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U.S. To Drop Iranian MEK Group From Terrorist List

Friday, September 21, 2012 15:05
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(Before It's News)

 

 

The United States has decided to remove the Iranian dissident group Mujahadin-e Khalq (MEK) from its list of terrorist organizations, U.S. officials said on Friday, handing a political victory to a group once sheltered by Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein that claims to have abandoned its violent past.

The officials said U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had made the decision to remove MEK from the list, and that it was expected to be formally announced in coming days.

The State Department said that Clinton sent a classified communication to Congress on Friday regarding the future status of the MEK, part of the formal notification process that would accompany removal from the terrorism list.

Read more here: http://news.yahoo.com/u-drop-iranian-mek-dissident-group-terror-list-160543646.html?_esi=1

The United States loves to support terrorists these days.  That’s not slander, it’s fact.   
http://www.cfr.org/iran/mujahadeen-e-khalq-mek-aka-peoples-mujahedin-iran-pmoi/p9158

Attacks attributed to Mek include:

The People’s Mujahedin of Iran (also called Mujahedin-e-Khalq, MeK or MKO) is an anti-clerical Islamist guerilla organization regarded by the Iranian, the U.S. governments, and others as a terrorist organization.

On 28 June 1981, bombs set by the MeK killed 70 high-ranking officials of the Islamic Republic Party, including Chief Justice Mohammad Beheshti who was the second highest official after Ayatollah Khomeini at the time. Two years after the Islamic Revolution of Iran, the MeK detonated bombs at the headquarters of the now-dissolved Islamic Republic Party. Two months later, the MeK detonated another bomb in the office of the president, killing President Rajai and Premier Mohammad Javad Bahonar. Their attacks did not succeed in overthrowing the Islamic Republic of Iran government.

In recent years, attacks by or thought to have been by the Mujahedin-e-Khalq include:

[edit]1998 Asadollah Lajevardi assassination

Two members of Mujahedin-e-Khalq assassinated Asadollah Lajevardi, a prosecutor and director of Evin Prison, along with his brother and a bystander on 23 August 1998.[6]

[edit]1999 Assassination of Ali Sayad Shirazi

On April 10, 1999, 6:45 local time Brigadier-General Ali Sayad Shirazi, deputy chief of staff of the regular army of the Islamic Republic and a military adviser to the Supreme Leader of Iran, was assassinated outside his house as he left for work. The People’s Mujahedin of Iran claimed responsibility for the assassination of Sayyad Shirazi, giving as their reason revenge for his role as commander of Iranian ground forces in Operation Mersad against the MeK.[7][8]

[edit]State terrorism and the 1998 “Chain murders”

Main articles: Allegations of Iranian state terrorism and Chain murders of Iran

Since the founding of the Islamic Republic, dissidents in Iran have complained of unsolved murders and disappearances of intellectuals and political activists who had been critical of the Islamic Republic system in some way. In 1998 these complaints came to a head with the killing of three dissident writers, a political leader (Dariush Forouhar) and his wife in the span of two months, in what became known as the Chain murders or 1998 Serial Murders of Iran.[9][10][11] of Iranians who had been critical of the Islamic Republic system in some way.[12] Altogether more than 80 writers, translators, poets, political activists, and ordinary citizens are thought to have been killed over the course of several years.[9] The deputy security official of the Ministry of Information, Saeed Emami was arrested for the killings and later committed suicide, although many believe higher level officials were responsible for the killings. According to Iranterror.com, “it was widely assumed that [Emami] was murdered in order to prevent the leak of sensitive information about Ministry of Intelligence and Security operations, which would have compromised the entire leadership of the Islamic Republic.  (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People’s_Mujahedin_of_Iran)

Its membership has been described as part of the Iranian generation “shaken by the events of June 1963″ and the radical generation Fidel Castro, Che Guevara, Vo Nguyen Giap, the Tupamaros in South America, the Algerian Mojahedin, and the Palestinian fedayeen. They were more “religious, radical, anti-American” than the earlier generation of Iranian leftists. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People’s_Mujahedin_of_Iran)

more ironic in all this is that this will not help out Obama one bit in the right-wing’s eye here in America.  MeK is both leftist and islamist, two things he has been accused of being himself.  lol   -Mort

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  • “The Enemy of my Enemy is my Friend”, so says that “TurnCoat Hillary Clinton

  • Pretty obvious why they would remove this group from the “list” since Iran is in their cross hairs & would offer an ideal vehicle of control. Im sure the Klinton Krone is busy having them fitted out for their new tasks on behalf of the terror commanders in Washington as we speak… keep your eye out for any `Persian Spring” & CONTRA/KLA style atrocities that can serve as newspeak for the coming invasion..

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