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Offline Catsoo

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The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« on: July 31, 2011, 12:26:03 AM »
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History

The Quds Force was created during the Iran-Iraq war as a special unit from the broader IRGC forces. After the war, Quds Force continued to support the Kurds fighting Saddam Hussein, during the war it had helped the Kurds fight the Iraqi military. The Quds also expanded their operations into other areas, most notably aiding Ahmed Shah Massoud's Northern Alliance against the Soviets during the Soviet war in Afghanistan[8] and then helping Massoud after the war against Taliban forces. There were also reports of the Quds forces lending support to Muslim Bosnians fighting the Serbs during the Yugoslav wars.[9]

According to the Egyptian newspaper Al-Ahram, current Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad helped fund Quds Force while he was stationed at the Ramazan garrison near Iraq during the late 1980s.[10]

Mission

The Federation of American Scientists, in a document from 1998, says the primary mission of the Quds Force is to organize, train, equip, and finance foreign Islamic revolutionary movements. It further states that the Quds Force maintains and builds contacts with underground Islamic militant organizations throughout the Islamic world.[2]

Organization
8 directorates of Quds Force Operations

The force is described as "active in dozens of countries."[11] According to former U.S. Army intelligence officer David Dionisi, Quds force is organized into eight different directorates based on geographic location:[12]

    Western countries
    Iraq
    Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India
    Israel, Lebanon, and Jordan
    Turkey
    North Africa
    Arabian peninsula
    Republics of the former USSR

In addition, Dionisi asserts in his book American Hiroshima that the Iranian Quds Force headquarters for operations in Iraq was moved in 2004 to the Iran-Iraq border in order to better supervise activities in Iraq.[12] The Quds Force also has a headquarters based in the former compound of the US Embassy, which was overrun in 1979.[13] In September 2007, a few years after the "American Hiroshima" book was published, General David Petraeus reported to Congress that the Quds Force had left Iraq. Petraeus said, "The Quds Force itself, we believe, by and large those individuals have been pulled out of the country, as have the Lebanese Hezbollah trainers that were being used to augment that activity."[14]

On July 7, 2008, Pulitzer Prize winning author Seymour Hersh wrote an article in the New Yorker revealing that President Bush had signed a Presidential Finding authorizing the CIA's Special Activities Division to conduct cross border paramilitary operations from Iraq and Afghanistan into Iran. These operations would be against al-Quds (AKA Qods Force) and “high-value targets”.[15] “The Finding was focused on undermining Iran’s nuclear ambitions and trying to undermine the government through regime change,” a person familiar with its contents said, and involved “working with opposition groups.”


Focus of the Force

The Quds force has four main areas of interest

    Hezbollah operations in Lebanon
    Iraqi Kurdistan
    Kashmir, the Balouch and Afghanistan
    And most recently Yemen

In the past the Quds force has also supported the establishment of Hezbollah branches in Jordan and Israel.

The size of Quds Force is unknown, with some experts believing that Quds Force numbers no more than 2,000 people, with 800 core operatives, and others saying that it could number anywhere from 3,000 to 50,000.[16][17][18]
[edit] Independence and talent

While it reports directly to the Supreme Leader of Iran, there are debates over how independently Quds Force operates.[16]

Mahan Abedin, director of research at the London-based Center for the Study of Terrorism (and editor of Islamism Digest journal), believes the unit is not independent at all: "Quds Force, although it's a highly specialized department, it is subject to strict, iron-clad military discipline. It's completely controlled by the military hierarchy of the IRGC, and the IRGC is very tightly controlled by the highest levels of the administration in Iran."[19]

Quds Force is considered by some analysts as "one of the best special forces units in the world," according to a Los Angeles Times report.[16] In Abedin's view, "t's a very capable force — their people are extremely talented, [and] they tend to be the best people in the IRGC."[19]


Activities


The Quds Force trains and equips foreign Islamic revolutionary groups around the Middle East. The para-military instruction provided by the Quds Force typically occurs in Iran or Sudan. Foreign recruits are transported from their home countries to Iran to receive training. The Quds Force sometimes plays a more direct role in the military operations of the forces it trains, including pre-attack planning and other operation-specific military advice.[12]
[edit] Afghanistan

Iran had supported the Afghan Northern Alliance forces against the Taliban before the US did in its 2001 invasion of Afghanistan.[20][21] Iran almost began a war in 1999 with Afghanistan when Taliban forces killed several Iranian officials.[20][22] The Qods force reportedly fought alongside the US and the Northern Alliance in the Battle for Herat.

Al Qaeda

Iran is believed by some to have detained the son of Osama bin Laden, Sa'ad bin Laden, at one point in time.[23]


Lebanon

After the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict, Quds Force has been cited as possibly providing the millions of US dollars being handed out by the group Hezbollah for reconstruction.[citation needed]

South America

It's been reported that Iran has been increasing its presence in Latin America through Venezuela. Little is known publicly what their objectives are in the region but in 2009, Defense Secretary Robert Gates denounced Iran for meddling in "subversive activities" using Qud forces. However, Iran claims it is merely "ensuring the survival of the regime" by propagating regional influence. [24] As far back as 1994, Quds were suspected of financing and aiding Hezbollah in an attack on a Jewish center in Buenos Aires which resulted in the deaths of 85 victims.[25]

Quds Force has been described as the Iranian "unit deployed to challenge the United State presence" in Iraq following the US invasion of that country, which put "165,000 American troops along [Iran's] western border," adding to the American troops already in Iran's eastern neighbor Afghanistan.[26]

The force "operated throughout Iraq, arming, aiding, and abetting Shiite militias" — the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, Dawa, and the Mahdi Army — "all" of which "had close ties to Iran, some dating back decades" as part of their struggle against Saddam Hussien's oppressive Arab nationalist regime.[27]

In November 2006, with sectarian violence in Iraq increasing, US Gen. John Abizaid accused Quds Force of supporting "Shi'a death squads" even while the government of Iran pledges support in stabilization.[28] Similarly, in July 2007, Major General Kevin Bergner of the U.S. Army alleged that members of the Quds Force aided in the planning of a raid on U.S. forces in the Iraqi city of Karbala in January 2007.[29]

Former CIA officer Robert Baer asserts the Quds Force uses couriers for all sensitive communications.[30]


2006 detainment in Iraq

On December 24, 2006, American newspaper The New York Times reported that at least four Iranians were captured by American troops in Iraq in the previous few days. According to the article, the US government suspected that two of them were members of Quds Force, which would be some of the first physical proof of Quds Force activity in Iraq.[31] According to The Pentagon, the alleged Quds Force members were "involved in the transfer of IED technologies from Iran to Iraq."[32] The two men had entered Iraq legally, although they were not accredited diplomats. Iraqi officials believed that the evidence against the men was only circumstantial, but on December 29, and under US pressure, the Iraqi government ordered the men to leave Iraq. They were driven back to Iran that day.[33] In mid-January 2007 it was said that the two alleged Quds force officers seized by American forces were Brig. Gen. Mohsen Chirazi and Col. Abu Amad Davari. According to The Washington Post. Chirazi is the third highest officer of Quds Force, making him the highest-ranked Iranian to ever allegedly be held by the US.[34]

American newspaper The New York Sun reported that the documents described Quds Force as not only cooperating with Shi'a death squads, but also with fighters related to al-Qaeda and Ansar al-Sunna. It said that Quds Force had studied the Iraq situation in a similar manner to the US Iraq Study Group, and had concluded that they must increase efforts with Sunni and Shiite groups in order to counter the influence of Sunni states.[35]

On January 11, 2007, US forces raided and detained five employees of the Iranian liaison office in Irbil, Iraq. The US military says the five detainees are connected to the Quds Force.[36][37] The operation has drawn protests from the regional Kurdish government while the Russian government called the detainments unacceptable.[38]

Alireza Nourizadeh, a political analyst of Voice of America, states that their arrests are causing concern in Iranian intelligence because the five alleged officials are knowledgeable of a wide range of Quds Force and Iranian activities in Iraq.[39] According to American ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, one of the men in custody is Quds Force's director of operations.[40]

Iranian and Iraqi officials have maintained the detained men were part of a diplomatic mission in the city of Arbil, Iraq.[41] The five Iranian detainees were still being held at a U.S. prison in Iraq as of July 8, 2007[42]. The U.S. says they are "still being interrogated" and that it has "no plans to free them while they are seen as a security risk in Iraq".[43] Iran says the detainees "are kidnapped diplomats" and that "they are held as hostages".[44]
[edit] Allegations of involvement in Karbala attack
Main article: Karbala provincial headquarters raid

On January 20, 2007, a group of gunmen attacked the Karbala Provincial Joint Coordination Center in Karbala, captured four American soldiers, and subsequently killed them. The attackers passed through an Iraqi checkpoint at around 5:00pm, a total of five black GMC Suburbans, similar to those driven by US security and diplomatic officials. They were also wearing American military uniforms and spoke fluent English. Because of the sophistication of the attack, some analysts have suggested that only a group like Quds Force would be able to plan and carry out such an action.[45] Former CIA officer Robert Baer also suggested that the five Americans were killed by Quds Force in revenge for the Americans holding five Iranians since the January 11 raid in Irbil.[46] It was reported that the US military is investigating whether or not the attackers were trained by Iranian officials;[47] however, no evidence besides the sophistication of the attack has yet been presented.

