Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Report points to Iran sending arms to rebels in Yemen

Weapons seized in the Arabian Sea indicate Tehran is arming Houthi rebels in Yemen, British-based activists have said in a report. The shipments included guns made in Iran, Russia and possibly North Korea.

The suspected pipeline leads from Iran to the coast of Somalia and then across the Gulf of Aden to Yemen, Conflict Armament Research said in a report on Wednesday.
"This report provides evidence suggesting Iran is playing a hand in supplying weapons to the conflict in Yemen," said Jonah Leff, the director of operations for the arms research group.
Australian, French, and US warships have seized some 4,500 weapons while raiding three traditional Middle Eastern boats, so-called dhows, in February and March of this year. According to the report, the arms shipments included 2,000 assault rifles "characteristic of Iranian manufacture" and 64 Hoshdar-M Iranian-made sniper rifles, all of them new.
The western ships found light machine guns, suspected to be of North Korean origin, in two of the three dhows. The guns had the same serial number sequence, "which suggests that the material derived from the same original consignment," the report added.
Two of the boats were made by Iranian shipbuilder Al Mansoor, whose yard is next to an Iranian Revolutionary Guards compound.
"Since 2012, Al Mansoor dhows have been involved in multiple cases of trafficking in heroin, cannabis, and more recently, weapons," according to the report.
The investigators also indentified 100 Iranian rocket launchers and nine Russian-made anti-tank missiles. United Arab Emirates previously reported finding an anti-tank missile from "the same production run" in Yemen.
While admitting that their findings were "relatively limited," the researchers point to "significant quantities of Iranian-manufactured weapons and weapons that plausibly derive from Iranian stockpiles."
Iran denies allegations
Saudi Arabia has long accused Iran of using Houthis to fight a proxy war against the government in Yemen. The Sanaa regime is backed by the oil-rich kingdom.
However, both the rebels and the officials in Tehran deny this claim. Iranian foreign ministry also rejected the allegations in the latest report.
"It is not true, and Iran has never provided weapons to Houthis or any other group in Yemen," the official told Reuters. "But we have always supported and will continue to support oppressed groups and nations."
Experts believe it is very hard to control smuggling in the region, with Yemen torn by fighting and Somali marine forces struggling with poor training and equipment.
dj/gsw (Reuters, AFP)

Will Iran’s Syria Policy Change After the Election of Donald Trump?

London, 29 Nov - In his article for The Daily Caller, Heshmat Alavi, a political and rights activist focusing on Iran, writes about the unexpected turn of events for Iran, with the election of Donald Trump as the new president of the United States. Now the Iranian regime is weighing its policy approach, foreign in particular. 
The appeasement policy adopted by U.S. President Barack Obama and his administration was taken full advantage of, using its windfall to fuel the Syrian War of ally Bashar Assad. Almost half a million Syrians have been killed, and more than 10 million have been displaced inside or outside the country.
A new administration in Washington has disturbed Tehran, who must now determine how to maintain its grip over the region, with a special focus on Syria. 
Protests began peacefully in Syria, but Assad opened fire on demonstrators. The Syrian people then took to arms and formed the Free Syrian Army in August 2011, inflicting major defeats to Assad’s forces. 
Considering Syria its 35th province, Iran deployed its Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) to assist the troops fighting against Syrian opposition forces. Alavi writes, “As the opposition advanced, Assad followed Iran’s orders in launching chemical weapons and mass murdering civilians in a suburb near Damascus back in 2013. Unfortunately, the international community failed to respond adequately, as Obama literally held back any possible measures by the West to safeguard his legacy defining nuclear deal with Iran.” 
As the war in Syria dragged on, it paved the grounds for the rise of Daesh (ISIS, ISIL). Alavi says, “Yes, Daesh is to blame for numerous atrocities. Yet it goes beyond doubt that Iran, Assad and former Iraqi prime minister Nouri al-Maliki launched massive crackdown campaigns against Sunnis in both countries in the name of battling Daesh.” 
“ISIS was created by Assad releasing 1,500 prisoners from jail and Maliki releasing 1,000 people in Iraq who were put together as a force of terror types,” said U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry in an interview with Fox News
Iran sought Russia’s involvement to provide air cover for its ground attacks, when confronted with major advances made by Syrian opposition forces in 2015. Iran increased its forces in Syria to 60,000 and launched “Operation Moharram” aimed at retaking areas from opposition control, including the strategic city of Aleppo. Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei also ordered the regular army’s 65th Division to Aleppo. 
“With the Assad military suffering major catastrophes and dwindling down to less than 50,000 troops, Tehran rallied more than 70,000 non-Iranian and Iranian forces in the Levant. The budget Iran has allocated to its Syria campaign ranges around $100 billion, most sent under the disguise of Khamenei’s office to facilitate the process,” Alavi states. 
Senior Iranian military commanders regularly inspect the situation on the ground, and many high-ranking officers, including Hossein Hamedani, a senior IRGC commander, have been killed. 
The IRGC has placed all pro-Assad forces fighting in Syria into five sectors, consisting of four fronts (north, south, middle and costal) under a central command post, the “Glass Building,” which is strategically adjacent to Damascus International Airport. 
The IRGC is also keeping a very close eye on all fronts, resulting in the role of the Assad army being significantly downgraded. 
Alavi writes that, “The IRGC Quds Force, commanding all pro-Assad forces in Syria, has established a complex command structure, consisting of Airborne, Navy, Air Force, the Missile Unit, Engineering and Communications & Electronic Warfare branches. IRGC Ground Forces are the main sector, fighting parallel to members of the Lebanese Hezbollah, along with foot-soldiers recruited from Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. More than a dozen Iraqi Shiite groups, including the notorious Badr Organization, Kata’eb Hezbollah, Assa’eb ahl Al Haq are involved in the Syria conflict. 
Iran’s presence in Syria has been reported thusly by the National Council of Resistance of Iran.
IRGC forces: 8,000 to 10,000
Iranian Regular Army: 5,000 to 6,000
Non-Iranian mercenaries:
  • Iraqi militias: Around 20,000 (from 10 groups)
  • Afghan militias (“Fatemiyoun”): 15,000 to 20,000
  • Lebanese Hezbollah: 7,000 to 10,000
  • Militias from Pakistan (“Zeinabiyoun”), Palestine, and elsewhere: 5,000 to 7,000 
It’s been estimated that paying for all non-Syrian forces fighting to maintain Assad in power, along with fees for their families, widows and etc., is costing Iran somewhere between $80 to $90 million, accumulating to about $1 billion over the span of one year. “Add these costs to those needed for extremely expensive military weapons and equipment, along with billions provided by Khamenei’s office to maintain Assad’s government intact, we come to realize the position of the Syria dossier for Tehran,” writes Alavi. 
President-elect Donald Trump will be inheriting a very complicated Syrian situation. Iraq and Yemen are also facing devastation. As a result, the Middle East is truly on the brink of a conflict of global proportions. 
11 Arab states have recently issued an unprecedented letter to outgoing U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemning Iran’s involvement across the Middle East. This follows a resolution by a House of Representatives seeking sanctions against Syria
Alavi concludes by saying, “The incoming Republican administration under Donald Trump needs to fully comprehend the destructive nature of Iran’s presence across the region, and how this phenomenon has rendered newly spread terrorism across Europe and beyond.”

