

1. Rajavi’s latest statement
2. MKO exposed on French TV
3. Iraqi police arrests 4 Men and a woman member of MKO
4. Iraqi MP: MKO must be expelled
5. Woman brainwashed into staying at guerrilla camp
6. Swedish MPs slammed over terrorist MKO meeting
7. US tripped up over Iranian captives
8. When Tanter divorces his wife to please a cult
9. British parliamentary Delegation visits Nejat Society
10. Professor Paul Sheldon Foote visit to the British Parliament
11. UK parliamentary Delegation’s visit to Edalat Society
12. “Iran for me is the Foreign policy”
A parliamentary delegation from Britain who is visiting Iran, met with the members and associates of Nejat (Salvation) Society in their office in Tehran on Wednesday 14th November 2007. The delegation headed by Mr Mike Gapes, the chairman of the foreign affairs committee of the House of Commons, consisted of the members of that committee including Mr Richard Younger-Ross, Mr Ken Purchase, Ms Gisela Stuart, Sir John Stanley, Mr John Horam, Mr Fabian Hamilton and other MPs.




Mr Ebrahim Khodabandeh, an associate of the Nejat Society opened the meeting and welcomed the guests and introduced the officials of the society including Mr Babak Amin the general secretary, Mr Arash Sametipour the international relations secretary and Ms Hura Shalchi the public relations secretary.

Members of Parliament in Britain got to hear what traditional Republican Party members really think about the US Administration’s neoconservative approach toward Iran yesterday.
Professor Paul Sheldon Foote on a short visit from the USA was invited by Conservative members of parliament to present a briefing talk about US foreign policy toward Iran.
Paul Sheldon Foote is a Professor at the California State University and an outspoken critic of US neoconservatives and American political leaders who support war on Iran. Professor Foote served as an elected member of the Republican Party Central Committee, Los Angeles County (1990 to 1992) and as a conservative Republican candidate for the California State Assembly endorsed by the California Republican Assembly (1992). He is also a Vietnam veteran. Professor Foote is married to an Iranian-American and has conducted extensive research on Iran’s political and cultural issues.
Professor Foote was welcomed in London by some individual members of parliament, researchers and media representatives.
On Thursday, November 22, 2007 (Thanksgiving Day in America), at the invitation of the Conservative Middle East Council (CMEC) http://www.cmec.org.uk,
Professor Foote addressed a group of MPs in a Q & A meeting in parliament with the title ‘US Division of Foreign Policy Towards Iran’.
The talk highlighted the false positioning of neoconservatives as representing the far right. Instead, Professor Foote identified their agenda as being in-line with communist totalitarian ideology. From this position, neoconservatives promote the exiled Iranian Mojahedin-e Khalq organization (aka MKO, MEK, NCRI, Rajavi cult) in the pursuit of ‘regime change’. As well as being a totalitarian cult which acted as Saddam Hussein’s private army for two decades, the MEK is listed as a terrorist group in the EU and USA.
In this way, Professor Foote explained, the neoconservatives have hijacked the traditional right wing in America. According to Professor Foote, opposition toward the Administration’s foreign policy does not come exclusively from the American left and the Democratic Party. America’s traditional right is also outspoken in criticism of the neoconservatives. Among these are Congressman Ron Paul and Patrick J. Buchanan author of ‘Where the Right went Wrong’.
“Real American conservatives support setting an example of how to have a great republic at home, not how to invade other countries to steal resources”said Professor Foote.
Others include Justin Raimondo, Claes Ryn, Lew Rockwell and Bruce Laingen – a Republican and highest ranking diplomatic hostage in Iran, who has supported talks and diplomatic relations with Iran.
Professor Foote and Massoud Khodabandeh from”Centre de Recherche sur le Terrorism (Paris)”met with members of the Home Affairs Select Committee and Foreign Affairs Select Committee in the House of Parliament during which they highlighted the damage which the British parliament’s reputation has received worldwide by ignoring the infiltration into parliament of proscribed terrorist organization Mojahedin Khalq (aka Rajavi cult). The banned group’s abuse of democratic institutions, including the misuse of privileges given historically to some unelected members appears to have gone unchallenged. Mr. Khodabandeh presented documents clearly illustrating the gravity of this issue and the impact it has already had on the reputation of Parliament.
