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Covert British unit a 'secret weapon' in Iraq
Deep inside the heart of the Green Zone, the heavily fortified administrative compound in Baghdad, lies one of the most carefully guarded secrets of the war in Iraq.
Not anymore. Thanks for that, LONDON SUNDAY TELEGRAPH.
It is a cell from a small and anonymous British army unit that goes by the innocuous name of the Joint Support Group (JSG), and it has proved to be one of the coalition's most effective and deadly weapons in the fight against terror. Its members -- servicemen and women of all ranks recruited from all three of the British armed forces -- are trained to turn hardened terrorists into coalition spies using methods developed on the streets of Northern Ireland, where the British Army managed to infiltrate the Irish Republican Army (IRA) at almost every level. During the long-running unrest in Northern Ireland, the JSG operated under the cover name of the Force Research Unit (FRU), which from the early 1980s to the late 1990s managed to penetrate the very heart of the IRA.

Since war broke out in Iraq in 2003, the cell has been responsible for running dozens of Iraqi double agents. Working alongside the Special Air Service (SAS) and the American Delta Force as part of the Baghdad-based counterterrorist unit known as Task Force Black, the cell members have supplied intelligence that has saved hundreds of lives and resulted in some of the most notable successes against the myriad terror groups fighting in Iraq.

Last week, sources said, intelligence from the JSG led to a series of successful operations against Sunni militia groups in southern Baghdad. Information obtained by the cell also is understood to have inspired one of the most successful operations carried out by Task Force Black, in November 2005, when SAS snipers fatally shot three would-be suicide bombers. The killing of Abu Musab Zarqawi, the leader of al Qaeda in Iraq until his death in June, came after intelligence obtained by the JSG, as did the rescue of kidnapped British peace campaigner, Norman Kember.

JSG operators deal with dozens of Iraqis every week who are prepared, for a variety of reasons, to become informers. "Some Iraqis come to us because they are simply fed up with the violence," one source said. "They may have had members of their families murdered, tortured or kidnapped. Unlike much of the middle class, which has already fled the country, they may be too poor to leave and so they come to us to see if they can make a difference."
Risking their own lives, and those of their friends and relatives to do so. They also fight who stay in the shadows and feed helpful information.
Posted by: trailing wife 2007-02-06
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=179673