On July 2, 2007, the US military said that information from captured Hezbollah fighter Ali Moussa Dakdouk established a link between Quds Force and the Karbala raid. The US military claims Dakdouk worked as a liaison between Quds force operatives and the Shia group that carried out the raid. According to the US, Dakdouk said that the Shia group "could not have conducted this complex operation without the support and direction of the Quds force."[48]
[edit] Allegations of support for Iraqi militants

In June 2007 US General Ray Odierno asserted that Iranian support for these Shia militia increased as the US itself implemented the 2007 "troop surge."[49] Two different studies have maintained that approximately half of all foreign insurgents entering Iraq come from Saudi Arabia.[50][51]

In December 2009 evidence uncovered during an investigation by the Guardian newspaper newspaper and Guardian Films linked the Quds force to the kidnappings of 5 Britons from a government ministry building in Baghdad in 2007. Three of the hostages, Jason Creswell, Jason Swindlehurst and Alec Maclachlan, were killed. Alan Mcmenemy's body was never found but Peter Moore was released on 30th December 2009. The investigation uncovered evidence that Moore, 37, a computer expert from Lincoln was targeted because he was installing a system for the Iraqi Government that would show how a vast amount of international aid was diverted to Iran's militia groups in Iraq. One of the alleged groups funded by the Quds force directly is the Righteous League, which emerged in 2006 and has stayed largely in the shadows as a proxy of the al-Quds force. Shia cleric and leading figure of the Righteous League, Qais al-Khazali, was handed over by the US military for release by the Iraqi government on December 29th 2009 as part of the deal that led to the release of Moore. [52]
[edit] Allegations by U.S. President Bush

In a February 14, 2007 news conference US President George W. Bush reiterated his claim that the Quds Force was causing unrest in Iraq, stating

    “I can say with certainty that the Quds force, a part of the Iranian government, has provided these sophisticated IEDs that have harmed our troops. And I'd like to repeat, I do not know whether or not the Quds force was ordered from the top echelons of government. But my point is what's worse -- them ordering it and it happening, or them not ordering it and it happening? And so we will continue to protect our troops. …to say it [this claim] is provoking Iran is just a wrong way to characterize the Commander-in-Chief's decision to do what is necessary to protect our soldiers in harm's way. And I will continue to do so. …Whether Ahmadinejad ordered the Quds force to do this, I don't think we know. But we do know that they're there, and I intend to do something about it. And I've asked our commanders to do something about it. And we're going to protect our troops.…I don't think we know who picked up the phone and said to the Quds force, go do this, but we know it's a vital part of the Iranian government. …What matters is, is that we're responding. The idea that somehow we're manufacturing the idea that the Iranians are providing IEDs is preposterous...My job is to protect our troops. And when we find devices that are in that country that are hurting our troops, we're going to do something about it, pure and simple. …does this mean you're trying to have a pretext for war? No. It means I'm trying to protect our troops.”[53]

Mohsen Sazegara, who was a high-ranking Tehran official before turning against the government, has argued that Ahmadinejad does not control the Guards outside of Iran. "Not only the foreign ministry of Iran; even the president does not know what the Revolutionary Guards does outside of Iran. They directly report to the leader," he said, referring to Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.[54] Although Ali Khamenei is the ultimate person in charge of the Quds Force, George Bush did not mention him.[55] According to Richard Clarke, "Quds force reports directly to the Supreme Ayatollah, through the commander-in-chief of the revolutionary guards."[55]
[edit] Detainment of alleged bomb smuggler

On September 20, 2007 the US military arrested an Iranian during a raid on a hotel in Sulaimaniyah, a city in the Kurdish-controlled north. The military accused the Iranian of being a member of the elite Quds Force and smuggling powerful roadside bombs, including armor-piercing explosively formed penetrators (EFPS), into Iraq. The military said intelligence reports asserted the suspect was involved in the infiltration and training of foreign fighters into Iraq as well.[56]

On September 22, 2007 Iraqi President Jalal Talabani criticized the United States for arresting the Iranian and called for his immediate release. Talabani argued he is a civil servant who was on an official trade mission in the Kurdish Region and stated Iraqi and Kurdish regional government representatives were aware of the man's presence in the country. "I express to you our outrage for these American forces arresting this Iranian civil official visitor without informing or cooperating with the government of the Kurdistan region, which means insult and disregard for its rights," Talabani wrote in a "letter of resentment" to Ryan Crocker, U.S. ambassador to Iraq, and Gen. David Petraeus.[57]

Contnue at:   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quds_Force


Catsoo

Offline Catsoo

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #1 on: July 31, 2011, 12:29:02 AM »
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Qassem Suleimani: the Iranian general 'secretly running' Iraq

Martin Chulov reports on the elusive Iranian with so much Iraqi influence that Baghdadis believe he is controlling the country

There's a story that the new CIA director, David Petraeus, likes to tell which harks back to his days as a four-star general in Iraq.

Early in 2008, during a series of battles between the US and Iraqi army on one side and the Shia militias on the other, Petraeus was handed a phone with a text message from the Iranian general who had by then become his nemesis.

The message came from the head of Iran's elite al-Quds Force, Qassem Suleimani, and was conveyed by a senior Iraqi leader. It read: "General Petraeus, you should know that I, Qassem Suleimani, control the policy for Iran with respect to Iraq, Lebanon, Gaza, and Afghanistan. And indeed, the ambassador in Baghdad is a Quds Force member. The individual who's going to replace him is a Quds Force member."

Petraeus hardly needed to be told. Much of the US military's work with Iraq's Shia Muslims had been undermined by Suleimani and the client militias of the Iranian general's al-Quds force. So too had US government diplomatic efforts elsewhere in the Middle East, especially in Lebanon.

Petraeus last year told a thinktank, the Institute for the Study of War, about the problem Suleimani created for him: "Now, that makes diplomacy difficult if you think that you're going to do the traditional means of diplomacy by dealing with another country's ministry of foreign affairs because in this case, it is not the ministry. It is a security apparatus."

As he prepared for the job of the US's most senior spy, Petraeus would surely have been preparing for further shadow boxing. Suleimani's reputation as the most formidable operator in the region has not diminished in the past three years. By some measures it has actually increased: Syria now also comes within Suleimani's sphere of influence.
Iranian general Qassem Suleimani Qassem Suleimani

The strength of the ties between Suleimani and Iraqi legislators has been revealed during weeks of interviews with key officials, including those who admire him and those who fear the man like no other.

Iraq's former state security minister, Sharwan al-Waeli is one who knows Suleimani well. A formal conversation between the Guardian and al-Waeli last year took on a very different tone as soon as Suleimani's name was mentioned.

The Shia legislator was a known ally of Iran, so much so that he was seen by secularists and Sunnis in parliament as someone prepared to do Iran's bidding. He denied Iran played a pervasive role in Iraq until he was interrupted with a question that Iraqi officials have long prefered to ignore: when was the last time Qassem Suleimani came to the Green Zone, the fortified government district in the heart of Baghdad?

Al-Waeli's left hand trembled slightly and his brow furrowed. "You mean Sayed Qassem Suleimani," he said, giving Suleimani an Arabic honorific reserved for the most esteemed of men. He refused to elaborate.

In Baghdad, no other name invokes the same sort of reaction among the nation's power base – discomfort, uncertainty and fear.

"He is the most powerful man in Iraq without question," Iraq's former national security minister, Mowaffak al-Rubaie, told the newspaper al-Sharq al-Awsat in July 2010. "Nothing gets done without him."

Until now, however, few Iraqis have dared to talk openly about the enigmatic Iranian general, what role he plays in Iraq and how he shapes key agendas like no one else.

"They are too busy dealing with the aftermath," said a senior US official. "He dictates terms then makes things happen and the Iraqis are left managing a situation that they had no input into."

Suleimani's journey to supremacy in Iraq is rooted in the Islamic revolution of 1979, which ousted the Shah and recast Iran as a fundamentalist Shia Islamic state. He rose steadily through the ranks of the Iranian military until 2002 when, months before the US invasion of Iraq, he was appointed to command the most elite unit of the Iranian military – the al-Quds force of the Revolutionary Guards Corp.

The al-Quds force has no equal in Iran. Its stated primary task is to protect the revolution. However, its mandate has also been interpreted as exporting the revolution's goals to other parts of the Islamic world.

Shia communities throughout the region have proved fertile grounds for revolutionary messages and have formed deep and abiding partnerships with the al-Quds force. So too have several Sunni groups opposed to Israel – first among them Hamas in Gaza.

But Iraq has been Suleimani's key arena. The last eight years have witnessed a proxy war between Suleimani's Quds force and the US military, the full effects of which are still being played out, as the US prepares for a full departure from Iraq and Iraq's leaders ponder over whether to ask them to stay.

Arabian heartland

At stake is no less than who gets to shape the destiny of the heartland of Arabia. "His power comes straight from (the country's lead cleric Ayatollah) Khamenei," said one of Iraq's three deputy prime ministers, Saleh al-Mutlaq, a secular Sunni. "It bypasses everyone else, including Ahmadinejad.

"There is a saying in Islam that you should never get angry with your father or mother. The [Shia] interpret that as meaning what (Khamanei, via Suleimani) says has to be respected by every [Shia] inside, or outside Iran.

"All of the important people in Iraq go to see him," said Mutlaq. "People are mesmerised by him – they see him like an angel."

A second MP – a senior member of Prime Minister Nour al-Maliki's inner circle who regularly meets Suleimani in Iran – said the general has only travelled once to Iraq in the past eight years. He described him as "softly spoken and reasonable, very polite". "He is simple when you talk to him. You would not know how powerful he is without knowing his background. His power is absolute and no one can challenge this."

Silver-haired, slight and with a perennial serene smile, Suleimani comes across as the most unlikely of warlords. Those who met him during the one time he traveled to Baghdad at the height of the 2006 sectarian conflict say he walked around the compounds of his two key hosts without bodyguards. The Americans did not know he had been in the capital until he was back in Iran and were deeply unhappy to learn that their arch enemy had been among them.

"He is indeed like Keyser Söze," said a senior US official this week – in reference to the legendary villain in the The Usual Suspects, whose ruthlessness and influence terrified everyone. "Nobody knew who he was and this guy's the same. He is everywhere, but nowhere."

The senior Shia MP added: "He has managed to form links with every single Shia group, on every level. Last year, in the meeting in Damascus that formed the current Iraqi government, he was present at the meeting along with leaders from Syria, Turkey, Iran and Hezbollah. "He forced them all to change their mind and anoint Maliki as leader for a second term."

Over the five years that Maliki has been in power in Iraq, all his key advisers have been granted court in Iran by Suleimani. Iraq's president, a Kurd – Jalal Talabani, has also regularly met the general, sometimes along the border separating both countries.

The Syrian uprising has added a new dimension. The al-Quds Force has been involved in suppressing the Syrian uprising, according to multiple sources inside and outside the country.

The US has slapped personal sanctions on Suleimani and two other generals in the Iranian security forces who it accuses of helping orchestrate the crackdown that is believed to have killed more than 1,600 civilians."

Tehran has heavily invested in the survival of embattled Syrian president Bashar al-Assad, whose ruling Allawite clan has links to Shia Islam. Assad's fall would be a serious strategic setback for Iran and Suleimani. It is perhaps the only part of the region where the general's preferred mix of strategic diplomacy with aggressive operations is being strongly tested.

In the meantime, the work of the al-Quds force continues in Iraq. All but two of the US troops killed in June – the highest number in more than two years, were killed by client militias directly under Suleimani's control, the Keta'ib Hezbollah and the Promised Day Brigades.

"It is clear that the al-Quds force is responsible," said the director general of the intelligence division in Iraq's interior ministry, Hussein Kamal. "There has been a systematic flow of weapons into Iraq for the past eight years. Of course they try to say it is not state-sponsored. But when weapons are flowing from the borders of a sovereign state, it is very clear where the blame lies.

"They are destructive weapons and they cannot deny the responsibility for them."

Another Shia MP said he had personally asked Suleimani why his al-Quds force continued to smuggle weapons, many of which are fired into the Green Zone, where he and most of Maliki's inner circle live. "He just smiled and said it is nothing to do with me," the MP said. "He said he had no idea where the weapons were coming from."

