
Paris (Iran Terror Website) - Iran Terror has
learnt Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security (VEVAK) is sending
to Paris a cell that has been trained in Tehran to carry out a
misinformation attack against the opposition National Council of
Resistance.
The new operation is aimed at diverting the
current world focus on the past activities of Iran’s new
ultra-conservative President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who is
suspected of being among the interrogators of U.S. hostages in Tehran
in 1979 and a key player in the assassination in Vienna of a prominent
Kurdish dissident.
According to Iranian exiles, Javad Firouzmand, a.k.a. Afshin Boroumand,
who claims to have been a senior member of the People’s Mojahedin of
Iran (PMOI/MeK), will be VEVAK’s kingpin in this new operation. He has
been briefed to claim that he fled the organisation’s main base at Camp
Ashraf, northeast of Baghdad, a month ago. But information has come to
light showing that since April 28, 2004 he had been in another location
under United States forces’ supervision.
Official
documents show that on his request, he was repatriated to Iran on March
9, 2005 after being interviewed by a team from the U.S. State
Department.
Research into the background of Firouzmand
shows that he had been an active VEVAK cell for several years. On July
15, 2001, Firouzmand, who had infiltrated the ranks of the MeK and was
carrying out a VEVAK assignment, fled the organisation with false
identification papers, stealing three weapons, walkie-talkies, a car,
and large amounts of cash in the process. But he was arrested by Iraqi
police before reaching the Iranian embassy in Baghdad and was
subsequently referred to relevant Iraqi organs to be prosecuted on
charges of espionage.
The MeK has a handwritten signed
statement by Firouzmand, in which he stated that he was remorseful for
his involvement with Tehran’s intelligence apparatus and requested to
re-join the ranks of the organisation.
Subsequent
requests by the MeK to Iraqi police for his handover proved successful
and he was given a choice of either returning to Iran to live a normal
life or continuing to remain with the organisation. Firouzmand chose
the latter.
As further evidence of Firouzmand’s
involvement with Iranian intelligence, an exiled Persian-language
television channel yesterday aired footage of documents and signed
letters by the VEVAK cell, in which he reveals his contacts and appeals
to stay with the group.
In particular, the evidence
showed that Firouzmand was in contact with the Iranian regime’s embassy
in Baghdad several years ago. His VEVAK handler in Tehran was a VEVAK
officer called Mohammad Alavi.
Further information on the background and activities of Javad Firouzmand will be published in the coming days. |