Professor Foote participated in a one hour round-table review on the significant issues in the Middle East during 2007 which will be broadcast for Press TV’s ‘Middle East Today’ program on 26 December 2007.
He also gave his expert view on the subject of the US Administration and possible ways of engaging in the problems posed by the Middle East, which will be published in next month’s edition of CFSOT (Centre for the Study of Terrorism – London) , the”Islamism Digest”.
During his trip Professor Foote also met with Anne Singleton of Iran-Interlink.
Referring to recent news released by Washington Post , Reuters , CNN and the Chinese newspaper People’s Daily, Cernig goes through a propaganda claim about how 300,000 Iraqis supposedly signed a petition complaining about alleged Iranian involvement in Iraq. The claim is strongly supported by a globally blacklisted terrorist organization, Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization (MKO), aka MEK, PMOI, NCRI. It is not the first time that the terrorist group, on the verge of expulsion from Iraq, exaggerates the supposed number of some supporters, this time 300,000. As Cering says:
That’s a lot, isn’t it?
But…
It isn’t as many as when this story was last hawked around, back in June. Then, according to the MeK’s own website, it was 450,000 members of the Iraqi tribes of Diyala who were condemning Iran’s presence as part and parcel of expressing "full solidarity with the Mujahideen Khalq (MEK)"
But…
Even that is nothing compared to the attempt before that to hawk the self-same story. Back in June 2006, the MeK’s political wing – the National Council of Resistance of Iran, which FOX News expert on Iran Alireza Jafarzadeh used to be spokesman for – announced that:
Solidarity Congress of Iraqi People announced the support of 5.2 million Iraqi’s to a declaration condemning Iranian regime’s meddling in their country. The declaration also lends support to People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran [The MeK’s other alias – C] whose presence in Iraq has acted as a major obstacle to mullahs’ fundamentalist ambitions in Iraq. The announcement was made before a huge crowd of Iraqis in Ashraf City on June 17.
Ashraf City, by the by, is the MeK’s own name for "Camp Ashraf" – the rather salubrious location, situated conveniently close to iraq’s biggest munitions dump – where thousands of MeK members are "guarded" by a handful of US and Bulgarian troops.
Back then, the breakdown of the notable signatories to the petition was even more admirable:
121 political parties and social groups, 700,000 women, 14,000 lawyers and jurists, 19,000 physicians, 35,000 engineers, 320 clerics, 540 professors, 2,000 tribal sheikhs and 300 local officials among 5.2 million signitaries of the declaration.
Maybe it was the claim that fully a third of Iraq’s population had signed something supporting such an odious terror group that lead to general disbelief and the story sinking without a trace.
So either the folk supporting the MeK against an alleged infiltration of the Iraqi government from top to bottom are changing their minds – by the millions – or the latest version is just the MeK scaling down their entirely fictitious nonsense to a more believable level.
Were it not for the fact that anti-Iranian rhetoric is currently fashionable, and is being stirred at every opportunity by U.S. neoconservatives both in and out of the White House, this latest story would have sunk without a trace too.
At the end of October a symposium was held in the French National Assembly, attended by a few second rate persons from the world of France and politics which brought nothing new to confront the Iranian threat.
More interesting is the guest of honor: Raymond Tanter.
Interesting first in his capacity as a professor at Georgetown University in the USA and as a former member of the National Security Council at the White House. But also because it is a striking example of an ambiguous relationship between a part of American political circles and certain terrorist groups.
Indeed, Tanter currently chairs the Iran Policy Committee (IPC) which performs lobbying for the Mojahedin-e Khalq (aka PMOI, MEK, MKO, NCRI,… etc.), recognized as a terrorist organization by both the European Union and the USA.