Suleimani has been variously described by those who dislike him – Iraq's Sunnis, and those who have spent years trying to get his measure – as a "talented extortionist" and a highly skilled wheeler-dealer.

US officials who have spent years trying to disrupt the work of his loyalists say they would like to meet him, while at the same time being puzzled as to his objectives.

"I would simply ask him what he wants from us," said a senior US military official. In addition to the soldiers killed this year, the US ambassador in Baghdad, James Jeffrey, said last summer that Iranian proxies accounted for roughly a quarter of US combat casualties in Iraq – around 1,100 deaths and many thousands more injuries.

Despite this, the US has landed few public blows on Suleimani's close circle.

In March 2007, the British SAS captured a senior Hezbollah official, Ali Moussa Daqduq, who had allegedly planned an operation that killed seven soldiers in Karbala. The same year, US troops also captured two men in the Kurdish north who they believed were al-Quds leaders. Apart from that, the trophy cabinet remains bare – at least publicly. More troubling than the apparent dearth of tactical victories is how the rest of the year will play out.

The US – and some key neighbouring Sunni states – believe Iran's strategy in Iraq as the conflict winds down is to keep the country in a permanent but manageable state of chaos.

"They keep it on simmer and turn it up and down when they want to," said one Lebanese official in Beirut.

The senior US military spokesman in Iraq, Major General Jeffrey Buchanan agreed. "Their overall strategy has been to keep [Iraq] isolated from the rest of its neighbours and from the US, because that makes it likely that it will depend on Iran. They want Iraq to play a subordinate, weak role."

Only Iraq's lawmakers can stop the master-client relationship from becoming entrenched here. It's a task that Kurdish legislator in the national parliament, Mahmoud Othman, fears may prove to be beyond his colleagues.

"Qassem Suleimani is the key man to every decision taken in Iraq," he said.

"It is a shame to have such a man playing such a role in this country. There should be a relationship between equals like normal relations with normal states."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jul/28/qassem-suleimani-iran-iraq-influence


Catsoo

Offline parthenon

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #2 on: July 31, 2011, 03:05:03 PM »
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Quote
"He is indeed like Keyser Söze,"

Now there's a name I haven't heard in a long time!

PS, I'm back to 14 points again. Thanks guys!
http://demagocracy.livejournal.com
http://asymmetronix.livejournal.com

"Bunker"Bill, aka the "Member Formerly Known as Parthenon" (MFKAP)

Offline berislac

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #3 on: August 01, 2011, 01:20:34 PM »
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Now you are on fifteen.Keyser Soze.What a great movie that is.

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #4 on: August 01, 2011, 01:28:11 PM »
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14 :)

Edit: up-voted again in the spirit of Ramazan.
« Last Edit: August 01, 2011, 01:31:08 PM by Barberry »

Offline berislac

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #5 on: August 01, 2011, 01:31:22 PM »
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 :D.So you do not like this movie.But still must admit Kevin Spacey was good in that role.Keyser Sose. 8)

Offline parthenon

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #6 on: August 02, 2011, 10:31:04 AM »
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Odakle ti ideja da se me ni taj film ne svidja? On je jednostavno briljantan!


...don't bother, it's just an edited Google translation I'm afraid.

Offline berislac

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #7 on: August 02, 2011, 01:56:52 PM »
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I never thought to see Croatian on this forum. :)It was close enough.Again +1 on reputation for your Croatian post.Lets get back on the topic,in Catsoo post I so there is mention of Quds forces being active in Bosnia war:That is true their main headquarters was in city of Mostar.There where responsible for arms shipment for Bosnian army.The Croatian port city of Ploce was main transit port of all weapons:Mainly small arms hand grenades  rpg-s mortars but in 1994there where even some armored vehicles BTR 60.I know that because that was common thing in Croatia in these days and my father was officer in the army and he knows that too.Croatian authorities in these days was giving Iranian operatives fake IDs and the weapons was even accompany by Croatian military to the border where it was handed to Bosnians.Croatia was given money from Iran on exchange for these services.Although it is possible that some generals from Croatian military was in that game and the government was not informed.I am preparing a big story on all of this events but it is hard to find anything on english all the articles are on Croatian or Serbian and google translation is coma.But I am very close and soon it will be posted.

Offline parthenon

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #8 on: August 03, 2011, 10:10:15 AM »
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Wasn't there an arms embargo at the time, enforced by NATO navies?

Croatia somehow managed to get hold of heavy weapons despite the embargo. Any new details about the role of former Argentinian prez Carlos Menem, honoured by Croatia with the "King Tomislav Cross" no less?


As to Ploce BTW, I had a stopover there on my way to Dubrovnik ("a tourist trap unfortunately"... complained yet another tourist) and was surprised by its "unmediterranean" (compared to Biokovo), almost SE-Asian like Neretva estuary. The Cetina at Omish is smaller but also very scenic!
 

Offline berislac

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #9 on: August 03, 2011, 01:39:23 PM »
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There was embargo on weapons but somewhat weak.Argentina was main arms provider but in fact the Ustase immigration was the biggest arms provider.They save our buts by razing the money and buying the weapons which where transfer to Croatia in all possible ways:by ships small airplanes river boats oil tans even personal cars.There is strong bond between Croatia and Argentina even today.Bask ETA organization was also the arms dealer and there was around 200 their fighters present in Croatia.The Omis and that part of the country around Neretva river is indeed similar to Asia.But Hercegovina region in Bosnia is even more similar to Asia.You where in Dubrovnik?Have you ever been to Zadar?

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #10 on: August 05, 2011, 03:52:59 PM »
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Sorry, never been to Zadar. Stopped at Split and then went back down the coast but on another occasion I visited Istria (Rijeka down to Rabac) with flash visits to Bashka (Krk), Pula and Rovinj (marvelous country though Split, Pula and Rabac were a bit underwheling I must admit.. saw the tobacco factory in Rovinj you mentioned earlier, BTW). If I had some spare change I'd buy a condo in Rijeka and become a lifetime patron of the local "Hemingway Bar" ;-)

OK, back to the Quds Force...

Offline Catsoo

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #11 on: November 07, 2011, 10:08:41 PM »
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Quote
ژنرال آفتاب‌ سوخته‌اي كه كابوس آمريكايي‌ها شد


"ژنرال سلیمانی" این "مجاهد" تحت تعقیب شیطان بزرگ و نوچه هایش، برای فرزندان این آب و خاک، همان "حاج قاسم"، بسیجی آفتاب سوخته کرمانی است که گوش به فرمان ولایت مطلقه فقیه است و چشم به آزادی قدس شریف دارد.
به گزارش گروه جهاد و مقاومت مشرق، روز اول خرداد ماه سال 1390، حوزه علمیه حقانی در قم، به مناسبت سالگرد آزاد سازی خرمشهر ، مراسم بزرگداشتی را برگزار کرد که میهمان اصلی آن، مردی میانه سال، با موهای جوگندمی، نگاهی نافذ و قدی متوسط بود. این مرد در بخشی از سخنرانی خود گفت:
«انقلاب های اجتماعی در خاورمیانه و شمال آفریقا ،بهترین فرصت ها را برای انقلاب ما فراهم کرده است. امروز شکست یا پیروزی ایران در مهران و خرمشهر رقم نمی خورد؛ مرزهای ما فراتر رفته، ما باید شاهد پیروزی در مصر، عراق، لبنان و سوریه باشیم؛ اینها آثار انقلاب اسلامی است.»
طلابی که تازه وارد سالن اجتماعات می شدند وقتی از هم درسان دیگر خود درباره نام سخنران مراسم پرس و جو می کردند، این گونه پاسخ می گرفتند:
«حاج قاسم سلیمانی، فرمانده نیروی قدس»
کمتر کسی در ایران بود که بداند، تنها دو روز قبل از این سخنرانی، باراک اوباما، رئيس جمهور آمریکا، نام قاسم سلیمانی را شخصاً به لیست افراد تحت تحریم ایالات متحده افزوده بود. البته نه باراک اوباما، نه وزیر دفاعِ او، نه رئیس سازمان سیا و نه هیچ کدام از رجال سیاسی و امنیتی آمریکا، صاحب این نام را نمی شناختند. برای آنان قاسم سلیمانی تنها شبحی هولناک بود که یک معنا را تداعی می کرد: «کابوس»

 بخش فارسی دائرة المعارف عمومی «ویکی پدیا» در معرفی «نیروی قدس» نوشته است:

«نیروی قدس یا سپاه قدس نیروی ویژه و زیرشاخه‌ای از نیروهای پنج‌گانه سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامی در ایران است که مسؤول فعالیت‌های نظامی برون‌مرزی را دارد. فرمانده کنونی آن، قاسم سلیمانی است. برخی منابع نفرات این نیرو را 15000 تن تخمين زده‌اند. برخی تحلیل‌گران نیروی قدس را یکی از بهترین نیروهای ویژه در جهان دانسته‌اند.
نیروهای قدس در جنگ ایران و عراق به‌عنوان نیروی مرزی سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامی تشکیل شد و فعالیتش را با حمایت از کردها برای مقابله با صدام در زمان جنگ ادامه داد. همچنین با حمایت از احمدشاه مسعود در جنگ شوروی در افغانستان و بعدها در مقابله با طالبان دامنه فعالیتش را گسترش داد. همچنین گزارش‌هایی از نیروهای قدس مبنی بر حمایت از جنگجوهای اسلام‌گرای بوسنیایی در جنگ یوگسلاوی در دست است. مأموریت اصلی نیروی قدس، سازماندهی، پروراندن، تجهیزکردن و سرمایه‌گذاری بر جنبش‌های انقلابی اسلامی است.»

«ویکی پدیا» در معرفی فرمانده « نیروی قدس» این گونه نوشته است:

«قاسم سلیمانی از فرماندهان سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامی و فرمانده نیروی قدس سپاه است. وی بارها از جانب آمریکا متهم به دخالت در امور عراق شده‌است. واشنگتن پست وی را از مهمترین سیاست گذار سیاستهای خارجی ایران می‌داند.»

گرچه هیچ شکی در معاند بودن مدیران و گردانندگان دائرة المعارف به اصطلاح مستقل و عمومی «ویکی پدیا» وجود ندارد اما نباید از این حقیقت چشم پوشید که تمام اطلاعات مفید جهان غرب درباره «نیروی قدس» و فرمانده آن، چیزی بیش از همین چند خط ، به اضافه پنج قطعه عکس کوچک از قاسم سلیمانی و مشتی اطلاعات کاملاً بی اساس و غیر مستند عجیب و دور از ذهن سالم درباره جزئیات یگان ها و فرماندهان این نیرو، نیست.

