|
God's assassins
The Lebanese Hezbollah and the
fundamentalist regime ruling Iran
July 16, 2006
iranian.com
The Lebanese Hezbollah
is intimately linked with the Islamic
Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) and
their personnel have been stationed in
joint camps and headquarters in the
Bekka Valley in Lebanon and in Iran. In
1983 the Lebanese Hezbollah suicide
bombers attacked the U.S. Embassy in
Beirut, killing 63 people including 17
Americans. Six month later, Lebanese
Hezbollah suicide bombers attacked U.S.
Marine barracks killing 241 U.S.
Marines.
Moreover, Lebanese Hezbollah kidnaped
numerous journalists, scholars, and
other non-combatants in Lebanon in the
1980s, with the support of the
fundamentalist regime. In the 1980s the
Lebanese Hezbollah kidnaped 18
Americans; three of the of kidnaped were
killed and the rest released after the
Iranian regime told them to release them
after making secret negotiations with
the U.S. in what became known as the
Iran-Contra affair.[1]
Lebanese Hezbollah was also
responsible for hijacking of a Kuwaiti
civilian airliner. The fundamentalist
regime in Iran has also given harbor to
Imad Mugniyah, a leader of Lebanese
Hezbollah and the mastermind of several
terrorist actions including the
hijacking of the TWA jetliner in 1985,
and the 1983 bombing of the U.S. Embassy
and Marine barracks in Beirut.[2]
The fundamentalist regime does not
deny its financial and strategic support
and alliance with the Lebanese Hezbollah,
but it regards it to be a guerrilla
organization and not a terrorist
organization. Imad Mugniyah, however,
who had been residing in Iran,
reportedly quietly left Iran after 9/11.
The fundamentalist regime has denied
that its agents have engaged in
terrorism, although in many Western
European courts, its agents have been
arrested and convicted and imprisoned
for assassination of Iranian dissidents.
The regime has also used its proxy, the
Lebanese Hezbollah, in assassinations in
Europe.
One infamous case is the Mykonos
assassinations in Berlin where a German
court convicted officials of the
fundamentalist regime for the murder of
four Iranian dissidents. According to
Parviz Dastmalchi, who survived the
assassination attempt and is regarded as
one of the foremost scholars on the
event:
"In the weeks following the
assassinations, several persons were
arrested, among them one Iranian and
four Lebanese citizens. The arrested
person who was the main organizer of the
terror is Kazem Darabi Kazerouni who was
sentenced to life in prison and in
currently in a prison in Berlin. Kazem
Darabi Kazerouni is a member of VEVAK
[the Ministry of Intelligence and
Security of the Country] and a member of
the Islamic Revolutionary Guards. ...The
liaison between Kazem Darabi Kazerouni
and the VEVAK in the country [Germany]
was a person in Bonn named Hassan Javadi
who was a diplomat. He [Hassan Javadi]
left the country in October 1989 and was
replaced with Morteza Gholami.
Also
Kazem Darabi Kazerouni was in
contact with Mr. Amani Farahani, the
Consul-General in Berlin whose main
duty was to gather intelligence on
Iranian opposition and other related
intelligence work. Mr. Darabi was a
member of the Muslim Student
Association in Europe, in the Berlin
branch. The Muslim Student
Association was one of Hezbollah
organizations in Europe that the
intelligence organizations of the
regime hired its agents from among
them.
Other colleagues of Darabi in
this group were Farhad Diyanat Sabet
Gilani and Bahman Berenjian, both of
whom were also members of VEVAK. Mr.
Darabi in 1982 along with 85 members
of Hezbollah of Iran and Lebanon
attacked a dormitory occupied by
Iranian students in West of Mainz,
which resulted in the death of one
person and injury of several others.
Darabi was arrested then and
convicted and sentenced to 8 months
imprisonment and expulsion from
Germany. But with the intervention
of Iran’s Ambassador in Bonn, he was
released.
The terror team stayed in
Darabi’s house for two days and then
stayed in a second house belonging
to Bahman Berenjian....
Another person who was arrested
is Mr. Abbas Rayel who is Lebanese.
This is the person who shot the last
bullets to finish off the murder
victims. In the years 1985 and 1986
in a camp belonging to the Islamic
Revolutionary Guards close to Rasht,
he was given terrorist training for
six months and he was a member of
Lebanese Hezbollah. He was convicted
in the court and sentenced to life
and is currently in prison.
Another person who was arrested
is Youssef Amin who was guarding the
entrance door of the restaurant (the
terrorist who closed the door and
stood in front of the door). This
person, like Abbas Rayel, is also a
member of Lebanese Hezbollah and
received terrorist training close to
Rasht. He was sentenced to 11 years
imprisonment.
