Spencer: Iran’s New Thug-in-Chief

Jihad Watch director Robert Spencer discusses Iran's new President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at FrontPage:

Not long after Iran’s new president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was elected in late June, the allegations started: he was among the jihadists who seized around seventy Americans in the American embassy in Tehran on November 4, 1979, and held them for 444 days while Jimmy Carter wrung his hands and quailed, discovering that liberal pieties were impotent to free them. And not only that: Ahmadinejad was alleged to be one of the young Iranian men pictured in a notorious photograph, standing next to a heavily blindfolded American hostage.

Some of the hostages were certain they remembered him. “You don’t forget someone like that,” said former Assistant Air Force Attache in Tehran David Roeder, who was one of the hostages. “They had me handcuffed to a chair and at least during the first few sessions, blindfolded as well. But once the blindfold came off, they had developed a plan that Ahmadinejad was instigating. Because I was not cooperating, they threatened that they were going to kidnap my handicapped son and send various pieces of him -- fingers and toes is what they mentioned -- to my wife if I didn’t start cooperating. You don’t forget somebody who is involved in something like that.” Five other hostages agreed that they remembered Ahmadinejad. However, others among Roeder’s fellow hostages professed never to have seen Ahmadinejad before.

Even President Bush expressed concern: “Obviously, his involvement raises many questions, and knowing how active people are at finding answers to questions, I’m confident they’ll be found.” Soon discovered was that Ahmadinejad does seem to have been a member of the Office of Strengthening Unity, which planned the embassy caper. However, Iranian officials, including the ringleaders of the embassy takeover and hostage seizure, denied that Ahmadinejad was involved.

But before they could declare their new president as pure as the driven snow, new allegations surfaced. Austria’s Interior Ministry is now investigating Ahmadinejad’s alleged involvement in the July 1989 execution-style murders of Abdul-Rahman Ghassemlou, leader of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (which opposed the mullahs’ regime), and two others in an apartment in Vienna.

As suspicions mounted around the world that Iran’s new president was a thug representing the most unsavory and ominous aspects of the mullahocracy he represents, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi grew indignant — and pointed his finger at a predictable culprit: “The charges are so evidently false that they don’t deserve an answer. It’s clear that it’s mere lies….We advise the Europeans not to fall into the trap of the Zionist media.”

Ah, the Zionist media. Of course. They concocted it all; Ahmadinejad was no doubt nowhere near the American Embassy in Tehran in 1979, and likewise absent from Vienna ten years later. Mere tales cooked up by the fiendish Zionists. No doubt Ahmadinejad and Asefi were sure that such an explanation would play well on Al-Jazeera and around the Muslim world, but for those interested in a more balanced and reasonable assessment of the new president and the charges against him, some troubling questions remained.

These questions centered around the abundant evidence that it would make little difference even if Ahmadinejad weren’t himself a kidnapper and assassin. Late last week he exulted that “thanks to the blood of the martyrs, a new Islamic revolution has arisen and the Islamic revolution of 1384 [the current Iranian year] will, if Allah wills, cut off the roots of injustice in the world. The wave of the Islamic revolution will soon reach the entire world.”

The Islamic revolution of 1384 (2005)? Did Ahmadinejad therefore mean that his election heralded a break with the regime installed by Khomeini’s Islamic revolution of 1979? Not exactly. On June 26, the day after his election, he visited Khomeini’s tomb and laid a floral wreath on the old man’s grave. Just in case anyone still wasn’t sure, Iran’s Islamic Republic News Agency spelled it out: Ahmadinejad, it reported, “renewed his allegiance with the late founder of the Islamic Revolution Imam Khomeini at his mausoleum in southern Tehran Sunday morning.”

Ahmadinejad’s Islamic revolution that will “soon reach the entire world” would therefore seem to be the one Khomeini was exhorting Muslims to fight for when he declared: “Islam says: Whatever good there is exists thanks to the sword and in the shadow of the sword! People cannot be made obedient except with the sword! The sword is the key to Paradise, which can be opened only for the Holy Warriors! There are hundreds of other [Qur’anic] psalms and Hadiths [sayings of the Prophet] urging Muslims to value war and to fight. Does all this mean that Islam is a religion that prevents men from waging war? I spit upon those foolish souls who make such a claim.”

Perhaps the questions that the international media are asking about Ahmadinejad should be recast. Rather than wondering if he is the man in the photo next to the hostage, or the murderer of Abdul-Rahman Ghassemlou, reporters should be asking: Mr. Ahmadinejad, do you disapprove of the storming of the American embassy in 1979 and the holding of the hostages? Do you deplore the murder of Ghassemlou? Will you bring the perpetrators of both to justice?