Iranian-American Communities Issue a Statement Against the Iranian Regime’s Lobbyists

London, 29 Nov - Various groups of Iranian-American communities have joined together to issue a statement against the Iranian Regime’s lobbyists who have attempted to smear the democratic Resistance forces.
The letter, penned by leaders from the Northern California, South Texas and Missouri, branches of the Iranian-American Community, decried the Regime’s attempt to paint the Resistance as terrorists and murderers when the Regime is the leading state-sponsor of terrorism and the world leader in executions per capita.
Ahmad Moeinimanesh, Executive Director of the Iranian American Community of Northern California, Ali Soudjani, President of the Iranian American Community of South Texas, and Kasra Nejat, President of the Iranian-American Cultural Association of Missouri, wrote: “Of late, we have seen particularly venomous and defamatory propaganda targeting former U.S. officials who addressed scores of conferences and seminars we organized on U.S. policy on Iran.”
They write that the reason that they care so much about the US-Iran policy is that they know the brutality faced by ordinary Iranians; indeed, they face it themselves once.
The statement read: “Many of us have lost family members due to repression in Iran, and many have relatives among the ranks of the main Iranian opposition movement, the Mujahedin-e-Khalq (MEK).”
The MEK have always been targeted by the Regime, from the 1988 massacre which killed 30,000 political prisoners to the attacks on Camps Ashraf and Liberty in Iraq over the past few years.
The MEK members were not even safe in exile in Iraq- they had to be moved to safety in Albania in 2016.
The statement continued: “Because of our personal histories, we also appreciate the freedoms and opportunities of life here in the United States perhaps more deeply than most. Our communities’ members are generally very successful, taxpaying professionals, committed to paying it forward, and using our good fortune to promote the secular, democratic, and non-nuclear Iran that best serves the interests of our homeland, Iran, and our new home, the United States.”
The Iranian Resistance receives bi-partisan support in the US and across many Western countries, thanks in no small part to the intelligence provided by the MEK in relation to Iran’s nuclear programme and role in terrorism.
The statement finished: “Iranian-Americans are loud and proud about the work we have accomplished, about the distinguished officials who have joined us in our call for policy change, about the support we have received from our Congressional representatives, and most of all about the alarm bells we have set off in Tehran.”

