Iran Focus (www.iranfocus.com): The MKO Propaganda Machine
9/15/05
By Nema Milaninia, Iranian Truth
I’ve
written several times about my distrust of several news sources by hard-line
monarchists or the Mojahedin-e
Khalq Organziation (a.k.a MKO, MEK, National Council of
Resistance of Iran, NCRI, People's Mojahedin of Iran, PMOI, etc.) as well as those who rely on these sources
as "news". Reading news from one of these agencies isn't about reflecting on
different interpretive accounts of events. This isn’t like choosing between the
New York Times and Washington Post where there are different “spins” on the same
source of information. Both the Time and the Post believe they are being
objective, but in different ways. Relying on news sources by hardline
monarchists and the MKO, is about choosing an agency that absolutely lies or
exaggerates incidents in order to enhance their own political objective. Let us
take Iran Focus as an example. In the past I have noted that Iran Focus is a
agency run by the MKO for various reasons:
1) The current executive
director of Iran Focus is Mohammad Hanif Jazayeri. Hanif is the son of Hassan
Jazayeri. Until three years ago, Hassan Jazayeri was rumored to have died in
1980 as a result of being abandoned by MKO and Iraqi trainers. Later the story
was changed to Hassan being executed by the Iranian regime for his membership
with the MKO. Given Iran and the MKO's history of human rights abuses, I won't
argue which is the correct account. Before Iran Focus was ever created, Hanif
has time after time advocated his support for the MKO. In fact, earlier this
year Hanif was engaged engaged in a campaign to remove the MKO from the
UK’s list of terrorist organizations (it is worth noting that the MKO is also
included in the State
Department's list of terrorist organizations.)
Additionally, in various posts dated in1998 and 1999, Hanif has advocated his support for the MKO
as Iran’s only "democratic alternative."
Hanif's signature also appears
on
this petition supporting the MKO cause.
2)
Iran
Focus along with its sister site Iran Terror (look at the website designs and stories as well as the website for the MKO and you can easily see they're created by the same designer) are
registered in London and Paris respectively. In fact both organizations,
including the MKO, tried to allege that the
Human
Rights Watch report illustrating all the human rights
abuses committed by the organization was a result of some conspiracy between HRW and agents in the Iranian
government. A response to the allegation can be
found here. I'd like to add that the "Gulf 2000
list" which Iran Focus and Iran Terror refers to is a listserv with hundreds of
academics, politicals, and thinkers on the Persian Gulf with different political
viewpoints. Nevertheless, the Iran Terror email refers to emails sent in the
listserv as "secret emails" which they had intercepted.
3) The Iran
Focus website uses language supporting the MKO cause. There are particular
ideological positions and phrases which MKO members and supporters use. By
continously using the MKO as Iran's "democratic alternative" both the Iran Focus
and Iran Terror websites intend to create the misleading image that the group,
as well as their political counter-part NCRI, are legitimate proponents of human
rights and democracy with a significant backing inside and outside of Iran. Read
this article, this article, and this article for an image of the type of
propaganda used by the websites.
As I stated before, the purpose of both
Iran Focus and Iran Terror is twofold: 1) to disseminate information for
political purposes and enhance a movement for external regime change and 2)
legitimize the MKO in Western government by
removing them from terrorist lists and enhancing their political influence. The
sum of these objectives is to persuade Western govenments to militarily engage
Iran in order to replace with Mullahs with the Mujahedin.
That being said
there's a variety of reasons to view the MKO news agencies and similar modules
as instruments of propaganda as opposed to instruments of news.
First,
the organization is a terrorist group under both US and European law. The
State Department continues to list the MKO as a terrorist
group. Although MKO agents have claimed that the
inclusion was part of Clinton's appeal to the reformist government in Iran, the
argument is no longer cogent in light of the fact that during Bush's 5 years in
office he has yet to remove the MKO as a terrorist group despite significant
political pressure by various neo-conservatives (this includes Daniel
Pipes who currently has a chair with the US Institute of
Peace) and various Republican Congressmen. (see this
article for a summary of US political figures who have
been lobbyed by MKO representatives and supporters). Not only were the MKO were
designated as a terrorist group under
executive order on November 2, 2001, but the President
used the MKO as an example of Saddam’s support for terrorism during
the drive up to the Iraqi war:
Iraq shelters terrorist groups including the
Mujahedin-e-Khalq Organization (MKO), which has used terrorist violence
against Iran and in the 1970s was responsible for killing several U.S.
military personnel and U.S. civilians.
By their
very nature as a terrorist organization, information by them should not be
trusted. Lets put it that way, would you trust al-Qaeda or Hizbollah about news
in the US or Lebanon?
Second, the MKO have demonstrated time and time
again the extents for which they'll engage a disinformation campaign for
purposes of propaganda. For example, the MKO continously contend that no
Mujahedin member has targeted Americans or Europeans figures during acts of
terrorism. These arguments are clearly false in light of the following:
- In 1973, the MKO assassinated Lt. Col. Lewis
Hawkins, a U.S. military advisor in Iran.
- In 1975, MKO members shot and
killed two U.S. Air force officers in Tehran and attacked a U.S. Embassy van
in Tehran resulted in the death of a local employee.
- In 1976, the MKO
assassinated three American employees of Rockwell International working in
Iran.
- In 1979, the MKO openly supported the holding of US hostages until
1981 when they began directing their attention to
Khomeini.
Whether or not the MKO targeted
Americans or not is a irrelevant argument anyways. Terrorism anywhere is
terrorism everywhere regardless of our relationship with its targets. Evidence
of MKO propaganda in Iran Focus is also apparant when we compare their
report to a report by the Washington Times concerning a recent MKO event.
The Iran Focus report indicates that there were thousands of participants, while
the Times only reports 300. See a similar report where Iran Focus reported that
over 40,000 participants intended to protest in
Berlin. Interesting for an organization that is only
reported to have 10,000 members.
Lastly, the MKO
are highly disliked and disregarded by Iranians worldwide. During the Iran-Iraq
war, the Saddam Hussein financed and utilized the MKO to
institute several attacks against Iranians. (Note: the MKO were also responsible
for assisting Saddam Hussein suppress Shiite and
Kurdish uprisings in 1991.) It is no suprise, therefore, that most Iranians
regard the MKO as a cultish organization. There is no statute of
limitations against murderers or conspirators to murder, nor is there one for
terrorists and those who conspire with terrorists. Similarly, the MKO do not
gain immunity for their previous actions simply by refraining from targeting
European and American targets for 30 years. Nor have they in the eyes of
Iranians.
For all these reasons I note that Iran Focus, Iran Terror,
people who rely on the two for information, and all affiliated groups should not
be used as a source of "alternative information." There's nothing alternative
about propaganda, regardless of if it addresses the same human rights issues
which we are concerned with. "The most dangerous untruths are truths slightly
distorted."
I would like to note that often those who do not share the
same political sentiments of the MKO or hard-line monarchists are branded as
“apologists” as if to place them in the same group as hezbollahis. We are not
apologists when we wish freedom Iran based on principles of reconciliation and
accountability. To do so would be similar to saying that opponents to the Khmer
Rouge were apologists when the Cambodian government was committing human rights
abuses in the early 70's. As Congressman Bob Ney rightfully stated,
“Opposition to the Mujahedin is not the same as support for the regime in
Iran.”