Iranian weapons killed 170 troops, officials claim

Iraq: Officials of the US-led coalition yesterday showed what they said were examples of Iranian weapons used to kill 170 of…

Iraq:Officials of the US-led coalition yesterday showed what they said were examples of Iranian weapons used to kill 170 of their soldiers and alleged high-level Iranian involvement in training Iraqi militants.

A senior defence official from the US-led multinational force in Baghdad told a briefing that 170 coalition troops had been killed by Iranian-made roadside bombs, known as explosively formed penetrators (EFPs), that he said were smuggled into Iraq.

Officials showed reporters fragments of what they said were Iranian-manufactured weapons, including one part of an EFP - which is strong enough to penetrate the armour of an Abrams tank - and parts of 81mm and 60mm mortar bombs.

The US accuses Iran of fanning violence in Iraq by giving sophisticated bomb-making technology, money and training to militant Shia groups, some of whom have links with Iraq's Shia-led government. Iran denies the allegation.

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The three defence officials spoke on condition they would not be identified. Washington has hardened its rhetoric over Iran's alleged role in the war in Iraq.

"The weapons had characteristics unique to being manufactured in Iran . . . Iran is the only country in the region that produces these weapons," the senior defence official said.

The officials said they were showing the evidence, including a slide of an Iranian-made shoulder-launched surface-to-air missile, out of concern over a vast increase in weapons used by Iraqi militants against US forces in 2006.

"We assess these activities are coming from the highest levels of the Iranian government," said the senior defence analyst, referring to the alleged training of Iraqi militants by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Qods Force.

The US military has seized several Iranians in Iraq in the past two months, including five in the northern city of Arbil, on suspicion that they are Qods members.

Iran does not officially acknowledge the group's existence but the analyst said it reports directly to Iran's top authority, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Despite the briefing, the senior defence analyst said there was no "smoking gun" linking Tehran and Iraqi militants, and Iraqi smugglers were bringing in the components. Tehran blames US soldiers for the violence in Iraq and for inflaming tension between majority Shia and once-dominant Sunni Arabs.

"We are a friend of Iraq. We have common culture and history, and Iraq's stability, security and integrity, means Iran's stability, security and integrity," Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad told a rally in Tehran yesterday marking the anniversary of the 1979 Islamic revolution.

President Bush has said he has no intention of invading Iran. However, some war critics say the Bush administration's language on Iran echoes comments made leading up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Elsewhere, Iraq's Shia prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki, said Iraqi forces would step up their deployment in Baghdad this week as part of a US-backed offensive against militants.

In fresh violence, a suicide bomber driving a truck packed with explosives killed at least 15 people when he attacked a police station north of Baghdad.

- (Reuters)