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Neocons Find New Exile Group Patsies to Push War with Iran

By Rostam Pourzal, Foreign Policy in Focus. Posted December 27, 2007.


Groups like the ones that sold the Iraq war still frequent the halls of Congress with plenty of guidance from pro-war think tanks.

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Many of us remember the Iraqi exile groups whose tall tales the Administration used to justify the invasion of their country in 2003. Fewer people are aware that similar groups from other Middle Eastern countries frequent the halls of Congress and editorial board rooms carrying their frightening ghost-written books with guidance from pro-war think tanks. The organized challenge against the 2007 National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) summary on Iran this month included such a group, which for years cried wolf about Iran.

The NIE's critics are complaining that it falsely weakens the Bush administration's campaign against Iran. Trusting that Iran is not developing nuclear weapons is suicidal, warn the neoconservatives who prompted the invasion of Iraq in search of imaginary banned weapons. As in the period that preceded the Iraq War, the hawks are now validated by an exile entity dedicated to violent regime change. The Iranian enabler group that has replaced the old Iraqi National Congress is the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI). In cooperation with leading neoconservative figures, NCRI has for over a decade spared no effort to destroy any chance of a U.S.-Iranian détente.

Eight days after the NIE summary assured the world that Iran is not developing nuclear weapons at this time international media reported that NCRI dismissed the report's findings. No other Iranian opposition group has actively challenged the new NIE's credibility.

Going even farther, NCRI's Washington spokesman, Alireza Jafarzadeh, claimed that Iran's nuclear program is managed by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corp's (IRGC) scientists during a Fox News interview. As the most trusted branch of Iran's armed forces, the IRGC was late this year designated by the White House as a sponsor of international terrorism. The exile group has also echoed the Washington war party's claims that Iran is arming Iraqi resistance groups with advanced weapons resulting in U.S. casualties.

NCRI's scare campaign against Iran is an attempt to overcome its own infamy. The "Council" is a front group based in Paris for the Mojahedin-e Khalgh Organization (known also as MEK, MKO, or PMOI), according to the U.S. State Department, which bans both as a single terrorist organization. MEK's pariah status makes it entirely dependent on the goodwill of the U.S. military, which has since the spring of 2003 sheltered its 3,500-plus fighters in northern Iraq after they disarmed.

The militia has for a quarter-century topped Tehran's "most wanted" terrorist list and is now sought by Iraq's government for atrocities it allegedly committed in Saddam's service. It fled Iran in the mid 1980s and fought on the Iraqi side during the Iran-Iraq war, hoping to overthrow the young Islamic Republic. Its campaign to deepen Western distrust of Iran is motivated primarily by the real possibility that its key figures will face capital crimes charges in Iraq and Iran if a U.S. accommodation with Iran ends the militia's utility to U.S. strategists as a bargaining chip. The latest sign of MEK's vulnerability emerged December 16 when Iran asked that the next round of U.S.-Iran negotiations in Baghdad address MEK's status.

Like the old Iraqi National Congress headed by Ahmad Chalabi, the MEK has powerful conservative backers in Western capitals that promote it as a democratic alternative. In Washington, these have included John Ashcroft, Dick Armey, Richard Perle, and members of Congress Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Tom Tancredo, all of whom were and remain advocates of the Iraq invasion. Among officially designated foreign terrorist organizations, MEK is the only one that can obtain street demonstration permits in Washington through its thinly disguised front operations. Poster-size portraits of the husband and wife team that have headed MEK for a generation are in abundance at such rallies, including one held on the grounds of U.S. Congress in 2004.

The surest way for the MEK to stay in business appears to be just the path they are following. They need to make themselves indispensable to the warmongers in the United States by helping subvert accommodation with Iran. (In this, they share the predicament of their neocon masters, who will be out of a job if peace prevails for too long.)

If Washington decides against an all out war on Iran and opts instead for a "low intensity conflict," as Ronald Reagan's wars of attrition in Central America came to be known, the MEK can well be the core of a Contra-style mercenary force. Claiming the mantle of the "Reagan Revolution," the neoconservatives would certainly welcome that as the next best thing to the war that they want badly even after the NIE largely vindicated Iran. There have been persistent rumors over the past year that American military or intelligence agencies have trained selected MEK operatives for clandestine missions in Iran, after having them renounce terrorism and swear allegiance to "democracy."

If, on the other hand, the Bush administration or its successor chooses sustained dialog instead of confrontation with Iran, the future of the MEK will never be far from the minds of Iranian negotiators. The White House has stressed its twin objectives of strengthening the government of "liberated" Iraq and limiting Tehran's influence there. Iranian leaders see an inherent contradiction in that policy. They are anxious to find out whether the U.S. will continue to shelter the MEK as an irritant to Iran or will transfer custody of the militia to Iran's trusted Iraqi authorities as an affirmation of Iraqi sovereignty. As Washington prepares for its next round of talks on Iraqi security with Iran in January, a sure way it can build confidence would be to agree to discuss this sensitive matter.

