Early years (1965–1970) The Mojahedin-e-Khalq (MEK) was founded in 1965 by a group of
Tehran University students who had opposed the Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in the 1950s. They considered the mainstream
Liberation Movement too moderate and ineffective, and aimed to establish a socialist state in Iran based on a modern and revolutionary interpretation of Islam that originated from Islamic texts like
Nahj al-Balagha and some of
Ali Shariati's works. MEK founders included
Mohammad Hanifnejad, Saeed Mohsen, and
Ali Asghar Badiazadegan, and it attracted primarily young, well-educated Iranians. While MEK publications were banned in Iran, in its first five years, the group primarily engaged in ideological work.
Schism (1970–1978) By August 1971, the MEK's Central Committee included Reza Rezai, Kazem Zolanvar, and Brahram Aram. Arrests and executions carried out by the Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's security services between 1971 and 1972, compounded by internal factional infighting, shattered the organisation. During the 1970s, the MEK opposed the Shah and
SAVAK, whom they described as "anti-patriotic, anti-Islamic, and collaborative with Imperialist and anti-popular oppressors". Between August and September 1971, SAVAK arrested and executed many MEK members including its co-founders. Some surviving members restructured the group by replacing the central cadre with a three-man
central committee. Each of the three central committee members led a separate branch of the organization. Two of the original central committee members were replaced in 1972 and 1973, and the replacing members were in charge of leading the organization until the internal purge of 1975. From 1973 to 1979, the Muslim MEK including
Massoud Rajavi were mainly in prison. "Rajavi, upon release from prison during the revolution, had to rebuild the organization". In May 1972, there was an assassination attempt on Brig. Gen. Harold Price in Tehran, and in 1973 Lt. Col.
Louis Lee Hawkins was shot dead in Tehran, though it remains unclear whether the MEK itself or its Marxist offshoot were responsible. Between 1973 and 1975, the Marxist–Leninist offshoot escalated their militant activities in Iran. In 1973, they engaged in two street battles with Tehran police and bombed ten buildings including Plan Organization,
Pan-American Airlines,
Shell Oil Company, Hotel International, Radio City Cinema, and an export company owned by a
Baháʼí businessman. In February 1974, they attacked a police station in Isfahan and in April, they bombed a reception hall, Oman Bank, gates of the British embassy, and offices of Pan-American Oil company in protest of the Sultan of Oman's state visit. A communiqué by the organization declared that their actions had been to show
solidarity with the people of Dhofar. On 19 April 1974, they attempted to bomb the SAVAK centre at Tehran University. On 25 May, they set off bombs at three multinational corporations. In August 1976, a car carrying three American employees of
Rockwell International - William Cottrell, Donald Smith, and Robert Krongard - was attacked, resulting in their deaths. While some sources suggest the MEK was responsible, the Marxist offshoot, which at the time had retained the organization's name, claimed responsibility for the killings in their "Military Communique No.24", concluding that the murders were in retaliation for recent death sentences.
