donderdag 12 april 2007

The Empire 223


'Kurdistan's Covert Back-Channels
By Laura Rozen
Mother Jones
How an ex-Mossad chief, a German uberspy, and a gaggle of top-dollar GOP lobbyists helped Kurdistan snag 15 tons of $100 bills.
In June 2004, journalist Seymour Hersh reported in the New Yorker that Israelis operating in northern Iraq under the guise of businessmen were in fact cultivating Kurdish proxies to gather intelligence in preparation for possible future action against Iran. About the same time, I too was hearing about Israelis operating in Kurdish northern Iraq. First, from a former senior American diplomat who was invited by an Israeli American businessman to advise the Kurds on how to get billions of dollars they believed they were owed from the Saddam Hussein-era United Nations Oil-for-Food program. The diplomat gave me the Israeli's name - Shlomi Michaels - and phone numbers for Michaels in Beverly Hills, Turkey, and Israel. The diplomat had walked away from the project, put off by Michaels' temper, and also, he said, by doubts about what Michaels was really up to, and who he might really be working for.
So I was intrigued when, last summer, I read in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz that Shlomi Michaels had become the subject of an Israeli government investigation for allegedly operating in Iraq without the required authorization from the Israeli authorities. Not only had I known about Michaels for two years, I had spent about as long trying to understand if the Bush administration would embrace the regime-change policy of its Iran hawks, who believe that the solution to Iran's nuclear ambitions is to promote mass uprisings of ethnic minority and dissident groups such as the Kurds.
For much of the past year, I have been digging into the story of Shlomi Michaels' operations in Kurdistan, and his connections in Israel, the United States, and around the world. My investigation took me to Israel early last fall, shortly after the Israeli war with Hezbollah, to talk with Israeli officials investigating Michaels, as well as one of Michaels' long-time American associates, and Michaels' business partner, the former Mossad chief Danny Yatom.
What I found was not the story I had expected. Instead of Michaels being part of a covert operation to set up anti-Iranian proxies in Kurdish Iraq, I discovered that Michaels and his associates were part of an effort by the Kurds and their allies to lobby the West for greater power in Iraq, and greater clout in Washington, and at the same time, by a group of Israeli ex security officials to rekindle good relations with their historical allies the Kurds through joint infrastructure, economic development, and security projects. It was, in other words, a story about influence-building, buying, and profit, albeit with subplots that were equal parts John le Carre and Keystone Kops, and a cast of characters ranging from ex-Mossad head Yatom to a former German superspy, with Israeli counterterrorism commandos, Kurdish political dynasties, powerful American lobbyists, Turkish business tycoons thrown in - not to mention millions of dollars stashed in Swiss bank accounts.'

1 opmerking:

Sonja zei

In een brief aan o.a. de VN van 22 december 2006 pleiten de provinciale bestuurders van Ninevé (Noord-Irak) voor een einde aan de wandaden van de Amerikaanse en de Nationale troepen, waaronder de liquidaties en de verkrachting van Iraakse vrouwen; voor het openstellen van de regio voor eerlijke verslaggeving; voor het stoppen van het gebruik van internationaal verboden wapens in o.a. Tel Afar, zoals gifgas, clusterbommen en napalm, en autopsie van de slachtoffers om deze barbaarse agressie te verifiëren.

Volgens hen vond er op dat moment een "etnische reiniging" plaats onder de Turkmenen in Tel Afar en de linkeroever van Mosul en omstreken door de Koerdische Peshmerga milities in samenwerking met de Badr Brigade (uitvoerders de Nationale Garde). De Koerden, die samenwerken met de VS en soms zelfs getraind worden door Israël, habben de regio ingenomen, hadden de lokale notabelen gearresteerd en eigen mensen op belangrijke posten neergezet. De Iraakse vlaggen zijn vervangen door Koerdische: "alsof wij opeens niet meer in Irak leven."

http://www.brusselstribunal.org/Wamidh_Fallujah.htm#Mosul

Peter Flik en Chuck Berry-Promised Land

mijn unieke collega Peter Flik, die de vrijzinnig protestantse radio omroep de VPRO maakte is niet meer. ik koester duizenden herinneringen ...