Chinese and Japanese intelligence agencies, which closely
monitor events in the Persian Gulf due to the dependence of both countries on
oil from the region, report that Israeli Navy commandos have recently been
active in creating maritime incidents in the Gulf that could be blamed on
Iran.
The five incidents that have Israel under the
scrutiny of the intelligence services of China and Japan, the world�s
second and third largest economic powers, respectively, are the �robbery�
attacks on four merchant ships off Basra, Iraq on August 8 and the July 28
explosion on the Japanese supertanker MV M. Star in the strategic
Strait of Hormuz.
Last month, the Israeli Navy deployed older U-209 and newer
U-212 Dolphin-class diesel submarines, obtained from Germany, to the Persian
Gulf. The submarines are known to have on board a number of Shayetet 13 naval
commando squadrons trained to carry out sabotage against sea and shore targets.
On August 17, Japan�s NHK news network reported that the
Voyage Data Recorder radar on board the M. Starspotted a small boat
engaged in �suspicious movements� shortly before an explosion damaged the ship�s
hull and injured one seaman. On August 4, a virtual unknown group called the
Abdullah Azzam Brigades, said to be linked to �Al Qaeda,� claimed
responsibility for the attack, but intelligence sources scoffed at the notion
that such a group could have carried out such a stealth-like attack.
Japanese intelligence believes what damaged the M. Star
was an underwater remotely-piloted drone, similar to the airborne variety
used extensively by the United States and Israel in the Middle East.
On August 8, men armed with AK-47s boarded and robbed four
ships off Iraq�s port of Umm Qasr. The ships were the MV Armenia, flagged in Antigua and Barbuda; the MV
Crystal Wave, flagged in North
Korea; the MV Sana Star,
flagged in Syria; and the U.S.-flagged MV Sagamore, owned by Sealift, Inc. and
contracted to the U.S. Department of Defense under the Voluntary Intermodel
Sealift Agreement (VISA) to support military �contingency operations.� The Sagamore
is also under contract to supply �freight services� to Iraq under a U.S. Agency
for International Development (USAID) contract.
It is believed by Asian intelligence sources that the Sagamore
was boarded by Israeli commandos for American complicity deniability
purposes to mask the true targets for the attack: the Antiguan-flagged Armenian
ship and the North Korean and Syrian ships. Iran is currently under a sanctions
regime by the UN, US, and European Union over its nuclear program and it is
believed by intelligence sources that the three non-US vessels were part of a
covert inspection program carried out by the Israeli commandos in the Gulf.
Iraq authorities put out a report that two of
the attackers of the Sagamore were arrested while the rest �fled to
Iranian waters.� Iraqi officials also described the incident as a �petty crime.�
The operation against the Armenia was not Israel�s
first covert operation against an Antiguan-flagged ship. On November 4, 2009,
Israeli commandos in the eastern Mediterranean near Cyprus seized the
Antigua-flagged and German-owned MV Francop and found weapons said to be
bound from the Egyptian port of Damietta for Syria, where they were allegedly
were to be transported to Hezbollah in Lebanon. The weapons were reported to
have been shipped from Iran to Egypt. Iran, Syria, and Hezbollah denied
any links to the weapons found on board the Francop. Suspiciously, some of the old mortar shells on board the Francop
were manufactured in Israel by Soltam Corporation. The shells were painted
to make them look new.
Previously
published in the Wayne
Madsen Report.
Copyright � 2010 WayneMadenReport.com
Wayne
Madsen is a Washington, DC-based investigative journalist and
nationally-distributed columnist. He is the editor and publisher of the Wayne Madsen Report
(subscription required).