13 March 2012

Oops is now a political term

Rico says that Jennifer Lin, a Inquirer staff writer, has the story:
Ed Rendell
In the last eight months, former Governor Ed Rendell (photo) has been to Paris four times and Geneva twice. He's also joined rallies at the Capitol, the White House, and the State Department, all on behalf of a new cause he admits he knew little about until recently: the fate of a militant Iranian exile group living in Iraq called MEK, short for Mujahedeen-e-Khalq.
He's been compensated for making speeches in support of MEK, designated by the State Department as a terrorist group, and pictured in ads and online videos that seek to get that designation lifted. That's landed him in the middle of an international controversy. The Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control has issued a subpoena for Rendell's records for speaking fees under a law that bars transactions with terrorist organizations.
And, over the weekend , Iran's quasi-official Fars news agency called him "among the most vocal advocates of the terrorist group," which Iran blames, along with Israel, for deadly attacks on its nuclear scientists.
In Paris on 11 February, Rendell said the plight of MEK members in Iraq was "a humanitarian cause and it was necessary for all of us, my country, the world community, and the United Nations, to stand up and do the right thing." He also effusively praised the group's leader, Maryam Rajavi, and proclaimed, "I love coming to Paris."
Contacted by The InquirerRendell twice hung up the phone with a "no comment". But, in a lengthy voice message left later, he spoke of 46 people, including eight women, who were killed in attacks by Iraq's current regime in 2009 and 2011. "I feel passionately that nothing happens to those people," he said. He declined to discuss the Treasury inquiry. "I'm sorry, I can't comment," he said, "because of the subpoena," first reported by the Washington Times. It was sent to William Morris Endeavor Entertainment, which handles Rendell's speaking engagements.
In MEK's early history, the group was involved in attacks on Americans in Iran in the 1970s. During the Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s, exiled MEK forces fought with former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein against the government in Tehran. Hussein rewarded the group with an outpost in Iraq 25 years ago, Camp Ashraf, north of Baghdad, where about 2,800 members are currently holed up.
Today, the Iraqi government wants the MEK contingent at Camp Ashraf to leave, and that has led to the bloody clashes. MEK has renounced violence. Under an agreement negotiated with the United Nations, the group must move to another former American base, Camp Liberty, near the Baghdad airport, until they can be resettled outside Iraq.
Rendell suggested that The Inquirer reach out to former Governor Tom Ridge, who also was the first secretary of Homeland Security. "Governor Ridge was active in this, even before I got involved," Rendell said in his message. Several calls to Ridge's Washington consulting office were not returned.
Besides Rendell and Ridge, the MEK issue has attracted a bipartisan A-list of Washington lawmakers, former cabinet officials, and retired generals, who are calling for two things: help for MEK members at Camp Ashraf in Iraq and removal of the organization from the terrorist list.
Among the high-profile supporters are former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani; former FBI Director Louis Freeh; former Vermont Governor Howard Dean; former National Security Adviser General James Jones; former White House chief of staff Andy Card; retired General Wesley Clark; former Senator Robert Torricelli of New Jersey and Senator Evan Bayh of Indiana; former CIA Director Porter Goss; and former Joint Chiefs Chairman General Richard Myers.
"I got involved because they asked me," Rendell said in his voice message. "I did extensive research and I looked at the other people who were involved, and they were generals and former elected officials. I had great confidence in them," he said.
Rendell likened his support of MEK to his endorsement of President Obama's decision to back NATO intervention in Libya, saving opposition forces in Benghazi. "The US in 2003 signed an agreement with MEK to disarm and, in return, the US would protect them," Rendell said. "And yet we didn't fulfill our obligation, and the Iraqi government twice attacked Ashraf where no one had arms."
A network of MEK support groups has paid VIP supporters to lobby for its delisting from the terrorist list.
On another front, MEK is trying to get the courts to set a deadline for the State Department to make a decision on whether to take it off the terrorist list. "The Department of State is still reviewing MEK's designation," said Laura Seal, a spokeswoman.
Meanwhile, the drumbeat of support from advocates continues. Ridge wrote in a 26 January column for Fox News that "unshackling the MEK from an unjust blacklist" would send the "mullahs' terrorist regime in Tehran exactly the message it needs to hear."
Rendell made his first address in support of MEK last July at a conference on MEK in Washington. His most recent appearance was on 11 February at a conference in Paris, attended by thousands of Iranian exiles. In his message, Rendell did not say how much money he has been paid to advocate for MEK.
Titra Parsi, founder of the National Iranian American Council and author of A Single Roll of the Dice: Obama's Diplomacy With Iran, said the federal government was long overdue in questioning people paid to express their support of MEK. He said some former officials had received $25,000 for expressing support for the exiles at Camp Ashraf and double that amount if they advocate for taking MEK off the terrorist list. Parsi said MEK remains on the terrorist list and, until it is removed, Americans cannot be paid to support it. He said the subpoena for information from Rendell may be an attempt by Treasury to see whether payments for speeches were directly or indirectly tied to MEK.
"You have to be extremely careful if you have anything to do with anyone on the terrorist list," added Jerry S. Goldman, a New York attorney representing a plaintiff in a lawsuit against the Saudi Arabian government and its alleged involvement in financing 9/11 attackers. "The definition of providing support to a terrorist group is extraordinarily broad," Goldman said.
Rico says that MEK also stands for methyl-ethyl ketone, which is caustic and poisonous, a fact that should be remembered by politicians... (But for fifty grand, and a trip to Paris to boot, Rico says he'll be happy to advocate that MEK get off the list.)

No comments:

 

Casino Deposit Bonus