But what is interesting is how Tanter has been under the control of the Mojahedin. At one point his wife, Constance Anderson-Tanter, accused the People’s Mujahideen of being responsible for the separation of the couple.
In several testimonies she clearly accuses the spokesman of the Mojahedin in the USA, Alireza Jafarzadeh, of first becoming a friend, then the confidant and finally mentor to her husband. At that point he convinced Tanter to leave his wife.
This kind of mental manipulation is usual in the Mojahedin and is the methodology of a typical type of sectarian group (cult) that has been frequently described.
Although curious this has been the fate of Raymond Tanter. A US academic who has become faithful to a terrorist cult…
It is, in this case, inappropriate for him to pretend to be an independent expert…
————
Original in French:
Quand un membre de l’administration US vire sa femme pour faire plaisir à une secte
Fin octobre s’est tenue à l’Assemblée nationale française, un colloque réunissant quelques seconds couteaux du monde politique français et qui n’a rien apporté de neuf à la rengaine sur la menace iranienne.
Plus intéressant en est l’invité d’honneur : Raymond Tanter.
Intéressant par sa qualité de professeur à l’université de Georgetown aux Etats-Unis et d’ancien membre du Conseil de sécurité nationale à la Maison Blanche, d’abord. Mais aussi, car il est un exemple marquant des relations ambiguës entre une partie de l’administration américaine et certains groupes terroristes.
En effet, Tanter préside actuellement le Comité pour une politique iranienne (Iran Policy Committee IPC) qui fait du lobbyng en faveur des Moudjahidine du peuple iranien (connu aussi sous le nom de l’OMPI, CNRI, etc…), organisation reconnue comme terroriste tant par l’Union européenne que par les USA dont Tanter fut pourtant un très haut fonctionnaire.
Mais ce qui est emblématique, c’est la manière dont l’OMPI l’a mis sous sa coupe. Au point que son épouse, Constance Anderson-Tanter, a accusé les Moudjahidine du peuple d’être responsables de la séparation du couple.
Elle accuse clairement dans plusieurs témoignages, le porte parole de l’OMPI aux USA, Alireza Jafarzadeh d’être devenu l’ami, le confident et finalement le mentor de son époux. Au point qu’il l’aurait convaincu de quitter sa femme.
Cette sorte de manipulation mentale est habituelle au sein des Moudjahidines et typique d’un fonctionnement de type sectaire qui a déjà été souvent démontré :
Bien curieux destin de Raymond Tanter, agent du gouvernement US, qui serait devenu un vrai fidèle de la secte terroriste…
Il est en tous les cas bien mal venu pour jouer à l’expert indépendant…
To Readers of the Washington Post…
(LPAC)–Today’s Washington Post features a story claiming that more than 300,000 Shi’ites in southern Iraq have signed a petition denouncing Iran for fomenting violence in Iraq, and claiming that Iran has taken over all of southern Iraq.
Only after puffing the petition, does the Post admit that the petition drive is being backed by the Mujaheddin-e Khalq, an Iranian exile group which is listed by the U.S. government as a terrorist organization, but which nonetheless is harbored by the U.S. in northern Iraq for its potential use against Iran.
In other words, what the vote of a mere 300,000 reflects, is that the MEK is controlled by Cheney, or by the same people who control Cheney, who desire a war with Iran.
300,000? The growing number of MySpace and Facebook users should remind us that large groups of people can be influenced to do stupid things by evil fascists. The question for readers of the Washington Post, is why the Post uses the same tactics to fool people with big numbers, rather than present the principle of Westphalia, the benefit of the other?
larouchepac.com,November 22, 2007
UK parliamentary delegation’s visit to Edalat Society(Victims of Mojahedin Khalq terrorism)
British Ambassador to Tehran, Geoffrey Adams, along with members and the Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Commons have met and talked with several families of victims of terrorism at Edalat (justice) Society in order to become familiar with terrorist nature and deeds of Mojahedin-e Khalq Organisation (MKO).
