April 20, 2024

US says Iran opposition in Iraq agrees to disarm

Agence France Presse
May 10, 2003
NORTHEASTERN IRAQ (AFP) – US forces struck a disarmament deal with the Iraq (news – web sites)-based Iranian armed opposition, a group listed as a terrorist organisation in the United States, a US general told AFP.

The People’s Mujahedeen’s thousands of guerrilla fighters and heavy weapons are to assemble in camps in Iraq under the control of the US-led coalition, said General Ray Odierno, commander of the US Army’s 4th Infantry Division. “It is not a surrender. It is an agreement to disarm and consolidate,” Odierno said after winding up two days of talks with the group, which has been termed a terrorist organisation by the US State Department, the European Union (news – web sites) and Iran. Speaking at a Mujahedeen base near the Iranian border, the general said they appeared to be committed to democracy in Iran and their cooperation with the United States should prompt a review of their “terrorist” status.

“I would say that any organisation that has given up their equipment to the coalition clearly is cooperating with us, and I believe that should lead to a review of whether they are still a terrorist organisation or not,” he said. The Mujahedeen’s 4,000 to 5,000 fighters — many of whom were educated in the United States and Europe — would gather at one camp in Iraq while their equipment, including scores of tanks, would be collected at another, Odierno said. Both camps would be guarded by coalition forces and the weapons would not be available to the Mujahedeen “unless we agree to allow them to have access”, the general said. The fighters, including a large number of women, would not be categorized as prisoners of war but they would be under “coalition control.”

Their status would be decided by Washington at a later date. They are likely to face brutal retribution if they are repatriated to Iran, while asylum in the United States could fuel charges of double standards (news – web sites) in the US fight against terrorism. Asked what role they could play in the future of Iraq, Odierno said only that they shared similar goals to the United States in “forming democracy and fighting oppression” and that they had been “extremely cooperative.”

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