Showing posts with label Asgari. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asgari. Show all posts

Monday, May 19, 2014

Former Senior IRGC Commander Under CIA Protection in U.S., Book Says

A book being published Tuesday will say that a senior former Iranian intelligence officer who masterminded the 1983 bombing of U.S. embassy in Beirut was given asylum by George W. Bush administration in 2007 after he defected in Turkey, Newsweek reported today.

The Good Spy, a biography of Robert Ames, a legendary CIA officer who was killed in the embassy bombing, identifies the Iranian as IRGC Brigadier General Ali Reza Asgari and says he was recently living under CIA protection in the United States. The book is written by Pulitzer Prize winning author Kai Bird.

General Asgari was a former deputy defense minister of Iran. He had also served as the senior IRGC commander in Lebanon and was credited with being a key actor in the formation of the Lebanese Hezbollah.

Asgari reached the rank of brigadier general in 1997 and became the deputy defense minister. In 2004, he fell out of favor, for reasons not fully revealed, and was jailed for 18 months. In February 2007, he traveled through Damascus to Istanbul, where he disappeared.

“The decision to give Asgari political asylum under the CIA's Public Law 110 program was probably opposed by veteran CIA officers who have some knowledge of Asgari's alleged responsibility for Roberts Ames’s murder,” Bird writes. “But they and the agency were reportedly overruled by the George W. Bush administration's National Security Council (NSC).

“Some of President Bush's NSC advisers evidently believed that the intelligence Asgari brought to the table on the Iranian nuclear program was essential to the national defense,” Bird added.

File photo: Former IRGC Brig. Gen. Ali Reza Asgari (Wikipedia)

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Iran: IRGC Gen. Asgari Was Kidnapped by Mossad


Ex-Deputy Defense Minister Disappeared in 2007
Iran’s Deputy Defense Minister Brig. Gen. Hossein Daqiqi said today in Tehran that evidence indicates that IRGC Brig. Gen. Alireza Asgari, a former deputy defense minister, was kidnapped in 2007 by Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service, while visiting Istanbul with his wife and transferred to Israel. Asgari and his wife were last seen in Istanbul on 7 February 2007, but have since disappeared. It was generally thought that Gen. Asgari had defected to the U.S. and was living in Northern Virginia.

“We have a lot of evidence proving that members of the Israeli intelligence service (Mossad) have kidnapped Asgari from Turkey and transferred him to Israel,” said Gen. Daqiqi, the deputy defense minister. (Fars News Agency, 15 December)  

Throughout these years, there have been conflicting reports and speculations on his whereabouts and his wellbeing. In 2007, a Kuwaiti newspaper said Asgari provided intelligence for the Israeli attack on Syrian nuclear site. In December 2009, the Iranian Foreign Ministry identified Asgari as one of ten Iranian detainees held by U.S. forces in Iraq. And in December 2010, an Israeli news website reported that an Iranian prisoner had committed suicide in solitary confinement in Israel's Ayalon Prison. Another website later claimed that the prisoner that had committed suicide was Gen. Asgari.

Photo credit: IRGC Brig. Gen. Hossein Daqiqi, Iran’s deputy defense minister, discussing Gen. Asgari’s disappearance. (Photo: Press TV)

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Iran Concerned Over Report of Gen. Asgari’s Death

Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has voiced concern over reports that former senior Iranian official Gen. Ali Reza Asgari may have committed suicide while under Israeli detention.

"The Israeli regime's abduction of Asgari with the help of the United States and the Israeli regime's recent claims is a clear and potent example of state terrorism," said Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Mohammad Reza Raouf Sheibani [IRNA, 28 December].

Asgari was an IRGC general officer, Iran’s deputy defense minister and a member of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council at the time of his disappearance in 2007. He was reportedly overseeing a military’s clandestine nuclear research program.

In December 2009, the Iranian Foreign Ministry had identified Gen. Asgari as one of the ten Iranian detainees held by US forces in Iraq. The claim was contrary to reports that Asgari had defected to the US and was being safeguarded in the country. It was not immediately clear how and why the Israelis had taken custody of Asgari.

