• Mike Pompeo claims without evidence that Iran is al-Qaida's new 'home b

    From slider@1:229/2 to All on Wednesday, January 13, 2021 10:02:35
    From: slider@anashram.com

    The US secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, has claimed, without providing evidence, that al-Qaida leaders have established a new “home base” in the Iran, in what appeared to be his latest effort to raise the political cost
    of the next administration reviving the 2015 nuclear deal with Tehran.

    Speaking with just eight days left in office, Pompeo alleged that Iran was “the new Afghanistan”, telling a news conference in Washington: “Unlike in
    Afghanistan, when al-Qaida was hiding in the mountains, al-Qaida today is operating under the hard shell of the Iranian regime’s protection.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/12/iran-al-qaida-mike-pompeo

    In remarks to the National Press Club, after which he did not take
    questions, the outgoing secretary of state also confirmed press reports
    that a senior al-Qaida figure, Abu Mohammed al-Masri, was assassinated
    last August in Tehran, where he was said to be living under a false
    identity.

    Masri, who was accused of helping to mastermind the 1998 bombings of two
    US embassies in Africa, was reported to have been shot in his car with his daughter, Miriam, the widow of Osama bin Laden’s son Hamza. Pompeo’s remarks were the first on-the-record comments supporting the claim.

    Most experts on the subject say that Iran does have a relationship with al-Qaida but it is a complicated one. It has harboured some senior members
    of the organisation, possibly as insurance against direct attack by the terrorist group, but fought against it elsewhere.

    Iran’s foreign minister immediately dismissed the allegations as “warmongering lies”, pointing out to the Trump administrations close ties to Saudi Arabia, the home country of most the 9/11 terrorists.

    “No one is fooled,” tweeted Mohammad Javad Zarif.

    “All 9/11 terrorists came from @SecPompeo’s favorite (Middle East) destinations,” he added. “NONE from Iran.”

    Advisers to Joe Biden believe the Trump administration is trying to make
    it harder for the president-elect to re-engage with Iran and seek to
    rejoin an international deal on Iran’s nuclear program once he takes
    office on 20 January. Donald Trump withdrew from the agreement in 2018 and since then has sought to destroy it altogether by imposing new sanctions.

    The other five major power signatories have so far refused to abandon the
    deal, although Iran has ramped up its nuclear activities in violation of
    the agreement, in response to US sanctions.

    In trying to block the Biden administration rejoining the 2015 nuclear
    deal, the outgoing Trump team has an ally in the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. According to a Politico reporter, the evening before
    his Iran speech, Pompeo was seen out for dinner in a Georgetown restaurant
    with the head of Mossad, Yossi Cohen.

    “It would be a stretch, however, to say as Pompeo did that al-Qaida has
    found a ‘new home base’ in Iran, since it’s not really ‘new’, nor is it
    really a ‘home base’ which remains the Afghanistan/Pakistan border regions,” said Peter Bergen, an al-Qaida expert at the New America
    thinktank.

    “After 9/11 a number of leaders of al-Qaida and quite a few members of Bin Laden’s family moved to Iran. There they spent a decade under various
    forms of house arrest,” Bergen said.

    “After al-Qaida kidnapped an Iranian diplomat in Pakistan in 2008, the Iranians and al-Qaida started quietly negotiating a prisoner swap that
    involved releasing members of the Bin Laden family and also some members
    of al-Qaida and in 2010 a number of these were released. Some stayed on
    though it’s unclear who, since some may have moved to Syria or elsewhere.

    “So, before 2010 Iran housed Bin Laden’s family members and other al-Qaida leaders. After 2010 that number went down significantly,” Bergen said.

    Daniel Byman, a professor and al-Qaida expert at Georgetown University
    said that it was impossible to say without access to intelligence reports
    the extent to which al-Qaida members in Iran have freedom to operate, but
    he described the Afghanistan comparison as “very misleading”.

    “In Afghanistan in the 1990s, you had training camps that were training thousands of people to fight in civil wars, but also as terrorists. You
    had volunteers coming from around the world, including the United States
    and Europe,” Byman said. “In Iran you don’t have these massive training camps and that’s a huge difference.”

    ### - a strange thing indeed to announce in the very last week of trumpy's office?

    lol he just don't wanna go peacefully does he :)))

    and so one last specter for the road huh?

    (wagging the dog?)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)