Iranian Imbroglio Gives New Boost To Odd Exile GroupCalled a Terror Cult by Many, MEK Wins Friends in U.S. Because It Opposes TehranA Rally Near the White HouseBy ANDREW HIGGINS and JAY SOLOMONWall Street JournalNovember 29, 2006; Page A1 Early this summer, as Washington fretted about Iran’s nuclear program, supporters of Mujahedin-e Khalq, an Iranian…
Missing the Mark on Iran
FrontPageMagazine.com By Ali Safavi Friday, January 27, 2006 [Below is Ali Safavi’s response to Michael Rubin’s article on the Mujahedeen-e Khalq in our Leftwing Monsters series. Michael Rubin’s response to Mr. Safavi is also in this issue. You can read it by clicking here — The Editors] As a sociologist who has known, closely studied the…
Exiled Iranians Try to Foment Revolution From France
The New York TimesSeptember 25, 2005 AUVERS-SUR-OISE, France, September 24 – MARYAM RAJAVI, a wide-eyed woman who goes by the title president-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, is eager to talk about the latest discovery by her spies: mile-long tunnels, large enough to drive trucks into, dug into the mountains outside of…
An implacable opponent to the mullahs of Iran
International Herald TribuneBy Craig S. Smith, The New York TimesSEPTEMBER 24, 2005 AUVERS-SUR-OISE, France Maryam Rajavi, a wide-eyed woman who goes by the title president-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, is eager to talk about the latest discovery by her spies: mile-long tunnels, large enough to drive trucks into, dug into the…
Iran’s Mujahideen: A Role?
Christian Science MonitorWednesday, 20 July 2005 By John HughesSALT LAKE CITY – Over the phone from Paris, in heavily accented English, Maryam Rajavi says: “I hope one day we can meet in Tehran.” Then, in apology for her command of English, she says “we’ll continue this interview [through an interpreter] in Persian.” But in whatever…