A former US National Security Adviser has admitted that there
are US intelligence agents on the ground inside Iran and says
they should focus on influencing Iranian behaviour.
Brent Scowcroft, the United States National Security
Advisor under Presidents Gerald Ford and George H. W. Bush,
also told Josh Rushing, the host of Al Jazeera's programme Fault
Lines, that aiding the protesters in Iran would provoke a more
intense crackdown by the government in Tehran.
"An attempt to change the situation in Iran
is likely to be turned against us and against the people who
are demonstrating for more freedom." Scowcroft said.
"Therefore I think we need to look at what
we can do best, which is to try to influence Iranian behaviour
in the region." he added.
Scowcroft, a former Lieutenant General in the
United States Air Force, also served as Military Assistant to
Nixon, and latterly as Chairman of the President's Foreign Intelligence
Advisory Board under President George W. Bush.
"Isn't it naive to think that the US doesn't
have some kind of intelligence operatives on the ground in Iran?"
asked Al Jazeera's Rushing.
"Of course we do." Scowcroft replied.
"Would they help the protesters in some way?"
Rushing asked.
"They might be, who knows. But that's a far
cry from helping protesters against the combined might of the
Revolutionary Guard, the militias, and so on, and the police,
who are so far, completely unified." Scowcroft answered.
Despite the fact that 18-to-24-year-olds comprised
the strongest voting bloc for Ahmadinejad of all age groups,
as
verified by independent voting data, Scowcroft
also described a "growing young population that doesn't
like the way they have to live," noting that "it's
going to change Iran, I think that is almost inevitable."
Watch the exchange below:
On a basic level, Scowcroft's comments highlight
the fact that president Obama
was being liberal with the truth when he stated
Wednesday that accusations of CIA involvement in Iran were "patently
false".
As we have highlighted in our continual coverage
of the situation, there is no debate over the fact that Western
intelligence is entrenched in Iran and has been
waging a covert war for a number of years.
The soft revolution plan was uncovered by Iranian
counterespionage personnel before it could be fully implemented.
It was to be carried out through "NGOs, union protests,
non-violent demonstrations, civil disobedience… and (efforts
to) foment ethnic strife" all across Iran, an Iranian official
stated.
What Scowcroft does not point out is the fact
that if US intelligence operatives wanted to foment regime change
in Iran, coercing the current government into a brutal crackdown
on protesters would be the perfect way to demonize it in the
eyes of the watching world.
This would pave the way for the introduction
of their own puppet ruler into the equation, directly
challenging the authority of the Mullahs, who are clearly not
interested in selling Iranian sovereignty down the river to
a globalist world order.
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