Soldati israeliani si trovano già nell'Iraq Occidentale alla rirca di Scud ma soprattuto di pretesti per accelerare l'intervento degli stati Uniti.
18/11/02: Arrivano gli Ispettori dell’ONU mentre le truppe Israeliane hanno già invaso l’Irak e con loro Inglesi e Americani.
Truppe israeliane avrebbero già invaso l’Iraq penetrando nella parte occidentale del paese: scopo della missione sarebbe localizzare le postazioni missilistiche irachene e evidenziare siti di armi di distruzione di massa ma potrebbe anche essere una provocazione per innescare la guerra.
Mentre i politici e i mass media discutono di quando inizierà la guerra, gli israeliani l’avrebbero già iniziata.
Le azioni sono condotte dal ‘Sayeret Matkal’, appartenente alla branca dell’Intelligence militare israeliano, settore creato nel 1957 per compiere missioni segrete oltre le linee del nemico. Meir Dagan, il direttore del Mossad (la CIA israeliana), sarebbe recentemente volato in segreto a Washington come riferito il 24 Settembre dal Jane’s Foreign Report.
Sharon avrebbe detto agli Stati Uniti che colpirà l’Iraq se l’Iraq attaccherà Israele. Con i soldati Israeliani in territorio iracheno le possibilità di creare un incidente a pretesto per iniziare il conflitto sono molto alte.
Una conferma alla presenza di truppe israeliane viene dal Jerusalem Post "L’operazione israeliana è stata intrapresa senza il consenso degli Stati Uniti e potrebbe innescare tensioni nel mondo arabo", dal quotidiano di lingua ebraica Yedioth Ahronoth ("l’operazione è stata coordinata segretamente (con gli USA) allo scopo di non adirare i paesei arabi") e in maniera indiretta dal portavove del Pentagono che riferiva all’American Free Press di non poter commentare la notixia e di non sapere se il Pentagono l’aveva approvata.
Forze speciali Britanniche e Americane si troverebbero nell’Iraq Occidentale allo scopo di impedire a Saddam l’uso di missili Scud contro Israele (Daily Telegraph) e nell’Iraq Settentrionale per addestrare le forze di opposizione al "regime" iracheno (fonti militari), almeno dal mese di Aprile di quest’anno (Jane’s World Armies). Infine 8000 soldati americani si troverebbero in Giordania al confine con l’Iraq, nonostante che il Re Giordano Abdullah abbia detto che la Giordania non servirà come trampolino di lancio per un assalto all’Irak. Vi sono notizie di esercitazioni comuni tra truppe giordane e americane.
U.S., Israel Conducting Covert Missions
Israeli commando forces are reportedly operating in western Iraq where their mission could include creating a provocation to kick-start a war.
Exclusive to American Free Press By Christopher Bollyn
Israeli special forces are already in western Iraq, reportedly pinpointing locations where Iraqi missile launchers may be positioned, according to the Associated Press. While foreign news outlets have reported this explosive story, the controlled U.S. mass media is not talking.
"While politicians and media are discussing the prospect of war with Iraq, the Israelis are taking action," AP wrote. "Israeli special forces are already operating reconnaissance patrols in western Iraq. These operations are carried out secretly by Israel’s best-trained commandos, the ‘Sayeret Matkal.’ Their mission: to find and identify places used by, or likely to be used by, Iraqi Scud missile-launchers."
Sayeret Matkal is also known as the General Staff Reconnaissance Unit and belongs to the intelligence branch of the Israeli military. The unit was formed in 1957 to carry out top-secret intelligence gathering missions behind enemy lines.
Meir Dagan, the new director of Mossad, Israel’s military intelligence agency, made a secret trip to Washington recently to improve military cooperation between the United States and Israel during the planned strike against Iraq, reported Jane’s Foreign Report on Sept. 24.
Dagan proposed that Israeli special forces carry out ground operations within Iraq before the main attack, it said.