1979 Iranian Revolution and subsequent power struggles The MEK supported the revolution in its initial phases, and became "a major force in Iranian politics" according to
Ervand Abrahamian. However, it soon entered into conflict with Khomeini, and became a leading opposition to the new theocratic regime. By early 1979, the MEK had organized themselves and recreated armed cells, especially in Tehran and helped overthrow the Pahlavi regime. In January 1979, Massoud Rajavi was released from prison and rebuilt the MEK together with other members that had been imprisoned. Also in January 1979 the MEK released a program advocating for increased rights for ethnic minorities in Iran, the introduction of welfare-state policies, and gender equality; while the Khomeini regime perceived these demands as a threat. Its candidate for the head of the newly founded
Council of Experts was
Massoud Rajavi in the referendum of August 1979. He was not elected. The MEK was one of the supporters of the
occupation of the American embassy in Tehran after the Iranian revolution, although MEK has denied this. Khomeini declared that "those who had failed to endorse the Constitution could not be trusted to abide by that Constitution". In the March and April 1980 parliamentary elections, the MEK secured the second-highest number of votes. Massoud Rajavi garnered 500,000 votes, while his wife Maryam received over 250,000. However, Khomeini restricted both of them from entering the parliament (Majles). On the final day of the elections, Rajavi met with President
Abolhassan Banisadr, complaining that the IRP and its Hezbollah supporters were systematically intimidating voters, disrupting rallies, assaulting campaign workers, and setting ballot boxes on fire. The MEK then arrived at two key conclusions: first, that they had enough popular backing to serve as an opposition to the IRP; and second, that the IRP would not allow them to operate as an opposition. The group began clashing with the ruling
Islamic Republican Party while avoiding direct and open criticism of Khomeini. The MEK was in turn suppressed by Khomeini's revolutionary organizations. In response to the widely disputed impeachment of President Banisadr, the MEK organized a
large-scale protest against Khomeini on June 20, 1981, intending to topple the regime. Big crowds gathered in various cities, with the Tehran protest alone attracting up to 500,000 people. Leading clerics proclaimed that demonstrators would be considered "enemies of God" and face immediate execution regardless of age. This marked the beginning of the
1981–1982 Iran Massacres led by the Islamic government.
Hafte Tir bombing On 28 June 1981, the
Islamic Republican Party headquarters was bombed in the
Hafte Tir bombing, which killed 74 party officials and other party members, including
Mohammad Beheshti, the party's secretary-general and
Chief Justice of Iran, 4
cabinet ministers, 10 vice ministers and 27 members of the
Parliament of Iran. Iranian officials initially blamed various groups including the Iraqi government, SAVAK, and the United States. Two days after the incident
Ruhollah Khomeini accused the MEK. In the years that followed, others were also held accountable, including a man named Mehdi Tafari executed by a Tehran tribunal for his alleged involvement. Kenneth Katzman notes there is much speculation among academics and observers that the bombings could have been orchestrated by top IRP officials as a strategy to eliminate political opponents within the government. According to the
United States Department of State, in addition to other sources, the bombing was carried out by the MEK. Ervand Abrahamian argues that whatever the truth may be, the Islamic Republic used this incident to fight the MEK. The MEK declared that the bombing was a "natural and necessary reaction to the regime's atrocities", and it never claimed responsibility for the attack.
Open conflict with the Islamic Republican Party and Prime Minister
Mohammad-Javad Bahonar in 1981 While Khomeini and the MEK had allied against the Shah, Khomeini "disliked the MEK's philosophy, which combined Marxist theories of social evolution and class struggle with a view of Shiite Islam that suggested Shiite clerics had misinterpreted Islam and had been collaborators with the ruling class", and by mid-1980, clerics close to Khomeini were openly referring to the MEK as "
monafeghin", "
kafer", and "
elteqatigari". The MEK in turn accused Khomeini and the clerics of "monopolizing power", "hijacking the revolution", "trampling over democratic rights", and "plotting to set up a fascistic one-party dictatorship". In July 1981, the MEK then formed the
National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) with the stated goal of uniting the opposition to the Iranian government under one
umbrella organization. Rajavi assumed the position of chairman of the organization. On 30 August 1981, they
bombed the Prime Minister's office, killing the elected President
Rajai and Premier
Mohammad Javad Bahonar. Iranian authorities announced that Massoud Keshmiri, an MEK member was probably responsible. The reaction to the Hafte Tir bombing and the bombing of the Prime Minister's office was intense, with many arrests and executions of Mojahedin. The MEK responded by targeting key Iranian official figures for assassination, as well as attacking low-ranking civil servants and members of the
Revolutionary Guards, along with ordinary citizens who supported the new government. Between June 1981 and April 1982, around 3,500 MEK members were either executed or killed by the
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Another 5000 MEK prisoners were detained in
camps, and another 8,000 were imprisoned for charges such as possessing copies of Mujahid newspaper. During the same period the MEK was responsible for about 65 percent of nearly 1,000 Khomeini officials killed. From 26 August 1981 to December 1982, the MEK orchestrated 336 attacks against Khomeini officials. In July 1982, 13 IRGC members and
Mohammad Sadoughi were killed by MEK members. Alongside him died his wife Azar Rezaei,
