Israel's Mossad
Teams up with Terror Group to Kill Iran's Nuclear Scientists (Part 2)
The MEK and its sister
organizations have since the beginning been run by Massoud and Maryam Rajavi, a
husband-wife team who have maintained tight control despite assassination
threats and internal dissent. Massoud Rajavi, 63, founded the MEK, but since
the U.S. invasion of Iraq has taken a backseat to his
wife.The State Department report describes the Rajavis as “fundamentally
undemocratic” and “not a viable alternative to the current government of Iran.”NBC News correspondent Tom Aspell
visits an MEK base in Iraq in this Nightly News piece that
aired on May 26, 1991.One reason for that is the MEK’s close relationship with
Saddam Hussein, as demonstrated by this 1986 video showing the late Iraqi
dictator meeting with Massoud Rajavi. Saddam recruited the MEK in much the same
way the Israelis allegedly have, using them to fight Iranian forces during the
Iran-Iraq War, a role they took on proudly. So proudly, they invited NBC News
to one of their military camps outside Baghdad in 1991.“The National Liberation
Army (MLA), the military wing of the Mujahedin, conducted raids into Iran during the latter years of the
1980-88 Iran-Iraq War,” according to the State Department report. The NLA's
last major offensive reportedly was conducted against Iraqi Kurds in 1991, when
it joined Saddam Hussein's brutal repression of the Kurdish rebellion. In
addition to occasional acts of sabotage, the Mujahedin are responsible for
violent attacks in Iran that victimize
civilians.”“Internally, the Mujahedin run their organization autocratically,
suppressing dissent and eschewing tolerance of differing viewpoints,” it said.
“Rajavi, who heads the Mojahedin’s political and military wings, has fostered a
cult of personality around himself.”The U.S. suspicion of the MEK doesn’t end
there. Law enforcement officials have told NBC News that in 1994, the MEK made
a pact with terrorist Ramzi Yousef a year after he masterminded the first
attack on the World Trade Center in New York City. According to the officials, who
spoke on condition of anonymity, Yousef built an 11-pound bomb that MEK agents
placed inside one of Shia Islam’s greatest shrines in Mashad, Iran, on June 20,
1994. At
least 26 people, mostly women and children, were killed and 200 wounded in the
attack.That connection between Yousef, nephew of 9-11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh
Mohammad, and the MEK was first reported in a book, “The New Jackals,” by Simon
Reeve. NBC News confirmed that Yousef told U.S. law enforcement that he had worked
with the MEK on the bombing.In recent years, the MEK has said it has renounced
violence, but Iranian officials say that is not true, that killings of Iranians
continue. Still, through some deft lobbying, the group has been able to get the
United Kingdom and the European Union to remove it from their lists of
terrorist groups.The alleged involvement of the MEK in the assassinations of
Iranian nuclear scientists provides the U.S. with a cloak of deniability
regarding the clandestine killings. Because the U.S. has designated the MEK as a
terrorist organization, neither military nor intelligence units of the U.S. government, can work with them. “We
cannot deal with them, “said one senior U.S. official. “We would not deal with
them because of the designation.” Iranian officials initially accused the
Israelis and MEK of being behind the attacks, but they have since added the CIA
to the list. Three days after the Jan. 11, 2012, bombing in Tehran that killed
Roshan, the state news agency IRNA reported that Iran’s Foreign Ministry had
sent a diplomatic letter to the U.S. claiming to have “evidence and reliable
information” that the CIA provided “guidance, support and planning” to
assassins directly involved in the attack.U.S. Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton immediately denied any connection to the killings. “I want to
categorically deny any United States involvement in any kind of act of
violence inside Iran,” Clinton told reporters on the day of the
attack.But at least two GOP presidential candidates have no problem with the
targeting of nuclear scientists. In a November debate, former House Speaker
Newt Gingrich endorsed “taking out their scientists,” and former Pennsylvania
Sen. Rick Santorum called it, ”a wonderful thing.”The MEK’s opposition to the
Iranian government also has recently earned it both plaudits and support from
an odd mix of political bedfellows. A group of former Cabinet-level officials
have joined together to support the MEK’s removal from the official U.S. Foreign
Terrorist Organization list, even taking out a full-page ad last year in the
New York Times calling for the removal of the MEK from the U.S. terrorist list.
Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, former U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey,
former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton; former Homeland Security Secretary Tom
Ridge, former FBI Director Louis Freeh and former Rep. Patrick Kennedy were
among those whose signatures were on the ad.“There’s an extraordinary group of
bipartisan or even apolitical leaders, military leaders, diplomats, the United
States … the United Kingdom, the European Union, even a U.S. District Court in
Washington, said that this group that was put on the foreign terrorist
organization watch list in 1997 doesn’t deserve to be there,” Ridge said in
November on “The Andrea Mitchell Show” on MSNBC TV.U.S. politicians also have
been pushing the U.S. government to protect the 3,400 MEK
members and their families at Camp Ashraf in Iraq, about 35 miles north of Baghdad. With the departure of U.S. troops, the MEK feared that Iraqi
forces, with encouragement from Iran, would attack the camp, leading to
a bloodbath. At the last minute, however, agreement was brokered with the
United Nations that would permit the MEK members’ departure for resettlement in
unspecified democratic countries. As of this week, there’s been little movement
on the planned resettlement. Iranian fighters with the National Liberation
Army, the military wing of the MEK, clean armoured personnel carriers in 1997
after a field exercise near Camp Ashraf in Iraq.The Iranians see what’s
happening as terrorism and hypocrisy by the United States. They have forwarded documents and
other evidence to the United Nations – and directly to the United States, they say.” I think this is very
cynical plan. This is unacceptable,” said Larijani. “This is a bad trend in the
world. Unprecedented. We should kill scientists … to block a scientific
program? I mean this is disaster!”Daniel Byman, a professor in the School of
Foreign Service at Georgetown University and also a senior fellow with the
Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution, said that if
the accounts of the Israeli-MEK assassinations are accurate, the operation
borders on terrorism.“In theory, states cannot be terrorist, but if they hire
locals to do assassinations, that would be state sponsorship,” said Byman,
author of the recent book, “A High Price: The Triumphs and Failures of Israeli
Counterterrorism.” “You could argue that they took action not to terrorize the
public, the purpose of terrorism, but only the nuclear community. An argument
could also be made that degrading the program means that you don’t have to take
military action and thus, this is a lower level of violence and that really
these are military targets, where normally terrorist targets are civilians.”But
ultimately, Byman said, there is a “spectrum of responsibility” and that Israel is ultimately responsible.Ronen
Bergman, while not speaking on behalf of the Israeli government, suggests that
there is a justification, citing an oft-repeated but disputed quote in which
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s said that Israel should be wiped off the face of the
earth.“Meir Degan, the chief of Mossad, when he was in office, hung a
photograph behind him, behind the chair of the chief of Mossad,” notes the
Israeli commentator. “And in that photograph you see -- an ultra-orthodox Jew
-- long beard, standing on his knees with his-- hands up in the air, and two
Gestapo soldiers standing -- beside him with guns pointed at him. One of -- one
of them is smiling.“And Degan used to say to his people and the people coming
to visit him from CIA, NSA, et cetera, ‘Look at this guy in the picture. This
is my grandfather just seconds before he was killed by the SS,’” Bergman said.
“’… We are here to prevent this from happening again.’"
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