A Most-Wanted Terrorist Is Spotted in Syria
By MEGHAN CLYNE - Staff Reporter of the Sun
January 25, 2006 - The New York Sun
http://www.nysun.com/article/26427
WASHINGTON - One of the American government's most wanted terrorists visited
Syria late last week with Iran's President Ahmadinejad, according to a former
Reagan administration national security official and Iran watchers on Capitol
Hill.
The former official, Michael Ledeen, now an author and scholar at the American
Enterprise Institute, made the claim in an article published yesterday afternoon
on the Web site of the conservative magazine National Review. Several American
government officials refused to confirm that the Lebanese Hezbollah figure, Imad
Mugniyah, was sighted at the meeting in Damascus last Thursday with Mr.
Ahmadinejad and the Syrian dictator, Bashar Assad.
Major Matthew McLaughlin, a spokesman for the Central Command, the military
division responsible for the Middle East, said, "Central Command keeps its eyes
on various terrorists and terrorist groups within the region, but would not
offer any comment on the whereabouts of a particular terrorist because the
information is classified."
Congressional staffers familiar with America's Iran policy, however, said
yesterday that while they had not received confirmation of Mr. Mugniyah's
participation in the Ahmadinejad-Assad summit from American officials, they had
heard from foreign "diplomatic sources" that the terrorist was at the meeting.
Mr. Mugniyah appears on the FBI's most wanted terrorists list along with Al
Qaeda leaders Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, and the government has
offered a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to his capture. Mr.
Mugniyah, of Lebanese origin but said to be living now in Iran, is described by
the FBI as the "alleged head of the security apparatus" for Lebanese Hezbollah.
He was indicted by America for his role in hijacking TWA Flight 847 in June
1985, a terrorist act in which an American citizen and Navy diver, Robert
Stethem, was beaten and tortured, shot in the head, and his body dumped out on
the Beirut International Airport runway.
Mr. Mugniyah is also linked to other attacks on Americans and reportedly has met
with Mr. bin Laden.
A Washington-based Iranian exile leader and a former Iranian minister of
education, Manoucher Ganji, told The New York Sun yesterday that while he had
not heard of Mr. Mugniyah's purported appearance in Damascus, the purpose of the
Assad-Ahmadinejad meeting was to plot against America and Israel. Mr. Ganji said
it would therefore make sense for a representative of Hezbollah to be present
for the discussions.
News of the alleged connections among Messrs. Assad, Ahmadinejad, and Mugniyah
came amid intensifying pressure on the governments of both Syria and Iran. The
Assad dictatorship finds itself embroiled in increasing calls for the
disarmament of Hezbollah and intensifying scrutiny of its alleged role in the
assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri, whose death is
under investigation by the United Nations.
And yesterday in the southwestern Iranian town of Ahvaz, in the oil-rich
Khuzestan province, two bombs detonated in a bank and outside a government
building, according to the Associated Press and Arabic news outlets. The
explosions rocked Ahvaz on the same day that Mr. Ahmadinejad and his entire
cabinet were scheduled to meet in the town, a trip that Mr. Ahmadinejad
cancelled yesterday, citing forecasts for inclement weather. The bombs killed
six and wounded 46.
It remained unclear yesterday who was responsible for the bombings, as scholars
and analysts of Iran pointed to a violent opposition, separatist movements, and
even the Ahmadinejad regime itself as possible culprits.
A fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Patrick Clawson, told
the Sun yesterday that the bombings were the latest episode in more than a year
of ethnic minority unrest in Iran, where Sunnis, Arabs, Kurds, and Turks are
outnumbered by the Persian Shia majority. As Mr. Ahmadinejad's "hard-liner"
approach to nuclear armament - prompting increasing concern and action among
Western governments - gains greater attention in America and Europe, Mr. Clawson
said, Iranians are already aware that Mr. Ahmadinejad is a hardliner at home.
The bombings, Mr. Clawson said, were likely a violent manifestation of Iranian
outrage at the regime.
The scholar said the actions demonstrated that "the main victims of Iranian
terrorism are Iranians," and that anti-Ahmadinejad sentiment among the Iranian
population is one of America's most valuable weapons against Iranian extremism.
"We have a natural ally in the people of Iran, and we should be using it," Mr.
Clawson said.
Mr. Ganji, too, called upon Washington to respond to the attacks with greater
support for Iranian democracy activists, both inside the Islamic Republic and in
exile. "Washington has been paralyzed all these years, they're still paralyzed.
They don't know what to do," Mr. Ganji said. He urged the American government to
bring free TV and radio to Iran, and to provide assistance to the exile movement
to provide for a peaceful transition to Iranian self-rule.
As for the explosions, Mr. Ganji said they were likely the work of separatists,
and said that the violence by enemies of the mullahs' regime would likely set
the Iranian pro-democracy movement back. Mr. Ganji condemned the violence, and
said that almost all Iranians agree with the regime about Iran's territorial
integrity, opposing separatism. The killing of innocent Iranians by separatists,
the activist said, would likely increase Iranian support for the Ahmadinejad
government.
Moreover, he said, "this is the kind of action that is certainly going to make
the work of the non-violent opposition more difficult." The perpetrators of
yesterday's attack are "in no way a responsible freedom movement," Mr. Ganji
said, adding that the bombings would almost certainly result in the government's
using the attacks as an excuse to jail scores of peaceful democracy activists.
An author and scholar of Iran, Kenneth Timmerman, said the attacks may have been
perpetrated Ahmadinejad government to inflate its support. "The Iranian regime
has a long track record of fabricating bomb attacks inside Iran to advance its
own political agenda," Mr. Timmerman said, citing an arson attack in August 1978
orchestrated by Ayatollah Khomeini, originally blamed on the shah but designed
by Khomeini's officials to spark the revolution that brought him to power. "I
would not be surprised if Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps were doing the same
thing today, in a vain attempt to get Iranians to rally around the Islamic
Republic," Mr. Timmerman said in an email to the Sun.
The signs of internal unrest in Iran also come amid increasing external pressure
on the Islamic Republic. As America, Britain, France, Germany, and the United
Nations work to defang Mr. Ahmadinejad's growing nuclear arms program, a
movement is afoot in the American Congress to support Iranians hoping to replace
the dictatorship with a free government.
In the Senate, Senator Santorum, Republican of Pennsylvania, has introduced the
Iran Freedom and Support Act, which mandates government support for Iranian
civil society and democracy movements. The legislation - which includes among
its cosponsors almost half the Senate, with backing from both Republicans and
Democrats - provides increased support for free press and broadcast outlets in
Iran, and calls on the American government to facilitate a transition to
democracy in the Islamic Republic resembling its anti-communist efforts in the
Soviet bloc during the Cold War. Companion legislation has been introduced in
the House by Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Republican of Florida, and has more than
330 cosponsors on both sides of the aisle. The House bill, while also calling on
American support for Iranian democracy activists, also requires sanctions
against the Ahmadinejad regime in response to its nuclear threat.
The White House spokesman, Scott McClellan, said yesterday, "the president has
made it very clear that we stand with the Iranian people who seek greater
freedom."
105 Chambers Street, New York, NY 10007
© 2005 The New York Sun, One SL, LLC. All rights reserved.