Ashraf Rabiei, Rajavi's first wife and six others. Rajavi's son Mostafa survived and was later sent to Paris. The MEK stressed the significance of ideology, which was shaped by its interpretation of what was missing in Iran at the time such as lack of freedom and human rights limitations by the Islamic Republic. The majority of the MEK leadership and members fled to France, where it operated until 1985. In 1983, the MEK started an alliance with Iraq following a meeting between
Massoud Rajavi and
Tariq Aziz. Iran's deposed president
Abolhassan Banisadr ended his alliance with the group in 1984, denouncing its stance during the
Iran–Iraq War. In 1986, after French Prime Minister
Jacques Chirac struck a deal with Tehran for the release of French hostages held prisoners by the Hezbollah in Lebanon. Also in June 1986, the Islamic Republic "won another major victory in its campaign to isolate the Mojahedin" by persuading the French government to close down the MEK headquarters in Paris. This improved relations between France and Iran. During this period other European nations declined to offer political asylum to the group. With no alternative available and a desire to maintain the group's cohesion, they ultimately decided to relocate to Iraq. James Piazza contends that the MEK's expulsion from France and relocation to Iraq is a "crucial episode" in the group's exile, as it appears Khomeini aimed to send the MEK to a remote place. However, the group ended up in a location that enabled it to continue its cross-border attacks. MEK representatives contend that their organization had little alternative to moving to Iraq considering its aim of toppling the Iranian clerical government. From 1982 to 1988, despite the mounting casualties on both sides, the lingering underground presence of the MEK in Iran remained operational and went on to perform an average of sixty operations per week, resulting in assassinations of important Khomeini deputies. The MEK came to be considered Iran's "largest and most active Iranian exile organization", and its publications were commonly circulated within the Iranian diaspora.
Operations Shining sun, Forty Stars, and Mersad . The MEK's official argument for moving to Iraq was that it would place them geographically close to their enemy, the
Islamic Republic government in Iran. In 1987 Masoud Rajavi declared the establishment of the
National Liberation Army of Iran (,
NLA). It served as an infantry force that included different militant groups and members of the NCRI. its sole objective was to "overthrow the Islamic Republic using a military force outside the country." Through a broadcast on Baghdad radio, the MEK extended an invitation to all progressive-nationalist Iranian individuals to join the NLA in overthrowing the government of the Islamic Republic. On 27 March 1988, the NLA launched its first military offensive against the Islamic Republic's armed forces. While some sources claim that Iraq participated in the operation, the MEK and Baghdad said Iraqi soldiers did not take part. Near the end of the
Iran–Iraq War, a military force of 7,000 members of the MEK, armed and equipped by Saddam's Iraq and calling itself the National Liberation Army of Iran (NLA) was founded. On 26 July 1988, six days after Ayatollah Khomeini had announced his acceptance of the UN-brokered ceasefire resolution, the NLA advanced under heavy Iraqi air cover, crossing the Iranian border from Iraq. It seized the Iranian town of
Islamabad-e Gharb. As it advanced further into Iran, Iraq ceased its air support, with Iranian forces cutting off NLA supply lines and counterattacking under cover of fighter planes and helicopter gunships. The MEK claims it lost 1,400 dead or missing and the Islamic Republic sustained 55,000 casualties. It claims to have killed 4,500 NLA during the operation. The operation was called
Foroughe Javidan (Eternal Light) by the MEK and the counterattack
Operation Mersad by the Iranian forces. Rajavi later stated that "the failure of Eternal Light was not a military blunder, but was instead rooted in the members' thoughts for their spouses". The Iranian government used the MEK's failed invasion as a pretext for the mass execution of those "who remained steadfast in their support for the MEK" and other jailed opposition group members. On 19 July 1988, the authorities isolated major prisons, having its courts of law go on an unscheduled holiday to prevent relatives from inquiring about those imprisoned, and as
Ervand Abrahamian notes, "thus began an act of violence unprecedented in Iranian history". Prisoners were asked if they were willing to denounce the MEK before cameras, help the IRI hunt down MEK members and name secret sympathizers. Those who gave unsatisfactory answers were promptly taken away and hanged. Human rights groups say that the number of those executed remains uncertain, but "thousands of political dissidents were systematically subjected to enforced disappearance in Iranian detention facilities across the country", and of "disclosing state secrets" and threatening national security". Under international law, these mass extrajudicial killings without fair proceedings were also considered systematic crimes against humanity. The executions were ordered directly by
Ayatollah Khomeini through a written
fatwa. The killings were implemented by "death committees," composed of an Islamic judge, a representative of the Ministry of Intelligence, and a state prosecutor. High-ranking officials, such as
Mohammad Khatami and
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, were identified by opposition groups as responsible. According to Professor Cheryl Bernard, the mass execution of political prisoners carried out by the Islamic Republic in 1981 caused the MEK to split into four groups: those that were arrested, imprisoned or executed, a group that went underground in Iran, another that left to Kurdistan and a final group that left to other countries abroad. By the end of 1981, the principal refuge for many exiled members of the MEK had become France.
