Miami Herald

Helping to fight Islamic State won’t get you off U.S. blacklist

- BY HANNAH ALLAM

WASHINGTON — The role of Syrian Kurds in the U.S.-led fight against the Islamic State has prompted calls for the removal of an affiliated Kurdish guerrilla group from the U.S. blacklist, bringing fresh scrutiny to a terrorist-designatio­n process that some critics call arbitrary and outdated.

So far, the U.S. government’s response to the fighters of the Kurdish Workers Party, the PKK, could be summed up as: Thanks for the help, but you’re staying on the list.

Shedding a U.S. foreign terrorist designatio­n is a long and complicate­d undertakin­g — a feat accomplish­ed by just a handful of the dozens of groups that have landed on the list since its inception in 1997. A designatio­n means that a group has earned the dubious label — and economic sanctions — of being named a “tier-one” foreign terrorist organizati­on. Tier-two groups are banned from entry to the United States; tier-three groups are undesignat­ed but closely monitored.

Several organizati­ons have lan- guished on the State Department’s tier-one list even though they’re essentiall­y defunct, with their leaders killed, jailed or engaged in peace talks with the government­s they once attacked. Others on the 59member list have been weakened but are still considered threatenin­g. And, of course, there are the active, high-profile groups that in American minds are synonymous with terrorism: the Islamic State, al Qaeda and Hezbollah, for example.

Those three, as well as the PKK, are among a half-dozen U.S.-designated groups now involved in the conflict over the Islamic State’s cross-border fiefdom. The battle is stirring up an unpreceden­ted soup of militants, with five tier-one terrorist groups — both Sunni and Shiite Muslim — on the same side as the United States against the Islamic State, itself a designee. The Obama administra­tion’s unsavory de facto partners against the Islamic State include the Lebanese militants of Hezbollah and the Nusra Front, the Syrian branch of al Qaeda.

“It’s a fairly unique set of circumstan­ces. The closest you have is Af-Pak,” said a State Department official involved in designatio­ns, referring to Afghanista­n and Pakistan. He spoke on condition of anonymity so as to freely discuss the sensitive topic. “But even there the groups are mostly working cooperativ­ely. Here, you see them at direct loggerhead­s.”

It’s that opposition to the Islamic State, which is also known as ISIS or ISIL, that the PKK is hoping to leverage in order to wriggle off the tier-one list. The group has waged a guerrilla war for Kurdish rights in Turkey for 30 years and was blackliste­d in the United States more than a decade ago. The PKK is closely affiliated with the group known as the PYD, whose fighters are on the front line of the ferocious battle to keep the Islamic State out of Kobani, a Syrian Kurdish town on the border with Turkey.

Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson even used the group’s fight against the Islamic State recently to rebut claims from Republican­s in Congress that terrorists had been caught crossing the Mexican border; Johnson said the four men in question had claimed membership in the PKK — “an organizati­on that is actually fighting against ISIL and defended Kurdish territory in Iraq.”

“The idea that ‘This group’s being very helpful against ISIL so we should remove the designatio­n’ — that wouldn’t merit a sufficient case, in our view, for de-listing,” the official said.

The main criticism of the process is the seemingly arbitrary way that groups get on and, more rarely, off the list.

Why, for example, is Nusra Front designated when Ahrar al Sham, another militant jihadist group in Syria with alleged al Qaeda connection­s, is off the list? Or take the case of Iranian-backed Shiite militias that once waged a deadly insurgency against U.S. forces in Iraq — Kata’ib Hezbollah was designated, but an equally egregious group, Asaib Ahl al Haq, wasn’t.

In both cases, officials have said that designatio­n possibilit­ies were floated but vetoed because national security officials determined that it was more useful to keep them off the list. In the case of Asaib Ahl al Haq, the Iraqi and Western authoritie­s released more than 400 members — including the leader — in negotiatio­ns that resulted in the release of British hostage Peter Moore in 2010.

Though Americans are most familiar with the Arab and Muslim factions on the list, the roster is diverse and truly global, including the Japanese religious cult behind a deadly chemical attack on the Tokyo subway and two separate splinter groups from the old Irish Republican Army, or IRA.

The LTTE, better known as the Tamil Tigers, remains on the list, even though the guerrilla organizati­on that gained notoriety for its suicide attacks was defeated by Sri Lankan government forces in 2009 and has been declared finished.

Europe’s second-highest court ruled this month that the European Union’s decision to place the Tamil group on a list of terrorist organizati­ons was procedural­ly flawed and must be annulled, according to news reports. The Tamil Tigers had challenged the European Union’s decision in 2006 to blacklist the group and freeze its assets, perhaps the harbinger to a similar campaign in the United States.

That was the path taken by the Mujahedin e Khalq, or MEK, a deep-pocketed Iranian dissident group that ran by far the most ambitious campaign to get off the terrorist list. After legal victories in Europe, the group hired top lawyers and paid high-profile speakers tens of thousands of dollars a pop to raise awareness of the MEK cause in the United States.

A Washington lobbying firm received nearly $1 million to work on getting the MEK off the terrorist list, according to an investigat­ion of the group’s payouts by the British newspaper The Guardian. The MEK cultivated an image of a prodemocra­cy, Western-friendly supporter of the ouster of Iran’s theocratic government; detractors describe it as a cultlike militant group with only fringe support among ordinary Iranians.

Over time, so many retired generals, politician­s and Cabinet members began agitating for the MEK’s removal from the blacklist that the Treasury Department investigat­ed whether the officials were providing illegal support to designated terrorists.

In the end, the group’s litigation forced the hand of then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. In 2012, she faced a court-imposed deadline: Either justify keeping the group on the list or approve a removal. She chose to de-list the group.

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