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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Mujahedin-e Khalq Tactics Undermine Iranian Regime Change
2025-03-30
[Townhall] After more than 45 years of holy manal dictatorship, the Iranian people deserve freedom. The Islamic Theocratic Republic is a terrorist regime responsible for the deaths of thousands of Americans and hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths in Iran
...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneously taking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militias to extend the regime's influence. The word Iran is a cognate form of Aryan. The abbreviation IRGC is the same idea as Stürmabteilung (or SA). The term Supreme Guide is a the modern version form of either Duce or Führer or maybe both. They hate Jews Zionists Jews. Their economy is based on the production of oil and vitriol...
and across the region.

A diplomatic belief in reform was always a fool’s game for two simple reasons: First, Iranian elections cannot change a regime policy set by unelected figures like Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
...the very aged actual dictator of Iran, successor to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini...>
. Second, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps exists solely to protect the theocratic regime from the Iranian people. Diplomats are naïve to believe that regime reformism is real; in reality, the reformers entrap Western officials in a game of good cop-bad cop. As former Iranian President Muhammad Khatami’s front man explained in 2008, "We had an overt policy, which was one of negotiation and confidence building, and a covert policy, which was continuation of the activities."

As former Iranian President Muhammad Khatami’s front man explained in 2008, "We had an overt policy, which was one of negotiation and confidence building, and a covert policy, which was continuation of the activities."
The irony of the Iranian regime is that it has greater legitimacy among the West’s useful idiots than it does among the Iranian people. For more than a quarter century, Iranians have poured out into the streets with increasing frequency. The murder of Jina "Mahsa" Amini "Woman, Life, Freedom" Movement was the last straw for many Iranians, who openly called for death to Khamenei. Such an event may not be far off: Iran’s dictator is 85-years-old, has had cancer, and is partially paralyzed from a 1981 liquidation attempt.

Iranians have myriad views about what comes next, though they also have remarkable consensus on three things:

First, they do not want external regime change. Iran is not Iraq. They want support, but will win freedom themselves, not at the barrel of a foreign gun. Second, they do not want Iran divided. When Iraqi President Saddam Hussein invaded Iran in 1980, he spoke about cleaving away "Arabistan," his name for the traditionally Arab-populated, oil-producing province of Khuzestan. Iranians rightly rallied to defend their country from Iraq, but the distraction of war allowed Revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to wrap himself in a nationalist flag to avoid accountability for his revolution’s failures and betrayal. The third point of consensus is disdain for the Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MKO).

This third point remains interwoven with the first two in the minds of most Iranians. The MKO—and Maryam Rajavi, for 40-years, its president-elect—were once fierce proponents of Khomeini’s Islamic Revolution. Rajavi has a right to be personally furious with Khomeini: Like he did with so many other supporters, he betrayed Rajavi and the MKO. Many MKO members fled to Iraq, Iran’s archrival that was at the time killing Iranian conscripts after having invaded the country. Most Iranians despise Khomeini—how else to explain why they would put dog excrement into his tomb—but they could not understand a group allying itself with an Arab dictator bent upon dismantling Iran itself.

Ultimately, Iranians will determine their own future, hopefully through a democratic process once the theocracy collapses. Some Iranians may support the son of the late shah as a unifying figure who can preside over a constitutional convention. Others may prefer a president, and still others may advocate for a parliamentary system presided over by a prime minister. Ethnic or religious groups dominant in one province or another may also seek greater local decision-making. Most Iranian groups debate such structures and cooperate with those with whom they disagree.

The MKO, however, stands apart in vision, in opacity, and in tactics. While Iranian women risk their lives for freedom from forced veiling, not only does Rajavi strictly cover herself, but she also requires that all the women of her group cover their hair. What Iranians want is not a different flavor of Islamic Theocratic Republic, but rather no Islamic Theocratic Republic.

Iranians also want democracy. Too many once believed Khomeini’s promises of democracy; they realize the danger of insincere promises. This translates into deep suspicion about the MKO. After all, how can a group that embraced first Khomeini and then Saddam stand for democracy? To suggest the MKO is pro-American is risible. Prior to the Islamic Revolution, the MKO killed American businessmen and military officers. While that was hardly unique among leftist groups during the Cold War, what makes the MKO different today is it denies its history rather than apologizes for it. Indeed, when Americans are not in the room its anti-Americanism flourishes.

The biggest problem with the MKO, however, is that it actively undermines grassroots opposition by disrupting events that do not pay homage to Rajavi or libeling or slandering those who raise questions about the MKO’s record.