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See more stories tagged with: iran, neocons, bush, chalabi, exile groups, national council of resis, hawks, mek

Rostam Pourzal heads the U.S. branch of the Campaign Against Sanctions and Military Intervention in Iran and is a contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus.

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Plus ca change,
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Dec 27, 2007 9:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
plus c'est la meme chose.

plur

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Just Keepin' Us Safe, I Guess
Posted by: QQOblivion on Dec 28, 2007 9:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All that crap about the Bush Admn keeping us safe from "terror" is a lie.
The neocons are indeed in bed with terrorists, in the form of the MEK.
I wish the Mainstream Media would report on these Bush-Admn-Neocon/terrorist connections and on some of the atrocities of the MEK. I know that the MEK's terror targets are "over there", so maybe the American people won't feel that the MEK is all that bad. But, hey, wouldn't it be nice if someone somewhere in the MSM would point it out to everyone that Bush has been lying to us all along about how he is supposedly against terrorism?
And wouldn't it figure that World War 3 might start because of lies from the terrorists who are in bed with the pro-war crowd? That would fit nicely in with how the Iraq war too started based on lies.
Lies on the prize.

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» wasn't it convenient? Posted by: undrgrndgirl
What's their religious side?
Posted by: saltoafronteira on Jan 3, 2008 4:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Are the Mek's Shiite or sunni whahabis, or what ?
could someone tell me?
If they happen to be sunny wahabites the thing becomes creepy, let's hope not.

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Quote about MKO
Posted by: saltoafronteira on Jan 3, 2008 4:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Instead of asking, I've searched. I dont know how reliable the source is, but just read for yourselves:

"The rise of MojAhedine Khalgh Organization (MKO/MEK/PMOI) started with the fall of Shah's regime. Previous to the fall of the Shah's regime, Iranians thought of MKO as an armed extension of Nehzat-e Azadi liberal-Islamic organization, from which the founders of MKO had come from. Also the Iranian democratic movement thought of MKO as intellectually naive, because of its mixing of Marxism and Islamism. Those inside MKO who sincerely saw their views to be Marxist-Leninist, soon left the MKO, as they saw they were living a lie.
....
The reality is that MKO was never a Marxist-Islamic group, the way Shah's advisors called MKO. At the time of founding of MKO, most of the progressive movements in the world used Marxist theories to analyze their struggle and using such theories did not really define the nature of such groups.
....
MKO was from the beginning similar to a Nazi-Islamic opposition to the regime. They wanted to revive the glory of Iran's Shiism using the latest achievements of the radical theory and movement. Their formation was a lot more similar to the formation of the Syria's Baath Party and Germany's Nazi Party than being similar to any Communist or Islamic organization.
.....
In one respect, Iranians were lucky that MKO was not able to come to power, and thanks to their collaboration with Iraq, got isolated on a nationalist basis by Iranian people. But on the other hand because of staying as opposition for a long time, many people think of them as a democratic-modern opposition, which they are *not*.
......
The dissolution of MKO (Mojahedine Khalgh Organization) is the best for the growth of the democratic and progressive movement in Iran. It is wrong to appease MKO. Any democratic organization and individual thinking to appease MKO, to find an ally for democracy and progress in Iran, are wrong, the same way Banisadr was wrong to have such hopes in MKO.

The appeasement of MKO is just like the appeasement of Hitler by Chamberlain. The Iranian progressive movement should wake up from decades of wrong analysis of MKO.
......
If MKO had succeeded in 1981, they would have been the Khmer Rouge of Iran.
.......
Human Rights organizations need to ask the U.S. to give HR groups access to that organization in Iraq, to determine the issues of imprisonment and death of dissidents by MKO in Saddam's Abu Ghoreysh and other jails, reported by former MKO members.
.......
MKO operatives have played with reputation (heysiat) of even the former NCRI leaders like Mehdi Khanbaba Tehrani and Hedayatollah Matin Daftari, calling them IRI Information Ministry agents, when those people had political differences with MKO and left NCRI.
.....
The self immolations of MKOcultists in France, further showed the atrocities of MKO leadership, who sacrificed their own members in such terrible ways, to help their leaders, when there was no threat even to their leaders, when summoned to court in a democratic country like France, and they waited long before telling members to stop self-immolation.
.......
Actually all the records of cooperation of MKO and Saddam all these years, should be published by the U.S. and especially the records of MKO using Saddam's prisons to torture and kill dissidents.
.....
The MKO former members who have spoken in many interviews are credible, and their allegations about MKO leadership should be reviewed, in a court of crimes against humanity, and those in MKO leadership responsible for those atrocities must be brought to justice."

End of quote.

Text by: Sam Ghandchi, Editor/Publisher of IRANSCOPE, issued in August 21, 2004

http://www.iranscope.com

America's newest allies....

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