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- <text id=94TT0318>
- <title>
- Mar. 21, 1994: The Tehran Connection
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 21, 1994 Hard Times For Hillary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TERRORISM, Page 50
- The Tehran Connection
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>An exclusive look at how Iran hunts down its opponents abroad
- </p>
- <p>By Thomas Sancton--With reporting by Nomi Morris/Berlin, Elaine Shannon/Washington
- and Kenneth R. Timmerman/Geneva, Istanbul, Paris and Vienna
- </p>
- <p> On a sweltering August afternoon in 1991, three dark-haired
- men approached an ivy-covered villa in the Paris suburb of Suresnes.
- It was the home of Shahpour Bakhtiar, 76, exiled former Prime
- Minister of Iran and a leader of the anti-Khomeini opposition.
- Since fleeing Tehran in 1979, Bakhtiar had been one of the most
- closely guarded men in France, watched over by paramilitary
- police 24 hours a day.
- </p>
- <p> The arrival of the three men raised no alarm, since one was
- Farydoun Boyerahmadi, 38, a Bakhtiar aide and confidant. He
- was bringing two friends, Ali Vakili Rad, 32, and Mohammed Azadi,
- 31, to meet the famous exile. The guards at the door collected
- the visitors' passports, frisked the men, then waved them inside.
- </p>
- <p> Bakhtiar and his personal secretary, Fouroush Katibeh, greeted
- the guests in a ground-floor salon. As soon as Katibeh went
- to the kitchen to make tea, one of the visitors leaped at Bakhtiar
- and, according to the autopsy report, struck a "mortal blow"
- to the throat. The secretary was similarly dispatched. With
- two knives grabbed from the kitchen, the assailants hacked at
- their victims' throats, chests and arms so savagely that a knife
- blade was broken. An hour after arriving, Boyerahmadi calmly
- collected the trio's passports, and the men drove off in an
- orange BMW. The guards failed to notice that Vakili's and Azadi's
- shirts were drenched in blood.
- </p>
- <p> The vicious attack touched off one of the most intensive murder
- investigations in French history. Conducted by Judge Jean-Louis
- Bruguiere, 50, a dogged investigator of terrorist activities,
- the probe followed a winding trail that led through Switzerland
- and Turkey to the highest levels of the Tehran government. The
- judge completed his work last month by turning over 18 volumes
- of documents to the Paris Appeals Court. This week judges will
- hear arguments from the prosecutor and defense attorneys, and
- must decide by April 7 whether to charge three key suspects
- in the case with "criminal conspiracy" and "complicity." If
- convicted, they risk a maximum sentence of life in prison.
- </p>
- <p> Like another trial of accused Iran-backed assassins now under
- way in Berlin, the Bakhtiar case will in effect put the Tehran
- government in the dock. Bruguiere's investigation appears to
- have assembled an unprecedented body of evidence linking Iranian
- officials to the murder of a political opponent abroad. "This
- case," says a French official familiar with the investigation,
- "marks the first time that we have so many proofs of the implication
- of the state in an operation of this importance." Defense lawyers
- contend that the evidence against their clients is flimsy, and
- Iranian officials vehemently deny any involvement in this or
- other foreign assassinations.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, the secret 177-page prosecutor's report, a copy
- of which TIME has obtained, lays out a credible chain of accusations.
- It declares flatly that "Iranian intelligence services effectively
- took part in carrying out this criminal conspiracy." The head
- of the intelligence and security ministry, Ali Fallahian, is
- believed to be in charge of Tehran's worldwide assassination
- networks. Investigators also claim to have uncovered links to
- Iran's foreign ministry, telecommunications ministry, Islamic
- orientation ministry and state television network, IRIB. One
- key charge in the prosecutor's report is that an important member
- of the alleged assassins' support network entered Switzerland
- with an order of mission typed under the letterhead of the foreign
- ministry and initialed by a ranking official above the typed
- words "for the Foreign Minister," referring to Ali Akbar Velayati,
- one of the most senior members of the government. "The whole
- Iranian state apparatus is at the service of these operations,"
- says a French official. "The government assumes the legitimacy
- of killing opponents anywhere in the world."