I have been a victim of MKO tactics. Ali Safavi, a member of the foreign affairs committee of the National Council of Resistance® of Iran, the political umbrella for the MKO, has six columns here libeling me in response to my criticism of the MKO. None of his columns address criticisms I made about the MKO. Rather, Safavi’s responses range from the bizarre to the conspiratorial: He accuses me of being an Iranian regime agent because, in his imagination, American Jews who worked in President George W. Bush’s administration and have advocated for regime change in Commentary and the Wall Street Journal over a quarter century must be closet Islamists. Sure, I went to Iran. Yale University funded me. I wrote my dissertation on telegraphy in 19th century Iran and penned several spinoff articles about Persian cryptology, Armenian and Baha’i telegraph workers, and the like. That no more makes me an Iranian agent than the many American students that the regime subsequently took hostage. By Safavi’s logic, am I also al Qaeda because I went to the Taliban
...the once and current oppressors of Afghanistan...
’s Afghanistan? Am I a communist because I went to Cuba? In reality, my job is to study how rogue regimes think, and I consider the Islamic Theocratic Republic the marquee rogue.

Washington policy debate is rough-and-tumble. During the Iraq war, partisans cast aspersions easily. Those that Safavi repeats—about my supposed role shepherding Ahmad Chalabi—originated in convicted fraudster Lyndon LaRouche’s magazine (Actually, I worked mostly with Iraqi Kurds). Ditto, a New York Times

...which still proudly claims Walter Duranty's Pulitzer prize...

news hound once accused me of being part of the Lincoln Group, which planted news stories in the Iraqi press. Sorry, Ali. Congress investigated the Lincoln Group; I was not part of it. Don’t be the only Townhall columnist that takes the New York Times at face value. And don’t be the only Iranian who, with the Chalabi calumny, appears to lament Saddam’s fall.

I’ve got thick skin, but such tactics matter. First, how can Washington policymakers take the MKO seriously when it cites LaRouche as a reliable source? Or deflects policy debate with ad hominem attacks? Or argues that security-cleared, American Jewish neoconservative Iran hawks are really just closet Revolutionary Guards agents?

More seriously, the aspersions Safavi casts toward me are mild compared to how the MKO treats the Iranian opposition. Rather than work jointly toward the goal of ending an odious regime in Tehran, the MKO would rather attack any Iranians who do not blindly submit to Rajavi, live in her group homes, and fork over their income and, in some cases, children.

During the Cold War, there were Communists, anti-Communists, and anti-anti-Communists who cared more about knocking down critics of the Soviet Union than about defeating the Evil Empire itself. This is the dynamic now at play with the MKO as it obsessively attacks critics of the Islamic Theocratic Republic. There could be no bigger gift to Khamenei than the MKO’s efforts to delegitimize its critics.
Related:
Mujahedin-e Khalq: 2020-01-17 Pair with Iranian ties get prison time for illegal surveillance of Iranian opposition groups in US: DOJ
Mujahedin-e Khalq: 2019-10-24 Albania says police thwarted attack plot by Iranian terror cell
Mujahedin-e Khalq: 2018-12-25 Albania expels Iranian terror diplomats
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iranian dissident group says it hacked 5,000 surveillance cameras in Tehran
2022-06-03
[IsraelTimes] Attack also defaces websites with graphics criticizing the ’anti-human Khomeini,’ ahead of events marking anniversary of Islamic Theocratic Republic founder’s death

Government-run surveillance cameras around Iran’s capital reportedly were "disrupted" Thursday, while an exile group claimed it hacked into over 5,000 cameras around Tehran ahead of commemoration events honoring the founder of the Islamic Theocratic Republic.

The Young Journalists Club, an affiliate of Iranian state television
... and if you can't believe state television who can you believe?
, acknowledged the disruption on Twitter after the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq claimed it penetrated the cameras, including around the mausoleum of the late Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. The website for Tehran’s municipality also went down, as well as "communication systems" used by the city, the report said.

The semiofficial ISNA news agency later quoted Tehran’s municipality as acknowledging the hack.

The Mujahedeen-e-Khalq released a video clip it claimed showed the municipality website and others defaced with a graphic that criticized the "anti-human Khomeini." It also included an image of Lord High Potentate and Supreme Leader of All He Surveys Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
...the very aged actual dictator of Iran, successor to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini...
with a red "X" over his face, as well as images of MEK leaders Massoud Rajavi and his wife, Maryam Rajavi, while calling for an "uprising until overthrow."