Think of Iranian Christians: Listen to their cries for freedom

BY DONYA JAM
As an Iranian-American, it is very natural that the U.S. policy on Iran matters to me. And as the child of Iranian Christians, the fate of Christians in Iran is of particular interest to me. 
The existence of the Christian community in Iran dates back centuries and is a major part of the history of the country. For centuries, Muslims, Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians got along fine in Iran. We were all Iranians and our religion was not an issue at all.
After the ayatollahs took over in 1979 things changed for the worse. The religious persecutions began and restrictions became more and more institutionalized. Many Christians and Jews fled. But some stayed in their native country, where they are given token representation in parliament so the Iranian regime can maintain the illusion of legitimacy.
The situation of the Iranian Christian minority did not see any improvement subsequent to President Hassan Rouhani assuming office. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom confirmed this when its 2015 annual report noted that an increased number of religious minorities have been jailed under Rouhani; the very man that the Obama administration depicted as a “moderate.”
The Obama administration did all it could to sell the nuclear deal as a victory, at best it has deferred the ultimate questions about how to deal with the regime in Iran, and at worst it has emboldened their belligerence in the region. A successful policy vis-a-vis the regime in Tehran has seemingly eluded Republicans and Democrats for the last 16 years.
In all fairness, it is time to try something new, for our own sake and for the sake of Iranians.
While we face the threat of terrorism at home and the increase of sectarian conflicts abroad, there are no easy solutions to these problems.
A common denominator underlying the rise of ISIS, and the spread of instability and fundamentalism is none other than the regime in Tehran. No one can deny this. Yet at every turn in the past eight years we were told that the only solution is one which engages the mullahs and strengthens their grip on power. The time for such thinking is at an end.
The regime has been reluctant to make good on promises of change, and thus far has continued its brutal repression of dissidents while maintaining an aggressive policy in the region. The question of how to guarantee a long term shift in the behavior of the Iranian regime remains unanswered. The only long term policy that can guarantee a fundamental change of behavior in Iran and that sets an example for hope and change abroad is one which recognizes the legitimate rights of the Iranian people to bring about democratic change and topple the theocratic fascist state in Iran.
It is time that the United States firmly aligned itself with the forces in Iran and in the Middle East which embrace democratic change, freedom and liberty, and secular governance. The Iranian people and their organized resistance should be our primary negotiating partners and allies, not the ruling mullahs.
The principal opposition to the Iranian theocracy, the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) is one such organization. The MEK has long served as an example of an organization whose principal aim has been to combat Islamic fundamentalism and terrorism that emanates from it. Khomeinists engaged in widespread repression of the MEK, and the West remained silent as they executed tens of thousands of MEK activists.
Today the MEK is the most integral part of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), a coalition of Iranian opposition organizations that support a secular future for Iran. One which guarantees freedom of speech, the rights of ethnic and as well as religious minorities, and calls for strict equality between men and women. In fact the NCRI is led by a woman, Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, whose leadership and platform stands as the direct antithesis of Islamic fundamentalism.
Mrs. Rajavi advocates for a new future for Iran. This includes a ten point plan for a democratic secular republic free of nuclear weapons, capital punishment, and tolerant to all religions, ethnicities and ideas. This plan would not only end the threat of Iran’s nuclear program, but would usher in a new era of cooperation and stability between the United States and Iran, as well as the entire region. It would address instability from Syria to Yemen and all throughout the region.
The new administration has a historical opportunity for a historical change in one of the hotspots in the world. The new approach is both moral and politically savvy.

Saudi Arabia’s Daily Al-Riyadh: Maryam Rajavi Said the World Should Act Against Iran Regime

NCRI - Al-Riyadh Newspaper printed in Saudi Arabia, published a report on Monday 28th November 2016 regarding the summit held in Paris. The report reads:"the president of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), Maryam Rajavi stated that the US policy was disastrous for the Iranian people over the past 16 years and this policy has generously contributed to the Mullahs' regime."
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A conference entitled "The call to Justice; prosecuting the perpetrators of crimes against humanity in Iran and Syria" was held in Paris and Maryam Rajavi said that the people, the Resistance of Iran and the countries of the region expect US government to revise its Policy since a new government is taking the office. Many Iranians, prominent political and legal figures and parliamentarians participated in the conference from France, Europe and other countries of the region as well as the authorities of the Syrian opposition.
Maryam Rajavi stressed that the war and insecurity particularly the issue of ISIS will not be resolved in the current condition unless the Iranian regime ends it’s meddle in the region and especially in Syria. Any partnership with the Mullahs for dealing with ISIS is disastrous since it strengthens the regime and its terrorism and ISIS will gain a political and social power as well. The people of Iran resent the dirty war that is going on in Syria however by the nonsense words such as defending the shrine Khamenei tries to justify the bloodsheds and the occupation of Syria.
The six world powers granted Iran the unjustified privileges during the nuclear talks. They also ignored the resolutions of the Security Council which were not implemented by the Iranian regime. Nevertheless, the nuclear deal produced an inverse result although it was the only opportunity for the Iranian regime to remove the crises. The increasing hunger and indigence have shattered people's life. The internal gangs do not support the Mullahs as before and they cannot be controlled anymore. In addition to that, they also have no power to impose against the social protests. The guardianship of the Islamic Jurist has reached a deadlock today. Under such circumstances, it is easier to dismantle the current regime and to establish a pluralist Republic.
Maryam Rajavi said:"we, the people of region expect the international community to halt its policy of giving concession to the Mullahs' regime and to stop being silent and inactive towards the crimes of the Iranian regime in the region. The international community also has to respect the demands of the people of the region as well as the struggle of the Iranians for achieving freedom."
Al-Riyadh Newspaper also wrote:"it should be noted that the French and Colombian figures, the judge of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, judge of the International Criminal Court (in office till 2003) and the Mayor of the 5th arrondissement of Paris participated in the conference. Some members of the Syrian opposition had a speech about the bombings and crimes which are committed by the brutal regime of Assad. They also discussed that Assad's regime is considerably supported by Russia and the Iranian regime. A number of political prisoners who have left Iran recently talked about their experiences and observations regarding the widespread repression exerted on the Iranian people. At the end, a photo exhibition was held about the horrible massacre of 1988 and the execution of 30 thousand political prisoners."