- </p>
- <p> Since 1979, more than 60 Iranian dissidents have been murdered
- abroad. "No one is immune to this threat," says Manouchehr Ganji,
- leader of a Paris-based opposition group, who lives with 24-hour
- police protection. Nor are non-Iranians safe. Salman Rushdie,
- the Indian-born author of The Satanic Verses, remains under
- a Tehran death sentence pronounced five years ago and reconfirmed
- last month. Iranian operatives are suspected in the killings
- of Saudi and Jordanian intelligence agents as well as the murders
- of five Turkish intellectuals since 1990. "Turkey is a prime
- target," says Istanbul police chief Necdet Menzir, "because
- we are a Muslim country with a secular democratic system."
- </p>
- <p> On the basis of extensive reporting in France, Switzerland,
- Germany, Austria and Turkey, much of it involving privileged
- access to investigators as well as to police and court files,
- TIME has compiled this report on four major murder cases. Complete
- with mysterious blue baseball caps, safe houses and none-too-bright
- hit men, these cases, Western authorities believe, point to
- Tehran's role in hunting down its opponents abroad.
- </p>
- <p> Bakhtiar: Follow the Numbers
- </p>
- <p> The trail that led French investigators to uncover the Tehran
- connection began with the killers' flight from the Bakhtiar
- murder scene on Aug. 6, 1991. The bodies of the former Prime
- Minister and his secretary were not discovered until the morning
- of Aug. 8, giving the fugitives a substantial head start. But
- Vakili and Azadi, who shaved off their mustaches and ditched
- their bloody shirts in the Bois de Boulogne, were beset by a
- series of mishaps after parting company with Boyerahmadi. Traveling
- on false Turkish passports and speaking little French, the pair
- hopped a train to Lyons but got off at the wrong station and
- missed a connection to Geneva, where their contacts were waiting
- to sneak them back to Tehran. The morning after the murder,
- as police reconstructed their flight, they arrived at the Swiss
- border by taxi. An official suspected that their visas were
- forged and refused to admit them. Five days later, they arrived
- in Annecy, where they left a wallet full of incriminating information
- in a phone booth.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the French police had finally found Bakhtiar's body
- and put out international arrest warrants. Boyerahmadi had disappeared
- without a trace. Eventually Azadi and Vakili made their way
- to Geneva, where Azadi met his contact and was whisked out of
- the country. Vakili, however, was picked up by Swiss police
- on Aug. 21, while wandering lost and abandoned along the banks
- of Lake Leman. He was extradited to France the next month.
- </p>
- <p> Interrogated by Bruguiere, Vakili admitted he was present at
- the murder scene but denied any connection to the Iranian government.
- Yet the judge was already tracing the link through France's
- computerized national telephone system, which automatically
- stores a record of every call. By running a computer analysis
- on 20,000 calls made from public phones along the escape route--particularly the booth where the wallet was found--investigators
- were able to zero in on a few key numbers called by the fleeing
- suspects.
- </p>
- <p> Two of these numbers led to apartments in Istanbul linked to
- a certain Mesut Edipsoy. An Iranian-born Turk, Edipsoy had rented
- one of the flats for two Iranians suspected of involvement in
- the plot and allowed them to use his own apartment as well.
- According to the prosecutor's report, the Iranians requested
- that Edipsoy procure the falsified Turkish passports that the
- killers used.
- </p>
- <p> Although Turkish police let Edipsoy slip away, the authorities
- were more helpful when it came to letting the French analyze
- phone calls from his apartments. A Paris number dialed from
- Istanbul led investigators to a woman who admitted working for
- Iran's intelligence agency, VEVAK. She said the call had come
- from her case officer, who was seeking confirmation of Bakhtiar's
- death on Aug. 7, one day before the crime was discovered.
- </p>
- <p> Before and just after the killing, calls were made from the
- same Istanbul apartment to the telecommunications ministry and
- to another Tehran number used by the Iranian secret service.
