My latest with @zachsdorfman reveals the operational details of Soleimani's killing, including the presence of Delta Force and Task Force Orange and the crucial role of Kurdish counterterrorism operators at the airport. More below.
One of the main aspects of this story revealed for the first time is that the Kurdish Counter Terrorism Group (CTG) was intimately involved with this op on the ground, and it likely could not have succeeded without them. Here are some details about them not in the article:
The unit's inception goes goes back to the CIA and later JSOC and 10th SFG inserting into Iraq prior to the 2003 invasion. Most people know about op Viking Hammer in which 10th Group linked up with the Kurds and battled Ansar al-Islam, suspected of having a chemical weapons lab.
Fewer know that the CIA trained Kurdish sabotage teams to go wreak havoc behind enemy lines. They infiltrated in small cells into Saddam's regime to conduct their missions. audacy.com/connectingvets…
They put a transmitter in the trunk of a car that blared out American propaganda on local radio waves, they identified key targets in the city, blew up an intelligence officers office, and even sabotaged a rail line that laid down a 90-car train on its side as the invasion began.
After the invasion, the Kurds sought to retain these types of capabilities that the Americans had helped them develop. The Counter-Terrorism Group (CTG) was born. Polad Talabani had been living in the UK at the time but when he heard about something stirring back home.
He returned to support the effort during Viking Hammer. He became the commander of CTG and developed strong ties with the CIA, Delta Force, 22SAS and other western Special Ops units.
CTG recruits out of the Peshmerga, especially from Cobra units, but it is important to point out that CTG is not part of the Pesh. They are their own distinct element and reports to the PUK's intel agency, once run by Polad's brother Lahur who is now co-President of the PUK.
Over the years I've spoken with many CIA officers who worked with CTG, and Delta operators who had gone out on ops with them. Interestingly, the Soleimani operation was not the first op that CTG has run in Baghdad.
In 2009, criminals kidnapped a kid in Sulaymaniyah from a wealthy family. CTG operators loaded inside civilians vans and drove into Iraq where they borrowed humvees from an Iraqi unit and hit Sadr City.
“We had four enemy killed, a bunch of guys injured, and rescued the kid,” Polad told me back in 2015. Things went kind of downhill for CTG as the US forgot about them after pulling out of Iraq around that time.
“We all thought that the United States would at least leave a small element behind after the war. Instead, they packed their bags one day and said goodbye,” Polad told me. Guns and night vision began breaking down. All this changed when ISIS appeared.
Their phone was ringing off the hook. CTG lots of ops, including a hit on a mosque in Jalula. “On that mission, we killed Chechens, Uzbeks, and even a guy from Hackney,” Polad said. They did tons of raids, assisted the Pesh, had snipers on the front lines racking up kills.
In 2017 it almost looked like CTG was getting their wish of going back to running high risk HVT strikes deep behind enemy lines when pictures of unit members showed up in Syria for the recapture of the Tabqa dam.
Unfortunately, a U.S. Special Forces source informed me that this was really just a PR stunt and that it had to do with trying to patch up relationships between the various Kurdish factions.
But with the Soleimani operation, it appears that CTG is definitely back in the game now and this joint CTG/JSOC op may represent the future of American clandestine and covert operations, largely done via surrogate with U.S. support.
And with that, I think there is a message here for those who don't value our international alliances, think they are a waste of time and money, and that America "doesn't get anything out of it." That's just empirically wrong and incorrect.
Our article has been updated with a statement from Lawen Azad, a spokesman for Lahur Talabany, co-president of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan party and a former intelligence chief who denied that Kurdish operatives were involved in the Soleimani killing cont:
writing in an email to Yahoo News that the Counter Terrorism Group "categorically rejects claims" that it was involved in the operation.
If you liked this article, you may also like my article at Yahoo News about a CIA covert operation gone wrong in the South China Sea. yahoo.com/news/the-cia-s…
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
My two cents on this important article from @David_Philipps. I've been trying to tell people for years now that SOF has absolutely no special ability to resist attacks on their cognitive spaces. We have no special training to deal with this.
I first started noticing this during the Obama admin as I was watching Special Forces veterans (mostly on Facebook) jump onboard with clear Russian propaganda, the source was not even concealed. These were Cold Warriors, now worshipping Putin as a defender of Christianity.
It was absolutely bizarre watching people who I thought should know better salivate over a foreign dictator while they decried Obama as a usurper undermining the fabric of America. Putin was the strong white man, Obama was the secret Muslim. Their minds had been captured.
Amazing interview today w/ @_Shan_Martinez_ discussing extremism in the military. Shannon became a neo-Nazi as a teenager near a military base and knew over 30 soldiers involved before she left the movement. The interview will be on @starsandstripes but I wanted to share this 🧵
Me: I want to ask what your perspective is on this on why there are so many veterans involved at the Capitol Building riots this last week.
Shannon: there are lots of different folks that showed up that we saw there, that there are many different strains in iteration of things,
so to speak about the people who were there as any sort of monolith, or one sort of cohesive group would be a serious misstep in my opinion. I think, it's so much of what so many veterans experience and feel when they leave, you know, it's like this sense of
Bombshells inbound. Got a lot to say about this, especially after many Aussie SOF members assured me for years that this was, "no big deal" and that, "nothing will come from this." JSOC and 22SAS may have their reckoning as well. More below:
It is known in certain circles how and why Australian SAS operators began carrying hatchets on target. This article makes reference to the SOF culture of hero worship. SAS operators did exchanges with DEVGRU (SEAL Team Six) and saw them carrying Dan Winkler hatchets,
Which are used for war crimes. Monkey see, monkey do, guess what Aussie SAS guys are now carrying around in Afghanistan? This report due out appears spot on in regard to the rot with SOF and how it has spread and perpetuated itself.
So popular social media narratives aside, it turns out that in fact there are some differences between men and women and it isn't all just a social construct. I will never understand people who decry the Army for emphasizing fitness and lethality. Rant:
There is a movement to make changes in the military that starts off being perfectly well meaning, that wants to make the force more diverse. This is a good thing, because it reduces institutional inbreeding ie: "that's the way we've always done things here." However, it comes
with significant bandwagoning and is taken to ridiculous extremes. Many political entrepreneurs seek to use the military as a vehicle to advance progressive politics. This is quite odd because it is asking the military to be the one thing that it can never be, not at war anyway.
New GAO report on federal law enforcement tactical teams. I'm particularly interested in the FBI's Hostage Rescue Team (HRT) and the Coastie units. Here we get some interesting data on deployments and personnel. For instance, we learn there are 149 HRT members.
"FBI officials stated that the HRT was deployed to Washington, D.C., in response to the civil unrest and protests. The reported primary responsibility of team members was to protect federal facilities and potentially respond as a QRF in the event of injured officers."
Interesting stuff on DOE's nuclear transport security unit. A lot of ex-SOF guys there and have told me it is a boring job. Would not want to be one of those guys though. Had someone tell me the contingency if bad guys are about to capture a weapon is to just JDAM the vehicle.
"They enable a shadow financial system so wide-ranging and so unchecked that it has become inextricable from the so-called legitimate economy." This was also said about BCCI decades ago. We all know this, yet we do nothing about it.
Meanwhile, I opened a LLC for my little podcast and I've had my bank up my ass about our business account. It was a pain to open it, they locked it down a couple times even though it does very small transactions at best. "What do you use this account for?!"