#Iran expands its terrorist sponsorship in the Balkans
http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2017/08/iran_expands_its_terrorist_sponsorship_in_the_balkans.html#ixzz4ot8vZMgJ
The
U.S. Congress's recent bill of sanctions on Iran mainly cites the
Iranian regime's terrorist activities throughout the Middle East.
The recently released Country Reports on Terrorism 2016 by the U.S. State Department says:
Iran continued its terrorist-related activity in 2016, including support for Hizballah, Palestinian terrorist groups in Gaza, and various groups in Syria, Iraq, and throughout the Middle East. Iran used the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps‑Qods Force (IRGC-QF) to implement foreign policy goals, provide cover for intelligence operations, and create instability in the Middle East. Iran has acknowledged the involvement of the IRGC-QF in the conflicts in Iraq and Syria and the IRGC-QF is Iran's primary mechanism for cultivating and supporting terrorists abroad.
The report is strong; however, it does not mention anything on the Iranian regime's terrorist activities in Europe.
Iran's
promotion of its brand of Shi'ite Islam, linked with its
terrorist-related activities across the Middle East, has been obvious
for decades, but such activities in Europe have largely managed to fly
under the radar. The Iranian regime is advancing its presence and
resources considerably in Europe, especially in the Balkans.
In 2016, the Iranian regime's Balkans-centered efforts
came under scrutiny when an Iranian cleric in Kosovo was charged with
financing terrorism and money-laundering through a nominally
non-governmental organization he operated. Kosovar authorities claimed
that Hasan Azari Bejandi, charged on July 26, 2016, ran five Shi'ite
organizations with links to Tehran.
The
umbrella group for the Iranian regime in Europe, including Kosovo,
appears to be affiliated with the Al-Mustafa International University,
headed by Ayatollah Alireza Aarafi, a member of Iran's Supreme Council
of the Cultural Revolution and a Friday Prayers
leader in the holy city of Qom. The university claims that Bejandi is
its representative in Kosovo. Al-Mustafa International University is owned and run by Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Last
week, non-government organizations and the German media warned the
government about the activities of Al-Mustafa-linked organizations in
the country. The federal family minister in Germany, Katarina Barley,
was alerted about an Al-Mustafa workshop in Germany funded, wrongly, by
her ministry, under the guise of a workshop of the Islamic Community of
the Shiite Communes of Germany (IGS). The minister called the event
off.
It
demonstrates that Iran's effort to exert influence over the Balkan
peninsula and its governments poses a grave security threat.
On March 9, the news media
in the Balkans reported that American security agencies saw expanding
activities from Iranian intelligence services over the Balkan area.
The U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) has compiled a report on
increased activities of Iranian intelligence services in Bosnia and
Herzegovina, containing around 650 names of members, mostly from Iran's
Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) and Ministry of Intelligence and Security
(MOIS).
The
report actually covers 15 years of Iranian intelligence agents'
activities and is mainly based on information gathered by the
Intelligence and Security Agency (OSA) of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
First on the list of Iranian intelligence agents is Hassan Jawad, deputy minister of intelligence in Tehran, according to the report.
During
the Bosnian war of the 1990s, Jawad was the IRGC chief for southeastern
Europe and then became head of the Department of Central Asia and the
Caucasus, according to OSA.
Jawad
is also a member of the Iranian-Bosnian Friendship Association Board of
Directors, but in reality, he is focused on intelligence work and was a
key player in recruiting.
Iran began extending its
malign influence in Bosnia back in 1990 as communism collapsed in
Yugoslavia. The mullahs dispatched spies with cash to Sarajevo to
grease politicians' palms, advocate radicalism, and recruit and train
terrorists.
During
the past three decades, Iran has launched consulates in the Balkans for
espionage and other covert activities. The presence of Iranian
intelligence agents in Bosnia in Herzegovina has sharply increased since
the beginning of 2012, along with the activities of Iranian officials
and diplomats. In particular, Iranian spies were seen visiting the
jihadist colony at Gornja Maoča in
northeastern Bosnia, which, despite occasional police raids, has
operated for years as a more or less open training camp for jihad-minded
radicals.
Albania is another Balkan country Iran has targeted in its attempt to create what Reza Shafa, an Iran expert, has called "a foothold in the European continent."
As in Bosnia, the attempted Iranian infiltration of Albania followed
the pattern of setting up "charities" and "cultural organizations" that
serve as front organizations for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
and the Ministry of Intelligence. Despite such efforts, however, Iran
draws little sympathy in either elite circles or among the general
population. Last year, Albania's government and parliament were in
unanimous agreement to allow a large number of members of Iran's
democratic opposition group, the MEK, to settle in Albania.
Iran's
techniques in training, equipping, and recruiting terrorists across the
Balkans through the IRGC is well known. After the U.S. sanctions
against the IRGC, in order to have a safer world, the next step for the
civilized world is to join the U.S. sanctions to make them work to evict
all the elements of IRGC from its targeted countries in the Middle East
and Europe.
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