The British parliamentarians visited Iran recently on the invitation of the Iranian parliament (Majlis).
Ms Sepehri, a member of the society whose father (a 45-year-old tailor) was martyred by the MKO’s terror teams in 1984, while referring to the memoirs from his father, said that the MKO has assassinated over 12000 individuals in Iran besides cooperating with Saddam Hussein in killings of many Kurds and Shiite Moslems in Iraq.
Mr Mike Gapes, the Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Commons who was present in the meeting said,”MKO are quite known to us; we do know them through Amnesty International and the Human Rights Commission of the United Nations.”
Then Ms Sobhani whose father (a 46-year-old shopkeeper) was martyred by the MKO’s terror teams in 1982 said:”Utilizing terror is not a tactic or a strategy for the MKO. It is part of their ideology and that is why they could never give in using violence; and this is an important and crucial point for those foreign supporters of the MKO who are aiming to use them as a tool.
“The leaders of this organisation are not trustworthy even for their friends.”
The visit of the UK parliamentarians to Tehran and their meeting with the society of the families of victims of terrorism took place while the MKO is claiming that they are enjoying the support of UK peers.
The MKO is currently in the list of designated terrorist groups in the UK, and the FCO has warned the statesmen not to have any contact with the members of this organisation.
During the one-hour meeting, Ms Sepehri addressed the members of the delegation and said,”Those who have sold their nation and their country to the aliens could never claim to be the advocate of the interests of the other nations and countries. This is a historic lesson that tells us one should avoid those opportunist groups who are terrorists and easily change color and tell lies.”
The chairman of the UK delegation, Mike Gapes, said after receiving some documents indicating the violation of human rights and terror by the MKO,”This documentation and other reports published by the international bodies about the MKO show that there is no doubt about their violent backgrounds. We are victims of terrorism too and the British people are also severely suffering from this phenomenon.”Some documentation about the terrorist activities of the MKO was handed over by the Edalat Society to the UK delegation.
Finally, the Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Commons emphasised,”We have issued a joint statement between the governments of France, Germany, and the UK with the Islamic Republic of Iran in Paris. In this statement we reached an agreement that one article of it indicates that three European countries and Iran are decisively willing to tackle against terrorism and they are determined to do so. These groups include Al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups such as the MKO.”
The formation of the MKO’s National Liberation Army (NLA) in 1987, that heavily relied on financial, logistic and arms aids of Saddam and Baath Party, definitely constituted a new phase of militarism within MKO that escalated the group’s across the border terrorist operations. The failure of the guerilla warfare inside Iran, the separation of the Kurdistan Democrat Party from the NCR as well as the impossibility of using the soil of Iran’s neighboring countries were the main causes leading to the formation of the so-called NLA. The army was supposed to be an amalgamation of the forces that were unanimous in overthrowing the Iranian ruling system to bring about regime change regardless of their political and ideological incongruities. Although the idea of the very formation of a people’s army was first theoretically criticized by the left parties such as Fadaiyan-e Khalq, after a while, and particularly after the strategic failure of the Operation Eternal Light, it took an absolutely ideological form and consequently turned into a tool for perpetration of terrorist operations inside Iran. Expounding on the features of a people’s army Ashraf Dehqan has said:
In the formation process of a people’s army, the class diversity of the forces as well as the unanimity of the leadership has to be considered. As such, in an anti-imperialist revolution, there should not be but one army. If any organization and group plans to have its own army or childishly call itself an army, it appears that not only it has no true understanding of the army but is also challenging one of the basic concerns of the Iranian revolution. [1]
These position takings before anything highlight the lead of hegemonic and egoistical mannerism in Mojahedin on the one hand and their manipulation of passive and aimless forces of opposition groups on the other hand. Fedaiyan-e Khalq, as an active militia force, disapproved formation of a liberation army; it explicitly implies that Mojahedin had no alliance in tactical form. Still the claimed liberation army was destined to failure since it lacked the required features of a people’s army. The failure of the army in the operation Eternal Light actually ended in the transformation of a supposed people’s army into a predestined apparatus of terrorism since it had to be either dissolved or metamorphosed. As Niyabati states:
The encountered conditions provided Mojahedin with a new option. They had to either continue focusing on the key role of the ‘liberation army’, which was neither prudent nor possible to be called national but ideological, or change their strategy and abandoned the idea of the ‘modern liberation war. [2]
The formation of the liberation army mainly aimed at distancing the organization from the terrorist allegations and winning legitimacy from the West. Today, the organization has changed to pose as a democratic alternative for the same reason. Antoine Gessler in his Autopsy of an ideological drift precisely explains that Mojahedin’s so-called liberation army could in no way convince the west that it was moving on the same strategic line of a real National Liberation Army:
The Mojahedin’s "National Liberation Army" has never really acted as an army in the Western sense of the word. After some stunning defeats during its conventional attacks, its soldiers fell back on the tried and true methods of guerrilla political terrorism. These are techniques which have advantages and disadvantages for the PMOI. On one hand, the organization could loudly and widely claim that it had a military capability. Later, it tried to build its "legitimacy" to the Iranian diaspora -who entertained no illusions about them. Finally, it tried to establish itself as the only possible alternative to the power in place. Most of the actions carried out inside the national borders were followed by a communiqué claiming responsibility. [3]
Rajavi’s insist on the militia and terrorist potentiality of an army that is actually disarmed and fallen short of engagement in any military operation is the unambiguous truth about NLA. It is an undeniable fact that its successive military defeats detached it from the make-up of an army and turned it into an absolute ideological annex that took a paramilitary structure to launch terrorist operations inside the Iranian soil. A supposed people’s army whose main objective was liberation of people was now targeting the same defenseless people through shelling mortars and terrorist ambushes. Elaborating on the tactic adopted by Mojahedin, Gessler says:
But, since the Liberation Army has only limited means and a limited number of recruits, especially compared to the numbers and armaments fielded by the regular Iranian Army, they can only plan small acts of force. Mortar attacks, attacks with explosive charges. Nothing important in itself, but actions that kill. Usually the victims are innocent civilians, if they are not targeted murders. This does not help the PMOI, especially when it hopes for a real popular representation in country. And this they lack completely. It is necessary not to sink into oblivion but the use of bloody mean: attracts harsh criticism on the international stage. There, the decision seems clearly taken to wipe out all extremist groups preaching the use of violence. Since then, Mr Rajavi and his friends gild the lily in grasping at prestigious straws. Many times, he has spoken of General de Gaulle’s legacy ill an attempt to draw self-serving conclusions [4].
The importance of this entirely ideological structure for MKO’s leadership lies not in its military potentialities but in its blind obedience. As Rajavi himself says, he prefers the arms carriers to the arms itself. An obedient veteran, even if disarmed and disguised, is on the alert apparatus, restricted by no place and uniform, to accomplish cult ambitious throughout the world.
References:
1. Niyabati, Bijan; A different look at the ideological revolution within MKO, p.41.
2. ibid, p.68.
3. Gessler, Antoine; Autopsy of an Ideological Drift, chapter 7.
4. ibid.
Bahar Irani,Mojahedin.ws,November 24, 2007
The head of the Iraqi parliament’s Security and Defense Committee says the MKO is a terrorist group that must be expelled from Iraq. "The Mojahedin Khalq Organization is a terrorist group that must be expelled from Iraq," said Hadi al-Ameri in an interview with an Iraqi newspaper. Al-Ameri referred to the MKO’s active role in suppressing the Iraqi nation under the Ba’ath regime, and said the group must not be allowed to remain on Iraq’s soil. He added that they were asked to leave the country at the beginning of the year because of meddling in Iraq’s internal affairs. Al-Ameri commented on the presence of other armed groups such as the PKK in the country and said Iraq is against the presence of any foreign armed group that poses a threat to neighboring countries. He added that Baghdad would try to expel the PKK from northern Iraq by any means possible. PressTV Sun, 18 Nov 2007