Jonathan
Spyer’s “Israeli Jets Appear to Have Struck Iraq for the First Time Since 1981”
(op-ed, Aug. 2) offers a discouraging insight into Iran’s malign influence in
the region, and the US response.
One
of the sites of the reported attack is Camp Ashraf in Iraq, which from 1986 to
2012 housed 3,400 members of the Iranian resistance group Mujahedin-e-Khalq
(MEK). Today, the site reportedly is used by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and
Shiite militias loyal to Iran for “storing, deploying and transporting weapons”
that threaten Iraq and Israel, among others.
Those
MEK members were the target of longstanding Iranian disinformation efforts that
influenced US actions only a decade ago. Although all had been disarmed, vetted
by US intelligence and law enforcement, cleared of any prior wrongdoing, and
offered US protection in 2004, the UN and US policy officials viewed them as
dangerous terrorists holding their own people against their will, and insisted
that they be relocated to a prison-like compound near Baghdad airport.
Although
four major court cases in the US and Europe and much independent research
debunked these toxic allegations, the defenseless MEK men and women suffered
seven lethal attacks by Iraqi army units and pro-Iran militias, which killed
over 140 and wounded over a thousand; seven were abducted in 2013 and haven't
been heard from since. The survivors were finally evacuated in 2016 to Albania,
which agreed to accept them as refugees.
That
their former residence has now become a hub of Iran’s regional destabilization
campaign makes one wonder how much Tehran’s disinformation continues to
influence the policy conversation in Washington, to our strategic detriment.