منابع خارجی و خصوصاً غربی، ادعاهای حیرت انگیزی را درباره نیروی قدس و فرمانده آن مطرح می کنند. تبلیغات غرب درباره فرمانده نیروی قدس بعد از اشغال عراق توسط آمریکا به اوج خود رسید و تا جایی پیش رفت که مقامات سیاسی و امنیتی یانکی صراحتاً نام «قاسم سلیمانی» را به زبان می آوردند و در آخرین مورد نیز «روئل مارک گرچت» کارشناس سابق بخش خاورمیانه سیا و عضو بنیاد «دفاع از دموکراسی‌ها» افاضه فرمودند: «سپاه پاسداران ایران را نمی‌توان مرعوب کرد مگر اینکه اعضای آن را بکشیم؛  قاسم سلیمانی، فرمانده سپاه قدس را باید بکشیم.»

در نمونه ای دیگر، روزنامه معتبر آمریکایی «مک کلثی» با بیان این مطلب نوشت:

«یکی از قدرتمندترین چهره‌های موجود در عراق، یکی از مقامات دولتی این کشور، یک رهبر شبه نظامیان، یک روحانی بلندپایه و یا یک فرمانده یا دیپلمات آمریکایی نیست. این فرد، یک ژنرال ایرانی است که هم‌اکنون بسیار پرنفوذتر از همه مقامات نامبرده شده است. ژنرال «قاسم سلیمانی» فرمانده نیروهای قدس، شاخه فعال سپاه پاسداران ایران در عراق است که مأموریت این شاخه، گسترش نفوذ ایران در خاورمیانه است. سلیمانی به عنوان مرد شماره یک تهران در عراق، عامل حمایت نظامی و مالی از گروه‌های گوناگون عراقی بوده و سعی در ناکام گذاشتن تلاش‌های آمریکا برای ایجاد دولتی متمایل به غربی‌ها پس از سقوط صدام را دارد.به گفته مقامات آمریکایی، سلیمانی انتخاب سیاستمداران متمایل به ایران را تضمین و همواره با رهبران ارشد عراقی دیدار و از چهره‌های شیعه عراق دفاع می‌کند.

یکی از مقامات ارشد عراقی که نخواست نامش فاش شود، می‌گوید: ما، آمریکایی‌ها و دیگر عراقی‌ها، چه او را دوست داشته باشیم یا نه، باید اذعان کنیم که او محور سیاست‌های ایران در عراق است. نیروهای قدس همه نقش‌های سیاسی، نظامی، ‌اطلاعاتی و اقتصادی را ایفا می‌کنند؛ آن ها سیاست خارجی ایران در عراق هستند.»

روزنامه مذکور در سی‌ام مارس 2008 ميلادي گزارش داده بود:

وی در ژانویه سال 2005، زمانی به عراق آمد که عراقی‌ها برای نخستین بار پس از سقوط صدام، به پای صندوق‌های رأی می‌رفتند.در حالی که آمریکا حمایت شدیدی از نخست‌وزیر شدن ایاد علاوی می‌کرد، سلیمانی فعالیت خود را در حمایت از شیعیان طرفدار ایران آغازکرد و به شدت به راهنمایی آنان برای پیروزی در انتخابات پرداخت. پس از انتخابات، بوش انگشت‌های رنگی مردم عراق را پیروزی بزرگی برای دموکراسی دانست، اما علاوی و متحدانش شکست خوردند و در عوض، متحدان ایران وارد میدان شدند. یک سال بعد، در آوریل سال 2006 ایران باز هم نگران بن بست مذاکرات برای برگزیدن نخست‌وزیر جدید عراق پس از دومین دور انتخابات مجلس عراق شد و این بار سلیمانی به منطقه سبز رفت تا با سیاستمداران شیعه مذاکره کرده و تضمین کند که انتخاب نهایی عراق، مورد پذیرش تهران نیز هست و در پایان هم عراقی‌ها بر سر نخست‌وزیری نوری المالکی به توافق رسیدند.
در این باره زلمای خلیل‌زاد نیز می‌گوید: همان‌قدر که مقامات آمریکایی سلیمانی را به جنگ افروزی متهم می‌کنند، او در ایجاد صلح نیز برای رسیدن به اهدافش فعال بوده است. او ماه گذشته در پایان دادن به درگیری‌های نیروهای مقتدی صدر و نیروهای عراقی در بصره، نقشی حیاتی داشت؛ تهدیدی که می‌رفت ناآرامی‌های آن گسترش یافته و پیامدهای وخیمی به ویژه برای منابع نفتی عراق در پی داشته باشد.
در نشست مهم دیگری که در نقطه مرزی ایران و عراق در مریوان انجام شد و به گفته منبعی که نخواست نامش فاش شود، در این دیدار، جلال طالبانی، درخواستی به ژنرال قاسم داده است، مبنی بر این‌که نبردها و ناآرامی‌ها متوقف شود. به گفته این مقامات، سلیمانی نیز روز پس از آن، پیامی می‌فرستد و بلافاصله نبردها متوقف می‌شود...»

يك مورد ديگر از موضع گيري هاي خارجي درباره فرمانده نيروي قدس، مربوط به «شمعون پرز» رئيس جمهور فعلي رژيم صهيونيستي است و چند ماهي است كه اين جمله را به او منتسب مي كنند: «خاورميانه، روي انگشت اشاره قاسم سليماني مي چرخد.»



این دعاوی بی مستند و گاه غير معقول، به همان اندازه که ارزش خاصی ندارد، برای یانکی های گاوچران سوژه ای مطلوب برای داستان پردازی و دشمن تراشی های هالیوودی است. امروزه آمریکا با نام «قاسم سلیمانی» همان گونه عمل می کند که پیش از این با نام «عماد مغنیه» می کرد. هنوز بسیاری به یاد دارند که در سال 1366، وقتی ناوگان آمریکا در خلیج فارس، در جنگ رو در رو با پاسداران نیروی دریایی سپاه به فرماندهی شهید «نادر مهدوی» دچار استیصال گردید، مقامات امنیتی آمریکا اعلام کردند  که «عماد مغنیه» در قایق های تندروی سپاه در خلیج فارس دیده شده است.
 با توجه به چنین سابقه ای، عجیب نیست که همزمان با اوج گیری ناکامی های نظامی آمریکا در عراق و سونامیِ «دیکتاتور براندازی» در خاورمیانه، «عمو سام» به دنبال شبحی باشد که با داستان سرایی درباره ی آن، فضاحت های خود را در افکار عمومی توجیه نماید. به این ترتیب از این پس، «سوپرمن»، «بت من»، «جیمز باند»، «مردان ایکس»، «شگفت انگیزها» و مأمور «جک بائر» [قهرمان سریال 24] باید در افغانستان و عراق و یمن و سومالی و ... به دنبال «ژنرال سلیمانی» بگردند و این «اَبَرجنگجوی بنیادگرا» را به چنگ بیاورند و سرش را برای رئیس جمهور آمریکا هدیه ببرند. زهی خیال باطل. ( دقت كنيد به شباهت عجيبِ سناريوي احمقانه آمريكا درباره طرح ترور سفير عربستان در آمريكا توسط نيروي قدس با داستان سريال هاي24 و «يونيت».)
حقیقت آن است که به رغم این رؤیاپردازی های رقت بارِهالیوودي، «حاج قاسم سلیمانی» ( هیولای افسانه ای و بدمن داستان های کمیک استریپ که امنیت آمریکایی ها را بر هم می زند) برای تمام ایرانیان انقلابی، یک بسیجی تمام عیار در میان سپاهِ بسیجیان ولایت است که مانند بسیاری از هم رزمانش، تمام حیات خود را از ابتدای جوانی، وقف نهضت حضرت روح الله کرده است.
قاسم سلیمانی، نوجوان کرمانی بود که با بنایی تأمین معاش می کرد. جنگ که آغاز شد، خشت و گل و شاغول را کنار گذاشت و اسلحه به دست گرفت. زیاد طول نکشید که قاسم سلیمانی توان تشکیلاتی و رزمی خود را به فرماندهان جوان سپاه که سن و سالشان زیاد با او فاصله نداشت نشان داد. به این ترتیب قاسم سلیمانی به فرماندهی بسیجیان هم ولایتی خود رسید و پس از مدتی لشکری از کارگرزادگان کرمانی تشکیل داد که نام آن را «لشکر 41 ثارالله» نهادند. این لشکر در طول سال های دفاع مقدس، درخشش اعجاب آوری از خود نشان داد نام خود را در تاریخ ایران و اسلام جاودانه نمود.
پس از پایان جنگ هشت ساله، لشکر 41 ثارالله تحت فرماندهی سردار حاج قاسم سلیمانی که در معرکه مرزهای جنوب آبدیده شده بود، به زادگاه خود یعنی کویر تفتیده ایران بازگشت و وظیفه ایجاد امنیت و مبارزه با شرارت های اشرار هدایت شده از مرزهای شرقی کشور را بر عهده گرفت. این واقعیتی غیر قابل تردید است که هنوز هم مردم کرمان و سیستان و بلوچستان، دوران حضور قاسم سلیمانی در مناطق شرقی و جنوب شرقی کشور را از امن ترین ایام زندگی خود می دانند.
توانایی نبوغ آمیز قاسم سلیمانی در شناخت بافت مردمی خاص مناطق کویری و نوع زندگی عشیره ای حاکم در آن نواحی و تدابیر بی نظیرش در مدیریت امنیتی چنین مختصاتی، او را به نگین درخشانی در میان یادگاران سال های دفاع و حماسه تبدیل نمود. قاسم سلیمانی که خود پرورش یافته شن های کویر و بزرگ شده رزق و روزی کارگری بود ، با اقتداری بسیجی که از سالیان جنگ تحمیلی به ارث برده بود ، عشیره ها و قبایل کویر را به انسجام و هماهنگی کم نظیری رساند و به مدد این تدبیر خود ، توانست اشرار و اراذل تحریک شده از خارج را ، از پشتیبانی داخلی و فضای تنفسی بومی محروم کرده و تنگنای سختی را بر آنان تحمیل نماید.
در سال 1379 بود که فرماندهی کل قوا ، حضرت آیت الله خامنه ای ، این بسیجی جان برکف ولایت را از کرمان به تهران فراخواند و او را به فرماندهی یکی از قوای پنجگانه سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامی ، که در میان غربی ها از آن با نام «سپاه قدس» یاد می شود منصوب کرد. از آن زمان تا امروز ، سردار قاسم سلیمانی کمترین جلوه را در عرصه رسانه های دیداری و شنیداری داشته است. گرچه مردم ایران و همرزمان او و هم ولایتی هایش همواره شاهد حضور او در عرصه حیات عادی در هیئات ، مجالس عمومی و خصوصی خود هستند اما همین غیبت طولانی در عرصه ی رسانه های عمومی، ایشان را برای غربی ها به شبحی مرموز تبدیل کرده است که سایه وار در کمین دشمنان نظام اسلامی می نشیند و ناگهان چون صاعقه بر سرشان فرود می آید.
گرچه با فرض درست بودن این فرضیات غربی ها، چنین برداشتی از شخصیت «قاسم سلیمانی» برای آنان ترس آفرین است اما بی شک برای همه ایرانیان، وجود سربازی دلیر با چنین توانمندی هايي، بسيار غرورانگیز است.
«ژنرال سلیمانی»، این «مجاهد» تحت تعقیب شیطان بزرگ و نوچه هایش، برای فرزندان این آب و خاک ، همان «حاج قاسم» بسیجی آفتاب سوخته کرمانی است که گوش به فرمان ولایت مطلقه فقیه و چشم به آزادی قدس شریف دارد و اگر جنگ برای بسیاری از همرزمان او در سال 1367 به صورت پایان یافت، برای او آشکارا تا امروز تداوم داشته است و او را باید بسیجی ای با 360 ماه سابقه حضور در منطقه عملیاتی دانست.
امروز امت اسلامی و خصوصا ملت مسلمان ایران، قدر دانِ خدمات حسینی این سردار عاشورایی است که خواب را از چشمان یزیدیان زمان ربوده است و گرچه هزاران نفر چون او در خیل سپاهیان روح الله وجود دارند که دست کمی از «حاج قاسم» ندارند اما از خداوند متعال خواستاریم که جبهه نبرد اسلام ناب محمدی(ص) با کفر و شرک جهانی و اسلام آمریکایی را تا قيام امام عصر(عج) از حضور چنین سرداران پاکباخته ای خالی نکند. ان شاءالله

