Experts: Iran's threat to kill U.S. generals is serious

Published 16 December 2010

Iran’s anger at the massive blow the Stuxnet malware has inflicted on its nuclear weapons program boils over; the commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, Gen. Mohammad Reza Naghdi, threatened that American generals will be targeted and killed in revenge for last week’s attacks on two of Iran’s leading nuclear scientists; Iran and Middle East experts say that Iran often makes outlandish threats, but that this one has to be taken as a serious and credible threat because it came directly from Naghdi; the most likely place for an attack to occur would be Iraq, and any attack would most likely be carried out by surrogates working for the Iranian Revolutionary Guard; Bahrain, Qatar, and other Gulf states would also allow the Iranian general to carry out the threat

Iranian space ready for American and Israeli generals // Source: advocate.com

A leader of Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard is promising that American generals will be targeted and killed in revenge for last week’s attacks on two of Iran’s leading nuclear scientists — a threat Middle East experts say must be taken seriously.

In a speech published in Farsi at an Iranian Web site linked to the Revolutionary Guard, Brig. Gen. Mohammad Reza Naghdi was quoted as saying that “the filthy Americans and the Zionists should not think that with killing our scientists, they can divert our nation from its path of Jihad and scare us.”

Fox News reports that he continued with a specific threat: “We will mark the hanging sites of the American and Zionist generals and we will identify which hanging was in retaliation for the blood of our great martyr Shahriari.”

Naghdi, commander of the Revolutionary Guard’s Basij Forces, was referring to Dr. Majid Shahriari, a leading Iranian nuclear scientist who was reportedly heading efforts to fight the Stuxnet virus that has crippled Iran’s nuclear program. Both Shahriari and another leading scientist, Fereidoun Abbasi, were targeted in simultaneous attacks last week in Tehran. As the men were driving to work, motorcyclists pulled up to their cars and attached magnetic explosive devices to them. The attackers drove off as the bombs exploded.

Shahriari was killed instantly; Abbasi, who was personally sanctioned by the UN for his part in the nuclear program, was wounded but managed to escape.

Fox News quotes Reza Kahlili, a former CIA spy who left Iran first discovered the comments, to say “that the United States should be concerned about this threat.”

Jim Phillips, an expert on Middle East Policy for the Heritage Foundation, and Alireza Nader, an expert in Iran’s leadership at the RAND Corporation, said Iran often makes outlandish threats, but they agreed that this one has to be taken as a serious and credible threat because it came directly from Naghdi.

“It is significant that this commander made specific threats,” Nader said. “Usually these threats are taken with a grain of salt, but there is a history of the Iranian regime retaliating against U.S. forces in a covert manner, especially in Iraq.”

A Department of Defense spokesman said the military was not aware of the threat. “I have not heard those threats; DOD is not going to respond to such comments,” said Maj. Chris Perrine, a public affairs officer. “Regarding security, we take appropriate security measures according to circumstances and are confident that our security posture in the region is appropriate.”

Both Phillips and Nader said that the most likely place for an attack to occur would be Iraq, and any attack would most likely be carried out by surrogates working for the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.

“The Revolutionary Guards have been in Iraq since the 1980s and they have an extensive network there,” Phillips said.

While Nader agreed that Iraq was the place Iran was most likely to strike, he also suggested that Bahrain, Qatar, and other Gulf states would also allow the Iranian general to carry out the threat.