Posted on 01/09/2006 9:27:51 AM PST by Flavius
ehran, Iran, Jan. 09 A dozen senior commanders of Irans elite Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) died in a plane crash in northwest Iran on Monday, a government spokesman announced.
A Falcon jet belonging to the IRGC crashed 13 kilometres southeast of Lake Orumieh, killing all 15 passengers on board. They included seven members of the General Command of the IRGC Ground Forces.
The commanders who died in the crash included Brigadier General Ahmad Kazemi, commander of the IRGC Ground Forces and a rising star in Irans radical Islamist military, Brigadier General Saeed Mohtadi, commander of the IRGCs 27 Mohammad Division, Brigadier General Hanif, Director of Intelligence of the IRGC Ground Forces, Brigadier General Soleimani, Director of Operations of the IRGC Ground Forces, and Brigadier General Yazdani, Commander of the IRGC Artillery.
The Revolutionary Guards Corps was founded in the early days of the Islamic revolution in 1979 as an armed force loyal to Irans clerical rulers. Its commanders directly report to the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and their mission is to protect and propagate the Islamic revolution.
Prior to his recent appointment as commander of the IRGC Ground Forces, Kazemi commanded the IRGC Air Force and Missile Forces. He was promoted in the recent reshuffle of the IRGC general command that was ordered by the Supreme Leader and was regarded as a loyal Khamenei supporter.
In a statement released in Tehran, the General Command of the Armed Forces said the IRGC plane crashed at 9:30 am local time near Orumieh Airport. It identified the cause of the crash as the failure of both engines. Earlier reports cited fuel shortage and bad weather as the cause of the crash.
Irans hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad praised Ahmad Kazemi and other IRGC commanders who were killed in the incident. He said the armed forces must become symbols of resilience and honour by awaiting the return of the Mahdi [the Shiite messiah] and obeying the Supreme Leader.
The top IRGC commanders were on a mission to visit IRGC forces in north-western Iran near the Turkish and Iraqi borders.
The blow to the IRGC comes at a critical time when the force has been given huge powers by the Supreme Leader in the wake of the consolidation of power by the ultra-conservative faction after the election of Ahmadinejad, who is himself a former commander of the IRGC. Hundreds of Revolutionary Guards commanders have been given senior government positions. At least 13 ministers in Ahmadinejads cabinet hail from the Revolutionary Guards.
As part of sweeping changes in the IRGC, Khamenei recently appointed a radical Shiite cleric, Ali Saeedi, as his personal representative to the IRGC. Saeedi, who will act as the chief ideological commissar of the Revolutionary Guards, has already reactivated the dormant Political Bureau of the IRGC and has told the Guards commanders that the Supreme Leader wants the force to play a much more prominent role in the political arena.
A day ahead of the crash, sources close to the IRGC said in Tehran that further reshuffles in the Guards top command were afoot. They mentioned plans to promote Brigadier General Mohammad Hejazi as the new Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the IRGC.
Security forces in Orumieh have sealed off the site of the crash and many military commanders have arrived at the scene, according to eye-witnesses.
Do we use old C130's to carry OUR MSM journalists? (ahem)
Iran's Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, although probably in his sixties, is said to have serious liver cancer, and is not expected to survive the next year.
Source and Link: Regime Change Iran Blog
The time to hesitate is through
No time to wallow in the mire
Try now we can only lose
And our love become a funeral pyre
I doubt it. If we wanted to take out their aircraft, you'd see their skies swept clear -- not just one crash. Iranian incompetence is a far more likely explanation.
I'd gladly fly on older aircraft (like an older C-130, or even a C-47) if I felt it had been well maintained.
But I'd worry about getting on a new aircraft if it was maintained and operated by an insane Islamic government.
Wasn't there also a recent plane crash into a building in Iran?
The C130 is a legend (like the DC3, Super Con, Warthog, B52). Well maintained, they are like the Energizer bunny. They just keep on going and going and....
Mostly journalists...sounds like Usama might have lost some of his photographers who report to al jazerra in that crash.
Oopsie.
I suppose it's possible the crash was caused by CIA lightning.
I'm guessing sabotage. All it takes is one.
Interesting theories on this thread.
Truly unfortunate 'accident'.
Its just as likely a little 'house cleaning' by the new Iranian President to insure his own radicals are in place in high military positions.
Somewhere, in the back of the room, Mike Espy is waving both hands and nodding.
ROFLMAO! Your theories absolutely correspond with my theories and I too don't know anything about aviation.
Ron Brown, too.
"94 people died, mostly journalists. They were being flown to cover a special military exercise, to boast of their preparedness for war."
MMMMNNNNNNNN! ! ! !
The smell of burnt presstitute in the morning.
It's fair. They want to decapitate infidels; their military leadership gets decapitated.
Allahu fubar! NO virgins?
Yes, we have no virgins, today! Allah bin Satan is running low, so has to conserve.
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