"Our information is that neither Israel nor the United States have a clue about what, if anything, Sad dam Hussein is hiding," Jane’s said. "It was this ignorance that persuaded the [Israeli] prime minister, Ariel Sharon, to assign the Sayeret Matkal to a job that is sensitive and dangerous."
Iraq is reported to have a small number of land-to-land missiles with a range of more than 600 miles. It is thought that these are located in the western desert region of Iraq. Deep caves are found in this area and can provide cover for military equipment. From this region, Iraqi missiles could strike at targets in the Gulf and Israel, the Cairo-based Al-Ahram wrote.
During the Gulf War, Iraq’s mobile missile-launchers proved highly elusive to aerial reconnaissance. To thwart aerial detection, the Iraqi military used high-fidelity decoys and took full advantage of gullies, culverts, and underpasses in the vast expanse of Iraq’s 29,000-square-mile desert.
In Jan. 1991, Iraq deployed Scud missiles aboard mobile launchers and initiated attacks on Israel. Although they inflicted little damage, the Scud attacks threatened to draw Israel into the conflict. U.S. and British special forces were deployed then to search for Scud launchers on the ground.
Jane’s said there were only certain locations from where Iraq’s remaining Scud missiles could be launched at Israeli targets, given their limited range.
"Matkal’s mission is to detect early preparations," Jane’s reported. "The Israelis believe the Iraqis have hidden their Scud launchers with great care." Sharon decided to dispatch the elite unit into Iraq, "so as not to take chances," Jane’s wrote.
Sharon is reported to have told the United States that he will strike Iraq if Iraq attacks Israel. With Israeli commandos already in Iraq an incident could easily be fabricated in which Iraq appears to attack Israel and thus create an excuse for Israel to retaliate.
If Israel is seen to be conducting military operations in Iraq, as Jane’s reports, relations with Washington’s Arab allies could be in jeopardy and anti-U.S. and anti-Israeli sentiments in the entire region could be inflamed.
Jane’s said that Israel had struck a secret agreement with Jordan under which Israel would be permitted to use Jordanian air space, if necessary.
"The Israeli operation was being carried out without the knowledge of the U.S.," the English-language Jerusalem Post wrote, because it "could raise tensions particularly at such a sensitive period, when the U.S. is attempting to garner support for an offensive against Iraq in the Arab world."
The Hebrew-language daily Yedioth Ahronoth wrote that the Israeli commando infiltration into western Iraq had been "coordinated secretly [with the U.S.] so as not to arouse the ire of Arab countries."
The Jane’s report had also been confirmed by American sources, according to the Israeli paper.
Israeli officials refused to comment on the report of Israeli forces in Iraq.
Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. David Lapan told American Free Press that he could not comment on the report or whether the Pentagon had approved of Israeli commando forces being sent into Iraq.
American and British special forces are reportedly already in western Iraq to prevent Saddam from deploying Scud missile launchers for an attack on Israel, according to London’s Daily Telegraph.
The U.S. military and the CIA have also sent reconnaissance troops and units to train opposition forces in the sections of northern Iraq under Kurdish control, military analysts say.
"We are pretty sure that the American and the British have been in northern Iraq at least since April," said Charles Heyman, editor of Jane’s World Armies.
"I think there is a pretty good chance that the elite special forces working with the CIA are exploring the battlefield," said retired Rear Adm. Stephen Baker, senior fellow at the Center for Defense Information. "It makes sense to have those folks active now, doing our homework."
U.S. TROOPS IN JORDAN
Some 8,000 U.S. troops are reported to be in Jordan near the border with Iraq, although the Jordanian King Abdullah has said that Jordanian bases will not serve as jumping off points for an assault against Iraq.
An Israeli source, Debka, reported that 4,000 U.S. troops landed at the Jordan’s Red Sea port of Aqaba on Aug. 12. Aqaba is within eyesight of the Israeli town of Eilat.
These troops were officially on a three-week joint exercise with the Jordanian army and relocated to the northeast Jordanian desert region bordering on Iraq, Debka wrote.




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