"Down with Khamenei, Raisi, curses on Khomeini," the graphic read.

Massoud Rajavi hasn’t been seen publicly in nearly two decades and is presumed to have died. Maryam Rajavi now runs the MEK. Khomeini, who led Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution, died June 3, 1989.

The hack comes after another cyber assault in January that included a graphic calling for the death of the country’s supreme leader, which played on multiple state TV channels.

In October, an assault on Iran’s fuel distribution system paralyzed gas stations nationwide, leading to long lines of angry motorists unable to get subsidized fuel for days. A cyberattack on Iran’s railway system caused chaos and train delays. Another hack leaked footage of abuses at its notorious Evin prison.

Iran, long sanctioned by the West, faces difficulties in getting up-to-date hardware and software, often relying on Chinese-manufactured electronics or older systems. Pirated versions of Windows and other software are common across Iran. That makes it easier for potential hackers to target the country.

The MEK began as a Marxist group opposing the rule of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. It claimed and was suspected in a series of attacks against US officials in Iran
...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites....
in the 1970s, something the group now denies.

It supported the 1979 Islamic Revolution, but soon had a falling out with Khomeini and turned against the holy man. It carried out a series of liquidations and bombings targeting the young Islamic Theocratic Republic.

The MEK later fled to Iraq and backed dictator Saddam Hussein during his bloody eight-year war against Iran in the 1980s. That saw many oppose the group in Iran. Although largely based in Albania, to this day the group claims to operate a network inside Iran.

Thursday’s cyber attack comes less than a day after the FBI
...Formerly one of the world's premier criminal investigation organizations, something for a nation to be proud of. Now it's a political arm of the Deep State oligarchy that is willing to trump up charges, suppress evidence, or take out insurance policies come election time...
said it thwarted a planned cyberattack on a children’s hospital in Boston that would have been carried out by hackers sponsored by the Iranian government.
Related:
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq: 2021-02-05 In first for Europe, Iran envoy sentenced to 20-year prison term over bomb plot
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq: 2020-12-05 Belgian court hearings end on Iran diplomat accused of bomb plot
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq: 2020-11-26 Iran diplomat on trial over plot to bomb opponents in France
Link


Europe
Belgium Tries Iranian Diplomat over Bomb Plot
2020-11-28
[AnNahar] An Iranian diplomat goes on trial in Belgium on Friday accused of plotting to bomb an opposition rally outside Gay Paree, in a case that has stoked tensions with Tehran.

The case shines another uncomfortable light on Iran's international activities just as it hopes to ease tensions with the United States after President Donald Trump
...the Nailer of NAFTA...
tore up the 2015 nuclear deal signed by both countries and other world powers.

It also comes a day after a prisoner swap that saw the release of three Iranians tossed in the calaboose
Don't shoot, coppers! I'm comin' out!
over a 2012 bomb plot in Thailand, in exchange for the freeing of an Australian-British lecturer imprisoned by Tehran for alleged spying.
The Australian is Kylie Moore-Gilbert. The three Iranians generously given in trade by Thailand are Saeid Moradi (“Stumpy”), Mohammad Kharzei, and Masoud Sedaghatzadeh.
In June 2018, Belgian authorities thwarted what they said was an attempt to smuggle explosives to La Belle France to attack a meeting of one of Iran's exiled opposition movements.

Later that year, the French government accused Iran's intelligence service of being behind the operation, a charge the Islamic republic has furiously denied.

Assadollah Assadi, a 48-year-old Iranian diplomat formerly based in Vienna, faces life in prison if convicted.

The National Council of Resistance® in Iran
...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneously taking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militias to extend the regime's influence. The word Iran is a cognate form of Aryan. The abbreviation IRGC is the same idea as Stürmabteilung (or SA). The term Supreme Guide is a the modern version form of either Duce or Führer or maybe both. They hate Jews Zionists Jews. Their economy is based on the production of oil and vitriol...
(NCRI), which includes the People's Mojahedin of Iran or (MEK), organised a rally in Villepinte outside Gay Paree on June 30, 2018.

Several well-known international figures -- including former US and British officials and Franco-Colombian former senator Ingrid Betancourt -- and NCRI leader Maryam Rajavi were to attend.

On the same morning, Belgian police intercepted a Belgian-Iranian couple driving from Antwerp and carrying half-a-kilo of TATP explosives and a detonator.