محمدیاسر رجبي
آبان 1390
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Offline Catsoo

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #12 on: November 13, 2011, 02:41:44 PM »
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Quds organization mission

Quote
ماموریت «نیروی قدس» به روایت فرمانده کل قوا


مأموريت سوم، همان چيزى است كه امروز سپاه پاسداران در قالب سپاه قدس يا نيروى قدس، از آن ياد مى‌كند و امام بزرگوارمان تشكيل هسته‌هاى مردمى حزب‌اللَّه در سراسر جهان را يكى از آرزوهاى خود و يكى از دستورهاى كار آينده‌ى انقلاب اسلامى در سطح جهان قرار دادند
به گزارش گروه جهاد و مقاومت مشرق ، مقام معظم رهبری ، حضرت آیت الله العظمی خامنه ای در ششمین ماه از زعامت خود بر نظام جمهوری اسلامی، طی سخنانی که در دیدار با دانشجویان ششمین دوره فرماندهی و ستاد دانشگاه امام حسین(صلوات الله علیه )   ایراد فرمودند ، به بازگویی وظایف سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامی پرداختند که بخشی از این سخنان به «نیروی قدس سپاه پاسداران» اختصاص داشت. نظر به اهمیت این فرمایشات ،خصوصا در مقطع کنونی ، مشرق قسمتی از این سخنرانی مهم را بازخوانی می نماید :

بارها گفته‌ايم و ان‌شاءاللَّه اين گفته را در عمل و برنامه‌ها و آيين‌نامه‌ها به صورت دقيقى پياده خواهيم كرد كه مأموريت اصلى سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامى، عبارت از دفاع مسلحانه از انقلاب و نظام جمهورى اسلامى است. اين، مأموريت اصلى سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامى است؛ همچنان‌كه مأموريت اصلى ارتش جمهورى اسلامى، دفاع از مرزهاى كشور است. البته، در آن وقتى كه تهاجم شديدى نسبت به مرزها تحقق پيدا بكند - مثل دوران هشت‌ساله‌ى جنگ - سپاه پاسداران با همه‌ى ساز و برگ و امكانات، به مرزها خواهد شتافت و تكليف خودش را كه حفاظت از انقلاب و نظام است، در مرزها انجام خواهد داد.

به نظر من، سه مأموريت عمده براى سپاه وجود دارد كه اينها را بايد توجه كنند:

اول، دفاع مسلحانه از انقلاب و نظام اسلامى است كه اين، مأموريت محورى سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامى است.
دوم، سازماندهى و آموزش ارتش بيست ميليونى است. اين ارتش كه اول بار، امام عزيزمان در اولين ماههاى انقلاب بر زبان مباركشان جارى كردند و از آن ياد نمودند، بايد وجود خارجى پيدا كند. سخنان امام بزرگوار و فقيد عزيز ما، نبايد مثل امواجى در فضا گم بشود و بتدريج محو گردد. بعكس، اين سخنان بايد روزبه‌روز، به عمل نزديكتر شود. نبايد روزبه‌روز كم‌رنگ بشود؛ بلكه بايد پُررنگتر بشود و تجسم و تبلور پيدا كند.[...]

مأموريت سوم، همان چيزى است كه امروز سپاه پاسداران در قالب سپاه قدس يا نيروى قدس، از آن ياد مى‌كند و امام بزرگوارمان تشكيل هسته‌هاى مردمى حزب‌اللَّه در سراسر جهان را يكى از آرزوهاى خود و يكى از دستورهاى كار آينده‌ى انقلاب اسلامى در سطح جهان قرار دادند. بى‌شك، سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامى، در اين مورد مأموريتى خواهد داشت.
ما نمى‌گوييم به جايى لشكركشى مى‌كنيم و در امور ديگران دخالت خواهيم كرد؛ اما مى‌گوييم كه نيروى نظامىِ منظمِ انقلابىِ مجرّب در اولين كشورى كه با انقلاب اسلامى پديد آمده است، يقيناً در قبال هسته‌هاى مسلح حزب‌اللَّه در سراسر جهان خالى از مسؤوليت نيست. كيفيت اين مسؤوليت، بايستى به تناسب و مقتضيات روشن بشود.

سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامى، اگر بخواهد اين سه مأموريت را درست انجام بدهد، اولاً احتياج دارد كه سازماندهى خود را هر چه قويتر و مستحكمتر بكند. اين، بار سنگينى است كه فقط مى‌تواند بر دوش يك سازمان مستحكم و يك بنيه‌ى قوىِ سازمانى قرار بگيرد ولاغير. بايد سازماندهى سپاه هرچه قويتر بشود. به گسترش بى‌رويه و كمّى اعتقادى ندارم. به توان بالاى كيفى، اعتقاد دارم. آن چيزى مملكت را نجات خواهد داد و انقلاب را به صورت مسلحانه حفظ خواهد كرد و براى حراست از آن، پشتگرمى و اميد مسؤولان و ملت را تشكيل خواهد داد، يك سازمان متشكل و نيرومند و قوى است، نه يك سازمان گسترده‌يى كه على‌رغم گسترش، بنيه‌ى كافى و توان لازم را نداشته باشد.
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Catsoo

Offline TheFollower

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #13 on: January 15, 2012, 11:15:37 AM »
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seriously.....western press!!

They love to create personalities, that one would love to hate.
"These days Iran seems to be blamed for pretty much everything except Global Warming."  - Prof. Mohammad Murandi (Uni. of Tehran)



Offline Bolbol

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #14 on: January 15, 2012, 11:20:29 AM »
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We don't know the first thing about Quds force, all we know is what we are told by the Western media.


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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #15 on: January 15, 2012, 11:49:33 AM »
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That is the most AWESOMEST part ever :-)

Offline Catsoo

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #16 on: January 16, 2012, 05:14:57 PM »
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I removed the video!
Catsoo
« Last Edit: January 20, 2012, 04:01:34 PM by Catsoo »

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #17 on: January 16, 2012, 07:46:42 PM »
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^ Those are not the Quds force. Most likely they are Saberin, IRGC fast response team.

Offline Nonbarbari

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #18 on: January 16, 2012, 08:34:40 PM »
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Yupp we have Saberin Froce there... They are like delta force if I´m not wrong..
You are once again threatened my beloved homeland,
I shall defend you until the last breath,
We embrace death if that's what it takes to save you, we have lived by Bushido code all along.

Offline Catsoo

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #19 on: January 17, 2012, 03:34:30 AM »
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I remove it the the content is confirmed to be different than the title.

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Online rouz

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Re: The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #20 on: January 17, 2012, 06:29:17 AM »
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I remove it the the content is confirmed to be different than the title.

Catsoo



Well, this is why the thread is stupid to begin with. Nothing here is confirmed by the force itself and is merely speculation. To the best of our knowledge, the Quds force does not have military branch in uniform. This is an old IRGC video re-posted on Youtube by some person.

Generally, one assumes the poster has the burden of proof. But here is the full video:

Small | Large
!

Small | Large
!
« Last Edit: January 17, 2012, 06:48:21 AM by rouz »

Offline Catsoo

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The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #21 on: April 04, 2012, 04:19:53 PM »
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Iran's Spymaster Counters U.S. Moves in the Mideast

By JAY SOLOMON And SIOBHAN GORMAN

In the smoldering geopolitical feud between the U.S. and Iran, spymaster Major-General Qasem Soleimani is emerging as director of the Islamic Republic's effort to spread its influence abroad and bedevil the West.

In January, Gen. Soleimani—commander of Iran's elite overseas forces—traveled in secret to Damascus to meet with Syria's president and architect of that nation's bloody and continuing Arab Spring crackdown. At the meeting, Gen. Soleimani agreed to send more military aid and reaffirmed Iran's close friendship, according to U.S. and Arab officials.

In February, American officials detected four Iranian jets ferrying munitions to Syria. On Sunday the Obama administration announced it would start providing communications equipment to Syria's opposition, while Arab states committed to paying the salaries of rebel fighters.

While it is tough to know the precise inner workings of Iran's political machine, Gen. Soleimani's role in Syria is the latest indication that he ranks among the most important figures driving Iranian policy.

Senior U.S. and Arab officials say it was Gen. Soleimani's idea to harass and bleed American forces for years in Iraq by arming Shiite militias there. The general's elite Qods Force of soldiers and spies oversees Iran's support for groups fighting Israel, including Hezbollah and Hamas.

Israel publicly blames the Qods Force for a string of assassination attempts on Israeli diplomats; U.S. officials have publicly blamed Iran and privately point a finger at the Qods Force. Last October, the U.S. Justice Department indicted Gen. Soleimani in the Southern District of New York for his purported role in a bomb plot aimed at killing the Saudi Arabian ambassador at a cafe in Washington, D.C. Iran has denied the charges.

U.S. officials believe Mr. Soleimani's approval underlies any Qods Force operations outside Iran. They have tied Iran's Qods Force to recent bombings in Thailand and India, as well as alleged plotting in Azerbaijan.

"He's a deep strategic thinker, but believes he should be a martyr" for Iran's Islamic revolution, said Mowwafak al-Rubaie, Iraq's former national security adviser, who has met Gen. Soleimani three times in Tehran in recent years.

