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In an effort to steer blame for the Samarra mosque bombing in the preferred
direction, the Straussian neocon puppet masters have trotted out Maryam Rajavi,
billed as president-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI),
the political front of the terrorist Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK), who
points an accusatory finger at Iran. “Mrs. Rajavi strongly condemned
Iranian regime’s meddling in Iraq and described the Samarra bombing, planned
attacks on Sunni mosques, killing of religious leaders, political figures, journalists
and others as part of a war that the ruling mullahs in Iran have initiated in
Iraq against its people,” a propaganda
release posted on the NCRI “Foreign Affairs Committee” website
states. “She said the Iranian regime’s motives for inciting such
violence is quite clear as the mullahs failed to achieve their ominous goals
in Iraq following the elections in that country. She reminded that a front of
Iraqi democratic forces is shaping up at the moment which is aware of the threats
of fundamentalism posed by Tehran. She emphasized that a national unity government
in Iraq does not serve the interest of religious fascism ruling neighboring
Iran,” the statement continued.
All of this is little more than Straussian neocon nonsense, a feeble-minded
attempt to shift blame on Iran in the lead-up to a shock and awe campaign to
be unleashed against that country next month or early this summer.
First and foremost, if we are to believe Rajavi’s fairy tale, we have
to assume that the religious Shia leadership in Iran would bomb their own holy
shrines “as part of a war … in Iraq against its people,” who
are primarily Shia. “Like the tombs of the Prophet Mohammed, Imam Ali
and Imam Hussain, no self-respecting Muslim, whether Shi’ite or Sunni,
would ever think of attacking such a place,” notes Richard
Steven Hack. No doubt Maryam Rajavi realizes this, but then she is reading
from a Straussian neocon script. Moreover, MEK entertains visions of grandeur,
fully expecting to rule Iran in the wake of the scheduled Anglo-American attack
(back in August of 1993, NCRI selected Rajavi to serve as the interim president
in Iran in the event that the mullahs are overthrown).
In fact, it is appropriate to view Rajavi as the leader of a cult. Massoud
(often called the “Pol Pot” of Iran) and Maryam Rajavi “exercise
absolute control over the group’s rank-and-file, requiring that members
worship them and practice Mao-style self-denunciations,” explains the
Center
for Cooperative Research. “Many of the MEK’s members are tricked
into joining the group. For example, the parents of Roshan Amini [told] the
Christian Science Monitor in 2003 that their son joined because he had been
told he would be able to complete two school grades in one year and earn a place
in college. But after joining, Amini was not permitted to leave.”
In 1997, the U.S. State Department listed MEK as a terrorist organization
(during the 1970s, MEK killed U.S. military personnel and civilians
working on defense projects in Tehran and supported the takeover in 1979 of
the U.S. Embassy in Tehran; in 1981, MEK detonated bombs in the head office
of the Islamic Republic Party and the Premier’s office, killing some 70
high-ranking Iranian officials, including Chief Justice Ayatollah Mohammad Beheshti,
President Mohammad-Ali Rajaei, and Premier Mohammad-Javad Bahonar, according
to the State Department).
In June, 2003, after French authorities raided the MEK compound, nine members
across Europe set themselves on fire in protest and critics claimed that the
self-immolations were ordered by MEK’s leadership.
In May, 2005, Human Rights
Watch documented torture in MEK camps (MEK critics were tortured, beaten,
and subjected to prolonged detention in solitary confinement at military camps
in Iraq).
Of course, for the Straussian neocons, it does not matter that Maryam Rajavi
and the followers of MEK are certified nut cases and sadistic sociopaths.
MEK “has been backed … by right-wing lawmakers, a group of hardline
neoconservatives and retired military officers called the Iran Policy Committee
(IPC), and some U.S. officials—particularly in the Pentagon—who
believe that the MEK could be used to help destabilize the Iranian regime, if
not eventually overthrow it in conjunction with U.S. military strikes against
selected targets,” writes Jim
Lobe. “While the group’s supporters in the Pentagon so far have
succeeded in protecting the several thousand MEK militants based at Camp Ashraf
near the Iranian border from being dispersed or deported, they have failed to
persuade the U.S. State Department to take the group off its terrorist list,
to which it was added in 1997 based on its attacks during the 1970s against
U.S. military contractors and its participation in the 1979 seizure of the U.S.
embassy in Tehran. The European Union (EU) also cites the MEK as a terrorist
organization.”
“The MEK has been registered by the State Department as a terrorist organization
for the past 10 years, but now neo-conservative factions of the Bush administration
are lobbying hard to remove it from the list,” explains an editorial posted
on the Bellaciao
website. “Should the MEK end up benefiting from US pro-democracy largesse,
it would send a clear message to people inside Iran that Washington funds groups
that engage in terrorist activity.”
Of course, this is hardly new, considering the United States has a long and
sordid history of supporting and funding terrorists, most notably the hobgoblin
of the engineered “clash of civilizations” conflict, Osama bin Laden,
who was until his demise a prized CIA asset.
In fact, the CIA
was responsible for overthrowing the democratically elected leader of Iran,
Mohammad Mossadeq, and installing and training (with help from the Israeli Mossad)
the brutal SAVAK secret police. It is interesting to note that CIA-sponsored
coup was code-named Ajax—the brand name of a scouring powder—because
the CIA intended to “wash the red out” of Iran (red as in communist).
It is ironic now, some fifty years later, the neocons want to use a group of
Mao-inspired terrorists in their effort to reduce Iran to a smoldering heap
of ethnic and religious strife.