The arrested couple, 36-year-old Nassimeh Naami and 40-year-old Amir Saadouni, join Assadi in the dock, alongside another alleged accomplice, Mehrdad Arefani, 57.

All four are charged with attempting to carry out a terrorist attack and taking part in the activity of a terrorist group. All face life sentences.

Assadi was arrested while he was travelling through Germany where he had no immunity from prosecution, being outside of the country of his diplomatic posting.

Arefani, an Iranian poet who had lived in Belgium for more than a decade, was arrested in La Belle France in 2018 after Belgium issued a European arrest warrant.

- 'ABSOLUTELY FURIOUS' -
Counsel representing those targeted by the alleged attack say Arefani was close to Assadi, said to be the architect of the plot, and point to an Austrian SIM card found in his possession.

The two men deny any connection.

"We are looking at a clear case of state terrorism
... any action taken by a non-Moslem state that constrains the violent impulses of Moslems or their allies ...
," said lawyer Georges-Henri Beauthier, who is representing the interests of the NCRI, along with French colleague William Bourdon.

Dimitri de Beco, defence counsel for Assadi, has accused the civil plaintiffs of trying to turn the case into a political trial on behalf of the opposition movement.

According to Iran expert Francois Nicoullaud -- a former French ambassador to Tehran -- Iran's President Hassan Rouhani
...Iran's moderate president, which he is, relative to his predecessor, which doesn't mean he's anything but a puppet of the nearest holy man...
was surprised to learn about the failed attack.

"Visiting Europa
...the land mass occupying the space between the English Channel and the Urals, also known as Moslem Lebensraum...
at the time, he was absolutely furious to learn about this intelligence service operation, on which he hadn't been consulted," the diplomat told AFP.

At the time of the alleged plot, Rouhani was trying to maintain the support of European capitals for the 2015 Iran nuclear deal abandoned by the Trump administration.

When Gay Paree pointed the finger at Iranian intelligence, an Iranian front man voiced denial and alleged that opponents of the deal in "certain quarters" were attempting to frame Tehran.

That idea was dismissed by observers like Nicoullaud as a smokescreen. "It's not serious," he said.

The trial is scheduled to take two days, Friday and then Thursday next week. The court is then expected to adjourn to consider its verdict before ruling early next year.
Related:
Assadollah Assadi: 2020-11-26 Iran diplomat on trial over plot to bomb opponents in France
Assadollah Assadi: 2020-10-11 Report: Iranian diplomat held in Belgium on terror charges warned of retaliation
Assadollah Assadi: 2020-03-15 Hezbollah commander prosecuted in Austria for terror finance
Related:
Kylie Moore-Gilbert: 2020-11-26 Iran says British-Australian academic freed for 3 Iranians
Kylie Moore-Gilbert: 2019-12-28 French, Australian academics jailed in Iran launch hunger strikes
Kylie Moore-Gilbert: 2019-12-13 French pair held in Iran to reportedly face Revolutionary Court
Link


Europe
Iran diplomat on trial over plot to bomb opponents in France
2020-11-26
[PUBLISH.TWITTER]

The bomb was meant to explode in a Gay Paree suburb during a huge rally being held by an exiled Iranian opposition group. It could have caused carnage.

Instead, the earth-shattering kaboom ripped apart the robot that army specialists were using to defuse the bomb after it was found in the car of a couple arrested in a Brussels suburb.

More than two years after the last-minute, cross-border operation that thwarted the planned attack, the couple go on trial Friday alongside two Iranian citizens, including a diplomat believed to be the plot’s criminal mastermind.

The court case in the city of Antwerp has the potential to embarrass Iran. According to legal documents from the two-year investigation obtained by The News Agency that Dare Not be Named, Belgium’s intelligence and security agency (VSSE) says the diplomat, Assadollah Assadi, operated on orders of Iran’s authorities and brought the explosives to Europa
...the land mass occupying the space between the English Channel and the Urals, also known as Moslem Lebensraum...
himself.

In a note to Belgium’s federal prosecutor, the agency argued that "the planned attack was conceived in the name of Iran
...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneously taking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militias to extend the regime's influence. The word Iran is a cognate form of Aryan. The abbreviation IRGC is the same idea as Stürmabteilung (or SA). The term Supreme Guide is a the modern version form of either Duce or Führer or maybe both. They hate Jews Zionists Jews. Their economy is based on the production of oil and vitriol...
and at its instigation."

The prosecutor’s office did not comment on the case because the trial had yet to start.