Two other persons were also
arrested. One is Mr. Mohammad
“Idris” and the other one is Mr.
Ataollah Ayad, the first one a
member of Lebanese Hezbollah and the
other one a member of Shia Amal of
Lebanon. These two were in the
organizing section of the
operations. There was one other
person who is a member of Lebanese
Hezbollah whose name is Ali Sabra
who was responsible for buying a
car. Sabra was able to escape
Germany and go back to Lebanon and
currently is one of the personal
security guards of Sheikh Fazlollah,
the leader of Hezbollah of Lebanon.
Another person is Abu Jafar also
known as Abu Heydar who was also a
member of Lebanese Hezbollah, which
was created in 1982 with budget and
training of its cadres by the
Islamic Republic. He was the driver
of the get-away car of the terrorist
who carried out the operations at
Mykonos restaurant. After the
operations, he escaped to Lebanon
and then to Iran and is currently
employed in the Islamic
Revolutionary Guards Corps.
But the most important of them
all was the person who was not
arrested was a person with the name
Abdol-Raham Bani-Hashemi who was
also know as Abu Sharif. He was the
main person with machine gun who was
leading the operational team. He is
a highly trained terrorist who works
directly under Fallahian [then
Minister of Intelligence]. On August
18, 1987, he had assassinated an
officer of Iranian air force pilot
named Talebi in Geneva. After the
assassination in Berlin, Abu Sharif
goes to Iran through Turkey and was
awarded a Mercedes Benz. In
addition, he is given shares of
several factories belonging to VEVAK
and other bonyads....
At the court it was brought out
that none of the assassins knew the
murder victims and did not have any
personal animosities. Therefore,
they were given a mission from
someone or some ones. In the court
proceedings, and after the witness
accounts of Mr. Abol-Qassem Mesbahi,
who was one of the senior officials
of VEVAK and the Director of Terror
Network in Western Europe, it’s
become clear (he provided testimony)
that these terrors both inside and
outside Iran were ordered directly
by Ayatollah Khomeini as long as he
was alive, and after his death, a
committee was established called
Special Committee. This Special
Committee would make decisions on
who should be eliminated in the
opposition inside Iran and outside
Iran.
The head of the committee is the
Supreme Leader Ali Khamanehi and
includes President, Minister of
Intelligence, Foreign Minister, Head
of Council of Guardians, and Head of
IRGC. The decision to assassinate is
made by the Special Committee and
then can be carried out with the
consent of the Supreme Leader. For
implementation, the order is
forwarded to another committee
called Qasr Firooz Committee. The
Qasr Firooz Committee draws up a
plan for the implementation of the
murders and a copy is sent to
Supreme Leader for his approval and
another to the President for his
approval. [3]
The
use of Lebanese assassins to kill
Iranian opposition members was not new.
In 1981, the regime has used Anis
Naghash, a Lebanese, to assassinate Dr.
Shapour Bakhtiar. The would-be assassin
failed in his attempt to kill Bakhtiar,
but in the process killed a French
policewoman and a French bystander. Ali
Akbar Velayati, the IRI’s Foreign
Minister, heavily lobbied the French
government, which agreed to extradite
the convinced killer to Iran.
The fundamentalist regime death
squad, however, succeeded in their
second serous attempt ten years later.
On August 6, 1991, three members of the
Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps’
death squad killed Dr. Bakhtiar and his
assistant, Mr. Soroush Katibeh in their
Paris residence. One of the assassins
was arrested, convicted and imprisoned
in France; two other members of the
assassination team, Fereydoun
Boyerahmadi and Mohammad Azadi,
succeeded in escaping to Iran.
About
Masoud Kazemzadeh is Associate
Professor in the
Department of Political Science at
Sam Houston State University in
Huntsville, Texas. He is the author of
Islamic Fundamentalism, Feminism, and
Gender Inequality in Iran Under Khomeini
(Lanham, MD: University Press of
America, 2002).
Notes
[1] Dana Priest and Douglas
Farah, “Terror Alliance Has U.S.
Worried: Hezbollah, Al Qaeda Seen
Joining Forces,” in Washington Post,
June 30, 2002.
[2] James Risen, “U.S. Traces Iran’s
Ties to Terror Through a Lebanese,” in
The New York Times, January 16, 2002.
[3] Interview with Parviz Dastmalchi
in “Joziyat Kostar Restorant Mykonos az
Zaban Yeki az Bazmandegan Fajeh,” may be
accessed on the Internet
here. My translation from Farsi
original.
*
Send
this page to a friend*
|