Lightly bearded, 55 years old and often wearing a collarless business shirt or military uniform, Gen. Soleimani has a calm presence about him, according to people who have met him. American and British intelligence officials draw comparisons between the real-life Iranian general and the fictional Soviet spymaster Karla, of John le Carre's Cold War novels. Global chess masters both, their goal is to blunt U.S. advances while aligning with Washington's adversaries.

At times, Gen. Soleimani has communicated directly with American military planners. In early 2008, Gen. Soleimani passed a message to then-commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, Gen. David Petraeus, via Iraqi politician Ahmad Chalabi. "General Petraeus, you should know that I, Qasem Soleimani, control the policy for Iran with respect to Iraq, Lebanon, Gaza and Afghanistan," he said, according to an official familiar with the incident.

His leadership of the Qods Force, the international arm of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, gives him a unique portfolio of duties, U.S. and Mideast officials say: intelligence operative, diplomat, foreign-policy strategist, battlefield commander and, allegedly, terrorism planner.

"I see [Gen. Soleimani] as sort of the evil genius behind all of the activities that Qods Force has done, all the expansion of Iranian influence," said Richard Clarke, counterterrorism czar for Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.

Attempts to reach Gen. Soleimani through Iran's mission to the United Nations were unsuccessful. Tehran denies any role in supporting international terrorism or providing arms to the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Iran accuses Israel of overseeing the assassinations of five Iranian nuclear scientists in recent years, a charge the Jewish state has neither denied nor confirmed.

Gen. Soleimani grew up in a poor family in Iran's southeast Kerman province, an area known for the central government's limited writ and for the power of its local tribes, according to researchers who have studied the commander's rise. As a young man he worked at menial construction jobs before joining the Revolutionary Guards, the armed-services branch responsible for enforcing the ideology behind Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution.

Within the Revolutionary Guards, he joined the Qods Force—the organization he now oversees. His background prepared him for his future operating in the tribal societies of Iraq and Afghanistan, said Ali Alfoneh, who studies Gen. Soleimani as a researcher at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington.

Gen. Soleimani spent his early years in the Qods Force combating Central Asian narcotics smugglers and the Taliban government in Afghanistan. Gen. Soleimani took over the Qods Force in the late 1990s after establishing a reputation for his fighting during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, according to Mr. Alfoneh and other academics.

In the months following the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks on the U.S., he emerged as a surprising U.S. ally, says Hossein Mousavian, a Princeton University-based researcher who served on Iran's Supreme National Security Council with Gen. Soleimani at that time. Gen. Soleimani was among those on the council who advocated cooperating with the U.S. to topple the Taliban. Iranian and American diplomats held regular meetings to devise ways to bring now-President Hamid Karzai to power, according to diplomats from both countries.

"Qasem is a very pragmatic commander," said Mr. Mousavian, who fell out with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad following the diplomat's role as an Iranian nuclear negotiator in the early 2000s. "He's willing to cooperate with the West if it serves Iran's interests."

Messrs. Mousavian, Al-Rubaie and others who have met the general describe him as both religious and pragmatic, but differ on his ultimate willingness to make peace with the U.S. Mr. Mousavian says the general wants the West to recognize Tehran's role as a Mideast power. Others see him as a revolutionary who will never accept rapprochement with the "Great Satan."

The fragile post-9/11 alliance between Iran and the U.S. collapsed with the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. Both Washington and Tehran viewed Saddam Hussein as a threat but had very different views on who or what should succeed him.

Iran wanted the U.S. to quickly withdraw from Iraq and install a provisional government led by Shiites and Kurds with ties to Tehran. Instead, the Bush administration set up a formal occupation force and a military presence that stayed in Iraq for seven years.

The U.S.'s military occupation set the stage for what U.S. and Iraqi officials say was the Qods Force's aiding and arming of the militias in Iraq that harassed U.S. and allied forces there for much of the past decade. Beginning in 2004, American and Iraqi intelligence detected fighters traveling over Iraq's southeastern border into Iran for training with Qods Force and Hezbollah operatives. The Iraqis were schooled in small arms and roadside bombs, which became the biggest killer of American soldiers during the war.

The Iran-trained fighters also received religious schooling and were advised to follow the teachings of the founder of the modern Islamic state of Iran, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, according to fighters who were captured and interrogated by the U.S. military, Pentagon transcripts indicate. A number of the trainees told their American questioners that they had no love for the Qods Force or the Iranian system, but needed their assistance to fight the U.S. occupation.

As the battle against the militias wore on, U.S. officials voiced frustration that many of their allies within Iraq—including Iraq's president, Jalal Talabani—maintained their long-standing ties to Gen. Soleimani. Kurdish leaders such as Mr. Talabani cooperated with Iran during Saddam Hussein's rule in an effort to obtain independence from Baghdad.

"General Petraeus mentioned that we continue to see on average one rocket and one [armor-piercing bomb] attack daily," a State Department diplomat wrote from Baghdad in 2009, according to a cable obtained by the Internet site WikiLeaks. "The next time Talabani spoke to Qasem Soleimani, he might pass along that we are concerned about Iranian actions," the cable said.

In addition to Mr. Talabani, other close allies of the Bush administration also knew Gen. Soleimani, including Mr. Chalabi, the Iraqi Shiite politician who shared a hatred of Saddam Hussein with the Iranians. In the weeks before the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Mr. Chalabi traveled between Washington and Tehran and briefed Gen. Soleimani on U.S. objectives, according to Francis Brooke, an aide to the Iraqi politician.

At times, Gen. Soleimani's Iraqi and Lebanese allies engaged in direct conflict with U.S. forces inside Iraq, said American officials. In January 2007, four American soldiers were captured and executed in the central Iraqi city of Karbala in an operation the Pentagon believed was jointly run by the Qods Force, Hezbollah and Iraqi militants.

Later that year, the Pentagon captured two Iraqi brothers and a Hezbollah commander in southern Iraq who allegedly admitted to cooperating with Gen. Soleimani's Qods Force, after initially pretending to be a mute, according to military officials briefed on the operation.

With the end of the Iraq war—and the spread of Arab Spring popular uprisings across the region over the past year—the U.S.'s conflict with Gen. Soleimani and the Qods Force has expanded into new territory. The U.S. publicly alleges that Iran has been working to overthrow American allies in Yemen, Lebanon and Bahrain. Tehran has accused Washington of propping up Arab monarchs and despots in the Persian Gulf to protect U.S. energy and security interests.

The center of this conflict now is Syria, where Iran's closest Arab ally, President Assad, is facing a broad challenge to his family's 40-year rule.

For the U.S., the goal of ending the Assad regime is primarily prompted by the opportunity to weaken Iran. Mr. Assad's fall, U.S. officials believe, would cripple Iran's ability to funnel arms to allies in Lebanon and the Palestinian territories. The Obama administration hopes the Syrian uprising will rekindle an Iranian protest movement that was suppressed by Tehran's security forces in 2009.

The Qods Force has long had a presence in Damascus due to Iran's and Syria's joint efforts to arm Hezbollah and Hamas. Ever since the Arab Spring uprisings began last year, the Qods Force has been advising Syria's security forces on crowd control and on technologies needed to track political activists, according to U.S. officials and Syrian activists.

Since Gen. Soleimani's January visit to Damascus, U.S. and Arab officials said Tehran appears to have upped its support for the Syrian regime.

Mr. Assad's forces have been trying to crush Syria's opposition by overrunning its strongholds in the cities of Homs, Hama and Idlib. According to U.S. officials briefed on Syria intelligence, the Qods Force has been accelerating shipments of small arms and artillery to support that effort. Some of these arms have been ferried into Syria on Iranian Iluyshin jets controlled by the Qods Force, according to an American official briefed on the intelligence.

"Soleimani has emerged as public enemy No. 1 in the Arab Spring," said a senior administration official working on Syria.

The Obama administration, following the efforts of its predecessors, is trying to curtail the ability of Gen. Soleimani to project influence across the Middle East, senior U.S. officials said. The U.S. Treasury has placed sanctions on the Qods Force commander three times; those sanctions remain in place. The U.S. and European Union are also seeking to block the Revolutionary Guard's ability to ship or fly arms into Syria, Lebanon and the Palestinian territories.

Last week, the Treasury sanctioned an Iranian airline, Yas Air, for allegedly ferrying arms to Damascus and specifically argued that the airline is controlled by the Qods Force.

A spokesman for Yas Air said all its flights are in accordance with international aviation law.

Last October, a former Central Intelligence Agency spy, Reuel Marc Gerecht, testified before Congress that if the Qods Force's role in last year's alleged plot to kill the Saudi ambassador is proven, the U.S. "should hold Qasem Soleimani responsible…. Go get him, either try to capture him or kill him."

Iran's government responded by calling for the international policing body, Interpol, to arrest Mr. Gerecht. More than 200 Iranian lawmakers signed a statement of support for Gen. Soleimani. And on Farsi-language websites, hard-line Iranian groups launched a campaign behind the slogan: "We Are All Qasem Soleimani."

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303816504577305742884577460.html

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The Quds (Jerusalem) Force
« Reply #22 on: April 04, 2012, 04:31:58 PM »
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Profile | The Canny General: Quds Force Commander Ghasem Soleimani
by MUHAMMAD SAHIMI in Los Angeles
31 Dec 2011 23:1720 Comments
ghasem.jpgA long history of quiet influence and power.

[ profile ] "Why don't we kill them? We kill other people who are running terrorist organizations against the United States." This is what retired General John (Jack) Keane, former vice chief of staff of the United States Army, told Congress during his testimony to the Homeland Security Subcommittee on October 26. Who was he talking about?

Testifying to the same subcommittee on the same day, the neoconservative Marc Reuel Gerecht, a retired CIA agent who worked in the Middle East for years, made it clear who Keane had primarily in mind: "I don't think that you are going to really intimidate these people, get their attention, unless you shoot somebody. You should hold Qassem Suleimani responsible. Qassem Suleimani travels a lot. He's all over the place. Go get him. Either try to capture him or kill him."

Gerecht was talking about Major General Ghasem Soleimani, long-time commander of the Quds (Jerusalem) Force, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' elite special forces division responsible for operations outside Iran's borders, considered by some to be among the finest of its kind in the world. The United States has known about Soleimani since at least the 1990s, and while U.S. troops were still in Iraq, they had to deal with the militias that had been armed and trained by the Quds Force.

In fact, the Shiites who came to power in Iraq in the aftermath of the U.S. invasion in March 2003 had been trained and equipped by the Quds Force for years. The Badr Division (also called the Ninth Badr Corps), the armed wing of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, which played a decisive role after the invasion, was founded in 1984 by Esmail Daghaayeghi, a Guard officer, following the Quds Force's establishment the previous year (see below). Daghaayeghi was killed during the Iran-Iraq War on January 18, 1987, during Operation Karbala 5 and posthumously given the rank of major general. During the war, the command centers of both forces were stationed in the Ramazan Garrison in the town of Marivan, Kurdistan, near the Iraqi border. After the war and through the 1990s, the Badr Division trained under the Quds Force.