On June 30, 2018, Belgian coppers tipped off about a possible attack against the annual meeting of the the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, or MEK, stopped the couple’s Mercedes car. In their luggage, they found 550 grams of the unstable TATP explosive and a detonator. In its report, Belgium’s bomb disposal unit said the device was of professional quality.

TATP has been used in several attacks in Europe in recent years, including in 2016 when jacket wallahs killed 32 people on the Brussels subway and at an airport. It could have caused a sizable explosion and panic in the crowd, estimated at 25,000 people, that had gathered that day in the French town of Villepinte, north of Gay Paree.

Regarded by Sherlocks as the "operational commander" of the attack, Assadi is suspected of having hired the couple years earlier.

According to a VSSE note, Assadi, 48, is an officer of Iran’s intelligence and security ministry who operated under cover at Iran’s embassy in Vienna.

Belgium’s state security officers believe he worked for the ministry’s so-called Department 312, the directorate for internal security, which is on the European Union
...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing...
’s list of organizations regarded as terrorist.

Assadi’s lawyer, Dimitri de Beco, told the AP his client contests all the charges against him.

"His defense will raise a number of procedural issues, including the question of his diplomatic immunity, since it is not disputed that he had diplomatic status, at least at the time of the facts," de Beco wrote in a short message, expressing his hope that the court case won’t be a "political trial."

The MEK, once an armed organization with a base in Iraq, is the most structured among exiled Iranian opposition groups, and is detested by Iranian authorities. It was removed from EU and US terrorism lists several years ago after denouncing violence and getting western politicians to lobby on its behalf. The MEK supports US President Donald Trump
...The tack in the backside of the Democratic Party...
’s hard line on Iran and backs US sanctions on the country.

Among dozens of prominent guests at the rally that day were Trump’s lawyer, Rudy Giuliani; Newt Gingrich
...former Speaker of the House, author of the Contract with America. Gingrich gave the country welfare reform and a balanced budget and the Publicans a landslide House victory in 1994. On the downside, he has a roving eye and a loose fly, he's opinionated, and he's abrasive despite his ability to work with the other side of the political aisle...
, former conservative speaker of the US House of Representatives; and former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt.

The organization’s leader, Maryam Rajavi, has alleged without offering evidence that Assadi received his orders from Iranian President Hassan Rouhani
...Iran's moderate president, which he is, relative to his predecessor, which doesn't mean he's anything but a puppet of the nearest holy man...
and Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
...the very aged actual dictator of Iran, successor to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini...
"The regime’s leaders must be prosecuted and face justice," she said last month during a video conference with journalists.

Assadi allegedly recruited the couple — Amir Saadouni and Nasimeh Naami, who were of Iranian heritage but lived in Antwerp — to obtain information about the Iranian opposition. The fourth suspect, Mehrdad Arefani, is a Brussels resident suspected of traveling to Villepinte on the day of the planned attack. Investigators found that he was in possession of a phone with Assadi’s number.

Travel records obtained by the AP show Assadi made several trips to Iran in the months leading up to the rally, returning from the last one little more than a week before the thwarted attack. According to a note from the prosecution’s files, Assadi carried the explosives on the commercial flight to Austria. He allegedly handed the bomb over to Saadouni and Naami during a meeting in a Pizza Hut restaurant in Luxembourg just two days before they were arrested.

Both have denied they were aware that the diplomat — whose code name was Daniel — had given them a bomb. Naami said she believed the parcel contained fireworks.

Belgium’s bomb disposal unit said the triacetone triperoxide charge in the couple’s Mercedes car was ready to use. It was "wrapped in plastic and concealed in the lining of a vanity case." They also found a digital remote trigger in a small bag belonging to Naami that contained feminine hygiene items.

Upon his arrest, Sherlocks also found a red notebook in Assadi’s car with instructions on how to use the bomb. The analysis of the suspects’ text messages and emails revealed they used code language to communicate, with "PlayStation 4" the alleged name for the bomb.

The French side of the investigation also established that Assadi visited Villepinte during the 2017 MEK rally, possibly on a reconnaissance trip.