Gen. Asgari was also a subject of controversy. In December 2007, ten months after his disappearance, the US intelligence community issued a new National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) finding in which it dramatically reversed a previous NIE finding, now stating that Iran has halted its nuclear weapon program in 2003. Asgari was believed to be at least one of the sources, if not the sole source, behind the new NIE finding.

In September 2007, Kuwait’s Al Jerida reported that Asgari provided the intelligence for Israeli attack on a Syrian nuclear site.

Gen. Asgari and his wife vanished in Istanbul on 7 February 2007, while on a personal visit to the city.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

The Missing Iranian Officials

Iran’s Mehr News Agency confirmed today that Iranian authorities believe that IRGC Brig. Gen. Ali Reza Asgari, former deputy defense minister of Iran, is in the United States. Gen. Asgari disappeared in 2007. Uskowi on Iran reported at the time that Gen. Asgari had defected to the US. Asgari was believed to be living in Virginia.

On Tuesday, The Iranian foreign ministry spokesman said 11 Iranians were being detained in the US. The spokesman named only the missing nuclear scientist, Shahram Amiri. Mehr’s report identified the other ten, including Gen. Asgari.

Iran has accused Saudi authorities of arresting and handing over Shahram Amiri to the US authorities. Amiri is one of Iran’s top nuclear scientists who was reportedly working at newly disclosed Fardu uranium enrichment plant near Qum. He was on a hajj trip to Mecca when he disappeared. The Saudis today denied the charge.

“Saudi authorities searched for him after being informed of his disappearance in Medina and at all the hospitals, hotels and centers in Mecca but they could not find him,” Saudi Foreign Ministry spokeman Osama al-Nogali told reporters in Riyadh.

US State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley, speaking to reporters in Washington, declined to comment on the situation.

Friday, December 7, 2007

Postponing the Conflict

The new NIE is one of the biggest reversals in the history of US intelligence. Iran does not have a bomb and is not working on a bomb. The earliest date it can build a bomb is 2009, but that’s highly unlikely. It’s more likely to be in 2010-2015, if it ever decides to make it. Iran’s nuke program does not pose a clear and present danger. The NIE now provides a pretext for US government to de-escalate tension and avoid a military conflict with Iran.

Not so fast, the skeptics argue. The NIE indeed confirms the existence of a nuclear weapon program prior to 2003. Iranians decided to suspend their activities under the threat of US troops who had just invaded Iraq and toppled Saddam. International pressure kept them from reactivating the program. If Iran wants to produce a bomb, they can do so. The decision is theirs alone.

The wild card is Israel. Even if the chance of an Iranian bomb by 2009 is very low, that minimal chance is still a very serious matter for the Israelis. The IDF intelligence and the Mosad are surely examining their own data in light of the new NIE, but knowing the Israelis it is safe to assume that they would have more confidence in their own information and that they would try in the coming months to convince the Americans to reassess their sources and their findings.

The Newsweek is reporting that US intelligence officials deny categorically that their main source was former IRGC Brig. Gen. Ali Reza Asgari, but instead they relied heavily on an electronic intercept in which an Iranian scientist was overheard complaining earlier this year about how Iran's nuclear weapons program had been shut down in 2003. The CIA and the entire US intelligence community must have high confidence in their source to produce one of the biggest reversals in community’s key judgments.

Skepticism notwithstanding, in practical political terms the new NIE has postponed any military conflict with Iran, at lease for the Americans.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Tehran: All-Clear Signal, or Not?

The US intelligence community in an astonishing report reversed its previous findings and now believes that Iran halted its nuclear weapon program in fall 2003. President Ahmadinejad immediately declared a victory for Iran. Although the real effects of the National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) are beginning to be felt, it is apparent that a mere three-page judgment statement on Iran’s nuclear capabilities has changed all political calculations about Iran and inside Iran.