Ex-Euro MP: Iran gives Trump chance to restore lost U.S. credibility in Middle East

After the unexpected election of Donald Trump as president of the United States of America, a new reality emerges not only for Americans but also for Europeans, in their relationship with the Iranian regime, former European lawmaker Alejo Vidal-Quadras wrote on Tuesday, November 29, for United Press International
"As a candidate, Trump rallied against the nuclear deal with Iran as 'one of the worst deals ever negotiated' and pledged to renegotiate on terms that favor the United States and its allies. He has also cast himself as a strong opponent to Islamic extremism in very forceful terms, another indication that the U.S. relationship with Iran could be in for big changes", wrote Dr. Vidal-Quadras.
Even without a complete renegotiation of the deal, there is much that Trump can still do in combating the Iranian regime's nuclear ambitions and sponsorship of extremism in the Middle East and around the world, he added. 
"The first action a Trump administration can undertake is simply enforcing the rules on the books. The Iranian regime has violated international agreements and raised concerns about its ballistic missile program. This flagrant violation must come at a price. Trump can put a halt to the huge trade deals between American companies and Iran and can introduce new sanctions accordingly. In doing so, he would send a clear message to the Iranian regime, enforce international law and lessen the threat around the Middle East." 
"Another action the new U.S. administration can take is to stand up against the practice of kidnapping that the Iranian regime has been using to receive ransom payments. They abducted American soldiers on a patrol in the Gulf this year and have been kidnapping American and European citizens in the past who they let languish in horrid conditions in prison until they extract their ransom. This is a technique that goes back to the Iranian revolution in 1979 and continues to be used because the American government has been paying the price instead of inflicting a price for Iran's aggression." 
"Another action that the new administration should take is to make it clear to Iran that the era of the impunity of its unbridled egregious meddling in the region from Iraq to Yemen, and particularly in Syria, is over. The case in point is Syria. The Assad regime is guilty of a multitude of atrocities against its citizens and Tehran has been its main backer in the past five years in his slaughter of the Syrian people." 
"But the key action is to go where it hurts the ruling clerics the most: reaching out to Iranian people and their resistance. This is Tehran's Achilles heel. In a policy initiative on Iran in 2015, 40 former senior U.S. officials who held national security positions in four administrations, called for a new attitude in U.S. policy toward Iran and the Iranian opposition. They called for a new approach toward the largest, most established and best organized democratic opposition, the National Council of Resistance of Iran, led by Maryam Rajavi. The key component of the NCRI, the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran, has maintained an extensive popular support among Iranians at home and abroad, despite a brutal repression including the execution of dozens of thousands of their activists by the regime. It must be remembered that it was the MEK who blew the whistle and revealed Iran's concealed nuclear program in 2002." 
"Rajavi's steadfast message to political and religious leaders around the world over a period of many years is summarized in her 10-point plan for the future of Iran, a political program that would resolve the country´s most dangerous and destabilizing challenges. The plan would restore political legitimacy through universal suffrage, guarantee rights for all citizens and particularly women and minorities, end the cruel excesses of the judiciary by re-establishing the rule of law, finish the nightmare of fundamentalist Islamic dictatorship by separating church and state, protect property rights, promote equal opportunity and environmental protections, and – last but certainly not least – seek a non-nuclear Iran, free of weapons of mass destruction." 
Dr. Vidal-Quadras added that President George W. Bush famously stated in his 2005 state of the union speech: "If the Iranian people stand up for their liberty, America stands with them." But in 2009, when millions of pro-democracy Iranians poured into the streets of Tehran calling for freedom and regime change, President Barack Obama didn't move a finger and let them be crushed by the tyrants. 
He added: "The next four years could dramatically shift U.S. policies in the world. If proactive on Iran, Trump could usher in long-term stability in the Middle East, decrease the likelihood of nuclear proliferation and contain the refugee crises. He has an excellent opportunity to restore the lost credibility of the United States in this context and the European Union should be an active partner in such an undertaking". 
Alejo Vidal-Quadras, a Spanish professor of atomic and nuclear physics, was vice president of the European Parliament from 1999 to 2014. He is currently president of the Brussels-based International Committee in Search of Justice (ISJ).


