By Sasan Fayazmanesh
Rounding up the usual suspects

Funeral of assassinated Iranian nuclear scientists,
Professors Majid Shahriari
In March of 1990, a Canadian ballistics expert by
the name of Gerald Bull, who was suspected of being involved in developing
Iraq's missile system, was murdered in Brussels, after being warned by a friend
that the Israeli secret police, Mossad, was planning to kill him. To this day we
do not know who killed Gerald Bull. The same fate might await the resolution of
a number of cases in the past few years, where Iranian physics professors and
scientists have been attacked and, in some cases, killed.
On November 29, 2010, there
were two assassination attempts against Iranian nuclear scientists, Professors
Majid Shahriari and Fereydoon Abbasi Davani. The former, Shahriari, did not
survive. Both attacks were carried out by men on motorcycles, as most news
media reported. Also, as many media outlets reported, Iran swiftly blamed the
CIA and Mossad for the attacks. AFP, on November 30, 2010, quoted President
Ahmadinejad as saying: "One can undoubtedly see the hands of Israel and Western
governments in the assassination which unfortunately took place. . . . the
Zionist regime this time shed the blood of university professor Dr. Majid
Shahriari to curb Iran's progress." Israel's foreign ministry "declined to
comment," AFP reported.
The name of the surviving
scientist, Abbasi Davani, appeared among the "Persons involved in nuclear or
ballistic missile activities" in the 2007
UN
Resolution 1747 against Iran. Actually, his name was the first on the list
and he was identified as the "scientist with links to the Institute of Applied
Physics, working closely with Mohsen Fakhrizadeh-Mahabadi." The second name on
the list, Fakhrizadeh-Mahabadi, was identified as the senior scientist and
former head of the Physics Research Centre (PHRC). "The IAEA," the resolution
read, "have asked to interview him about the activities of the PHRC over the
period he was head but Iran has refused."
After the November
attacks, the Israeli media made similar speculation as to who was behind the
attack. For example, on November 30, 2010, Yossi Melman, a senior commentator
for Haaretz, stated in an article in The Independent: "No
organisation claimed responsibility but it is obvious, not just because of
accusations by Iranian officials and Iran's media, that Israel was behind it.
Most experts who follow Middle East politics and Mossad history would agree."
Melman speculated that these attacks are "part of the endless efforts by the
Israeli intelligence community, together with its Western counterparts including
Britain's MI6 and America's CIA, to sabotage, delay and if possible, to stop
Iran from reaching its goal of having its first nuclear bomb."
As Melman noted, the attacks
were "at least the fourth attempt to assassinate Iranian scientists linked with
the country's nuclear programme in four years" and "there were probably other
attempts which did not hit the headlines." "The attribution to Mossad,"
according to Melman, "is not because of the use of motorcycles, though in the
past Mossad has been involved in similar operations." "It has more to do,"
Melman went on to say, "with the policy of Mossad to deal a blow to Iran's
nuclear programme. On top of assassinating nuclear scientists to terrorise
others and force some to quit, it is believed that Mossad was also behind
penetrating Iranian purchasing networks and selling them flawed equipment of its
nuclear enrichment centrifuges and most recently by planting a virus which has
damaged the nuclear computers at Natanz."
Similar speculation about who was behind the
sabotage and assassinations in Iran appeared elsewhere. For instance, on
November 30, 2010, The Jerusalem Post referred to a report in the French
newspaper
Le Canard enchaîné and stated
that according to the "French intelligence sources," acts of sabotage and
assassinations that were "carried out in the past year in Iran were conducted by
Israel with the help of the CIA and MI6." The sabotage, the report went on to
say, included "the introduction of the Stuxnet computer virus into 30,000
computers in Iran's nuclear reactors and explosions in October in which 18
Iranian technicians were killed at a factory in the Zagros mountains that
manufactured Shihab missiles." The assassinations, according to the report, were
conducted by "Mossad in cooperation with the American and British intelligence
agencies."
There were also rumors in some Iranian news
media, as well as some foreign news sources, that the
US designated
terrorist organization Mujahedeen Khalq-e Iran or MEK [MKO,
National Council of Resistance, and various other
names used by the organization] was also behind the assassinations. For example,
Iranian Students News Agency stated on December 1, 2010, that the "monafeghin,"
a code name for MEK, had admitted that they had "played a role" in the attack.
In this report they referred to some MEK
documents that appeared on the website of "Habilian
Center," a group that claims to be a non-governmental organization fighting
terrorism in Iran.
On December 1, 2010, AP also reported that
according to Iran's defense minister, Israel had enlisted members of MEK to
carry out such attacks. Indeed, on November 30, 2010, Fars News Agency quoted
Iranian Defense Minister Ahmad Vahidi as saying: "This inauspicious act was
sponsored by the Zionist regime and in coordination with the western
intelligence agencies, the US and Britain in particular, and was carried out by
MKO [MEK] hirelings."
