http://www.iranfocus.com/modules/news/article.php?storyid=2158

 

Iran: One agent's tortuous path throws light on VEVAK methods    Sun. 22 May
2005 


 




Iran Terror

M.H. Sobhani, kingpin of Human Rights Watch's new report, is veteran Iranian
intelligence agent

London, May 22 - An internal memorandum of Iran's Ministry of Intelligence
and Security, known as MOIS or VEVAK, obtained by the Iranian opposition's
sources in Iran and published in August 2002, identifies Mohammad Hossein
Sobhani as a team leader and a veteran agent of VEVAK. Research into
Sobhani's long years of service for the Iranian secret police and interviews
with former VEVAK agents and active Iranian dissidents familiar with his
case chart a tortuous path that throws light on the methods and tactics of
an intelligence service that has become one of the world's largest, and most
feared, secret organizations.

Sobhani was one of several VEVAK agents who were sent to Europe from Tehran
within a short period in the spring of 2002. German asylum records show that
he applied for political asylum in that year. Farhad Javaheri-Yar and Akbar
Akbari were among the members of a team of VEVAK agents led by Sobhani.

The spring of 2002 was a particularly busy time for VEVAK's senior officials
in Tehran. Iranian leaders felt strongly that with the U.S. now free from
the burden of the conflict in Afghanistan, a war with Iraq was afoot. Iran's
Supreme National Security Council, the country's top security body, had
instructed the Ministry of Intelligence and Security to work on plans on how
to use the combination of anti-terrorism alarm in Western countries in the
wake of the 9/11 attacks and an imminent conflict in Iraq as a means of
dealing a fatal blow to the Mujahedeen-e Khalq (MeK), the most active
opposition group to Iran's clerical regime.

VEVAK's Third Department, which deals exclusively with the MeK and its
allied or associated organizations, already had an elaborate disinformation
operation in the pipelines. It was giving instructions to a group of VEVAK
recruits, all former MeK members, to go to Europe, apply for political
asylum, and begin a new disinformation exercise against the MeK, alleging a
range of human rights abuses by MeK against its former members.
Parliamentarians, human rights groups, and security agencies of Western
governments were to be targeted.

Soon after the arrival in Germany of members of the Sobhani ring,
Persian-language websites and journals working as a front for VEVAK, such as
Mahdis, Iran Didban and Iran-Interlink began highlighting their gory
accounts of solitary confinement and physical abuse in MeK camps in Iraq.

These accounts remained essentially confined to VEVAK-operated
disinformation outlets, however, until Human Rights Watch gave them
prominence in a report released on May 18, 2005. The report, a litany of
allegations of human rights abuses by MeK, is particularly focused on the
accounts given by Mohammad Hossein Sobhani and makes much of his claim that
he was held for more than eight years in solitary confinement.

Ironically, Sobhani has changed a key part of his story in the Human Rights
Watch report from earlier accounts he gave after he first arrived in Europe.
According to the Human Rights Watch report, Sobhani "escaped from a low
security detention center in Iran".

In a June 11, 2002, interview with Mahdis, a Persian-language website that
acts as a front for VEVAK, Sobhani said that he escaped when he was in a
vehicle being transferred to another location and got away when there was a
shoot-out.

The discrepancy is very revealing, because it points to a critical part of
Sobhani's whole story. After Sobhani's arrival in Europe in March 2002, his
VEVAK handlers realized that his story had one major foible that would give
it away: if he was, as he claimed, an opponent of the Iranian regime, how
could he travel to Germany directly from Tehran? VEVAK tried to cover up
Sobhani's real story by planting an interview with him on one of its
websites, Mahdis, on June 11, 2002. Sobhani claimed that although he had
returned to Iran from Iraq on January 21, 2002, and had been handed over to
the Iranian authorities, he managed to escape following a shoot-out in
Tehran. Three years later, he has given an entirely different account of how
he escaped, as his "testimony" in the new Human Rights Watch report shows.

Sobhani's escape story required a long stretch of imagination to believe and
was obviously a hastily-arranged effort to protect Sobhani. Those familiar
with the situation know that in 26 years of clerical rule in Iran, there
have only been a handful of successful escapes from the hands of Iran's
dreaded security services. Sobhani, who claims he was a long-time member of
MeK, would have been such a high-value prize for VEVAK that the chances of
his getting away in a "shoot-out" would have been next to nil. Moreover,
what about the other members of his ring? How did they leave Iran and join
him in Germany? These questions never found a satisfactory answer.

VEVAK's handlers of the Sobhani ring work under the direct command of
VEVAK's deputy chief, Mohammad-Reza Iravani. Iravani, who is better known to
intelligence professionals by his alias Amir Hossein Taghavi, is the Deputy
Minister of Intelligence and Security. He has a long record in terrorist
attacks on Iranian opposition activists abroad and murder of dissidents in
Iran. He was a close associate of Saeed Emami, VEVAK's number two in the
1990s, who died in prison in mysterious circumstances after his role in a
series of grisly murders of dissidents in Iran was exposed.