Think of Iranian Christians: Listen to their cries for freedom

BY: DONYA JAM 

The Hill, Nov. 29, 2016 - As an Iranian-American, it is very natural that the U.S. policy on Iran matters to me. And as the child of Iranian Christians, the fate of Christians in Iran is of particular interest to me.
The existence of the Christian community in Iran dates back centuries and is a major part of the history of the country. For centuries, Muslims, Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians got along fine in Iran. We were all Iranians and our religion was not an issue at all.
After the ayatollahs took over in 1979 things changed for the worse. The religious persecutions began and restrictions became more and more institutionalized. Many Christians and Jews fled. But some stayed in their native country, where they are given token representation in parliament so the Iranian regime can maintain the illusion of legitimacy.
The situation of the Iranian Christian minority did not see any improvement subsequent to President Hassan Rouhani assuming office. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom confirmed this when its 2015 annual report noted that an increased number of religious minorities have been jailed under Rouhani; the very man that the Obama administration depicted as a “moderate.”
The Obama administration did all it could to sell the nuclear deal as a victory, at best it has deferred the ultimate questions about how to deal with the regime in Iran, and at worst it has emboldened their belligerence in the region. A successful policy vis-a-vis the regime in Tehran has seemingly eluded Republicans and Democrats for the last 16 years.
In all fairness, it is time to try something new, for our own sake and for the sake of Iranians.
While we face the threat of terrorism at home and the increase of sectarian conflicts abroad, there are no easy solutions to these problems.
A common denominator underlying the rise of ISIS, and the spread of instability and fundamentalism is none other than the regime in Tehran. No one can deny this. Yet at every turn in the past eight years, we were told that the only solution is one which engages the mullahs and strengthens their grip on power. The time for such thinking is at an end.
The regime has been reluctant to make good on promises of change and thus far has continued its brutal repression of dissidents while maintaining an aggressive policy in the region. The question of how to guarantee a long-term shift in the behavior of the Iranian regime remains unanswered. The only long term policy that can guarantee a fundamental change of behavior in Iran and that sets an example for hope and change abroad is one which recognizes the legitimate rights of the Iranian people to bring about democratic change and topple the theocratic fascist state in Iran.
It is the time that the United States firmly aligned itself with the forces in Iran and in the Middle East which embrace democratic change, freedom and liberty, and secular governance. The Iranian people and their organized resistance should be our primary negotiating partners and allies, not the ruling mullahs.
The principal opposition to the Iranian theocracy, the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) is one such organization. The MEK has long served as an example of an organization whose principal aim has been to combat Islamic fundamentalism and terrorism that emanates from it. Khomeinists engaged in widespread repression of the MEK, and the West remained silent as they executed tens of thousands of MEK activists.
Today the MEK is the most integral part of the National Council of Resistance of Iran ( NCRI ), a coalition of Iranian opposition organizations that support a secular future for Iran. One which guarantees freedom of speech, the rights of ethnic and as well as religious minorities, and calls for strict equality between men and women. In fact, the NCRI is led by a woman, Mrs. Maryam Rajavi , whose leadership and platform stands as the direct antithesis of Islamic fundamentalism.
Mrs. Rajavi advocates for a new future for Iran. This includes a ten-point plan for a democratic secular republic free of nuclear weapons, capital punishment, and tolerant to all religions, ethnicities, and ideas. This plan would not only end the threat of Iran’s nuclear program but would usher in a new era of cooperation and stability between the United States and Iran, as well as the entire region. It would address instability from Syria to Yemen and all throughout the region.
The new administration has a historical opportunity for a historical change in one of the hotspots in the world. The new approach is both moral and politically savvy.

Iran regime even more oppressive since nuclear deal, dissidents say


 - The Washington Times - Tuesday, November 29, 2016
Now free in the West, recently escaped political dissidents say Iran’s regime has grown more oppressive since its nuclear deal with the U.S. and other world powers that had hoped the agreement would moderate the Islamic-ruled nation.
The protesters also say the billions of dollars in cash the U.S. shipped to Iran, plus the West’s release of frozen Iranian bank assets, already have been diverted to Iran’s expansionist armies in Iraq, Syria and elsewhere.
“Every deal, every negotiation with the regime, it means additional gallows in Iran,” says Shabnam Madadzadeh, 29, who gained fame as a student organizer at Tehran’s Tarbiat Moalem University. She spent five harsh years in confinement, including in Iran’s notorious Evin prison, but she did not break.
Just a few weeks ago, Ms. Madadzadeh escaped her home country via a clandestine network operated by the People’s Mujahedeen of Iran, or MEK. She surfaced in Paris and appeared Saturday at a conference with other Iranians opposed to the hard-line mullahs who run the country.
“Iranian people do not want negotiations with this regime, and they hate appeasement policy with this regime,” Ms. Madadzadeh told The Washington Times. “They want the world, European governments and United Nations and the U.S. to stay firmly against the regime’s policy of violence against human rights — the regime’s crimes in Iran and Syria and exporting terrorism in the world. Iranian people want a change in regime by themselves and resistance.”
A 2010 State Department report on human rights violations in Iran singled out the vindictive prosecutor who imprisons dissidents. One of his victims: Ms. Madadzadeh.

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Giuliani’s Ties to Iranian Resistance Group MEK Should be Viewed as a Valuable Contribution

