Sean D. Naylor, Daily Beast: Inside U.S. Commandos’ Shadow War Against Iran
The U.S. military’s cadre of elite special operations forces has spent the last 14 years taking on terrorists—and finding Iran’s hand pulling the jihadi strings.
It was July 25, 2004. Violence was escalating in Iraq, the Taliban were reasserting themselves in Afghanistan, and Joint Special Operations Command—the U.S. military’s cadre of elite special operations forces—was already deploying operators to the Horn of Africa and Yemen. But for the first day of the three-day JSOC commanders’ conference at Fort Bragg, the country under discussion was Iran.
In the days after September 11, JSOC was running at least two undercover agents into Iran. But the command wanted to know more—much more—about the would-be regional superpower it seemed to confront at every turn.
Today, the U.S. and Iranian governments are in a period of political détente, with the nuclear deal signed in Vienna. Tehran and Washington’s militaries are even cooperating—if at arm’s length—in the fight against ISIS.
WNU Editor: I can not understand why the White House and the Pentagon are concerned with the upcoming publication of "Relentless Strike". If this excerpt is any indication .... there must be a lot of details that are going to be published that will question the reasons on why the U.S. still pursued a nuclear deal with Iran while knowing what they have (and are) doing.
No comments:
Post a Comment