Hamid Reza Asefi would no doubt see in such questions just more Zionism. And that in itself would be illustrative of the overarching fact that nothing at all has changed in Tehran with Ahmadinejad’s victory -- and that the mullahs’ regime poses more of a threat to reasoned discourse and the peace of the world today than it ever has before.

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From the website of Laura Mansfield (www.lauramansfield.org):

"Is the president-elect of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, one of the hostage-takers at the US Embassy in Tehran in 1979?

The Northeast Intelligence Network and Strategic Translations called upon its Farsi-language resources to help determine the answer to this question.

Sure enough, the answer is readily found on the official website of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The website includes various documents from Ahmadinegad’s campaign where he claims "I Can Control the Americans - I Have Experience Doing It". In one particularly disturbing document, he claims that if elected, he will "bring the death that the Shi’ite are experiencing in Iraq to the streets of America with the volunteer martyr brigades that are ready to act."

Ahmadinegad claims that under his leadership "America will not stop Iran from its uranium programs. Iran has a right to defend itself against the Zionist sons of pigs and apes." He says that he "knows how to control the US and will do so when the time is right."

The website in fact boasts of his involvement in the Embassy takeover, even posting photographs of Ahmadinegad and his fellow students.

The website claims that this photograph was taken inside the US Embassy in Tehran in 1980: ( see PDF attachment for photos):

The official biography on Ahmadinejad’s website leaves little doubt as to his involvement in the 1979 embassy takeover:

Born in Garmsar, east of Tehran in 1956
4th child of 7
Working class family
Father was a blacksmith
Family moved to south Tehran in 1957
Graduated high school
Enrolled Elm-o Sanaat University 1975 studying engineering
Became leave of student activist group at Elm-o Sanaat University
Founded the Islamic Students Association at Elm-o Sanaat shortly after fall of shah
1979 became representative from Elm-o Sanaat at the Office of Strengthening Unity between Students and Theological Seminaries (OSU) (OSU set up by Ayatollah Mohammad Beheshti, top confidant to Ayatullah Khomeini
Ahmadinejad and other members of OSU central councilincluding Ibrahim Asgharzadeh, Mohsen Mirdamadi, Mohsen Kadivar, Mohsen Aghajari, and Abbas Abdi regularly met with Khomeini
Mirdamadi and Abdi suggested to OSU that US embassy be stormed. Ahmadinejad recommended storming the Soviet embassy at the same time.
During 1980 "Islamic Cultural Revolution" Ahmadinejad and the OSU assisted in purging dissident lecturers and students - many arrested and later executed.
1980 - Ahmadinejad joined Revolutionary Guards.
1980s, Ahmadinejad employed as interrogator and torturer the Internal Security department of Revolutionary Guard.
Iran government website Baztab, claims Ahmadinejad worked as an executioner in the notorious Evin Prison
1986 became senior officer in Special Brigade. Revolutionary Guard, at Ramazan Garrison (Ramazan Garrison was the headquarters of the Revolutionary Guards' "extra-territorial operations", a euphemism for terrorist attacks beyond Iran's borders.)
Governor, Maku and Khoy (towns in NW Iran)
1993 appointed governor of Ardebil Province
1997 return to Elm-o Sanaat University to teah and organize Ansar el Hezbollah
2003 became major of Tehran; founded Abadgaran-e Iran-e Islami party
Ahmadinejad has this photo of himself posted on the website, date 1358. The Persian year 1358 corresponds to the year 1979 on the Gregorian calendar. ( see PDF attachment for photos)

Other photos taken during his university days are shown below (see PDF attachment for photos)

An opposition website claims the following:

In Kermanshah, Ahmadinejad became involved in the clerical regime's terrorist operations abroad and led many "extra-territorial operations of the IRGC". With the formation of the elite Qods (Jerusalem) Force of the IRGC, Ahmadinejad became one of its senior commanders. He was the mastermind of a series of assassinations in the Middle East and Europe, including the assassination of Iranian Kurdish leader Abdorrahman Qassemlou, who was shot dead by senior officers of the Revolutionary Guards in a Vienna flat in July 1989. Ahmadinejad was a key planner of the attack, according to sources in the Revolutionary Guards."


As noted by Robert above, Ahmadinejad's participation on the American embassy is less important than what he thinks of the whole matter. Just as all those who throughout the Arab and Muslim world were hysterical with pleasure after 9/11 (the cheers in Cairo streets, and in Beirut restaurants, the dancing and hand-clapping and ululations of joy in the West Bank and Gaza, the slaughtered goats and sheep for festive celebratory meals in Saudi Arabia) Does he approve of the Tehran androlepsy? Does he approve of the murder of the Kurdish leader? Does he approve of all those assassinations carried out, in and out of Iran, by the assorted assassins of the Islamic Republic of Iran?

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