The big question is whether the report is an all-clear signal for Tehran. The NIE does not give us any facts, only judgments. It tells us the 2005 report by the same agencies on the same subject contained wrong judgments.

We can not say which version is more accurate without knowing the facts. We only hope that the facts behind the new set of judgments were not limited to what is the talk on the street that the information on halting the work on the bomb was provided by IRGC Brig. Gen. Ali Reza Asgari who defected to the West earlier this year and is now considered to be a CIA asset.

We also hope that the facts were not solely based on some published reports about an intercepted phone conversation between an IRGC general and the political leadership in Tehran on the necessity to resume the atomic work. Both sets of information could be as wrong as those that the 2005 judgments were based on.

What we can say with certainty is that the report has changed all political calculations. No matter how credible are the new judgments, in practical term the US leverage on Iran’s nuclear program all but disappeared on Monday. No more WWIII either. But the report does not get Iran off the hook entirely.

The NIE states that Iran suspended its nuclear weapons program few months after Saddam was overthrown in Baghdad. Tehran must not be quite as immune to foreign pressure as it likes to portray itself! If the decision to halt the work on the bomb was based on a cold calculation on the part of the ayatollahs to keep away US troops from entering Iran during those victorious early days of Iraq war, a different set of calculations also based on cold realities on the ground can reverse their decision: US has its hands full in Iraq, as said many times by Ahmadinejad, so let’s make the bomb. Political decisions can by definition get reversed.

Tehran’s halt of atomic work after Saddam’s overthrow also shows that with the right amount of pressure, the international community can change Iran’s behavior; much less costly way of doing things than a WWIII.

This brings us to the timing of the report. The White House did not need to authorize the publication of the NIE. Could it be that those within the administration that always preferred the lets-change-Tehran’s-behavior solution now had the upper hand and by releasing the report checkmated the proponents of the military action against Iran? Whether or not they had anything to do with the decision to publish the NIE, they now have the upper hand. No military action can be conceivable after the report.

In Tehran, the NIE brought an unexpected victory for Ahmadinejad who was resisting pressures from the moderates and the reformists to revise the country’s nuclear policy. Only three months before the all-important parliamentary elections in Iran, Ahmadinejad gets a shot in the arm which may prove decisive in who would control the Majlis. Ahmadinejad must wonder how ironic can it get to receive such valuable help from the US intelligence community.

The Iranian opposition also is once again learning a time-honored fact: in the struggle against the government do not rely on foreign policy. A report published on the other side of the world can change all calculations. Stick with the basics. Democracy, human rights and the establishment of a progressive Iran.

Friday, September 28, 2007

IRGC Defector Role in Israeli Air Strike on Syria

Kuwaiti newspaper Al Jerida reported today that the intelligence for Israel's attack on a Syrian target earlier this month was provided by IRGC Brig. Gen. Ali Reza Asgari, who defected from Iran a few months ago.

Another Kuwaiti paper, Al Watan, quoted diplomatic sources in Europe as saying that US jets circled above the Israeli fighters and gave them aerial cover during the operation.

Reports circulating in Washington indicate that the Israeli raid on Syrian target destroyed advanced weapon facilities. The former US ambassador to the UN, John Bolton, has also said that the raid targeted either a joint nuclear or missile facility with North Korea.

The surprising element of the air strike was the ability of Israeli Air Force jets to enter deep into Syria without setting off Russian-built radar systems in place in the country.

Sunday, July 8, 2007

Missing Revolutionary Guard General Defected

The Jerusalem Post reported today that the missing Revolutionary Guard Brig. Gen. Ali Reza Asgari has defected to the US and is being safeguarded by the CIA. Asgari met up with CIA operatives in Istanbul before he was brought to the US.

The Post reported that Asgari has told the CIA that Iran is enriching uranium with laser in addition to using gas centrifuges.

The report on laser enrichment is very surprising. The technology has proved to be extremely difficult to master. If the report is true, it will appreciably raise the Western concerns over the Iranian nuclear program.

Asghari was a general officer in the Revolutionary Guard and a member of the Iran’s Supreme National Security Council.