OUR FRIEND IRAN?
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP90-00965R000100110106-5
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
1
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 5, 2012
Sequence Number:
106
Case Number:
Publication Date:
May 11, 1986
Content Type:
OPEN SOURCE
File:
Attachment | Size |
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CIA-RDP90-00965R000100110106-5.pdf | 83.96 KB |
Body:
Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP90-00965R000100110106-5
WASHINGTON POST
11 May 1986
Jack Anderson
And Dale Win Atta
Our Friend
Iran? ir ' mAy
B8
As the Reagan administration continues its
secret, conciliatory tilt toward Iran, the presi-
dent's advisers should not lose sight of the du-
hious background of the people they're cozy-
ing up to.
There are solid pragmatic grounds for seek-
ing to paper over U.S.-Iranian differences.
One of these, as we've reported, is the admin-
istration's hope that the United States will
have at least some influential friends in Teh-
ran when the Ayatollah Khomeini inevitably
passes from the scene.
But lest the administration get carried
away, we'd like to remind it of an Inescapable
tact: Khomeini and his top henchmen are
btrxxlthirsty, unrepentant terrorists who hive
been rabidly anti-American.
('?,nsider a likely successor to Khomeini,
flashemi Rafsanjani, speaker of the Iranian
parliament. U.S. officials have pinned a suh-
stantial part of their hopes on Rafsanjani, and
have presumably inspired sympathetic stories
in the press, which referred to hill, as a "nuxi-
erate" and credited him with helping to free
the American hostages five years age.
Well, our sources inside Iran point out that
before he rose to his present eminence, Raf-
sanjani was co-owner of a battery service shop
in the Street of Cheragh Bargh in Tehran.
That was in the late 1970s under the shah's
regime. It was in Rafsanjani's shop in 1977
that the bodies of two U.S. servicemen were
found hidden beneath two cars. They had been
killed in the anti-shah, anti-American terror-
ism that eventually brought Khomeini and
Rafsanjani to power.
One of the future parliament leader's em-
ployees was arrested and imprisoned for the
murder of the two Americans. But he was
quickly released when Khomeini seized power
in 1979, and has since gone to work for the
Mussavi terrorist family, which has done more
to kill and terrorize Americans than any group
in the Middle East.
There are other high Iranian officials on the
dishonul list:
? S.-:1eq Khalkali, who was Rafsanjani's part-
ner in the battery service center. Khalkali is
now a jurist on Khomeini's Islamic revolution -
ary tribunal. Khalkali has sent thousands to die
before the firing squads of the notorious Evil,
prison outside Tehran. By one respongible c,-
timate, 4,000 Iranians have perished in Evin
by gunfire and torture.
Khalkali is the man who dest ? ?.,,1 the
charred remains of the U.S. a-:..
died in the aborted hose >4 miaaion in
1986.
i Oil Minister Mohammed Gharazi. Trained in
Libyan and Palestinian terrorist schools dur-
ing the mid-1970x, Gharazi showed his ruth-
lessness when he was made commander of the
Revolutionary Guards operating against the
Kurd rebels in northwestern Iran.
In 1980, Gharazi ordered his troops to mas-
sacre the entire population of a Kurdish village
named Garena. More than 150 men, women
and children were literally put to the sword.
Gharazi boasted that he personally had be-
headed at least a dozen of the victims.
^ Chief prosecutor Musavi Khoiniha. Khomei-
ni's favorite pupil at the theological seminary t
in the holy city of Qom years ago, Khoiniha 1
has been called "the ayatollah in the embassy" t
for his role in planning and leading the take-
over of the American Embassy in November
1979. For more than a decade, Khoiniha was
an "agent of influence" employed by the KGB. r
^ Iran's ambassador to the Vatican, the Ayatollah Y
KhosrowShahi.. Khomeini's former chauffeur, he
was believed to be second-in-command of the stu-
dents who seized the American Embassy. He is
reliably reported to be running an international
network of terrorist operations out of his head-
quarters on the Via Nomentana, Rome,
next-door to the Libyan Embassy. KhosrowShahi
directs terrorists in Italy, Spain, France, West I
Germany and Britain.
? All Nawai who, while an attache in the Irani-
an consulate in Bern, Switzerland, bought 300
tons of explosives on the black market in June
1982. Some of it is believed to have been used
to blow up the U.S. Embassy and the Marine
barracks in Beirut the following year, killirg
258 Americans.
^ Mahtnoutl Nourani, Iranian charge d'affaires
in Beirut. fie was involved in the hijacking of
TWA Flight 1347 last June, in which an Anterl-
can Navy man was beaten and murdered.
There are other high Iranian officials, including
Cabinet nunisters and top diplomats, who were
ultimately involved in the planning, preparation
and execution of terrorist acts against Amen-
cans. the administration would do well to re-
member whom they're dealing with as they pur-
sue friendly relations with the Khomeini regime.
aJ 1986. !'n,trd Feature Syndicate. Inc.
r Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP90-00965R000100110106-5