Confirming all such news, particularly the
role that MEK might have played in the attack, is difficult. However, as I
mentioned in my 2008 book, The United States and Iran: Sanctions, Wars and
the Policy of Dual Containment, as well as a forthcoming book, MEK has
worked closely with the Israelis in the past, often acting as a conduit for
them. Indeed, the most important and the only correct piece of information that
this organization has ever made public-namely, the
August 14, 2002 announcement that Iran has been
building two nuclear facilities-was supplied to them by the Israelis, as I have
argued in my book. The organization has also posted on the web,
on a number of occasions, the names and addresses of some university professors
or nuclear scientists in Iran, including Drs. Fereydoon Abbasi Davani and Mohsen
Fakhrizadeh-Mahabadi. For instance, on November 19, 2004, the website "Iran
Focus" posted a piece under "Verbatim:
Opposition cites new intelligence on Iranian laser enrichment." The piece
referred to the "text of a press conference" held in Paris by Mohammad
Mohaddessin, the "chairman of the NCRI [National Council of Resistance] of Iran
Foreign Affairs Committee." In his talk, Mohaddessin accused Iran of "using
advanced laser technology to secretly enrich uranium and of lying to the United
Nations nuclear watchdog body about the covert program." Like many other such
claims by MEK, this assertion was false. But in his press conference Mohaddessin
referred to the Center for the Development of
Defense
Technology and stated:
The center is run under the
supervision of Dr. Fereydoon Abbasi, a Ministry of Defense laser specialist and
one of the few experts in separation of isotopes. He is also in charge of the
nuclear training and research at the Ministry of Defense. Dr. Abbasi plays a key
role in the Ministry of Defense's elaborate concealment program to keep the
regime's nuclear activities secret and deceive IAEA inspectors.
He concluded his talk by
listing the names of "laser experts" working for the Iranian Department of
Defense. The names included
Mohsen Fakhrizadeh-Mahabadi and other colleagues of
Professor Abbasi Davani.
It is interesting to
note that in fall 2010 and winter 2011, and even throughout the period when
MEK's name was in the news for a possible link to the attack on the Iranian
nuclear scientists, there was a feverish campaign in the US to remove the MEK
from the US list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations.
On November 16, 2010, six Members of Congress signed such a letter
addressed to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. The letter, signed by
Representatives Bob Filner, Dana Rohrabacher, Ted Poe, Judy Chu, Ed Towns and
Mike Coffman, highlighted House resolution 1431, introduced by Bob Filner,
which called for the MEK's removal from the US list of terrorist organizations.
On December 17, 2010, AP reported that in a symposium in Washington several
"Bush-era officials" have "urged the Obama administration to strike an Iranian
opposition group [MEK] from a terrorism blacklist and support regime change in
Iran." The officials listed were Tom Ridge, John Bolton, Frances Townsend and
Michael Mukasey. Mukasey, the former attorney general under Bush, was quoted as
saying: "We should take off the list of terrorist organizations the one group [MEK]
that is devoted to restoring freedom in Iran."
The
Christian Science Monitor, which also reported the same event, quoted
Mukasey as saying that the "the regime in Tehran" is at the "center" of an
"Islamism that threatens civilization as we know it" (December 19, 2010). On
December 23, 2010, The Washington Post reported that at a rally in Paris
organized by the "French Committee for a Democratic Iran, a pressure group
formed to support MEK," former New York mayor Rudolph Giuliani, former secretary
of homeland security Tom Ridge, former White House homeland security adviser
Frances Fragos Townsend and former attorney general Michael Mukasey "demanded
that Obama instead take the controversial Mujaheddin-e Khalq (MEK) opposition
group off the U.S. list of foreign terrorist organizations and incorporate it
into efforts to overturn the mullah-led government in Tehran." "The United
States should not just be on your side," Giuliani was quoted as saying, it
"should be enthusiastically on your side. You want the same things we want."
On January 10, 2011, Iran's Minster of
Intelligence, Heidar Moslehi, announced that "more than 10 people" linked to the
Mossad were arrested in connection with last year's killing of a nuclear
physicist (AP). The case referred to the assassination of Dr. Masoud Ali
Mohammadi, a professor of physics at Tehran University, who was killed by a
bomb-rigged motorcycle that exploded outside his house as he was leaving for
work in January 2010. An individual was shown in a
video
confessing to Professor Ali Mohammadi's murder after getting training in Israel.
Some people in Iran, including the wife of the assassinated professor, were
satisfied with the investigation and found the confession credible. But the
opponents of the Iranian government appeared to be skeptical, especially some
members of the Green movement who had tried earlier to portray the government as
a suspect in the killing, since Ali Mohammadi appeared to be a supporter of the
opposition leader Mir-Hossein Mousavi. Indeed, one of the main organs of the
opposition movement interviewed Professor Ali Mohammadi's wife and, without much
success, tried to shake her confidence in the confession. The Israeli analysts,
too, appeared to be skeptical of the Iranian government's announcement that
those responsible for the assassination have been captured.
Also skeptical that the murder case of
Professor Ali Mohammadi has been solved were the Sherlock Holmeses of this
world, who have followed closely this and similar cases in the past. They still
remember the unresolved case of
Gerald Bull's murder more than two decades ago.
Sasan Fayazmanesh
is Professor Emeritus of Economics at California State University, Fresno. He is
the author of
The United States and Iran: Sanctions, Wars and the Policy of Dual Containment
(Routledge, available in paperback in February 2011). He can be reached at:
sasan.fayazmanesh@gmail.com.
... Payvand News - 01/17/11 ... --