London, 29 Nov - On November 28, in an article for Politico Magazine, Robert G. Torricelli, former U. S. Senator from New Jersey, and a former member of the U.S. House of Representatives, wrote about the Iranian Resistance Group, Mujahidin e-Khalq (MEK).  His article was written  in response to an article published in Politico last week, criticizing the MEK and the U.S. politicians who support them, particularly former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani.
Torricelli, a former Democratic member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who is familiar with the MEK and with Giuliani’s work on behalf of the organization says, “I can say unequivocally that Benjamin’s assertions are outrageous—so outrageous that I must respond.” 
A large bipartisan coalition supports the MEK in its campaign for regime change in Iran, including two former chairmen of the joint chiefs, two former CIA directors, a former attorney general and the former chairs of both political parties. People with such varied political ideals, such as Howard Dean and Patrick Kennedy to Newt Gingrich and John Bolton support the MEK. Torricelli says, “From this perspective, the outlier isn’t Rudy Giuliani; it’s Daniel Benjamin.” 
The history of the MEK began when it was part of the coalition opposing the shah of Iran in the late 1970s. The shah’s secret police executed and imprisoned most of their leadership. That vacuum was briefly filled by a Marxist group who were rejected by the incarcerated MEK leaders. Most of the Marxist leaders were killed by the shah or by the mullahs after their ascent to power in 1979. The MEK eventually regained its original leadership, and the MEK became an opposition group to the theocratic regime, and fled into exile in Paris and Iraq. 
Torricelli writes, “Throughout this time, the MEK did take part in legitimate political and military action against the Iranian regime, but I have seen no evidence to support the assertion Benjamin makes that it took part in terrorist activities against Iranians or Americans.” 
In Iraq in the 1980s, the refugee camps of the MEK were under the protection of the government of Iraq. MEK fighters were aligned with Iraqi Army during Iran/Iraq War. “But Benjamin’s claims that they assisted in Saddam Hussein’s repression of the Kurds have been denied by both MEK and U.S. Army leaders in Iraq. Upon the arrival of U.S. forces in 2003, the MEK willingly handed over its weapons, accepted U.S. protection and actively exposed the Iranian regime and its proxies’ terrorist activities. This included saving American lives by identifying IED locations. This, more than anything, explains the group’s support by former U.S. military personnel, including the former army anti-terror officer and the U.S. military police general assigned to the camp,” writes Torricelli. 
The MEK provided invaluable intelligence regarding the Iranian nuclear program that helped counter Tehran’s efforts to develop atomic weapons. Maryam Rajavi, leader of the movement, committed herself publicly to a democratic, non-nuclear, secular Iran at peace with its neighbors with gender equality and a ban on capital punishment. The MEK organized thousands in the Iranian diaspora and built political support in Congress and parliaments across Europe. It is now the most organized and disciplined of the Iranian opposition groups. 
“Some current and former State Department employees, including Mr. Benjamin, have a different concept. They remain committed to the idea that the MEK was a terrorist organization—a notion, I believe, which stems from an illusion of American reconciliation with the mullahs. In 1997, a group at State succeeded in convincing President Bill Clinton to place the MEK on the State Department list of terrorist organizations. Some claimed at the time that this decision was mainly intended as a goodwill gesture to Iran. The State Department gave as its reasons the MEK’s long record of violence, but I can tell you that as a member of the Foreign Relation Committee, I reviewed the State Department file on the MEK and found no evidence, no testimony and no reason for the designation except placating Tehran,” Torricelli writes, adding, “Thousands of Iranian-Americans and literally hundreds of members of Congress protested. In 2011, as a private attorney, I led a team of lawyers in a State Department inquiry to resolve the issue. After four hours of testimony, we yielded to the State Department to present their contradictory evidence. They had nothing.” 
Without evidence, an order by the U.S. District Court was issued.  The MEK was removed from the State Department list of terrorist organizations by Secretary Hillary Clinton in 2012. 
Torricelli continues, “Defeat came hard for the Iran apologists within the department. Mr. Benjamin isn’t the first to argue that the broad coalition of former U.S. intelligence, military, diplomatic and congressional leaders can’t be believed because some accepted speaking fees to attend MEK meetings around the world. The fact that these people faced combat for or dedicated their entire careers to our country, and are among our most respected leaders seems to be of no consequence. It's an argument that requires no rebuttal except to note that by this standard the views of Thomas Paine, Elie Wiesel and Winston Churchill—all of whom accepted speaking fees from various international organizations—would have been silenced as well.” 
Rudy Giuliani was one of the most outspoken supporters. The 3,000 MEK refugees settled along the Iran/Iraq border were under imminent threat in 2012. Iraqi relations with the United States were tense. Torricelli writes,  “Secretary Clinton requested that I assemble a persuasive group of distinguished Americans to travel to Europe and persuade Mrs. Rajavi to relocate the refugees to a former U.S. military base near Baghdad. I appealed to Louis Freeh, Ed Rendell, Michael Mukasey and Rudy Giuliani. Each accepted, canceled commitments, paid his own transportation to Paris and argued persuasively that the MEK assist the United States by relocating.” 
Such a broad coalition of diverse Americans has varied perspectives. Torricelli says that, “Some believe that in the political vacuum following an economic or political collapse in Tehran, a determined and well-funded political opposition like the MEK could seize power. Others believe that the MEK might simply be part of a broader coalition, a simple pressure point or just a source of continuing intelligence.” Although rationales for support might differ, this group of Americans is united by the beliefs that the MEK is a genuine democratic force, and that regime change in Tehran is the best option to keep the peace, avoid a nuclear Iran, and benefit American interests. 
Going back to Mr. Benjamin’s argument that Rudy Giuliani’s participation in this coalition should disqualify him for consideration as secretary of state, Torricelli has this to say, “Experience and participation in public policy issues was once a condition for high government service. It’s now a complication, because a record of advocacy creates controversy. But the selection of secretary of state needs to be different. Among the most likely crises facing the new president is an escalation in the struggle with the fundamentalist Islamic Republic of Iran. Rudy Giuliani has lived that struggle for a decade. Mr. Benjamin may quarrel with his efforts but it's important to note that voices in the American foreign policy establishment as diverse as Senator McCain, Secretary Clinton, Deputy Secretary Blinken and John Kerry’s own personal representative on the MEK, Jonathan Weiner disagree. Each has thanked Rudy Giuliani and the other Americans involved in these efforts.” 
Whether or not the president-elect chooses Mr. Giuliani as secretary of state, countering Tehran and assisting our country should not be seen as anything other than a valuable contribution to his consideration.