If convicted, the four suspects face between five years and 20 years in prison on charges of "attempted terrorist murder and participation in the activities of a terrorist group." Hearings will last between two and three days and a verdict is expected be delivered by the end of next month.
Related:
Assadollah Assadi: 2020-10-11 Report: Iranian diplomat held in Belgium on terror charges warned of retaliation
Assadollah Assadi: 2020-03-15 Hezbollah commander prosecuted in Austria for terror finance
Assadollah Assadi: 2018-10-02 Germany approves extradition of Iran diplomat over bomb 'plot'
Related:
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq: 2020-01-16 Albania expels 2 Iranian diplomats
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq: 2019-11-18 Iran supreme leader warns ‘thugs’ amid gas price protests
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq: 2019-11-18 Iran's top leader warns ‘thugs' as protests reach 100 cities
Related:
Maryam Rajavi: 2020-01-16 Albania expels 2 Iranian diplomats
Maryam Rajavi: 2020-01-08 Soleimani's CV
Maryam Rajavi: 2019-11-18 Iran supreme leader warns ‘thugs’ amid gas price protests
Link


Europe
Albania expels 2 Iranian diplomats
2020-01-16
[IsraelTimes] Albania’s Foreign Ministry expels two Iranian diplomats for activities "not in line with their status."

A ministry statement says the two diplomats, Mohammad Ali Arz Peimanemati and Seyed Ahmad Hosseini Alast, are declared persona non grata and asked to "immediately" leave Albania.

In December 2018, Albania expelled two other Iranian diplomats for "violating their diplomatic status" by allegedly engaging in unspecified illegal activities that threatened the country’s security.

Albania is home to about 2,500 members of the Iranian exile opposition group Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, which moved there from Iraq.
Related:
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq: 2019-11-18 Iran supreme leader warns ‘thugs’ amid gas price protests
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq: 2019-11-18 Iran's top leader warns ‘thugs' as protests reach 100 cities
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq: 2018-07-01 Maryam Rajavi: Regime overthrow is certain, Iran will be free
Related:
Albania: 2020-01-13 Iran’s Revolutionary Guards says missiles did not aim to kill US troops
Albania: 2020-01-12 Europe Under Siege from People-Smuggling Gangs
Albania: 2020-01-11 Albania calls out ‘blind brutality’ and ‘malicious activity’ of the Iranian regime after Khamenei appeared to threaten his country online
Link


-Obits-
Soleimani's CV
2020-01-08
[CDN] To understand the role and position of Qasem Soleimani in the Iranian regime, we must first understand the role and position of the Revolutionary Guards and the Qods Force.
.
The word "Iran" does not appear in the official logo of the Revolutionary Guards for a simple reason that their mission is overseas. This entity is the main instrument of the religious leader to establish an "Islamic caliphate".
.
The mission of preparing and executing the goals of the Islamic Republic was assigned to the Revolutionary Guards. In this regard, the Qods Force, as an overseas arm of the Revolutionary Guards, effectively took control of the Iranian regime’s foreign policy through a number of embassies. Embassies of the Iranian regime in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen, Bahrain, and Azerbaijan are among these "diplomatic" agencies.
.
FRANCE: In the early hours of Friday, January 3, 2020, a vehicle carrying General Qasem Soleimani, the commander of the Qods Force, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, Deputy Commander of Hashad al-Shaba’bi and their companions, was struck by a US air raid after leaving the Iraqi airport, leading to them getting killed.

WHO WAS QASEM SOLEIMANI?
Some political observers have described Qasem Soleimani’s assassination as a breakthrough in regional equations and an irreparable setback to the mullahs’ regime. Others have described this event as losing the most powerful person in the Iranian system.

To understand the role and position of Qasem Soleimani in the Iranian regime, we must first understand the role and position of the Revolutionary Guards and the Qods Force.

Due to the religious nature of this regime, based on the dogmas of the Middle Ages, they are unable to provide a reasonable answer to the economic, political and cultural needs of their people in the 21st century.

Thus, as the Iranian opposition leader, Maryam Rajavi, profoundly has said before, this regime guarantees its survival by brutally suppressing inside Iran and violating human rights by issuing crisis, sending out terrorism and warmongering outside of the country.

The Revolutionary Guards came into existence in 1979 just three months after the Iranian regime established.

The word "Iran" does not appear in the official logo of the Revolutionary Guards for a simple reason that their mission is overseas. This entity is the main instrument of the religious leader to establish an "Islamic caliphate".

"The broader overseas aspect, which is the responsibility of the IRGC, is the country’s strategy, and sometimes it is even the most important necessity," Said Khamenei recently to the IRGC commanders (October 2, 2019, on Iranian state television).

Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic, has always had a dream of an Islamic caliphate, relying on Shiite with Iran-Iraq and Syria as centers of it. And this is something that is pursued by Khamenei. The Iranian regime has to expand itself to survive.