- Other calls were made to the headquarters of Iran's IRIB network,
- which is believed to provide cover for intelligence operations.
- Still more were made to Geneva hotels, where, according to Bruguiere's
- findings, members of the killers' alleged support team were
- staying. French investigators say these calls connected the
- Istanbul apartments, which served as logistical bases for the
- assassination, to the killers, Iranian intelligence and the
- Iranian government.
- </p>
- <p> The paper trail provided other links. Combing through thousands
- of visa applications, French authorities found forms submitted
- by Vakili and Azadi. Their applications had been endorsed by
- a French electronics company called Syfax. Officials of the
- company said they had intervened at the request of Iranian businessman
- Massoud Hendi, a nephew of the Ayatullah Khomeini and a former
- Paris bureau chief for Iranian television.
- </p>
- <p> Arrested while vacationing with his family in Paris in September
- 1991, Hendi admitted seeking the visas but said he had done
- so innocently: Hossein Sheikhattar, a senior aide to the telecommunications
- minister, had asked him to help two friends enter France by
- inviting them as guests of Syfax. Hendi's lawyer, Jerome Herce,
- insists that his client's efforts to obtain visas "prove nothing,"
- since the two alleged killers actually entered France on a different
- set of visas. But the prosecutor claims this fact has "no effect
- on the charges of complicity" in the murder.
- </p>
- <p> Another alleged co-conspirator is Zeinolabedine Sarhadi. According
- to Swiss border police, Sarhadi arrived in their country on
- Aug. 13, 1991, ostensibly to work as an archivist in the Iranian
- embassy. His real mission, Bruguiere claims, was to help whisk
- Bakhtiar's murderers out of the country. Phone data, backed
- up by questioning of hotel personnel and inspection of guest
- registers, indicate that Sarhadi was in touch with both the
- Istanbul base and the Geneva hotel where hit-man Azadi stayed
- just before his escape from the country. Sarhadi's lawyer, Nuri
- Albala, admits that his client's "passport arrived in Switzerland
- on Aug. 13, 1991" but insists that someone else was using it.
- The travel document was "stolen," says Albala, after being handed
- over to the Iranian airport police.
- </p>
- <p> Arrested in Switzerland in December 1991 and extradited to France
- five months later, Sarhadi has not taken his imprisonment gracefully.
- He has written repeatedly to his ambassador, Ali Ahani, demanding
- that Tehran intervene on his behalf; Ahani has visited Bruguiere
- several times seeking to get the charges dropped.
- </p>
- <p> The diplomatic interest is understandable: one of the most direct
- links between the plot and the Iranian government is the order
- of mission dispatching Sarhadi to Switzerland. The one-page
- typed document was issued on the authority of Foreign Minister
- Ali Akbar Velayati. The original of this letter, dated July
- 16, 1991, will be a key piece of evidence at the trial.
- </p>
- <p> Bruguiere believes that he has established a final link between
- the killing and Tehran in the person of Gholam Hossein Shoorideh
- Chirazi Nejad. A well-traveled Iranian businessman with high-level
- government connections, Shoorideh prevailed upon a visiting
- Swiss businessman to help two friends get visas by having his
- company invite them as guests. One of the "friends" was Nasser
- Ghasmi Nejad, whose real purpose was apparently to rendezvous
- with Azadi and shepherd him back to Tehran. Shoorideh and Nejad
- thus joined the list of six alleged co-conspirators, including
- Azadi, Boyerahmadi, Sheikhattar and Edipsoy, who are to be tried
- in absentia at the same time as Vakili, Hendi and Sarhadi.
- </p>
- <p> Rajavi: Riding the Tiger
- </p>
- <p> Kassem Rajavi was a tempting target. Not only was he the brother
- of Massoud Rajavi, leader of the largest and best-armed Iranian
- opposition force, the People's Mujahedin, but he was the group's
- spokesman before the Geneva-based U.N. Commission on Human Rights,
- where he was known for his vehement denunciations of the Tehran
- regime. "For years he tickled the tiger," says Swiss investigating
- judge Roland Chatelain. "In the end the tiger bit him."
