'Hizbullah trained Iraqis how to kidnap soldiers'

WikiLeaks docs describe Iranian border shootouts, Revolutionary Guard weapons transfers to Iraq; will release 15,000 new Afghan war files.

Hizbullah training 311 (photo credit: AP)
Hizbullah training 311
(photo credit: AP)
Inside the some 400,000 US military documents released by WikiLeaks on Friday, were stories of tense and deadly border incidents on the Iraqi-Iranian frontier, Hizbullah training Iraqi operatives, and unmanned US surveillance aircraft lost deep in Iranian territory.
One such document made available to The New York Times by WikiLeaks, was a military report describing a 2006 encounter between a joint American-Iraqi patrol on the Iranian border that ended with one Iranian soldier dead and a handful of Iraqi soldiers detained in Iran.
RELATED:US woman who was held in Iran says she's not a spySwedish defend WikiLeaks about-faceFire from the mountain
The US Army report said that the joint patrol was approached and subsequently surrounded by several Iranian military vehicles. When the Americans noticed  additional Iranian troops tactically positioning themselves and encircling the patrol, they decided to leave.
As the American half of the patrol began to leave the area, the Iranian troops began firing upon them. When the US army unit saw an Iranian soldier with a rocket-propelled grenade pointed at them, they shot and killed him with a 50-caliber weapon. The cross-border exchange of fire continued for several minutes until the Americans were out of range.
The Iraqi unit involved, who had apparently dismounted their vehicles without their weapons, were captured by the Iranians and later released.
Hizbullah trained Iraqis in "precision military style kidnappings"
Another document released described Iraqi operatives being trained in conducting "precision military style kidnappings" by Hizbullah near Qum in Iran.
One operative, chosen because of his Hizbullah training, was alleged to have meticulously planned an attack in which American troops would be kidnapped inside a Baghdad tunnel. The attack was to have utilized improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and small arms to disable the American vehicles, reminiscent of Hizbullah tactics seen in Lebanon.
The attack never took place, but the operative was thought to be responsible for the kidnapping of an Iraqi government minister in late 2006.

Stay updated with the latest news!

Subscribe to The Jerusalem Post Newsletter


Also included in the huge cache of documents was a military report describing intercepted weapons shipments from the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. The  report said that one seized shipment coming from the Revolutionary Guards into Iraq contained high explosives, ammunition, and surface-to-air missile heads.
Other stories included in the released documents described a suspected Iranian-funded assassination program in Iraq, and unmanned surveillance aircraft drifting into Iranian territory, some of which were never recovered.
Detained American hikers were on Iraqi side of the border
The three Americans detained by Iran in July 2009 for alleged illegal entry were on the Iraqi side of the border at the time, according to a US military report written on the day of their arrest, found among the cache of WikiLeaks documents posted Friday.
"The leadership in Iran benefits as it focuses the Iranian population on a perceived external threat rather than internal dissension," the report said.
The document, a field report not meant as a definitive account or a conclusive assessment, was reported first by The New York Times on its website Friday. It was among nearly 400,000 secret US military documents revealed by WikiLeaks.
The US military report described "a kidnapping of 3 Americans who were being taken to the Iranian border. The Americans were hiking near the Iranian border when taken." An update later in the day said an Iraqi colonel reported that the three had been detained "for being too close to the border."
The US State Department has repeatedly urged Iran to release the three — Sarah Shourd, Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal, saying they did nothing wrong. Iran claims they illegally crossed the border to spy. Shourd was released in September after complaining of health problems; the two others remain in prison in Iran.
Wikileaks on Saturday said that it will soon publish 15,000 more secret Afghan war documents.
WikiLeaks has said the 15,000 additional Afghan files were held back because of their sensitive content. Kristinn Hrafnsson of WikiLeaks told reporters Saturday in London that the documents had now been fully vetted for release and will be published shortly.
He said the Iraq documents have been edited to conceal people's names and "contain no information that could be harmful to individuals."