CREATING A QODS FORCE FOR THE CIRCULATION OF FUNDAMENTALISM AND TERRORISM
After eight-years of Iran-Iraq war, there were many discussions within the Iranian regime about the future of their strategy and how to preserve it. Iranian officials eventually chose to send out terrorism or expanding the Islamic Republic for the sake of survival.

In 1990, they created the Qods Force with the prospect of creating an "Islamic International Army". Qods was a product of the Iranian regime’s war experiences during the 1980s and was fueled by the experience of numerous terrorist operations.

The foreign policy of the Iranian regime is based on the development of Islam. The mission of preparing and executing the goals of the Islamic Republic was assigned to the Revolutionary Guards. In this regard, the Qods Force, as an overseas arm of the Revolutionary Guards, effectively took control of the Iranian regime’s foreign policy through a number of embassies. Embassies of the Iranian regime in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen, Bahrain, and Azerbaijan are among these "diplomatic" agencies.

Qods Force institutionalize the influence of the Mullah’s regime in the countries of the region and even in Africa.

Qasem Soleimani has been the commander of the Qods Force since 1996 and has been the main agent of all the regime’s policies in the region. His role was not limited just to be the commander of the Qods Force. Rather, according to Mark Dubowitz, the executive director of the Defense of Democracy Foundation, Soleimani has served as both the army chief of staff and head of Intelligence organization as well as operating as a foreign minister, appointing ambassadors to the affiliated countries in the region.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran supreme leader warns ‘thugs’ amid gas price protests
2019-11-18
[BREITBART] Iran’s supreme leader on Sunday backed the government’s decision to raise gasoline prices and called angry protesters who have been setting fire to public property over the hike "thugs," signaling a potential crackdown on the demonstrations.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
...the actual dictator of Iran, successor to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini...
’s comments came as authorities shut down the internet across Iran
...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneously taking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militias to extend the regime's influence. The word Iran is a cognate form of Aryan, the abbreviation IRGC is a cognate form of Stürmabteilung (or SA), the term Supreme Guide is a cognate form of either Shah or Führer or maybe both, and they hate Jews Zionists Jews. Their economy is based on the production of oil and vitriol...
to smother the protests in some two dozen cities and towns over the rise of government-set prices by 50% as of Friday.

Since the hike, demonstrators have abandoned their cars along major highways and joined mass protests in the capital, Tehran, and elsewhere. Some protests turned violent, with demonstrators setting fires and there was also gunfire.

It remains to be seen how many people have been injured, killed or arrested. Authorities on Saturday said only one person was killed, though other videos from the protests have shown people gravely maimed.

In an address aired by state television
... and if you can't believe state television who can you believe?
Sunday, Khamenei said "some bit the dust and some places were destroyed," without elaborating. He called violent protesters "thugs" who had been pushed into violence by counterrevolutionaries and foreign enemies of Iran. He specifically named those aligned with the family of Iran’s late shah, ousted 40 years ago, and an exile group called the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq.

"Setting a bank on fire is not an act done by the people. This is what thugs do," Khamenei said.
How about occupying an embassy?
However,
ars longa, vita brevis...
he made a point to back the decision of Iran’s relatively moderate President Hassan Rouhani
...Iran's moderate president, which he is, relative to his predecessor, which doesn't mean he's anything but a puppet of the nearest holy man...
and others to raise gasoline prices. Gasoline in the country still remains among the cheapest in the world, with the new prices jumping up to a minimum of 15,000 rials per liter of gas ‐ 50% up from the day before. That’s 13 cents a liter, or about 50 cents a gallon. A gallon of regular gasoline in the U.S. costs $2.60 by comparison.

Khamenei ordered security forces "to implement their tasks" and for Iran’s citizens to keep clear of violent demonstrators.

Related:
Ali Khamenei: 2019-11-13 Argentina asks Azerbaijan to arrest Iranian suspect in Jewish center bombing
Ali Khamenei: 2019-11-05 US sanctions Iran supreme leader's aides on embassy anniversary
Ali Khamenei: 2019-11-03 Iran's Ayatollah Khamenei renews ban on talks with U.S.
Related:
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq: 2018-07-01 Maryam Rajavi: Regime overthrow is certain, Iran will be free
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq: 2014-06-02 Iran Hangs Prisoner Linked To Opposition Group
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq: 2013-09-02 Iran exiles claim 44 dead in Iraq raid on camp
Related:
Hassan Rouhani: 2019-11-16 Protests erupt across Iran, burning banks, angry over gas prices
Hassan Rouhani: 2019-11-16 Iran conducts second 'repatriation' operation abroad
Hassan Rouhani: 2019-11-12 Iran’s Rouhani unveils massive internal corruption allegations
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Terror plots in Europe and winds of change in Iran
2018-07-19
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] Last month, Iran’s main opposition the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) held its biggest rally in suburban Gay Paree. The colorful event was in many ways different from preceding years as Iran continues to boil in dissent and protests spreading in far corners of the nation.

