Both 'Terrorist' And Ally Philadelphia ne of the stranger news items coming out of Iraq these days concerns an Iranian opposition group called the Mujahedeen-e Khalq (MEK). It's a U.S. government- designated terrorist organization that coalition forces first bombed from the air, then signed a cease-fire agreement with, and finally disarmed and protected. Say that again? The MEK is not your typical anti- Western group but an organization with a strong political presence in Western capitals and more than 3,000 soldiers sta- tioned in Iraq, singularly dedicated to one goal: overthrowing its "arch-enemy," the Islamic Republic of Iran. Of course, during its 17 years in Iraq, it also had to do Saddam Hussein's bidding. This situation raises several questions: • Is the MEK a terrorist group? No. It used terrorism decades ago, when its members attacked Americans. For the last 15 years, however, the MEK has been organized as an army, and its only 0 Daniel Pipes is director of the Middle East Forum. Patrick Clawson, deputy director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, contributed to this report. Pipes' e-mail address is Pipes @MEFo rum. o rg violent actions have been directed against the Iranian regime. Unlike Hezbollah (which targets Jewish community centers and shoots rockets into civilian areas), the MEK attacks specific regime targets. Unlike the PLO and Sinn Fein (whose leaders were terrorists more recently and arguably still are), the MEK really has foresworn this barbaric tactic. • Can the MEK liberate Iran? No. Its strategy of invasion by an army cannot work. The foul theocracy in Tehran will come to an end when the democratic forces in Iran finally manage to push it aside. Foreigners can best help them by encouraging inc, satellite television transmis- sions from Iranians living in free coun- tries (as U.S. Sen. Sam Brownback, R- Kan, has recently proposed). • Can the MEK be useful? Yes. Western spy agencies are short on "human intelligence," meaning spies on the ground in Iran, as distinct from eyes in the sky. Coalition military command- ers should seek out the MEK for infor- mation on the Iranian mullahs' agents in Iraq. The MEK can also supply key infor- mation about developments in Iran where, despite a tendency toward exag- geration, it has had some major scoops. Its information in mid-2002 about Iran's nuclear program, for example, was better where in Iraq. And State is than what the International dreaming if it thinks the sight of Atomic Energy Agency knew, U.S. troops guarding the MEK thereby leading a shocked U.S. will mollify Iran's mullahs. government to kick off an inves- Instead, as the U.S. Army rec- tigation that confirmed just how ommends, MEK members far advanced the Iranians are should (after giving assurances toward building a nuclear bomb. not to attack Iranian territory) Policy toward the MEK has be permitted enough arms to long been quietly but intensely DAN IEL protect themselves from their and bitterly debated in PIP ES Iranian opponents. And in Washington. To curry favor with Spe cial Iranian "moderates," the State Comm entary November, when the secretary of state next decides whether or Department designated the not to re-certify the MEK as a terrorist group in 1997 as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. Although 150 members of group, he should come to the sensible conclusion that it poses no threat to the Congress publicly opposed this designa- security of the United States or its citi- tion, a U.S. Court of Appeals recently zens, and remove it from the list of upheld it. Foreign Terrorist Organizations. This stark difference of views helps Finally, because Iran's mullahs irra- explain Washington's erratic policies of tionally fear the MEK (as shown by their late. On April 15, the U.S. Army signed 1988 massacre in the jails of Iran of a cease-fire permitting the MEK to keep 10,000 long-imprisoned MEK members its weapons and use them against Iranian and supporters), maintaining the MEK regime infiltrators into Iraq. as an organized group in separate camps This deal infuriated the State in Iraq offers an excellent way to intimi- Department, which then convinced the date and gain leverage over Tehran. To president to undo it, leading to the deter the mullahs from taking hostile strange sight of U.S. troops surrounding steps (supporting terrorism against coali- MEK camps on May 9, disarming its tion troops in Iraq, building nuclear fighters, and taking up positions to pro- weapons), it could prove highly effective tect them. to threaten U.S. meetings with the That's a bad idea. Coalition forces are MEK or providing help for it. ❑ urgently needed to restore order else- Two Minutes of Memory Jerusalem T he siren wails and Israel stands still. Cars stop in their lanes of the highway; pedestrians freeze in mid- stride on crosswalks; entire restau- rants of people drop their forks and stand to attention together. We stand and we remember, and, believe me, as those sirens wail your bones shudder in fear. It is like the primal blast of the shofar that, according to Jewish tradition, blew when the heavens opened with mercy during the first act of cre- ation. Only this time, it signals those same heavens opening to call the creation back to the Creator. These Doron Spielman is a 1996 graduate of the University of Michigan and an alum- nus of the Jewish Federation of Metro- politan Detroit's Project OTZMA. He made aliyah in 2000, and works for the City of David in Jerusalem. His e-mail address is doron@cityofdavid.org.il are Israel's fallen — both those with guns in hand on the front line, and those with babies in hand at Sbarro's Pizza. Well over 20,000 of them in the 55 years since the declaration of the State of Israel. Those sirens bear no good tidings. They are the same sirens that have continued to blow every Memorial Day since the armies of Iraq, Iran, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and Egypt besieged our land in 1948. They are the sirens that signaled the approach of Saddam's rockets in 1990, and that, thank God, have remained silent over the last few months. Every one of us knows at least one person who stood like us last year in silent reflection and now stands in something infinitely worse. To be honest with you, I think that many others like me take a moment to pray that we should never know their personal pain. Then the sirens wail down. Not all at the same time now, but slightly staggered so that the echo through- remember those who sacri- ficed themselves so that I may live? Throughout the rest of the day I am set on trying to figure out what I can do to better remember them. Next year I will go to the national cemetery, visit Yad Vashem, plant a tree in DO RON SPIEL MAN their honor, I tell myself. As I come to this conclu- Spe cial sion, day has turned to Comm entary Doing More evening, and my thoughts are drawn away by the For one moment, life was taken from us all, and in that instant sounds of music permeating the night. The smells of barbeques are we shared something so powerful, so everywhere, and people begin to communal, it can scarcely be pour out into the streets smiling. described. Evening marks the beginning of Few speak about it immediately Israel's Independence Day celebra- afterwards. It takes a few moments tions on Iyar 5 (the evening of May before we can look another person 6 this year), and there is not a per- directly in their eyes. Most continue son without a party to go to. The wherever they left off. But nothing change is simply abrupt. But this is is the same. fitting for Israel, because this is what I am left feeling frustrated and we do on an almost daily basis. angry. Mostly at myself. Were those SPIELMAN on page 36 two minutes all I an giving to out the hills of Jerusalem sounds like a mother weep- ing for her young. We are all mothers then. Then, miraculously, life once again fills those bodies. Pedestrians in mid-stride continue on their way; babies begin to cry; cars resume their journeys to wherever. 5/23 2003 35