Post-war Saddam era (1988–2003) The Iranian government is believed to be concerned about MEK activities in Iran. As such, MEK supporters are a major target of Iran's internal security apparatus abroad and it is said to be responsible for killing MEK members,
Kazem Rajavi on 24 April 1990 and
Mohammad-Hossein Naghdi, a NCRI representative on 6 March 1993. In 1991 the MEK was accused of helping the Iraqi Republican Guard suppress Shiite and Kurdish
nationwide uprisings, a claim the MEK has consistently denied. Ervand Abrahamian suggests that one motivation for the MEK's opposition to the clerical regime was its infringement on the rights of national minorities, especially the Kurds. In April 1992, the MEK attacked 10 Iranian embassies, including the Iranian Mission to the United Nations in New York using different weapons, taking hostages, and injuring Iranian ambassadors and embassy employees. There were dozens of arrests. According to MEK representatives, the attacks were a way to protest the bombing of a MEK military base where several people had been killed and wounded. The MEK bought some 7,000 out of 42,000 tickets for the match between, in order to promote themselves with the political banners they smuggled. The plan was ultimately foiled with TV cameras avoiding filming them, and intelligence sources having been tipped off about a potential
pitch invasion. To prevent an interruption in the match, extra security entered Stade Gerland. In 1999, after a 2 1⁄2-year investigation, Federal authorities arrested 29 individuals in Operation Eastern Approach, of whom 15 were held on charges of helping MEK members illegally enter the United States. The ringleader pled guilty to providing fake documents to MEK members and to violations of the
Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996. In 2002 the
NCRI publicly called or the formation of a National Solidarity Front to help overthrow the Iranian Government.
2003 French arrests In June 2003, French police raided the MEK's properties, including its base in
Auvers-sur-Oise, under the orders of anti-terrorist magistrate
Jean-Louis Bruguière, after suspicions that it was trying to shift its base of operations there. 160 suspected MEK members were then arrested, including
Maryam Rajavi and her brother Saleh Rajavi. After questioning, most of those detained were released, but 24 members, including
Maryam Rajavi, were kept in detention. In response, 40 supporters began
hunger strikes to protest the arrests, and 10 members including
Neda Hassani,
immolated themselves in various European capitals. Police found $1.3 million in
$100 bills in cash in their offices. U.S. Senator
Sam Brownback, a Republican from Kansas and chairman of the Foreign Relations subcommittee on South Asia, then accused the French of doing "the Iranian government's dirty work". Along with other members of
Congress, he wrote a letter of protest to President
Jacques Chirac, while longtime MEK supporters such as
Sheila Jackson Lee, a Democrat from Texas, criticized Maryam Radjavi's arrest. In 2014, prosecuting judges also dropped all charges of money laundering and fraud.