Maryam Rajavi, President of the NCRI in her address said: "A passionate generation thirsty for freedom has risen to take over the entire country and take back Iran from the occupiers. This is the Iranian nation’s fight. The regime’s overthrow is inevitable."

The Washington Times called it "a large, boisterous rally." Many former and present officials of countries from around the globe participated and delivered a collective message of support for Iranian people and their struggle for a better life.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran opposition leader Maryam Rajavi denounces ‘shooting defenseless residents’
2018-07-02
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] The Head of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, Maryam Rajavi, hailed demonstrators in the Iranian city of Khorramshahr who protested against water pollution, and urged all relevant human rights
One man's rights are another man's existential threat.
organizations to condemn the international affairs assistant in the Iranian judiciary, Mohammad-Javad Larijani’s threats to kill protesters.

In a series of tweets, Rajavi condemned the shooting of "defenseless residents" in Khorramshahr, calling it a crime against humanity.

Iranian state media reported that several demonstrators were maimed Saturday in Khorramshahr when they clashed with police.

Protests erupted after about 500 people gathered at a main square in the city to protest against pollution that is seeping into the city’s drinking water network, the state-run news agency
...and if you can't believe the state-run news agency who can you believe?...
IRNA said.

In another tweet, Rajavi called the Khorramshahr uprising heroic, while urging the international community to take action against the Iranain regime.

Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Experts eye prospects for change in Iran at big Paris exile conference, with praise for Trump
2018-07-01
[American Thinker] In Paris Friday, freedom-loving Iranians held a major "Free Iran 2018" conference, featuring a panel discussion with experts from the U.S., Canada, France, and Algeria, discussing the consequences of recent protests in Iran along with what's going on with the Iranian opposition. Among them, there were experts who praised both Iran's top opposition leader, Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, and President Trump.

The panel discussion was a public exchange of ideas, giving experts and audience members the chance to discuss the difference between what we saw before in past protests and what we see now going on in Iran.

According to a National Council of Resistance in Iran (NCRI) report, Ambassador Mitchell Reiss, a former director of U.S. State Department policy, who moderated the event, said, "Today Madame Rajavi [the leader of NCRI] is widely respected as the inspiration behind the democratic movement for change in Iran," adding that the current momentum is on the side of those who want a democratic Iran. "Credit must go first and foremost to Madame Maryam Rajavi and the members of NCRI," Reiss said, reminding listeners of the role the Iranian opposition played in the protests.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Maryam Rajavi: Regime overthrow is certain, Iran will be free
2018-07-01
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] Iran’s opposition conference "Free Iran" headed by the National Council of Resistance of Iran started its annual forum on Saturday in Villepinte in Gay Paree with a brief presser by Maryam Rajavi, the head of the exiled council, during which she called for the "accountability of the Iranian regime and for supporting the popular uprising in order to overthrow the regime of "Wilayat al-Faqih."

Rajavi said spoke on the ongoing protests that first erupted in the areas surrounding Tehran’s Grand Bazaar and has led to a domino effect on other cities as well.

"The first thing that must be said today is that flames of the auspicious and liberating uprising are again rising in Tehran and across Iran: Again, Mashhad and Shiraz, Bandar Abbas and Qeshm, Karaj and Kermanshah, Shahriar, Islamshahr, Kashan, Arak, Isfahan, Ram Hormuz, and many other towns and cities," Rajavi said.

The President-Elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran headed by the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (MeK), said that "Indeed, the uprising cannot be extinguished and will continue without respite, constantly expanding and deepening".

Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Maryam Rajavi and Rudy Giuliani Meet at the NCRI Headquarters in France
2017-07-02
[National Council of Resistance of Iran] Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, the President-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), met Mayor Rudy Giuliani on Friday, June 30, at the NCRI headquarters in Auvers-sur-Oise, northwest of Paris.

Mayor Giuliani pointed to the Iranian regime’s malign activities in the region, stressing that the mullahs are the source instability and crisis in the region, and have kept their grip on power in the past 38 years through widespread repression and blatant disregard for human rights at home and the export of extremism and terrorism abroad.
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