*Argentina Blocks Prosecutor from Telling Congress About Iran’s Troubling
Terror Network*

Posted By *Bridget Johnson* On July 2, 2013 ****

WASHINGTON — Nearly two decades after Middle Eastern terrorism left its
devastating calling card in South America, special prosecutor Alberto
Nisman issued a searing 500-page indictment drawing meticulous and
harrowing connections between Iran and Islamic radicalism in the Western
Hemisphere.****

Going beyond the 1994 bombing of the AMIA Jewish center in Buenos Aires,
which killed 87 people and injured more than 100, Nisman painted a picture
of Iran and Hezbollah’s vast network of sleeper cells in America’s backyard
conducting “activities you wouldn’t imagine” or waiting indefinitely to
receive an order to attack, the prosecutor told reporters when he unveiled
his report in late May.****

Nisman first accused Iran and Hezbollah of being behind the terrorist
attack several years ago. But his new report details the infiltration of
several Latin American countries through intricate intelligence networks
and stresses that the AMIA bombing was just one cog in a greater plan: “a
segment in a larger sequence.”****

Congress wants to hear from Nisman about his investigation, and he’s
willing to come to Washington to talk not only with lawmakers but the Obama
administration.****

But Argentina is now blocking the tenacious prosector from sharing his
findings with Congress.****

Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.), former chairwoman of the House Foreign
Affairs Committee and current chairwoman of the Middle East and North
Africa Subcommittee, invited Nisman — “a well-recognized, towering figure
when it comes to going after bad guys and human-rights violators” — to
brief Congress, she told PJM on Tuesday.****

“People just don’t know that Iran sees Latin America as fertile ground,”
Ros-Lehtinen said. “…I invited him to come. He was going to come educate
Congress and the administration on the real threat Iran poses.”****

“Few people if any know about this bombing, which should have acted as a
wake-up call for us on Iran,” she added in reference to Nisman’s original
subject of investigation.****

Nisman was also sought by the House Homeland Security Committee, which
scheduled a hearing titled “Threat to the Homeland: Iran’s Extending
Influence in the Western Hemisphere” next Tuesday at the Subcommittee on
Oversight and Management Efficiency. The panel’s chairman, Rep. Jeff Duncan
(R-S.C.), tweeted, “I invited AMIA prosecutor Nisman to testify about
Iran’s influence in western hemp but Argentine gov denied his request. Not
transparent.”****

According to Argentine media, Nisman was ordered by Prosecutor General
Alejandra Gils Carbó to not talk to Congress because the testimony “is not
related to the function of the public prosecutor.”****

The government then “clarified” that it was an issue of approving travel
costs.****

But the Argentine government’s historical lack of forthrightness
surrounding the AMIA bombing — and recent coziness with Iran on the
investigation — just leads to suspicion over President Cristina Fernandez
de Kirchner’s true intentions in keeping Nisman bottled up.****

Her husband, late President Nestor Kirchner, admitted in 2005 that the
government covered up evidence to stymie the investigation into the attack.
After that apology came Nisman’s first accusation pointing toward Hezbollah
and Iran, eventually naming the shot-callers as Mohsen Rabbani, Iran’s
cultural attaché to Buenos Aires at the time of the bombing and the alleged
coordinator of Iranian cells across the continent; Mohsen Rezai, cur­rently
Iran’s sec­re­tary of the Expe­di­ency Council; Ali Akbar Velayati,
minister of foreign affairs at the time of the attack; then-President
Hashemi Rafsanjani; then-Intelligence Minister Ali Fallahian; and, as the
final stamp of approval, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.****

Interpol red alert notices are active for Rabbani, Fallahian and Rezai.
Upon protest from Iran in 2007, Interpol’s executive committee agreed not
to issue red notices for Rafsanjani and Velayati.****

Rezai and Velayati were among President-elect Hassan Rouhani’s challengers
in this year’s presidential election. “In any part of the world, they would
be in prison; in Iran, they run for president,” Nisman said.****

Nisman said last week that Rouhani, then secretary of the National Security
Council, was not at the meeting that green-lighted the 1994 bombing — but
has “irrefutable proof” that Iranian leaders coordinated the attack.****

Incredibly, Argentina agreed with Tehran this January to put the case to
rest not by necessarily bringing any of the suspects to justice, but by
establishing a joint “truth commission” whereby Iran would investigate its
own involvement in the terror attack. The memorandum of understanding was
given Tehran’s final stamp of approval in May, just before Nisman released
his damning report.****

“To not allow him to travel to the U.S. is a misguided act and it reaffirms
the truth commission is a farce,” Ros-Lehtinen told PJM, adding the
restriction on Nisman coming before Congress is a “deplorable situation”
that “goes against his right to freedom of expression and freedom of
travel.”****

“Iran continues to harbor and support extremist elements,” she said.
“…Shame on President Kirchner and anyone who’s had any say about not
allowing him to come.”****

Ros-Lehtinen said she believes Kirchner is “betting on Iran being the
winner in all of this power play” — and assuming that Iran will have more
sway over the continent in the long run than the United States.****

The Islamic Republic’s expanded influence in the Western Hemisphere was
even confirmed in the State Department’s annual international terrorism
assessment<http://pjmedia.com/blog/what-obama-didnt-mention-in-counterterror-speech-iran-hezbollah-activity-surging-worldwide/?singlepage=true>
[1], which was sent to Congress a day after Nisman issued his report and
warned that sponsorship of terror by Iran and Hezbollah has surged to “a
tempo unseen since the 1990s” with attacks spanning three continents.****

The report implicated Iran in attacks in India, Thailand, Georgia and
Kenya, as well as the plot to murder the Saudi ambassador in Washington.
“The thwarted plot demonstrated Iran’s interest in using international
terrorism – including in the United States – to further its foreign policy
goals,” the State Department said.****

Ros-Lehtinen noted the wave of Iran’s diplomatic and cultural missions
popping up across Latin America. “No one in Latin America is trying to get
to Iran,” she said. “These are being used as fronts to deepen their
influence in the Western Hemisphere.”****

Nisman said Iran’s terror network in Guyana was behind the 2007 plot to
blow up the jet-fuel supplies at JFK International Airport. Two men, a U.S.
citizen and a Guyanese citizen, were convicted in the conspiracy in 2010.***
*

Ros-Lehtinen said she expected Nisman, who has been brushed off as a
“Zionist” by Iran, to travel beyond Washington during his time in the U.S.
and meet with some Jewish groups.****

She said the Foreign Affairs Committee was waiting until Nisman had secured
his visa to schedule a hearing, but now, in an effort to get around
Argentina’s ridiculous block on his visit, they may have to ask the
prosecutor to brief lawmakers via videoconference.****

Ros-Lehtinen is still hoping Nisman will be able to air his warning of the
broad terror threat in person, in public before the committee. “We could
schedule it in a New York minute,” she said.****
------------------------------

Article printed from PJ Media: *http://pjmedia.com*****

URL to article: *
http://pjmedia.com/blog/argentina-blocks-prosecutor-from-telling-congress-about-irans-troubling-terror-network/
*****

URLs in this post:****

[1] annual international terrorism assessment: *
http://pjmedia.com/blog/what-obama-didnt-mention-in-counterterror-speech-iran-hezbollah-activity-surging-worldwide/?singlepage=true
*****

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