Several members of Congress have created a caucus to support the Mojahedin-e Khalq, an exiled Iranian faction that once fought for Saddam Hussein and was formerly listed as a terrorist organization by the U.S. government. The lawmakers’ move comes as the MeK, long accused of cult-like abuses and shadowy foreign ties, faces legal problems in Albania over its Ashraf-3 compound.
The MeK announced the creation of the Congressional ASHRAF Protection and Rights Advocacy Caucus in late December, calling it a “bipartisan” group that will be led by Democratic and Republican co-chairs. The current caucus chairman Lance Gooden (R–Texas), and the three other members who have signed on so far are Rep. Paul Gosar (R–Az.), Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R–N.Y.) and Hispanic Caucus chairman Raul Ruiz (D–Calif.).
Gooden’s legislative director Claire Alden stated that the Organization of Iranian-American Communities, a pro-MeK group, was lobbying Democratic offices to join the caucus. “OIAC is waiting to hear back from several Democrat[ic] members as I understand it,” Alden wrote in an email to Responsible Statecraft on January 9.
Gooden had sent out a letter on January 8, obtained by Responsible Statecraft, seeking other members of Congress willing “to support the humanitarian and democratic rights of Iranian dissidents living in Ashraf-3, Albania, and worldwide, fighting for regime change and freedom in Iran.” It called the MeK “an opposition movement fighting for Iran’s liberation from one of the most evil dictatorships of the contemporary era.”
The creation of a caucus “immediately gives you allies on [Capitol] Hill,” says Ben Freeman, director of the Quincy Institute’s Democratizing Foreign Policy Program and an expert on foreign lobbying. “They know they’ve got a receptive ear in Congress. They know that if they email [a caucus member’s] office and have a request, at the very least, someone’s going to pick up the phone”
In addition to the members of Congress, two Trump cabinet officials — former Vice President Mike Pence and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo — have also recently thrown their weight behind the MeK.
Last year, Saudi Arabia had reportedly agreed to cut its support for the MeK. A few months later, Albanian police raided Ashraf-3, the MeK’s sprawling headquarters in Albania. The Albanian authorities accused the MeK of cybercrimes and other provocative activities in violation of the agreement allowing the exiles to stay in the country. The exiles accused Albanian police of killing an elderly man with tear gas during the raid.
At the time, the U.S. State Department affirmed Albania’s “right to investigate any potential illegal activities within its territory,” and stated that the MeK is not “a viable democratic opposition movement that is representative of the Iranian people.” Gooden, Malliotakis, Gosar, and Ruiz seem to disagree.
Gosar’s support for the MeK stands out as particularly unusual, given his other foreign policy stances. The congressman, an outspoken “America Firster,” has previously denounced “proxy wars in the Middle East” and vowed to stop Washington’s “nation-building, foreign aid giveaways, and bloody regime-change wars.”
“Congressman Gosar supports freedom in Iran. The Ashraf Caucus shares that goal,” said Gosar’s communications director Anthony Foti in an email to Responsible Statecraft. “The expectation is for peaceful change organically coming from the people of Iran. At no point has Congressman Gosar supported U.S. military intervention in Iran nor would he.”
The MeK is a left-wing faction that participated in Iran’s 1979 revolution and was pushed out by its Islamist rivals. The group soon began promoting itself as an Iranian government-in-exile, and appealed to the Soviet Union for support. After the Iraqi invasion of Iran in 1980, the MeK’s leadership relocated to Iraq and fought for Saddam Hussein’s…
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