IRANIAN SUPPLIED ARMS? NOT SO MUCH.
In the worst days of the Iraq War, the Pentagon launched a media campaign designed to convince the world that Iran was smuggling arms to Iraqi insurgents. Some of the claims strained credulity, such as the idea that Iran would supply Sunni insurgents fighting against its Shia allies. In particular, Iran was supposed to be the main supplier of deadly EFPs, or explosively formed projectiles. To some, these claims were alarming evidence of malevolent Iranian intentions. To others, they were a transparent effort to blame US failure on Iran.
Turns out that the latter were right:
The caches that included Iranian weapons thus represented just 2 percent of all caches found. That means Iranian-made weapons were a fraction of one percent of the total weapons found in Shi'a militia caches during that period.Cernig:The extremely small proportion of Iranian arms in Shi'a militia weapons caches further suggests that Shi'a militia fighters in Iraq had been getting weapons from local and international arms markets rather than from an official Iranian-sponsored smuggling network.
Left out of the list of Iranian-made weaponry were 350 armour-piercing explosively formed penetrators (EFPs) found in Iraqi weapons caches. Despite the lurid claims of US officials, the task group couldn't ascribe an Iranian origin to a single one...Iranian equipment is less reliable and more expensive than Eastern Block materiel that flooded the region after the 2003 invasion -something which a certain imprisoned international arms dealer, ex-CIA and ex-US military contractor and supplier to despots and terrorists, Viktor--Robert Farley
Bout, may well know a fair bit about. It's a buyer's market and the Iranians are seeing market forces exclude their produce, with the exception of simple artillery rockets. They're more expensive than the Pakistani arms bazaar's copies coming down the old Silk Road routes and far less effective than easily available and comparatively-priced black market US weapons too.
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COMMENTS (5)
And they laughed when we called him General Betrayus.
Posted by: Hedley Lamarr | November 17, 2008 11:01 AM
Only 2% huh? Well that is certainly going to be real comforting to the loved ones of American service members who were killed by the weapons.
So what is the acceptable threshold of American deaths by weapons supplied from foreign countries?
Posted by: Just A Grunt | November 17, 2008 11:12 AM
Just A Grunt,
What is the acceptable threshold of American deaths by weapons supllied from their own country? Because US bought-and-supplied weapons manufactured in Eastern Europe made up a larger percentage of those caches, and those weapons went missing from US inventory on Pteraeus' watch.
Regards, C
PS, thanks for the link, Robert
Posted by: Cernig | November 17, 2008 11:32 AM
Just A Grunt,
The question you should ask yourself is, do you want to focus on the source of 2% of the weapons and ignore where 98% come from, or do you want to make a difference and actually try to go after the 98%?
Posted by: ff11 | November 17, 2008 3:23 PM
This war have been going on for five years now, and only very rarely do I see the question asked in the mainstream media: where the hell do the insurgents get all their weapons anyway?
Thanks for covering this and this (partial) answer.
Posted by: Jason | November 19, 2008 7:16 AM