Post-U.S. invasion of Iraq (2003–2016) In May 2003, during the
Iraq War, the
Coalition forces bombed MEK bases and forced them to surrender. This resulted in at least 50 deaths. Following the occupation the U.S. did not hand over MEK fighters to Iran. The group's core members were for many years effectively confined to Camp Ashraf, before later being relocated to a former U.S. military base,
Camp Liberty, in Iraq. Then-Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and Vice President Dick Cheney argued that the MEK should be used against Iran. They were then placed under the guard of the
U.S. Military. Defectors from the MEK requested assistance from the
Coalition forces, who created a "temporary internment and protection facility" for them. In the first year these numbered "several hundred", mainly Iranian soldiers captured in the Iran–Iraq War and other Iranians lured to the MEK. In all, during the period of US control, nearly 600 members of the MEK defected. In June 2004, Donald Rumsfeld designated the MeK as protected persons under the
Fourth Geneva Convention. After it was no longer designated as a terrorist group, the US was able to convince
Albania to accept the remaining 2,700 members who were brought to Tirana between 2014 and 2016. Separate to events in Iraq, the organization launched a free-to-air satellite
television network named
Vision of Freedom (
Sima-ye-Azadi) in England in 2003. It previously operated
Vision of Resistance analogue television in Iraq in the 1990s, accessible in western provinces of Iran. They also had a radio station,
Radio Iran Zamin, that was closed down in June 1998. In 2006, an EU freeze on the group's funds was overturned by the
European Court of First Instance. In 2010 and 2011
Ali Saremi,
Mohammad Ali Haj Aghaei and
Jafar Kazemi were executed by the Iranian government for co-operating with the MEK.
Iraqi government crackdown (2009–2013) In 2009 American troops gave the Iraqi government responsibility of the MEK. Iraqi authorities, which were sympathetic to Iran, allowed Iran-linked militias to attack the MEK. On 23 January 2009, while on a visit to Tehran, Iraqi National Security Advisor Mowaffak al-Rubaie reiterated the Iraqi Prime Minister's earlier announcement that the MEK organization would no longer be able to base itself on Iraqi soil and stated that the members of the organization would have to make a choice, either to go back to Iran or to go to a third country, adding that these measures would be implemented over the next two months. On 28 July 2009, Iraqi security forces raided MEK headquarters at
Camp Ashraf. MEK claimed 11 dead and 400 injured in clashes while the Iraqi government claimed 30 policemen injured. U.S. officials had long opposed a violent takeover of the camp northeast of Baghdad, and the raid is thought to symbolize the declining American influence in Iraq. After the raid, the U.S. Secretary of State,
Hillary Rodham Clinton, stated the issue was "completely within [the Iraqi government's] purview". In the course of attack, 36 Iranian dissidents were arrested and removed from the camp to a prison in a town named Khalis, where the arrestees went on hunger strike for 72 days. Finally, the dissidents were released when they were in an extremely critical condition and on the verge of death. In January 2010, Iranian authorities charged five MEK
protesters of "rioting and arson" under the crime of
moharebeh, an offence reserved for those who "take up arms against the state" and carries the death penalty. In July 2010, the
Supreme Iraqi Criminal Tribunal issued an arrest warrant for 39 MEK members, including
Massoud and
Maryam Rajavi, accusing them of
crimes against humanity during the
1991 uprisings in Iraq. The MEK denied the charges. In 2012, the MEK moved from Camp Ashraf to
Camp Hurriya in
Baghdad (a onetime U.S. base formerly known as
Camp Liberty). A rocket and mortar attack killed 5 and injured 50 others at Camp Hurriya on 9 February 2013. MEK residents of the facility and their representatives appealed to the
UN Secretary-General and U.S. officials to let them return to Ashraf, which they said has concrete buildings and shelters that offer more protection. The United States has been working with the
UN High Commissioner for Refugees on the resettlement project. In 2013, 52 unarmed MEK members were killed during an attack on Camp Ashraf. 7 other members were also reported missing. Iraqi security forces are thought to be responsible for the assault, with guidance and support from the Iranian government.