- </p>
- <p> On April 24, 1990, Rajavi, 56, was heading for his home in the
- Geneva suburb of Coppet. Shortly before noon, a Volkswagen Golf
- swerved in front of his car and sprayed the windshield with
- bullets. Two gunmen jumped out of a second car and methodically
- pumped five bullets into Rajavi's head. One of the killers leaned
- over and tucked a navy blue baseball cap into the door pocket.
- It was the third time police had found a blue baseball cap at
- the scene of an Iranian assassination.
- </p>
- <p> Shortly after the murder, police discovered the Volkswagen at
- Geneva's Cointrin Airport. Authorities held up the 5:45 p.m.
- Iran Air flight to Tehran for two hours, while they noted the
- identity of every passenger. Investigators are now convinced
- that several members of the hit team were aboard, as well as
- two Iranian diplomats suspected of involvement in the killing.
- </p>
- <p> By checking the passenger list against hotel registries and
- police records, investigators eventually identified 13 individuals
- believed to have taken part in the plot. All of them came to
- Switzerland on brand-new government-service passports, many
- issued in Tehran on the same date. Most listed the same personal
- address, Karim-Khan 40, which turns out to be an intelligence-ministry
- building. All 13 arrived on Iran Air flights, using tickets
- issued on the same date and numbered sequentially. Switzerland
- issued international arrest warrants for them on June 15, 1990.
- </p>
- <p> On Nov. 15, 1992, French police arrested two of the suspects
- in Paris. France informed Switzerland last August that an extradition
- request would soon be granted. But on Dec. 29, French Prime
- Minister Edouard Balladur abruptly announced that "for reasons
- linked to the national interest," the two men, Moshen Sharif
- Esfahani and Ahmad Taheri, had been "expelled" to Tehran.
- </p>
- <p> France has provided no further explanation. "The Prime Minister
- judged the situation, based on certain concrete facts, and decided
- on the appropriate action," says an adviser to Interior Minister
- Charles Pasqua. Denying there was any "specific threat" from
- Tehran, this official adds, "Of course, what we did was contrary
- to the extradition convention. But sometimes you just have to
- take exceptional measures."
- </p>
- <p> Qassemlou: In the Lion's Den
- </p>
- <p> Abdelrahman Qassemlou, 59, leader of the independence-minded
- Iranian Kurds, arrived in Vienna on July 11, 1989, to negotiate
- an autonomy agreement with emissaries of President Ali Akbar
- Hashemi Rafsanjani. After 10 years of fighting, the government
- seemed eager to reach a settlement. For two days, Qassemlou,
- his deputy Abdullah Ghaderi-Azar, 37, and Fadhil Rasoul, 38,
- a Vienna-based Iraqi Kurd serving as a mediator, talked in a
- borrowed apartment with interior-ministry official Mohammed
- Jaafari Sahraroudi and Hadji Moustafavi, a.k.a. Ladjeverdi,
- an intelligence operative. A third Iranian, Amir Mansour Bozorgian,
- stood guard at the door.
- </p>
- <p> On the second day of the talks, at about 7:15 p.m., police found
- Sahraroudi standing in the street, clutching his bleeding arm
- and shouting "Help! Help!" He told police someone had broken
- into the apartment upstairs and shot him. While Sahraroudi was
- packed off to the hospital in an ambulance, the police entered
- the apartment. They found Qassemlou's bullet-riddled body seated
- in an armchair. His two associates were sprawled dead on the
- floor. The killers had tossed a blue baseball cap into Qassemlou's
- lap.
- </p>
- <p> The wounded Sahraroudi, who was apparently hit by a stray bullet,
- was not as dazed as he seemed. Just before the police arrived,
- a witness later recounted, he was talking on the sidewalk to
- a man who fit Moustafavi's description. The man drove off on
- a red Suzuki motorbike. Apparently, he was carrying the murder
- weapons; the next day two silencer-equipped pistols were found
- in a garbage dump along with a bloodstained windbreaker and
- the bill of sale for the Suzuki Sahraroudi had purchased six
- months earlier.
