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8, 2003
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May
10, 2003
Bush and the MKO
The Good Terrorists?
by SASAN FAYAZMANESH
There is an old saying that "one man's terrorist
is another man's freedom fighter." But when it comes to
the US foreign policy this dictum should read: "One man's
terrorist is the same man's freedom fighter." This schizophrenic
policy nowhere is more evident than in the case of the recent
US attitude toward Mujahedin-e-Khalq-e-Iran (MKO).
MKO sprang into action as an urban guerilla
force against the dictatorial regime of the Shah in the 1960's.
According to many reports, in the 1970's the group engaged in
assassination campaigns against American military personnel and
civilian supporters of the Shah. In 1979 MKO joined the Iranian
Revolution on the side of the Islamic forces and, purportedly,
supported the takeover of the American Embassy and hostage taking.
Eventually, MKO had a falling-out with the clergy and found its
way into Iraq, where it became Saddam's mercenary force. In that
capacity, MKO helped Saddam in waging war against Iran, quelling
the Shiite uprising in 1991, and carrying out numerous assassination
and bombing campaigns in Iran.
MKO's ideology has never been well-defined.
Thus the Shah used the oxymoron "Islamic-Marxists"
to refer to them. With the passage of time the group's ideology
became even less clear as it turned more and more into a cult
led by a deranged individual, Massud Rajavi, whose lifestyle,
including wife swapping, was more like a Jim Jones than a revolutionary.
The lack of clear ideology, combined with the history of the
group as Saddam's henchmen, means that MKO does not have any
popular support in Iran. Thus MKO's activities appear to be truly
terroristic, a series of violent acts with no real consequence,
except causing fear among a population.
Yet, despite the cult's use of violence
and its close association with Saddam, many in the US Congress,
particularly those associated with the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee (AIPAC), have continuously supported MKO. Successive
US administrations have also ignored the group's terrorist acts
and its ties to the old Iraqi regime. This support, prior to
the overthrow of Saddam's regime, made strange bedfellows out
of US, Israel and Iraq. But in the mid 1990's, feeling the pressure
from the corporate lobby to mend relations with Iran and relax
trade sanctions, the US Department of State officially designated
MKO as a terrorist organization. This designation, however, did
nothing to stop the activities of MKO in the US. The group continued
to freely operate and raise funds in this country, and, even
until a few years ago, it was openly engaged in panhandling in
the US airports. The designation of MKO as a terrorist organization
also did nothing to reduce its support in the US Congress. Indeed,
after the State Department prepared a report on the nature of
MKO, some members of Congress, such as Gary L. Ackerman, Robert
G. Torricelli and Dan Burton, criticized the State Department
for not interviewing MKO members before preparing its report.
Furthermore, some US Congressional members, such as Representative
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, elevated this cult to the rank of the main
opposition to the Islamic regime, praised it as having a "democratic,
pluralistic and secular platform," and invited its members
to testify in Congress. Some of these same Congressional members
even attended rallies organized by the cult and urged the Clinton
Administration to support MKO as well. By the end of the previous
Administration, MKO had become an organization labeled both as
"terrorist" and "freedom fighter."
The Bush Administration re-designated
MKO as a terrorist organization after 9/11 but continued the
policy of benign neglect. However, when the Administration was
trying to make its case to invade Iraq, MKO became a convenient
target as a true terrorist organization that must be combated.
Thus in his remarks to the United Nations General Assembly, President
Bush justified his policy toward Iraq by saying that in "violation
of Security Council Resolution 1373, Iraq continues to shelter
and support terrorist organizations that direct violence against
Iran." Of course, a few days before the President's speech
MKO had held a press conference, not too far from the White House,
to announce the location of Iran's alleged secret nuclear facility.
Even after the President's speech, MKO continued its open activities
in the US, including holding press conferences in Washington.
With the end of the US invasion of Iraq
the status of MKO changed once again. US military forces, which
apparently did not understand the nuances of the US foreign policy,
initially treated MKO as another dangerous armed group, along
with Ansar al-Islam. They therefore bombed the group's camp,
causing some of its members to flee to the Jordan-Iraq border.
But on April 19 MKO members demonstrated in Washington and called
on their supporters to stop the assault. The US government apparently
told the military guys that MKO is no ordinary terrorist organization
and must be protected. On April 22 a ceasefire was declared and
Massoud Rajavi said: "We welcome the signing of a ceasefire
agreement with the US forces." The cult was even allowed
to keep its weapons for a potential fight against Iran and the
Iraqi Shiite forces returning to their homeland. The US government,
however, continued to maintain that MKO is still a terrorist
organization. But as Cofer Black, the Department of State's counter-terrorism
coordinator, told a group of reporters on April 30, MKO "is
a pretty special group." Yes, MKO is indeed a very special
group. They are US's "good terrorists."
Sasan Fayazmanesh is Associate Professor of Economics Department
of Economics California State University, Fresno. Email: sasanf@csufresno.edu
Yesterday's
Features
Julie
Hilden
When It's a Crime to Visit Your Son
Mickey
Z.
Partisan Protests?
Mark
Zepezauer
Evil is as Evil Does
David Lindorff
The Coming Senior Revolution
Abu
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The Detention of Dr. Huda Ammash
Ben
Tripp
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Norman
Madarasz
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Stew Albert
Pushovers
Steve
Perry
Bush's War Web Log 5/08
Website
of the Day
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