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'Gray
Lady' Runs Ad for Terrorists
Daily Insight - Jan. 24,
2003
By Kenneth R.
Timmerman
The New
York Times has published a full-page
advertisement for an Iraqi-based terrorist
group that boasts of the support the group
has received from 150 members of
Congress.
The group, the People's Mujahedin
Organization of Iran, also known as the
Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK), claims to have
thousands of armed members based in
military camps in Iraq, financed and
equipped by Saddam Hussein.
In the 1970s, elements of the group were
involved in the murder of American
servicemen and civilian contractors in
Iran and took part in the seizure of the
U.S. Embassy in Tehran in November 1979.
They later clashed with the radical
Islamic clerics led by Ayatollah Khomeini
over power-sharing arrangements, and were
driven into exile in 1981. Since 1986,
they have been based in Iraq.
The State Department has included the MEK
on its list of international terrorist
organizations since 1994. Its flagship
organization in the United States, the
National Council of Resistance, was
designated by the State Department as a
"front" for the MEK in the aftermath of
the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
The pro-MEK ad appeared on page A8 of the
Times on Jan. 15. Fine print at the
bottom identified the sponsor as the
"Colorado Iranian-American Community,
19857 E. Lindale Place, Aurora, CO
80013."
The Colorado secretary of state's office,
which maintains corporate registries, had
no files on such an entity. Unregistered
groups with similar names have been used
by the MEK in the past as fronts for its
public activities. According to the New
York Times advertising department,
full-page ads appearing during the week
sell for $104, 554.80.
An FBI spokesman tells
Insight he is "unclear"
whether the ban on activities by terrorist
groups in the United States extends to
newspaper advertising, or whether the
New York Times had broken the law
by accepting money in support of a group
whose assets have been frozen by executive
order.
Unlike many large newspapers, the New
York Times has no ombudsman to
represent the readers or correct factual
errors in the newspaper's reporting. No
one at the Times' advertising
department would say who had made the
decision to accept the payment on behalf
of the terrorist group.
The ad included photographs of six of the
150 members of Congress who allegedly had
signed a recent statement of support for
the MEK. Top billing went to Florida
Republican Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, who
circulated the pro-MEK letter among her
congressional colleagues. She and others
have signed previous letters of support
for the group.
Also appearing were Reps. Tom Tancredo
(R-Colo.), Bob Filner (D-Calif.), Edolphus
Towns (D-N.Y.), Sheila Jackson Lee
(D-Texas) and Lincoln Diaz-Balart
(R-Fla.). Most acknowledge having signed
the pro-MEK letter, although a spokeswoman
for Diaz-Balart tells
Insight that she was "not
aware" that his picture had been used in
the ad.
In the 1990s, before its assets were
frozen, MEK members and supporters
contributed heavily to the election
campaigns of their political supporters in
Congress. They gave more than $136,000 in
hard money contributions to disgraced
former senator Robert Torricelli (D-N.J.)
and large amounts to Rep. Gary Ackerman
(D-N.Y.). Mujahedin supporters also gave
several thousand dollars to Towns and
Ros-Lehtinen.
The MEK has proved adept at winning
congressional support for its activities
by painting itself as the only credible
opposition to the clerical regime in
Tehran. "They come to us and say, 'Don't
you oppose terrorism? Don't you oppose the
mullahs?' It's hard to say no," one
congressional staffer, whose member later
withdrew from an MEK support letter,
said.
Veterans of Capitol Hill tell
Insight that young staff
members with little or no international
experience sometimes make the decision for
their congressman to sign on to these
letters, thinking they are supporting a
pro-democracy group. "I would say they are
terribly misinformed and should educate
themselves [as] to what's really
going on," says Larry Klayman, chairman
and chief counsel of Judicial Watch.
Responding to a lead editorial in the
Rocky Mountain News last week that
blasted him for supporting a terrorist
group, Rep. Tancredo took full
responsibility for his decision. "I do not
dispute the claim that the history of the
[MEK] is not that of the Boy
Scouts," he said. To claim that he or
others had been "duped" was simply
"arrogant."
Tancredo reiterated MEK propaganda that
the group is "dedicated to the overthrow
of the bloodthirsty regime that today
holds power in Iran," and called them a
"secular coalition." In fact, the MEK
imposes Islamic headscarves on female
members -- which secular groups in the
Muslim world eschew -- and regularly has
purged coalition "partners," starting with
former president Abolhassan Bani-Sadr,
whose daughter had been married to MEK
leader Massoud Radjavi in the early
1980s.
"The MEK is not a secular but a religious
party," says Roozbeh Farahanipour, a
prominent leader of the 1999 student
rebellion in Iran who now lives in the
United States. "The fact that their own
'president,' Maryam Radjavi, covers her
hair is a sign of them being a religious
party. People are looking for a secular
government in Iran."
The FBI has been investigating MEK
activities in the United States and Iraq
since the 1980s. An FBI penetration agent,
who spent several months in MEK camps in
Iraq in the late 1980s, tells
Insight that the group still
celebrates the anniversary of the murder
of U.S. servicemen in 1977 by singing
revolutionary songs at reveille.
Defectors from the group, which former
insiders say is run like a cult by
co-leaders Massoud and Maryam Radjavi,
provided information to U.N. weapons
inspectors in 1997 that the Iraqi regime
had hidden banned weapons-production
equipment and possibly nuclear materials
in a MEK training camp east of Baghdad.
MEK troops blocked entrance to the camp
when a U.N. inspection team attempted to
enter the site.
U.S. intelligence officials today believe
the MEK camps still are used by Iraq as
hiding places for banned weapons of mass
destruction, and expect Saddam to call on
MEK troops in the event the U.S. marches
on Baghdad. MEK units fought Iraqi
opposition Kurds during the insurrection
of 1991.
Many Iranians think of the MEK as
traitors, say regional experts, because
they fought on the side of Iraq during the
1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War. "The MEK is not
the hope of Iranians," student activist
Aryo Pirouznia tells
Insight. "We saw how they
backed the Islamic regime in seizing
power. They took part in the mass
executions at the beginning of the regime,
then backed Iraq in its attack on Iran,
thinking they would become the sole power
in Iran."
The Islamic veil the MEK imposes on women
"has become a synonym of oppression in
Iran," Pirouznia adds.
Khosrow Akmal, former secretary general of
the Constitutionalist Movement of Iran, an
exile group with members across Europe and
the United States, calls support for the
group from members of Congress "100
percent wrong" and "surprising, especially
after so many reports from the State
Department. It's simply not possible for
members of Congress not to know that these
people killed many Americans."
Some 60 percent of Iran's population is
under the age of 25 and too young to
remember the former shah or the mujahedin.
And yet it is these young people who
repeatedly have risen up against the
regime over the past three years in cities
and universities across the country.
Kenneth R. Timmerman is a senior writer
for Insight.
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