- </p>
- <p> Nothing about the murder scene made sense. There was no sign
- of forcible entry. The furniture seemed to have been rearranged
- after the crime. "Bozorgian and Sahraroudi told us someone
- had forced their way into the room and opened fire," says a
- senior Austrian-government official. "They lied. By all appearances,
- the murderers were inside the room at the time of the crime."
- </p>
- <p> Within hours, police had recovered the murder weapons, had one
- suspect in custody (Bozorgian) and a second in the hospital,
- and knew the identity of the third. They had a cassette recording
- of the conversations before the murder and of the gunshots.
- By the morning of July 14, they had interrogated Bozorgian and
- Sahraroudi and had found enough "important discrepancies" to
- detain them both.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, they reported there was "no reason" to hold Bozorgian,
- who was released the day after the crime and went straight to
- the Iranian embassy. Sahraroudi was taken to the embassy on
- July 21, after recovering from his bullet wound. Police dutifully
- returned to him an envelope containing $9,000 and his diplomatic
- passport, which he was seen handing to Bozorgian shortly after
- the murder. Next day Sahraroudi was escorted by police to the
- airport and flew to Tehran. There he was reportedly given a
- hero's welcome. He has since been promoted to the rank of brigadier
- general in the Revolutionary Guards and heads the intelligence
- directorate of its covert-action branch.
- </p>
- <p> Four months after the crime, the Austrian state prosecutor issued
- arrest warrants for Sahraroudi, Bozorgian and Moustafavi. Police
- made a show of cordoning off the Iranian embassy in Vienna on
- the theory that Bozorgian might still be holed up there, but
- the cordon was quietly withdrawn a few weeks later. In January
- 1992, Austrian authorities sent a 16-page inquiry to Tehran,
- seeking information on the case. The Iranians have never replied,
- but that has not stopped Austria from maintaining cordial diplomatic
- relations and signing commercial contracts with the mullahs.
- </p>
- <p> Wolfgang Schallenberg, secretary-general of the Austrian foreign
- ministry, denies there was any pressure from Tehran to release
- the suspects. Says he: "The police made their determination
- according to the information available to them at the time."
- But another top-level Vienna bureaucrat privately points out
- what may be a more compelling reason for Austria's laxity: "No
- country wants to prosecute a terrorist case. It's a threat to
- your government, to your stability, to your penal system. A
- convicted terrorist faces a life sentence, which means in Austria
- at least 15 years. That means 15 years you are at risk."
- </p>
- <p> Sharafkandi: Last Supper
- </p>
- <p> In the back room of Berlin's Mykonos Restaurant on Sept. 17,
- 1992, eight men were feasting on lamb and stuffed grape leaves.
- The diners, members of various Iranian opposition movements,
- were in town for a convention of the Socialist International.
- The senior member of the group was Sadegh Sharafkandi, 54, who
- had succeeded the murdered Qassemlou as head of the Kurdish
- opposition.
- </p>
- <p> At 11 p.m., Iranian dissident Parviz Dastmalchi glanced up at
- what he assumed was a late arrival coming to join the gathering.
- Suddenly someone shouted in Farsi, "You sons of whores!" and
- two gunmen opened fire. Dastmalchi threw himself backward under
- a table and played dead. The shooting lasted no more than a
- minute, then the gunmen fled in a dark blue BMW. Sharafkandi
- and two associates were killed instantly, and a third man died
- shortly afterward in the hospital.
- </p>
- <p> German authorities quickly rounded up five of the eight suspected
- perpetrators and have had them on trial in Berlin since last
- October. Three others are still at large. The alleged leader,
- Kazem Darabi, a 34-year-old importer-exporter, worked for years
- as the German-based link between Tehran and the Lebanese Hizballah,
- according to the German prosecutors. The indictment identifies
- him as "an agent of the Iranian intelligence service VEVAK"
- and a Revolutionary Guards member. His assignment, assert German
- prosecutors, was to "liquidate" the Kurd leader as part of a
- "persecution strategy of the Iranian minister for intelligence
- and security against the Iranian opposition." The other four
- defendants, all Lebanese, are veterans of the Hizballah and
- Amal militia.
