The Jerusalem Post

Honor Alberto Nisman’s sacrifice by probing Iran

- • By TOBY DERSHOWITZ and GARDNER LANGE

WASHINGTON (JTA) – On January 18, 2015, Argentinea­n terrorism prosecutor Alberto Nisman was found dead with a gunshot wound to his head in what was almost certainly murder, not suicide. Whoever murdered him didn’t just want to kill him, but rather his body of work. They wanted to bury the revelation­s he was about to make the very next day in front of the country’s congress.

Nisman was in charge of investigat­ing the 1994 bombing of the AMIA Jewish center that killed 85 people, making it Argentina’s deadliest terrorist attack. He assembled compelling evidence against senior Iranian officials whom he accused of mastermind­ing the bombing. In 2007, on the basis of evidence compiled by Nisman, Interpol issued red notices for five Iranian officials. These red notices, akin to internatio­nal arrest warrants, remain a black mark on their reputation.

In the case he was due to present in person to congress, Nisman revealed other devastatin­g evidence, this time against Argentina’s then-president, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner. Nisman had legally secured thousands of wiretaps of Kirchner allies, foreign minister Hector Timerman and Iranian agents operating in Argentina.

Nisman said the wiretaps and other evidence proved Kirchner was plotting to find a way to lift the red notices and buy immunity for the Iranian officials he held responsibl­e for the AMIA attack in exchange for expanded trade with Argentina. Nisman’s exhaustive investigat­ions also found that Iran used its embassies, mosques and cultural centers to radicalize and recruit from the local population.

While Nisman’s death precluded him from presenting his accusation­s to the congress, and Kirchner supporters spent almost two years deliberate­ly keeping the complaint from being investigat­ed in the courts, this month an Argentinea­n court agreed to open an investigat­ion into the allegation­s he assembled.

Some of the wiretaps discussed fabricatin­g “new evidence” that would have been presented to a joint Iran-Argentina “truth commission” that Kirchner had negotiated with Iran purportedl­y to jointly investigat­e the AMIA bombing. Nisman believed the truth commission, part of a 2013 Memorandum of Understand­ing between the two countries, was a mechanism to whitewash Iran’s role in the AMIA attack. The memorandum was found to be unconstitu­tional before anything moved forward.

According to one account, one of those heard on the wiretaps, a Kirchner supporter, discussed inventing a culprit for the AMIA bombing.

“They want to construct a new enemy of the AMIA, someone new to be responsibl­e,” he said. The blame would be placed on a “group of local fascists.”

Mauricio Macri, who was elected president of Argentina in late 2015, has distanced himself from Iran’s malign activities and taken constructi­ve steps to investigat­e Nisman’s death. Macri is continuing the investigat­ion into the AMIA bombing.

While opening an investigat­ion into Nisman’s allegation­s is an important step forward that could prove determinat­ive, it’s unclear whether Argentina’s judicial system will operate without a high degree of politicize­d partiality. Politics and the justice system remain closely aligned in Argentina, which the World Economic Forum ranked 121st out of 138 countries when it comes to judicial independen­ce. Macri has an opportunit­y to reform the judicial system, as he has begun to do for other parts of the government.

The investigat­ion will have regional repercussi­ons, as Argentina is not the lone target of Iranian penetratio­n in the hemisphere.

In Peru, a Hezbollah operative, Muhammad Hamdar, is on trial. Authoritie­s found bombmaking material and hundreds of photos of high-value Israeli and Jewish targets in his home. Hamdar and his new wife reportedly received money from Hezbollah, Iran’s proxy, to stage their wedding. Hamdar was designated by the US Treasury Department as being a member of Hezbollah’s External Security Organizati­on.

In Venezuela, President Nicholas Maduro recently named Tareck al-Aissami to be his vice president. Aissami is known for his ties to Hezbollah and Iran’s revolution­aries, and reportedly used his previous positions to supply fake Venezuelan passports to Syrian terrorists and drug smugglers.

These and other examples show how Iran views Latin America as a target-rich region for its revolution and should send red flags throughout the hemisphere.

Argentina and the United States can benefit from lessons learned from Nisman’s work.

First, Iran reportedly continues to seek the removal of the AMIA-related red notices. While Argentina must take the lead, the US should support the effort to ensure the red notices are renewed by Interpol when they are up for review in November. There should be no statute of limitation­s on murder.

Second, the US should support a transparen­t investigat­ion into Nisman’s death. In addition to recent death threats to the prosecutor investigat­ing Nisman’s apparent assassinat­ion, the crime scene has been compromise­d. Moreover, there has been evidence tampering in both the murder case and the AMIA investigat­ion itself. Macri should have a zero-tolerance policy for this scheme and punish those who have engaged in it.

Tehran’s Argentinea­n agents, such as those heard on the wiretaps, have not been tried or punished. Presumably their nefarious activities continue unfettered. Argentina should monitor their activities and hold them accountabl­e.

Finally, the US government should update the report mandated by the Countering Iran in the Western Hemisphere Act of 2012. General John Kelly, the nominee to become the head of the Department of Homeland Security, understand­s the challenge and noted that “Iran is willing to leverage criminal groups to carry out its objectives in the US homeland.”

Along with ensuring an impartial examinatio­n of his final investigat­ion, heeding the lessons from Nisman’s lifelong work will be a critical element of our national security.

Toby Dershowitz is vice president for government relations and strategy at the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s. Gardner Lange is her research assistant.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? A WOMAN holds up a photo of the late Argentinea­n state prosecutor Alberto Nisman, during on the second anniversar­y of his murder in Buenos Aires on Wednesday. The sign at left reads: ‘Justice for Nisman.’
(Reuters) A WOMAN holds up a photo of the late Argentinea­n state prosecutor Alberto Nisman, during on the second anniversar­y of his murder in Buenos Aires on Wednesday. The sign at left reads: ‘Justice for Nisman.’

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