Thursday, October 13, 2011

DRUG CARTEL LINK TO IRANIAN PLOT DOUBTFUL

I don’t doubt that Manssor Arbabsiar, a naturalized U.S. citizen, and Gholam Shakuri, a member of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard, conspired together to assassinate the Saudi ambassador, to bomb a D.C. café and to bomb the Saudi and Israeli embassies. But that does not mean the Iranian government was behind this plot. And linking the Iranian government to the Mexican drug cartels in this plot seems absolutely absurd to me.

Iran doesn't need to use some jerk in this country to bring about the assassination of the Saudi ambassador. And the Iranians sure don’t need the help of Mexican drug cartels. Their secret agents can easily kill the ambassador during one of his many trips to the Saudi kingdom.

And when a DEA informant claims to be an associate of a Mexican drug cartel, it doesn’t mean he actually was and it certainly does not mean a drug cartel was involved in the plot.

This plot looks like it was conjured up without the knowledge of the Ayatollahs and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

NOT BUYING STORY OF IRANIAN LINKS TO DRUG CARTELS

Grits for Breakfast
October 12, 2011

The news story making waves that the Iranian government allegedly tried to have the Saudi Arabian ambassador assassinated on US soil strikes me as squirrelly and self-interested. Said Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, "The idea that they would attempt to go to a Mexican drug cartel to solicit murder-for-hire to kill the Saudi ambassador? Nobody could make that up, right?" Well, nobody but government officials who rely on a lazy, compliant media to repeat their spin countless times before vetting the facts. (See Bruce Ivins' story, and Steven Hatfill's for classic illustrations, or since these charges could start a war, maybe the Gulf of Tonkin is a better example, or Bush II's claims that Iraq had chemical weapons.)

As it turns out, the suspects did not go to any "Mexican drug cartel" at all, but the case is based on a paid informant from Corpus Christi unaffiliated with any cartel who had state charges dropped in exchange for his services. In reality, the feds could have used an informant pretending to be from the Italian mob, the Crips, Bloods, you name it, since the only link to drug cartels is the cover story they fabricated.

Reported the Texas Tribune, the corporate intelligence service Stratfor says, "It seems unusual that the Iranians would approach a Mexican cartel to carry out the assassination, when the Iranians probably have the capability themselves," and that "at this point the cartels have not been directly linked to the plot."

Why would the Iranian government seek the Saudi ambassador's assassination, and if true, why would they choose to do it on American soil? It makes no sense. I don't yet know what to believe about these allegations, but one thing I know for sure: Only a fool would agree that "Nobody could make that up."

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