- </p>
- <p> The evidence against the five is overwhelming. The getaway car
- contained the fingerprints of a defendant. One of the weapons
- recovered from a sports bag left in a parking lot was flecked
- with blood from a victim. It also bore fingerprints of another
- defendant, whose prints were found in an apartment Darabi kept
- in Berlin.
- </p>
- <p> Whether prosecutors will succeed in proving links to Tehran
- officials is less certain, however. A police officer has testified
- that a top aide of Chancellor Helmut Kohl ordered a key report
- to be removed from the evidence file. The exact contents of
- the report are unclear, but the testimony has deepened suspicions
- that Iran has been pressuring the German government to limit
- the Mykonos case to keep intelligence matters out. However,
- German intelligence chief Bernd Schmidbauer, the country's main
- liaison with Iran, has repeatedly denied that Tehran has exerted
- any undue influence or that the missing report contains crucial
- information. Iran's ambassador to Germany, Seyed Hossein Mousavian,
- "categorically [denies] any connection between Darabi and
- the Iranian state" and blames the killings on "assassins from
- the outside, who want to sabotage Iran."
- </p>
- <p> The case has hardly ruffled Tehran's relations with Bonn. Last
- October Intelligence Minister Fallahian visited Bonn for private
- meetings with Schmidbauer. The government tried to keep the
- meeting a secret, but Fallahian brazenly called a press conference
- to "demonstrate that contrary to the public statements of the
- German government, we maintain good relations with Bonn." Shortly
- afterward, Schmidbauer testified to the close ties between the
- two countries by telling a parliamentary committee that German
- intelligence had recently delivered a $60,000 computer-training
- project to its Iranian counterpart.
- </p>
- <p> The cooperation may reflect Bonn's efforts to win the freedom
- of two German nationals being held on espionage charges in Tehran.
- But it may also be related to the fact that Bonn is Tehran's
- No. 1 trading partner: apart from oil, 50% of Iran's exports
- end up in Germany, and last year Iran imported $2.4 billion
- worth of German goods. Last month the German government guaranteed
- a refinancing package on about $2.35 billion worth of loans
- to Iran.
- </p>
- <p> The Men Behind the Veil
- </p>
- <p> The official believed to be most directly responsible for the
- assassination squads is Intelligence Minister Fallahian, 45,
- a black-bearded mullah who was born into a religious family
- and educated in the holy city of Qum. An ardent follower of
- Ayatullah Khomeini, Fallahian spent time in the Shah's jails
- for spreading antigovernment propaganda. His political rise
- began after the 1979 revolution, when he became a religious
- magistrate. He quickly won a reputation, say dissidents, as
- a "hanging judge," because of his penchant for handing down
- death sentences. He became the government's acting chief prosecutor
- in 1982.
- </p>
- <p> Head of intelligence since 1988, Fallahian is believed to play
- a key role in organizing covert operations abroad. According
- to an Oct. 6, 1993, report by Germany's federal criminal department,
- two dozen foreign-based opposition figures have been assassinated
- since he took over the ministry. In an August 1992 interview
- on Iranian TV, Fallahian openly boasted of his organization's
- success in stalking Tehran's opponents. "We track them abroad
- too," he said. "Last year [1991, the year of Bakhtiar's assassination]
- we succeeded in striking fundamental blows to their top members."
- </p>
- <p> According to Western intelligence and Iranian dissident sources,
- decisions to assassinate opponents at home or abroad are made
- at the highest level of the Iranian government: the Supreme
- National Security Council. The top political decision-making
- body is chaired by Rafsanjani and includes, among others, Fallahian,
- Velayati and Ali Khamenei, who succeeded Khomeini as the revolution's
- spiritual guide in 1989. The council's secretary, parliamentary
- vice president Hassan Rouhani, was recently quoted in the Iranian
- newspaper Ettela'at, vowing that Iran "will not hesitate to
- destroy the activities of counterrevolutionary groups abroad."
