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MKO a False Pro-Democratic Movement
Kenneth Timmerman, Front Page Magazine
May 19, 2006
[Mojahedin.ws comments: In spite of its extensive propaganda
activities to epitomize itself as a pro-democratic group to fulfill the
Western incited regime change in Iran, the MKO fails to convince many
advocates of regime change to regard it as representing the Iranian people.
Kenneth R. Timmerman, Executive Director of the
Foundation for Democracy in Iran, warns
against the allure
of false democratic movements like the Mojahedin. In a discussion symposium
directed by
Front Page Magazine, he tipped off people to the traps laid before the
democratic aspirations of
bringing freedom to Iran.]
Trap number one: we must not fall for the allure of false democratic
movements, such as the Mujehedin-e Khalq. This Islamist-Marxist cult hides
behind a number of fronts, including the National Council of Resistance and
a host of U.S.-based “Iranian-American community” groups, and pretends to
support democratic ideals. But make no mistake. The Mujahedin murdered
Americans in the 1970s, took part in the Khomeinist revolution, helped the
regime seize the U.S. embassy and take U.S. diplomats hostage in 1979, and
remains committed to an Islamist state in Iran. Additionally, the MEK has
aroused widespread hatred in
Iran because it sided with Saddam Hussein
during the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war.
We have many good options for supporting the legitimate and admirable
aspirations of the Iranian people to bring freedom to their country, but the
MEK is not one of them.
This is a group that
attempted to invade Iran militarily in April 1988 with the help of Saddam
Hussein’s army, and was repulsed by 16-year old kids and grandfathers armed,
literally, with pitchforks. The overwhelming majority of Iranians consider
them as traitors.
The MEK has for years claimed to head a “coalition” that formed a
“parliament-in-exile.” In fact, the 500-or so front groups that belong to
this “coalition” are just MEK fronts –and some of them just individuals -
not independent groups. Ultimately, they elevated the leader’s wife to
become “president-elect.”
poster / source : FrontPageMagazine.com
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