The Support Within the Us Congress for the MEK Is Across the Board

London, 29 Nov - Breitbart has accused Politico of left-wing bias following a publication last week which accused former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani of taking money from the Iranian opposition group, People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI-MEK).
The Iranian Resistance forces vehemently oppose terrorism, which is one of the many reasons they work against the Iranian Regime in spite of the danger it puts them in. For Benjamin to state otherwise is frankly an insult to those who have died as a result of the Iranian Regime’s terrorism.
As Tom Tancredo writes in his piece on Breitbart: “There has never been a shred of evidence that any members of the current PMOI were involved in those events… [Those charges] have been refuted by multiple investigations and are no longer given credence even by Obama’s State Department. For nearly two decades, those allegations arising from events in the 1970’s were used as a basis for listing the PMOI/MEK as a terrorist organization.”
The support within the US Congress for the MEK is across the board, including Democrat Sen. Robert Menendez, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, Rep. Ed Royce, and Sen. John McCain. Other prominent supporters include Newt Gingrich, John Bolton, former CIA Director James Woolsey, and Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz.
The facts
• Benjamin’s Bureau in the State Department was accused by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton of taking too long to remove the MEK from the US terror list in 2012.
• The Iranian Regime is, in fact, a leading sponsor of terrorism within the middle east and around the world.
• The MEK has provided (and continues to provide) valuable information to the US on Iran’s nuclear weapons program and their human rights abuses.
• The MEK and the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), which acts as a government in exile, attracts bipartisan support in most Western countries and has the overwhelming support of the Iranian people.
• The MEK surrendered their arms in 2002.

MEK Provided Vital Intelligence Regarding the Iran Regime’s Nuclear Programme and Terrorist Activities

London, 29 Nov - A political scientist has written an op-ed for The Huffington Post decrying the attempts by a former State Department Official to smear the Iranian Resistance with allegations of terror and the murder of Americans.
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh, president of the International American Council on the Middle East, heavily criticised the op-ed by Daniel Benjamin, a former Coordinator for Counterterrorism at the State Department and advised the American Public to look at the facts, the law and the politics behind this scathing attack.
First, the politics. Benjamin, a Democrat, is obviously attempting to score some partisan points by attacking a leading Republican for their links to the Iranian Resistance group, the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran/Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (PMOI/MEK).
In this, Benjamin clearly forgets that he was criticised by then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for failing to remove the MEK from the US terror list quickly enough in 2012.
Next, the facts.
The Iranian Resistance, including the MEK and the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), has been a strong US ally, who have provided the US with vital intelligence regarding the Iranian nuclear programme and the Iranian Regime’s terrorist activities.
The MEK was not responsible for the killings of Americans in Iran in the 1970s. Instead, the Americans were murdered by a breakaway faction, known as Peykar, who hijacked the movement after MEK leaders were executed or imprisoned in Iran. Peykar also killed MEK members who attempted to stop them.
Massoud Rajavi, the MEK leader who was released from prison in 1979, essentially had to rebuild the MEK after the Peykar hijacking, according to Patrick Clawson, a director of research at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
Finally, the law. In 2012, the Treasury Department suspected that the MEK was providing material support to terrorist groups and subpoenaed former US officials.
This was out of line with the view of both the State Department, the Judicial Branch of the US Government, and the European Union. Eventually, the Treasury admitted that there were no legal violations by the MEK or their supporters.
The MEK were only ever on the US terror list to ease relations between the US and the Iranian Regime. Any acts of violence, committed before 2002 when they laid down their weapons, were targeted at the Regime and not at civilians.
Rafizadeh asserts that the way forward is to hold the Iranian Regime “accountable for its hostility and terrorism against the United States and its allies”, imposing sanctions against Iran’s human rights abuses and striving for democratic change in Iran.