- </p>
- <p> One man high on Tehran's current hit list is Manouchehr Ganji.
- A former education minister under the Shah, Ganji, 63, heads
- a Paris-based opposition group known as the Flag of Freedom,
- which has monarchist origins but seeks "democratic" change in
- Iran. Guarded at all times by a six-man French antiterrorist
- squad, Ganji moves about Paris in a bulletproof car and works
- behind heavy metal doors with coded locks. "I live the life
- of a rat, going from one hole to another," he says. As head
- of a Western-backed organization that broadcasts anti-regime
- propaganda into Iran, where he claims to have substantial underground
- networks, Ganji is considered a "prime target."
- </p>
- <p> He shares with Salman Rushdie the distinction of having a price
- on his head. TIME has obtained a copy of a document, dated March
- 16, 1993, that promises a "considerable financial reward" for
- Ganji's "assassination." Written on government letterhead and
- signed by state prosecutor Moussawi Tabrizi, it is addressed
- to Fallahian's intelligence ministry. The document accuses Ganji
- of "plotting against Islam" and quotes Khamenei as decreeing
- that "this man is an apostate and a corrupt man, who must be
- eliminated." The document adds that "the President of the Republic
- [Rafsanjani] has been informed of this obligatory decree."
- French intelligence experts, operating from a photocopy, are
- cautious about pronouncing on the document's authenticity but
- say it contains "no glaring errors."
- </p>
- <p> Western intelligence sources say foreign assassinations are
- carried out by a special branch of the Revolutionary Guards
- known as the Quds (Jerusalem) Force, headed by Brigadier General
- Ahmad Vahidi. The foreign ministry typically provides diplomatic
- cover, material support and logistical assistance. The Quds
- Force, which has its headquarters in Tehran, is said to use
- bases like the Imam Ali department in northern Tehran to train
- Iranian and foreign recruits.
- </p>
- <p> In a videotaped 1994 confession that TIME was able to view in
- Istanbul, Mehmet Ali Bilici, a militant Turkish fundamentalist,
- described his terrorist training at an Iranian camp near Qum.
- He said he and other trainees received basic military instruction,
- followed by courses in intelligence-trade craft, coded communications,
- explosives and covert operations, and acknowledged that he received
- "direct orders" from the Iranians to conduct "military operations
- on Turkish soil." Bilici has admitted to kidnapping two Iranian
- opposition figures who were turned over to VEVAK agents and
- later killed.
- </p>
- <p> "The Iranians are extraordinarily determined in their efforts
- to assassinate members of their opposition abroad," says Paris
- assistant district attorney Patrick Lalande. "They will tell
- you that they treat their opponents abroad just as they treat
- them at home and that this is a purely domestic affair." Western
- governments do not agree but find it hard to stand up to Iran's
- state-backed terror. The Bakhtiar case, with a trail of evidence
- that leads right into Tehran's ministries, is a major test of
- France's resolve. The trial, which could start as soon as next
- June, is more likely to open in the fall and could possibly
- be delayed until early 1995. Given France's recent "expulsion"
- of Rajavi's suspected killers, some skeptics wonder if the case
- will ever get to court.
- </p>
- <p> French prosecutors insist that nothing can derail the judicial
- process at this point. Yet they admit that a conviction could
- set off diplomatic reverberations--and, perhaps, even a replay
- of the September 1986 bombing wave that left 12 dead and at
- least 250 injured in Paris.
- </p>
- <p> Such worries do not deter Bruguiere. The antiterrorist crusader,
- who survived an abortive 1987 grenade attack and packs a .357
- Magnum for his own protection, is hard at work on a new investigation.
- On Dec. 20, he arrested two alleged VEVAK agents for plotting
- to kill an opposition figure in Paris. One of the men is also
- implicated in the 1990 murder of Ganji's aide Cyrus Elahi. Judge
- Bruguiere is giving the mullahs no rest.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-