Americans under any circumstances. In the
logic of the region, the Iranians will reason that even if the perpetrators
were Sunnis, the
United States somehow manipulated them into carrying out the
operation. The Iranians are now as fixated on U.S. covert operations against
Iran as the
United States has become on Iranian covert operations in
Iraq and
elsewhere against U.S. interests.
Whatever the facts of this
particular case might be, the
United States has been transmitting numerous
signals -- official and otherwise -- that
Iran is vulnerable and is placing
itself at risk by opposing U.S. interests in
Iraq. The Sharafi abduction
seems designed to enhance Tehran's sense of vulnerability, and hence to fuel
disagreements among those in
Iran who feel the
United States is at a weak
point and those who warn that the
United States is most dangerous at its
weakest. The debate between these camps is about how to deal with the
United
States: whether to retaliate against provocations, pursue negotiations or a
mix of both. This is precisely the kind of re-evaluation of its stance and
options that the
United States wants to see from
Iran. The Americans want the
Iranians to view the
United States as a dangerous foe, and to moderate their
appetite for power in the region. Therefore, even if the
United States didn't
order the Sharafi operation, it still fits into a pattern of warnings that
the Americans have been issuing.
There are some factors that allow us
to speculate -- and this remains speculation -- that U.S. forces working with
partners within the Iraqi Defense Ministry engineered the kidnapping. More
specifically, the 36th Commando Battalion, whose uniforms were worn by the
gunmen in the course of the kidnapping, is known to work closely with U.S.
forces. Amid efforts to quell the Sunni insurgency and contain the growth of
Iranian influence in
Iraq, the
United States in 2005 began moving to bring
the Baathists back into Iraq's political system, especially the security
forces. This policy has been central to the tensions between the Americans
and Iraqi Shia, but it is a tool the Bush administration is using to counter
Iranian moves.
Another point to consider is that Sharafi -- as an
official with diplomatic immunity -- could not be held in detention for long
under normal measures. The standard procedure for dealing with foreign
diplomats who are deemed undesirable is to declare them persona non grata and
order them out of the country within a matter of days. This is the course of
action generally pursued if the goal is to rid a country of potential
intelligence operatives -- and it is a sign of escalating tension between the
diplomat's home state and the host country. In Sharafi's case, expulsion
would have been the prerogative of the Iraqi government. But since the
Shiite-dominated government has close ties to
Iran, it is hardly likely that
he would have been expelled.
In this case, the objective of the
United States would not be simply to secure the Iranian's expulsion, but
given his position, to extract intelligence about Tehran's plans and
operational networks in
Iraq. Arresting him and holding him for questioning
would not be possible under international law, let alone in the face of the
scandal that would ensue if U.S. forces had done this. Nevertheless, an
opportunity to question him would be of real value to the
United States.
Maintaining plausible deniability would be the key. But arranging for
Sharafi's abduction by a third party would be a feasible way of obtaining the
intelligence sought by the
United States. It is therefore quite possible that
this was a U.S.-authorized operation executed by Washington's Sunni allies.
The Sunnis in
Iraq -- both the nationalists and the jihadists -- have
reasons of their own to abduct an Iranian official, and hence could have
seized Sharafi as part of a completely independent operation. Sunni
nationalists and jihadists feel that they are more threatened by Iranian
influence in
Iraq than by the U.S. military presence, which most believe
eventually will come to an end. The Iranian-Shiite threat, however, is a
permanent feature of the region and poses long-term danger.
The
Sunnis also recognize that they do not have the means to deal with
Iran or
its Iraqi Shiite allies by themselves -- but the
United States has the power
to weaken the position of
Iran, and by extension, its Iraqi patrons. With
tensions between
Washington and
Tehran at their current heights, there is an
opportunity to be exploited.
The Sunnis could exacerbate those
tensions further by abducting an Iranian diplomat at a time when the
United
States already has five Iranian officials in custody. No claims of
responsibility for the operation were issued, which means Tehran's suspicions
of the Americans easily could be fueled.
The timing is interesting in
another way as well. In efforts to maximize its position in
Iraq,
Tehran has
been angling for negotiations with
Saudi Arabia -- and this leaves Iraqi
Sunnis feeling nervous. As a minority group that occupies a region without
oil, the Sunnis would be at an inherent disadvantage: No matter what kind of
support
Riyadh might offer them, they would find it difficult or impossible
to escape the pull of Iranian and Shiite power. Neither the nationalist
insurgents nor the jihadists could accept such an outcome.
On the day
of Sharafi's abduction, the al Qaeda-led alliance called the "Islamic State
of Iraq" issued a statement saying U.S. military action against
Iran would
benefit Islamist militants. Therefore, it is entirely possible that the
abduction was an attempt to provoke
Iran -- which already is demanding the
release of the officials captured in Arbil -- into retaliation against the
Americans. The jihadists' hope would be that this could provoke a wider
U.S.-Iranian conflict and hence torpedo any U.S.-Iranian dealings.
The
Iranians seem sincere in their conviction that the abduction was the work of
the
United States. Their likely reaction would be to encourage their allies
within the Iraqi Shiite militias to strike at both U.S. and Sunni targets --
reminding
Washington that
Tehran is not without options -- while at the same
time pressing ahead on the diplomatic front. In other words, the likely
short-term outcome of this incident will be increased violence.
At the
same time, the
United States is engaged in a long-term process designed to
convince the Iranians that the risks incurred in destabilizing
Iraq and
blocking a political settlement in
Baghdad are greater than they might have
imagined, and that the U.S. resolve to resist
Iran is sufficient to block
Tehran's ambitions. From Washington's point of view, the primary hope for any
satisfactory end to the
Iraq war rests in a change of policy in
Tehran.
Regardless of whether this abduction triggers retaliation, if
Iran comes to
believe that Washington is dangerous, it might come to the bargaining table
or -- to be more precise -- allow its Iraqi allies to come to the
table.
An action like the Sharafi abduction allows the signal to be
sent, while still falling short of mounting overt military strikes against
Iran -- something for which the
United States currently has little appetite
or resources. A covert war is within the means of the
United States, and the
Americans might hope that their prosecution of that war will convince
Iran
they are serious and to back off. Therefore, even if the kidnapping had
nothing to do with the
United States and
Iran misreads the incident, it still
could serve American interests in signaling American resolve. Given the state
of the U.S. position in
Iraq, the strategy well might fail -- but once again,
it is one of the few cards the
United States has left to play.