Agence France-Presse,
BAGHDAD: The US military on Monday accused Iranian special forces of using Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah militiamen for training Iraqi extremists and of planning an attack that killed five US soldiers this year.
Brigadier General Kevin Bergner told reporters that US-led forces had captured a senior Hezbollah militant, Ali Musa Daqduq, who confessed to training Iraqi extremists in Iran to carry out attacks in Iraq.
Daqduq, a Lebanese, was captured in Iraq's southern city of Basra on March 20, Bergner said, adding he “initially claimed to be deaf and mute”.
“In 2005, he was directed by senior Lebanese Hezbollah leadership to go to Iran and work with the Quds Force to train Iraqi extremists,” Bergner said.
He said the Quds Force, a unit of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, and Hezbollah were jointly operating camps near Tehran in which they trained Iraqi fighters before sending them back to Iraq to wage attacks.
“He (Daqduq) was directed by the Iranian Quds Force to move Iraqis in and out of Iraq and report on the training and operations of Iraqi special groups.”
Bergner said the Quds Force's goal was to develop extremist groups into a network similar to Hezbollah, adding that the two were training between 20 and 60 Iraqis at a time.
“Iranian Quds Force is using Hezbollah as a proxy… as a surrogate in Iraq, a surrogate to work on their behalf and do things they do not want to do themselves.
“Hezbollah brought a level of sophistication and street capability” to the training, he added.
Bergner said the military believed that “senior leadership in Iran” was aware of the activities of the Quds Force.
Iran dismissed the US accusations as “ridiculous”.
“Unfortunately these days US officials have got used to crafting a succession of artificial and ridiculous scenarios for political gains without any evidence,” foreign ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini said.
“It has been four and a half years that US officials have sought to cover up the dreadful situation in Iraq, which is a result of their mistakes and wrong strategies, by denigration and blaming others.”
Bergner said many of the extremists getting trained in the camps on the outskirts of Tehran are from “groups who have broken away from the Jaish al-Mahdi militia” of Shiite radical leader Moqtada al-Sadr.
The groups are “not under his (Sadr's) control. He shares the concern,” Bergner said.
One such group carried out the attack in the Shiite shrine city of Karbala on January 20 in which five US soldiers were killed.
Both Daqduq and a militant involved in the attack “said that senior leadership leading the Quds Force knew of and supported planning for the eventual Karbala attack that killed five coalition soldiers,” Bergner said.
Previously, US commanders had accused Tehran of financing and arming the militants accused of carrying out the killings, but this was the first time they have accused Iranian officers of prior knowledge of the attack.
In the Karbala assault, militants disguised in US-style uniforms driving trucks swept past security at an Iraqi security base and attacked a visiting group of American soldiers.
One US soldier was killed at the scene and four more dragged into the trucks, driven away, and later shot dead.
“The Quds Force had developed detailed information regarding our soldiers' activities, shift changes and defences and this information was shared with the attackers,” Bergner said.
The latest accusations are part of a mounting campaign by US officials to prove alleged links between Iran, Hezbollah and the violence in Iraq.
US commanders have long accused Iran of supplying explosively-formed penetrators — sophisticated bombs that launch a fist-size chunk of molten metal capable of slicing through armoured vehicles — to armed groups in Iraq.
Hundreds of US troops have fallen victims to these weapons since May 2004, when they first appeared on the Iraqi battlefield, and Hezbollah used them to deadly effect in its conflict last year with Israel in southern Lebanon.