RENOWNED CLERIC'S SON SENTENCED, AS IRAN CONTINUES TO ENFORCE SILENCE

On Sunday, the Special Clergy Court of the Islamic Republic of Iran handed down a sentence for Ahmad Montazeri, the son of Hossein Ali Montazeri, the late Iranian cleric and former heir-apparent to Supreme Leader Ruhollah Khomeini. The elder Montazeri was ousted from the regime before he could take over for Khomeini, largely as a result of conflicts between the two men over the regime’s escalating repression in the early years of the revolutionary theocracy.
Ahmad Montazeri was brought up on charges of revealing state secrets and spreading propaganda against the regime after he released a recording of his father speaking out against the mass executions of political prisoners in the summer of 1988. The executions mainly targeted the dissident group known as the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran. The still-banned organization estimates that 30,000 people were put to death in little more than two months.
The Montazeri recording, made in the immediate aftermath of the executions, referred to the incident as the “greatest crime of the Islamic Republic” and declared that the other people featured in the recording would be condemned by history because of it. These other regime figures included Mostafa Pourmohammadi, who currently serves as justice minister in the administration of President Hassan Rouhani. After the release of the recording, Pourmohammadi acknowledged his participation in the massacre and declared that he was proud to have carried out “God’s commandment” of death for the members and supporters of the PMOI (MEK).
In an interview, Ahmad pointed out that the contents of the recording had already been made publicly known through his father’s memoirs and thus could not have constituted state secrets. Nevertheless, he was sentenced to 21 years in prison and was stripped of his status as an Islamic cleric. Ahmad believes that the judge in his case was prevented from acting independently, and that the verdict had been determined ahead of time by the political establishment. This casts doubt upon the prospects of success for his appeal, which he has 20 days to file.
Any clemency he might have hoped to earn through that appeal has probably already been offered, albeit informally and without legal basis. The court declared that although the legal sentence was 21 years, Ahmad would only have to serve six of those years. The defendant told IranWire that he believed this to be a ploy to try to convince him that he owed the regime a debt of gratitude.
According to the World Tribune, two specific justifications were given for the partial appeal: Ahmad’s lack of criminal record and the alleged fact that his brother was killed in a bombing by the PMOI  (MEK) in 1981. With this statement, the regime appears to have attempted to reframe the discussion of Ahmad Montazeri’s case, to portray the leading Iranian resistance organization as criminals and not as victims of the massacre about which Hossein Ali Montazeri had spoken out.
But to accomplish this end, the regime will have to reframe the discussion about more than just the Montazeri case. The release of the recording brought unprecedented publicity to the massacre, which had been a severe taboo in Iranian political discussions since immediately after the victims were buried in secret mass graves. Now there is a concerted effort underway to launch inquiries into the massacre and to uncover the locations of those graves. And this effort has met with renewed efforts by the regime to crack down on sources of public exposure like the Montazeri recording.
One example of this is the case against Mansoureh Behkish, who was recently the subject of an Amnesty International call to action. The human rights organization pointed out that she had lost a sister, four brothers, and a brother-in-law during the 1988 massacre. Now she is facing national security charges over her membership in Mothers and Families of Khavaran, a group that holds commemorative gatherings for the victims of the massacre and other incidents of violent repression, as well as providing support for the families of victims.
If convicted of collusion against national security and spreading propaganda against the regime, Behkish will likely be called upon to also serve out a suspended sentence that she was given in 2011 as a result of her activities with Mothers and Families of Khavaran and also Mothers of Laleh Park, which focuses upon victims of repression following the Green Movement uprising of 2009.
By many accounts, Tehran has been paranoid about another such uprising ever since the Green Movement was suppressed. The growing domestic and international awareness of the 1988 massacre is certainly a potential motivator for such instability. But the regime’s attempts to repress dialogue regarding the massacre are only a portion of the larger crackdown that has been ongoing in recent months and years.
Activists, journalists, and even fellow regime officials face reprisals for voicing dissent, as evidenced by media reports on the attempted arrest of Iranian Member of Parliament Mahmoud Sadeghi. On Sunday, the MP temporarily escaped arrest with the help of neighbors and activists, after judiciary chief Sadeqh Larijani issued an order for his arrest.
The order reportedly came in response to Sadeghi publicly raising questions about Larijani’s financial dealings, involving the apparent deposit of millions of dollars’ worth of government funds into a number of private accounts. The attempted arrest seems to justify Ahmad Montazeri’s claims about the criminal justice system being used as a political cudgel, as well as illustrating the overall intolerance of dissent, even in response to actual crimes.

GIULIANI'S TIES TO MEK IS PART OF A DISTORTED STORY


Robert G. Torricelli, a former United States senator from New Jersey and the lawyer of record for the MEK, has written about Rudy Giuliani’s links to the Iranian Resistance following an article published by Daniel Benjamin for Politico that criticised his relationship with the group. Torricelli says that claims made by the author of the article are “outrageous”, hence his response.
He points out that “the broadest and most impressive bipartisan coalition in a generation has supported the MEK in its campaign for regime change in Iran”, saying that this includes former CIA directors, a former attorney general, two former chairmen of the joint chiefs and former chairs of both political parties. From Howard Dean and Patrick Kennedy to Newt Gingrich and John Bolton.
The MEK, formed during the 1970s, quickly emerged as an opposition group and fled into exile in Iraq and France. Torricelli said that although the group took legitimate political and military action against the regime, there is nothing to say they were terrorists. 
During the 1980s the MEK refugee camps in Iraq had to be under protection. Benjamin said that they helped Saddam Hussein repress Kurds, yet U.S. forces have said this is untrue, and the MEK actually saved American lives by identifying the location of IEDs. “This, more than anything, explains the group’s support by former U.S. military personnel, including the former army anti-terror officer and the U.S. military police general assigned to the camp,” said Torricelli.
He adds that the MEK provided crucial information about Iran’s nuclear program that was the turning point in hindering the country’s development of nuclear weapons. Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, the leader, has committed herself to a secular, non-nuclear and democratic Iran. The group now benefits from support in European Parliament and Congress. 
On the other hand, others cannot shake the “terrorist” label which comes from President Bill Clinton being persuaded to add the MEK to the State Department list of terrorist organizations. This was described by some as a goodwill gesture to Iran. “Thousands of Iranian-Americans and literally hundreds of members of Congress protested. In 2011, as a private attorney, I led a team of lawyers in a State Department inquiry to resolve the issue. After four hours of testimony, we yielded to the State Department to present their contradictory evidence. They had nothing.” Therefore, the MEK was removed as no evidence was provided. 
In 2012, several thousand MEK refugees on the Iran-Iraq border were in immediate danger of attack. Secretary Clinton asked Torricelli to get a group of distinguished Americans to urge Mrs. Rajavi to move the refugees to a former American military base near Baghdad airport. Louis Freeh, Ed Rendell, Michael Mukasey and Rudy Giuliani not only accepted, but also all travelled at their own expense, and cancelled prior arrangements to see Mrs. Rajavi. 
Benjamin argues that Giuliani’s participation with the MEK should disqualify him from being considered for the secretary of state post. Torricelli believes that this should not happen. “Among the most likely crises facing the new president is an escalation in the struggle with the fundamentalist Islamic Republic of Iran. Rudy Giuliani has lived that struggle for a decade. Mr. Benjamin may quarrel with his efforts but it's important to note that voices in the American foreign policy establishment as diverse as Senator McCain, Secretary Clinton, Deputy Secretary Blinken and John Kerry’s own personal representative on the MEK, Jonathan Weiner disagree. Each has thanked Rudy Giuliani and the other Americans involved in these efforts.”