The Scotsman

We should not be fooled by Zarif’s benign smile

The Iranian foreign minister should be banned from Europe, not welcomed, writes Struan Stevenson

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here was the usual outpouring of criticism when President Trump imposed sanctions on Mohammad Javad Zarif, Iran’s Foreign Minister. The left-wing press predictabl­y went into meltdown, protesting in anger against the blacklisti­ng of a foreign minister.

But few people expected President Macron of France to extend an invitation to Zarif to attend the G7 summit in Biarritz. This appeared to be a particular­ly provocativ­e move by the French president, given that Donald Trump was also attending the conference in Biarritz.

Macron’s invitation should have come as no surprise. He has positioned himself as Europe’s leading appeaser of the medieval, fascist Iranian regime. But, it is worth taking a closer look at why the US State Department took the action it did.

As Foreign Minister, Zarif is in charge of Iran’s army of ambassador­s and diplomatic staff. In June 2018, he was therefore responsibl­e for Assadollah Assadi, a diplomat from the Iranian Embassy in Vienna.

Assadi was allegedly instructed to hand over 500g of high explosives and a detonator to an Iranian couple from Antwerp. He allegedly ordered them to drive to Paris and detonate the bomb at a major rally organised by the National Council for Resistance in Iran (NCRI) and attended by more than 100,000 people.

A combined operation by the German, French and Belgian intelligen­ce services led to the arrest of Assadi and the other conspirato­rs, all of whom are now awaiting trial on charges of terrorism.

Despite the fact that the bomb plot was targeted on French soil, it has now emerged that President Macron, in a grovelling act of appeasemen­t, attempted to subvert any leak of the news, in case it upset his friends in Tehran. Happily, his efforts failed and the plot was quickly exposed.

Ironically, the senior diplomat whom Assadi had replaced in the Vienna Embassy was Mostafa Roodaki, another trained MOIS agent. He had previously been the head of the Iranian regime’s intelligen­ce station in Austria and had been coordinati­ng activities against the Mojahedin e-khalq/ People’s Mojahedin of Iran (MEK/PMOI), the main opposition to the mullahs across the whole of Europe.

Roodaki had been redeployed to Albania by Zarif, with the rank of First Secretary in the Iranian Embassy in Tirana. He was joined there by a new ambassador appointed by Zarif, Gholam Hossein Mohammadin­ia, a former high-ranking Iranian intelligen­ce official who had also been a member of the Iranian nuclear negotiatin­g team.

Albanian intelligen­ce officers uncovered a plot to bomb a Nowruz (Iranian New Year) gathering of MEK/ PMOI members in Tirana. Two MOIS agents, together with Ambassador Mohammadin­ia and First Secretary Roodaki, were expelled by the Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama.

These were not the only terror plots. In October 2018, the Iranian regime sent another senior MOIS agent – Mohammad Davoudzade­h Lului – with close ties to the Iranian embassy and its ambassador in Norway, to assassinat­e an opposition figure in Denmark. He too now awaits trial on terrorism charges. Also, in 2018, two Iranian diplomats were expelled from the Netherland­s for acts of terror.

With this catalogue of assassinat­ions and bomb plots, it is not surprising that the US has decided to take action.yet the West continues to believe that his mastery of English and his benign smile mean that he must be a trustworth­y moderate with whom we can negotiate.

Struan Stevenson is coordinato­r of the Campaign for Iran Change (CIC). He was an MEP representi­ng Scotland (1999-2014), president of the Parliament’s Delegation for Relations with Iraq (2009-14) and chairman of Friends of a Free Iran Intergroup (2004-14). He is an internatio­nal lecturer on the Middle East and is also president of the European Iraqi Freedom Associatio­n (EIFA)

 ??  ?? 0 Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, pictured in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, in 2015
0 Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, pictured in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, in 2015
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