The reaction in Iran to the statements by Keane and Gerecht was swift and furious. Hardline media outlets lionized Soleimani (see, for example, here, here, here, and here.) According to the hardline website Asr-e Iran, which is close to Tehran mayor and former Guard commander Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, "Those in Islamic Iran who know [Soleimani] talk about his shyness, humble behavior, and tranquility. And unlike what the Americans say, he is not mysterious." Mashregh News, the website linked with the Guards, published pictures of Soleimani during the war with Iraq that show him bidding farewell to soldiers headed for the front. Jahan News, the website published by Majles deputy and former Guard commander Ali Reza Zakani, stated, "We are all Ghasem Soleimani." Soleimani himself declared, "This is not a threat; it is helping [me] to realize an old, strong desire. In response to those who think that they can impose themselves on us through threats, I say, oh God, make martyrdom in your path at the hands of our enemies our fate."

Who is this Ghasem Soleimani who invokes such emotions in Tehran hardliners? As tensions between the West and Iran increase, the covert war that the United States and Israel are apparently waging on Iran is also heating up. Even before the U.S. forces left Iraq, Soleimani was considered by some as the most powerful figure in that country. With their departure, he becomes even more prominent in any possible confrontation between Iran and the United States and Israel, and in particular in any asymmetric warfare that the Quds Force may wage.

Early life
110684_407.jpgGhasem Soleimani -- usually referred to as Haj Ghasem Soleimani by the Iranian media -- was born on March 11, 1957, to a poor peasant family in the mountainous, sparsely populated village of Rabord near the town of Baft in the southeastern province of Kerman. (Some reports indicate that he was born in 1958.) After completing elementary school, together with his cousin Ahmad Soleimani he left his family and moved to Kerman, the provincial capital. His family was heavily in debt, and the young Soleimani tried to help out by working as a day laborer in the construction industry. After several years, he joined the Water Organization of Kerman as a simple technician.

After the uprising of June 5, 1963, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi outlawed all opposition political groups in Iran. In March 1975, the Shah banned all the political parties that were loyal to him and ordered the establishment of a single party, the Rastakhiz (Resurrection) Party. The struggle against his regime grew even fiercer. Around this time, the teenaged Soleimani reportedly began his anti-Shah activities.

As the Shah had eliminated all the viable political groups, the clerics who opposed his regime grew in influence. One such cleric was Seyyed Reza Kaamyaab (1950-81) from Mashhad, who was well known in Kerman for his fiery speeches against the Shah. After the 1979 Revolution, Kaamyaab was elected to the first Majles representing Mashhad. He was assassinated by the Mojahedin-e Khalgh Organization (MKO) in July 1981. Soleimani was a religious follower of Kaamyaab. But there is nothing that indicates in what way, or even if, Soleimani participated in the Revolution that toppled the Shah's regime in February 1979, although it is known that Ahmad Soleimani was an organizer of the first anti-Shah demonstrations in Kerman the previous spring.

Joining the Guards

On May 5, 1979, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini ordered the founding of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to prevent a military coup by the remnants of the Shah's army, elements of which had supported the CIA-sponsored coup of 1953. The Guards quickly set up provincial command centers around the country, including one in Kerman, which Soleimani joined as a "volunteer." He received only six weeks of training (the maximum in that era was two months), but proved to be a fast learner, which opened the path for his rise in the Guards' ranks.

One of the first crises that the Guards had to deal with was the uprising in the Kurdish region in western Iran just a few months after the Revolution. To put down the uprising, the government of Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan dispatched the army and Guard forces. Similar to the Shah's regime, the Bazargan government sent troops from other regions of Iran, so the soldiers would not be bound to the local population. The government forces were led by Defense Minister Mostafa Chamran and Colonel Ali Seyyed Shirazi, who later rose to the rank of lieutenant general, the only one in Iran's military after the Revolution. (Chamran was killed in 1981 in the war with Iraq; Shirazi was assassinated by the MKO in 1999.) Soleimani was part of the force that was dispatched from Kerman to Mahabad in West Azerbaijan province, historically a stronghold of Kurdish dissidents. Little is known of Soleimani's role in the armed forces' brutal suppression of the uprising. Upon his return to Kerman, Soleimani was put in charge of the Guard base there.

Iran-Iraq War

On September 22, 1980, Iraqi forces invaded Iran with the hope of toppling the regime in Tehran. The Guards played a prominent role during the eight-year war that followed, in which young men such as Soleimani found the mission of their lives: defeating Iraq. He was instrumental in training and dispatching to the war front several Guard battalions from Kerman. He was eventually appointed to command the 41st Saarallah Division based in Kerman, which was sent to the front and played a key role in preventing Iraqi forces from overrunning the town of Susangerd in Khuzestan province. According to many accounts, Soleimani took part in practically all the important operations of the war mounted by Iran's military, both successful and unsuccessful. In October 1984, his cousin Ahmad Soleimani was killed in combat.

There are many tales attesting to Soleimani's bravery and tactical skills. My youngest brother, who fought at the front for 28 months -- two years of mandatory service plus four months as a volunteer -- told me that Soleimani was reputed to be one of the "bravest and shrewdest guys" at the front. He told me about Soleimani personally leading operations during which he willingly risked capture by Iraqi forces. Ali Alfoneh of the American Enterprise Institute calls Soleimani "a war hero and genuine patriot who joined the [Guards] following the revolution, as Iran grappled with the likelihood of civil war and the challenges of Iraq's invasion." Various sources describe many of the operations that Soleimani led, or in which he and the 41st Saarallah Division played important roles (see, for example, here, here, and here).

Formation of the Quds Force

In the first half of the 1970s, border disputes led to considerable tension between Iran and Iraq. The Shah's regime armed and trained the Iraqi Kurdish forces led by Mullah Mustafa Barzani that were fighting against the central government in Baghdad. (After March 6, 1975, when the Shah and Saddam Hussein signed the Algiers Agreement, Iran cut off aid to Barzani's forces.) Taking a page from the Shah, the Islamic Republic decided to do something very similar. Hence the Quds Force was formed in 1983 to arm and train Iraqi Kurdish forces to combat Hussein's army and to carry out intelligence operations in Iraq. In that era, the Quds Force's Ramazan Garrison headquarters was a command center for irregular warfare, behind-the-front operations, and intelligence collection. There has been some speculation that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was in Kurdistan at the time, played a role in the force's founding, but I could not verify this independently.

The Quds Force was originally affiliated with the Office of Liberation Movements, which was formed after the 1979 Revolution to assist Islamic revolutionary movements in other countries, but it soon became a branch of the Guards, within which it was called the 2nd Quds Corps for quite some time. While the war with Iraq raged, one of the force's primary missions was to collaborate with Kurdish fighters against Hussein's army. After Israel invaded Lebanon in 1982 and initiated an extended clear occupation of the southern part of the country for a long time, the Quds Force is believed to have played an important role in arming and training those who wanted to resist the occupation. With the official founding of the Lebanese Hezbollah in February 1985, the Quds Force is thought to have trained and equipped its fighters. However, it must be emphasized that the exact nature of the working relationship between the Lebanese Hezbollah and the Quds Force remains shrouded in secrecy, with few hard facts available.

Also contemporaneous with the Iran-Iraq War, Soviet forces were fighting the Afghan Mujahedin, which were supported by the United States, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia. An important figure among the Mujahedin was Ahmad Shah Masoud, an ally of Iran whose operations were aided by the Quds Force (see below).

Postwar era
120315_109.jpgThe war with Iraq finally ended in August 1988. The Guard commanders all became commissioned officers of Iran's military. Most of the top commanders were given the rank of brigadier general, like Soleimani, or lieutenant brigadier general. The war had left a lasting impression on the worldviews of men such as Soleimani and current Guard chief Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari (pictured seated with Soleimani). They have not forgotten that the West, and in particular the United States, as well as the Soviet Union, supported Iraq during the war. A network of these commanders, comprising some of the most hardline Guard officers, was created that now effectively runs Iran. I shall return to this point.

At the end of the war, the 41st Saarallah Division returned to Kerman. For many years afterward, one of the Quds Force's primary responsibilities was the fight against narcotic traffickers using Iran as a conduit for the transfer of drugs from Afghanistan to the rest of the word. The route runs from Afghanistan (as well as Pakistan) to southern Khorasan and Sistan and Baluchistan province and from there to Kerman province on its way to Europe, the Persian Gulf region, and other locations. It is estimated that, over the past two decades, at least 3,000 Iranian military and police personnel have been killed in the war on the traffickers. Soleimani, as commander of the 41st Saarallah Division, played a key role in the fighting in the early and mid-1990s and was praised by many officers, including then Guard chief Major General Mohsen Rezaei.

After Soviet forces withdrew in defeat from Afghanistan in 1989, the leftist Afghan regime hung on for a time. But when the Soviet Union collapsed at the end of 1991, the government of Mohammad Najibullah also crumpled. Iran, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia all competed for influence in Afghanistan. Initially, Iran supported the Hazara Shia group Hezb-e Wahdat (Party of Unity), led by Abdul Ali Mazari. When factional fighting broke out, Ahmad Shah Masoud's forces defeated all of the other militias, except that of the Taliban, who hate Iran and Shiites. From then on, the Quds Force supported Shah Masoud. I shall come back to this shortly.

In the 1990s, the Quds Force was accused of involvement in important operations beyond Iran's borders. For example, much has been said about the force's possible role in the bombing of the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia on June 25, 1996, which killed 19 U.S. servicemen and one Saudi, and injured 372. Though Iran was eventually absolved by Saudi Arabia of any involvement (see also this article by Gareth Porter), U.S. neoconservatives still insist that the Quds Force had a hand in the bombing.

The Quds Force was definitely involved in the war in the Balkans in the first half of the decade. With tacit U.S. approval, it supplied the Muslim combatants with arms to defend themselves against the Serbian forces. Several reports indicate that Soleimani was in command of Quds Force operations in Bosnia.

The Taliban, with Pakistani military backing and financial support from Saudi Arabia, overthrew the Afghan government and took power in Kabul on September 27, 1996. The United States initially considered the development a positive one for the Afghan people.

Glyn Davies, a State Department spokesman, expressed hope that the Taliban would "move quickly to restore order and security and to form a representative interim government that can begin the process of reconciliation nationwide," adding that the United States would send diplomats to Afghanistan to meet with the Taliban to reestablish full diplomatic ties. From then on, a main task of the Quds Force was to supply and support the forces of Ahmad Shah Masoud who, together with Abdul Rashid Dostum, a former pro-Soviet fighter and leader of the Uzbek minority's Jonbesh-e Melli (National Movement), had formed the United Islamic Front for the Salvation of Afghanistan, universally known as the Northern Alliance. The supply route went through Persian-speaking Tajikistan.