Investigation into Sobhani's past has revealed that VEVAK used a classic
family tie to recruit him to its ranks. His brother, Jaafar Sobhani, was
already a member of the Revolutionary Guards and worked for VEVAK in the
Ministry of Education. He facilitated the recruitment of his brother,
Mohammad-Hossein Sobhani, who was a non-commissioned officer in the clerical
regime's army at the time.

VEVAK officers soon saw a talented agent in Sobhani and earmarked him for a
difficult mission: infiltration of the opposition group, the People's
Mujahedeen. MeK's report on the VEVAK infiltration, published in 2002, notes
that Sobhani's mission began in February 1983 when he turned up at one of
MeK bases in Kurdistan. He was first deployed in logistical bases and from
February 1990 until the fall of 1991 he was a member of protection team for
transportation. Sobhani joined at a time when MeK security and communication
structures were severely diminished as a result of successive blows by the
mullahs' regime and did not go through a standard vetting procedure to check
his background. But his colleagues bore lingering suspicions about his
conduct. In 1986, his supervisor, Fereydoun Varmazyari, reprimanded him
formally. It became clear to Varmazyari that Sobhani had lied about his past
and was trying to hide his activities prior to joining the movement.
Varmazyari himself was shot dead by the clerical regime's agents soon
afterwards and Sobhani evaded further scrutiny into his past.

Sobhani's true role as a VEVAK agent became exposed as a result of long
investigations after a botched plot to assassinate Massoud Rajavi, president
of the opposition National Council of Resistance. On December 23, 1991,
VEVAK officers working under diplomatic cover had taken up positions near
the MeK office in Baghdad, waiting for the imminent arrival of Rajavi. But
they were spotted and challenged by the MeK security guards and were wounded
in the ensuing clash. AFP and Reuters news agencies reported a mysterious
announcement by the Iranian regime that two of its diplomats in Baghdad had
been seriously wounded by the MeK. Then on March 18, 1992, the state-run
radio and television in Iran read out a VEVAK press release, which announced
that "Rajavi was assassinated by his bodyguards". Apparently VEVAK's cipher
operators made a mistake in deciphering the message from Baghdad; for
several hours the mullahs thought that their plot to assassinate Massoud
Rajavi had succeeded.

Seventeen days later, the clerical regime's Air Force bombed Camp Ashraf.
Thirteen bombers dropped 30 tons of bombs on the camp. Another VEVAK agent,
Kazem Soleimani, later claimed in the official Iranian media that he
personally saw the dead bodies of Maryam and Massoud Rajavi. Investigations
into these assassinations and attacks established that VEVAK had received
information from a handful of infiltrators, who included Mohammad Hossein
Sobhani.

Mahnaz Bazzazi, a veteran MeK counter-espionage expert, has spent much time
uncovering Sobhani's hidden past and his VEVAK ties. "In every liberation
movement around the world in the past century, Sobhani would have faced the
ultimate punishment once his identity as a VEVAK agent on a mission to
assassinate the movement's leaders became established," she said in a
telephone interview from Camp Ashraf. "But we never carried out such
punitive measures and even Sobhani was not punished. His allegations of
solitary confinement and torture are bold-faced lies and there are hundreds
of people who can testify to that, who saw him jogging around in the camp
even after his mission was uncovered."

In 1999, Sobhani made an attempt to escape to the Iran-Iraq border and cross
into Iran, but he was arrested by Iraqi police and subsequently sent to Iran
through legal channels in 2002. After he was debriefed, VEVAK sent him to
Germany on a new disinformation mission against the MeK and the coalition
National Council of Resistance of Iran.

Two senior VEVAK officials and handlers, Haj Gholami and Haj Saeed, were
responsible for the training and preparation of Sobhani and other members of
his team for the new mission. In an internal VEVAK report dated February 20,
2002, Ramin Darami, a member of the Sobhani ring, wrote to Haj Saeed, his
new handler, "After we entered Iran through legal channels [from Iraq], we
were sent to Marmar Hotel in Tehran and were given a high-level reception.
While we were in Marmar Hotel, the head of our team was brother Mohammad
Hossein Sobhani and others in our group were Ali Qashqavi and Taleb
Jalilian. Our brothers from the Ministry of Intelligence [VEVAK] paid us
daily visits and resolved all our problems, and during this period I spoke
to Haj Mahmoud. My stay in the hotel lasted ten days. During the period we
stayed in Marmar Hotel, your proposed plans were reviewed several times by
brother Mohammad Hossein Sobhani within our team and we were briefed on it."

The MeK, who obtained this document in its original Persian manuscript,
published it in their weekly journal in August 2002.

Sobhani's activities on behalf of VEVAK have not been solely of concern to
Iranian dissidents. He has been approached by European police and state
security officials on a number of occasions, who continue to be concerned by
his activities against Iranian exiles and his contacts with VEVAK handlers
in Europe. They know very well from their experience in the 1990s that
VEVAK's disinformation agents could be used for collection of critical
information on prominent Iranian dissidents and plots to assassinate them.

 



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