Sunday, October 16, 2011

Iran Commander Behind Killing of U.S. Troops Reportedly Linked to Washington Bomb Plot: What If Anything Will Obama Do About It?

Iran Commander Behind Killing of U.S. Troops Reportedly Linked to Washington Bomb Plot: What If Anything Will Obama Do About It?

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Comment by Jim Campbell
In a word, NOTHING!
WASHINGTON – A key player in the Iran-backed plot to assassinate Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the U.S. was a senior military commander linked to the slaughter of U.S. troops in Iraq, The Washington Post reported Saturday. Both Fox News and the Washington Post failed to see the connection to what was actually going on by these terrorists. This article has serious legs as the arrest of Abdul Reza Shahlai exposed a Muslim car theft ring within the United States used to fund Jihad.

Abdul Reza Shahlai is the cousin of accused plotter Mansour Arbabsiar, 56, an Iranian-American currently in custody and charged with a string of offenses including conspiracy to commit murder and an act of international terrorism.
Iranian Commander of QUDS force front left.

Along with a co-conspirator who remains at large in Iran, Arbabsiar — a used car salesman based in Corpus Christi, Texas — allegedly planned to bomb a Washington, D.C. restaurant where he believed Saudi Ambassador Adel al Jubeir was a regular customer.

The plotters also allegedly discussed bombing the Saudi and Israeli embassies in Washington and the Israeli embassy in Argentina.
After the details of the foiled plan were announced Tuesday, the U.S. Treasury Department moved to block the assets of five individuals believed to be directly linked to the conspiracy.
One of them was Shahlai.
The 54-year-old is a commander in Iran’s Quds Force, the body believed to have been behind the Saudi ambassador plot and described to the Post by a US official as “Iran’s arm for supporting terrorists and planning attacks.”
In 2007 Shahlai ran a group of elite killers within the Iraqi militia of the cleric Moqtada al Sadr, who dressed as US and Iraqi soldiers and launched an attack on official buildings in Karbala — a raid which left five Americans dead.
He also supplied al Sadr’s group with weaponry, according to a Treasury report cited by the Post.
He was allegedly dealing with Arbabsiar when the Texas-based salesman returned to Iran earlier this year, hoping to use him as a link to Mexican drug traffickers who would be involved in the assassination plot.
“The Quds Force … has, in the past, reached out to groups that might seem unlikely partners,” a U.S. official told the newspaper. “The U.S. government has known for quite some time that the Quds Force was involved in this type of external plotting and has known that Shahlai has been behind much of it. That he is still at it is no surprise.”

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