Domestic politics

During this entire period, while Soleimani did not speak -- and was hardly even seen -- in public, he was deeply involved in all the Quds Force's major operations outside Iran's borders. In early August 1998, Taliban forces attacked the city of Mazar-e Sharif in northern Afghanistan, killing thousands of civilians. They specifically targeted Iran's consulate in the city, where they murdered 11 Iranians, including eight diplomats and a journalist, Mahmoud Saremi, who was working for IRNA, Iran's state news agency. The other two dead Iranians were most likely intelligence officers. The two countries almost went to war, as Iran massed 200,000 troops on its Afghan border. But instead of attacking Afghanistan, the Quds Force continued to supply the Northern Alliance. In the fall of 2001, after the United States invaded Afghanistan, it was the Quds Force that supported and trained Northern Alliance fighters, even though Ahmad Shah Masoud had been assassinated on September 9, two days before the al-Qaeda terrorist attacks.

Mohammad Khatami had been elected president of the Islamic Republic by a landslide on May 23, 1997, and begun a cautious program of reform. That September 10, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei abruptly removed Rezaei from his position as Guard chief and appointed Brigadier General Yahya Rahim Safavi, a hardliner, in his place. The move greatly displeased the senior Guard commanders and provided the network of wartime Guard commanders an opportunity to announce its existence. Thirty-three high-ranking Guard officers, including Soleimani, signed a letter that protested Rezaei's dismissal and implicitly blamed Khatami for it.

Rahim Safavi subsequently appointed Soleimani as the commander of the Quds Force and Brigadier General Esmail Ghaani as his deputy. Soleimani's predecessor was Brigadier General Ahmad Vahidi (born Ahmad Shah Cheraghi), the current minister of defense. Interestingly, although Soleimani had signed the protest letter, it is known that he had opposed some of Rezaei's decisions during the war against Iraq. This might indicate that the letter was more an expression of the Guard commanders' unhappiness with the election of Khatami than of firm support for Rezaei. Another interesting point is that even though Soleimani and Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, commander-in-chief of the armed forces during most of the war, are both from Kerman, the two men never developed a close relationship.

The July 1999 uprising at the dormitories of the University of Tehran shook the foundations of the Islamic Republic. The uprising began when the popular Islamic leftist daily Salaam was banned after it published a series of reports on conservatives' attempts to restrict the press. The students who protested the ban were attacked by the Basij militia and plainclothes agents, which ignited several days of fierce demonstrations around the country. The Guard network responded. Twenty-four top commanders -- including Soleimani and then Brigadier General Mohammad Ali Jafari, chief of the Guards' ground forces -- wrote a letter to Khatami threatening that if he did not end the pursuit of his reformist policies, they would be forced to take strong action:

    Your Excellency, Mr. Khatami, look at the international media and radio broadcasts. Does the sound of their merriment not reach your ear? Dear Mr. President, if you do not make a revolutionary decision today, and fail to fulfill your Islamic and national duty, tomorrow will be too late and the damage will be more irreversible than can be imagined.... With all due respect, we inform you that our patience is at an end, and we do not think it is possible to tolerate any more if this is not addressed.

Although in another letter to Khatami, a large number of regular army officers and former Guard commanders expressed their firm support for him, the threatening letter from the network of top Guard commanders had a much greater impact. It also marked the first occasion in which Soleimani took a public position regarding a national issue. But that remains an exception. Soleimani has conducted himself almost invariably as a professional soldier who does not interfere in politics nor take public positions regarding issues of state.

Aftermath of U.S. invasion of Iraq

The U.S. and British invasion of Iraq in March 2003 greatly worried the Iranian leadership. There was every sign that the United States intended to establish large, permanent military bases in Iraq. The leadership thus decided to make sure that it was positioned to wield influence over various Iraqi Shia groups, which were already Iran's allies, as well as some Sunni nationalist groups opposed to the invasion and occupation. Thousands of Iranian intelligence agents and Quds Force personnel penetrated Iraq, establishing links with various groups and reportedly distributing vast sums of money.

As resistance to the occupation intensified, the U.S. military began to accuse Iran and the Quds Force specifically of intervening in Iraq and bearing responsibility for some American casualties. In an interview with CBS in February 2006, General John Abizaid, then commander of all U.S. forces in the Middle East, said, "At the same time that the government of Iran is talking about stabilizing Iraq, these Revolutionary Guard Qods Force people are supporting the Shia death squads of some of the various splinter [groups]." "So, aren't we already at a war with Iran through its proxies in Iraq?" he was asked. Abizaid responded, "No. We're not at war with Iran through its proxies. We are in a period of making it clear to the Iranians that they need to move to help stabilize Iraq and not destabilize it."

On January 11, 2007, five Iranian diplomats, reportedly members of the Quds Force, were arrested by U.S. troops when they raided the Iranian Liaison Office in Arbil, in Iraqi Kurdistan (the office was reportedly in the process of becoming Iran's consulate). The five men -- Naser Bagheri, Mousa Chegini, Abbas Hatami Kakavand, Hamid Askari Shokouh, and Majid Ghaemi -- were held for more than two years. It is widely believed that the Americans mistakenly thought that Jafari, the Guard chief, was at the office and that the raid was staged to capture him.

Abizaid's claims were followed by the Bush administration's accusations in early 2007 that Iran was helping Shia militias murder American soldiers in Iraq. On February 11, U.S. military officials in Baghdad presented rocket-propelled grenades, mortar rounds, and components for explosives that they said were like those responsible for the deaths of 170 American servicemen over the previous three years; they claimed that such weapons were made available to the insurgents with the approval of Iran's highest authorities. The charges were met with great skepticism, not because they were implausible, but because there was simply no evidence linking the weapons to Iran or the Quds Force.

In March 2007, the United Nations Security Council issued Resolution 1747, which prohibited arms sales to and from Iran because of concerns over its nuclear program. The edict also imposed sanctions against several Guard commanders, including Soleimani. In October that year, the United States imposed additional sanctions on him, accusing him of supporting terrorism and nuclear proliferation activities. To date, however, there is still no evidence linking the Quds Force to Iran's nuclear program that has been made public.

In early 2008, the Mahdi Army of the Iraqi Shia firebrand Moqtada al-Sadr began fighting the forces of the U.S.-backed government. When the situation seemed to be slipping out of control, representatives of the two sides met in Qom with Soleimani and, after intense negotiations, agreed to a ceasefire. This was yet another manifestation of his influence and power.

During the same period, another episode took place that became famous. In the midst of a battle that pitted Iraqi and U.S. army forces against the Mahdi Army, General David Petraeus, then the commander of the American contingent in Iraq, was handed a phone displaying a text message from Soleimani:

    General Petraeus, you should know that I, Qassem Suleimani, control the policy for Iran with respect to Iraq, Lebanon, Gaza, and Afghanistan. And, indeed, the ambassador in Baghdad [Hassan Kazemi Qomi] is a Quds Force member. The individual who's going to replace him [Hassan Danaeifar] is a Quds Force member.

Soleimani was implying that, as far as the Middle East was concerned, he was the one with whom Petraeus had to deal. The American general, of course, did not need a reminder. This past July, the Guardian quoted Iraq's former national security minister, Mowaffak al-Rubaie, as saying of Soleimani, "He is the most powerful man in Iraq without question. Nothing gets done without him." A senior U.S. official told the Guardian, "He dictates terms then makes things happen and the Iraqis are left managing a situation that they had no input into."

In June, after antigovernment demonstrations in Syria turned bloody, the European Union imposed sanctions on Soleimani. The Syrian opposition has alleged that the Islamic Republic, and in particular the Quds Force, has been helping the Syrian government to crackdown on the demonstrators.

And in October, the United States alleged that the Quds Force was behind a plot to assassinate Saudi Arabia's ambassador to Washington and carry out other terrorist operations. Regardless of the accuracy of the allegations, they brought to the fore the key role that Soleimani plays in Iranian operations abroad.

Promotion
11120_581.jpgOn January 24, 2011, Khamenei promoted Soleimani to major general. There are currently only 12 other major generals in Iran's armed forces: Guard chief Jafari; Rahim Safavi, now the Supreme Leader's senior military adviser; Rezaei, now secretary-general of the Expediency Discernment Council; Armed Forces Chief of Staff Hassan Firoozabadi, who is close to Khamenei; his top deputy, Gholam Ali Rashid, who is very popular within the military for his achievements during the war with Iraq, particularly the liberation of the Persian Gulf port of Khorramshahr; Mostafa Izadi, deputy armed forces chief of staff, who is highly respected and the only military man who openly supported the late Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri; Hassani Saadi, deputy armed forces chief of staff for military coordination, who is considered an apolitical soldier; Mohammad Bagheri, Firoozabadi's deputy for operations and intelligence; Ataollah Salehi, commander of Iran's regular armed forces (not including the Guards), who is the only current general to have received his military training prior to the Revolution; Ali Shahbazi, the first chief of the regular armed forces after Khamenei's 1989 appointment as Supreme Leader, and his successor, Mohammad Salimi, both now military advisers to Khamenei; and former Navy commander Ali Shamkhani.

Leave aside Rezaei and Shamkhani, who no longer have active military roles (and are no longer close to Khamenei), and the three who serve as the Supreme Leader's advisers, and Soleimani is effectively one of just eight men now serving at the highest rank in Iran's military structure.

Presidential prospects

Speculation is rife in Tehran as to who will be the military's candidate in the next presidential election, set for June 2013. Many believe it will be Tehran Mayor Ghalibaf, the former commander of the Guard air force who also ran in 2005, or Saeed Jalili, secretary-general of the Supreme National Security Council and Iran's chief nuclear negotiator, who is close to the military hardliners. But according to a source with contacts in high places in Tehran, Soleimani may be Khamenei's candidate. The Supreme Leader has publicly praised him, which is extremely rare. There is little information, however, on how close the two men are.

Last spring, in a rare speech to the Majles deputies, Soleimani said, "What has happened in Egypt, and is happening in Libya, Yemen, and Bahrain, and will undoubtedly also happen in other Arab nations, are Islamic movements that are influenced by [Iran's] Islamic Revolution. The definitive and true model in the Islamic Revolution that has influenced what is happening is the Sacred Defense [the Iran-Iraq War]." The claim, of course, is false. But it does provide a window on the current thinking of Soleimani, who almost never appears in public outside of commemorations for fallen heroes of the war.

What sort of role will General Ghasem Soleimani play in Iran's future? Only time will tell. But there is no question that, though he has preferred to stay in the shadows, he has long been one of the most powerful figures in the land.

Read more: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2011/12/profile-the-canny-general-quds-force-commander-ghasem-soleimani.html#ixzz1r5eB0t1F


http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2011/12/profile-the-canny-general-quds-force-commander-ghasem-soleimani.html

 

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