Iran's nuclear programme The MEK and the NCRI revealed the existence of
Iran's nuclear program in a press conference held on 14 August 2002 in Washington, D.C. MEK representative
Alireza Jafarzadeh stated that Iran is running two top-secret projects, one in the city of
Natanz and another in
a facility located in Arak, which was later confirmed by the
International Atomic Energy Agency. Journalists
Seymour Hersh and
Connie Bruck have written that the information was given to the MEK by Israel. Among others, it was described by a senior IAEA official and a monarchist advisor to
Reza Pahlavi, who said before MEK they were offered to reveal the information, but they refused because it would be seen negatively by the people of Iran. Similar accounts could be found elsewhere by others, including comments made by US officials. On 18 November 2004, MEK representative Mohammad Mohaddessin used satellite images to state that a new facility existed in northeast
Tehran named "Center for the Development of Advanced Defence Technology". This allegation by MEK and all their subsequent allegations were false. In 2010 the NCRI claimed to have uncovered a secret nuclear facility in Iran. These claims were dismissed by U.S. officials, who did not believe the facilities to be nuclear. In 2013, the NCRI again claimed to have discovered a secret underground nuclear site. In 2012, NBC News' Richard Engel and Robert Windrem published a report quoting U.S. officials, who spoke to
NBC News on condition of anonymity, that the MEK was being "financed, trained, and armed by
Israel's secret service" to assassinate Iranian nuclear scientists. A senior U.S. State Department official said the Department never claimed that the MEK was involved in the assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists. Former CIA
case officer in the Middle East,
Robert Baer said that the perpetrators "could only be Israel", and that "it is quite likely Israel is acting in tandem with" the MEK. On 27 November 2020, Iran's top nuclear scientist
Mohsen Fakhrizadeh was assassinated. Iranian Rear Admiral
Ali Shamkhani, who heads the Supreme National Security Council, blamed Mujahideen-e-Khalq and Israel.
Settlement in Albania (2016–present) In 2016, the United States brokered a deal to relocate the MEK to
Albania. About 3,000 members moved to Albania, and the U.S. donated $20 million to the U.N. refugee agency to help them resettle. On 9 September 2016, more than 280 remaining MEK members were relocated to Albania.
Relationship during Trump presidency In 2017, the year before
John Bolton became President Trump's National Security Adviser, Bolton addressed members of the MEK and said that they would celebrate in Tehran before 2019. By 2018, operatives of the MEK were believed to be still conducting
covert operations inside Iran to overthrow Iran's government. It also maintained some operations in France, and in January 2018, Iranian President
Hassan Rouhani phoned French president
Emmanuel Macron, asking him to order kicking the MEK out of its base in
Auvers-sur-Oise, alleging that the MEK stirred up the
2017–18 Iranian protests. By 2018, over 4,000 MEK members had entered Albania, according to the
INSTAT data. On 30 June 2018, Rudy Giuliani, Donald Trump's personal lawyer, lectured an MEK gathering in Paris, calling for regime change in Tehran. John McCain and John Bolton have met the MEK's leader Maryam Rajavi or spoken at its rallies. During the Free Iran 2019 conference in Albania, former New York City mayor
Rudy Giuliani attended an MEK podium, where he described the group as a "government-in-exile", saying it is a ready-to-go alternative to lead the country if the Iranian government falls.
Islamic Republic of Iran operations against MEK inside Europe On 30 June 2018
Belgian police arrested married couple of Iranian heritage Amir Saadouni and Nasimeh Naami on charges of "attempted terrorist murder and preparing a terrorist act" against an MEK rally in France. The couple had in their possession half of a kilogram of TATP explosives and a detonator. Police also detained
Asadollah Asadi, an Iranian diplomat in Vienna. German prosecutors charged Asadi with "activity as foreign agent and conspiracy to commit murder by contacting the couple and giving them a device containing 500 grams of TATP". Prosecutors said Asadi was a member of the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and Security service, an organization that focuses on "combating of opposition groups inside and outside of Iran". Iran responded that the arrests were a "
false flag ploy", with the Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman saying the "two suspects in Belgium were in fact members of the People's Mujahideen". In October 2018, the French government officially and publicly blamed Iran's Intelligence Service for the failed attack against the MEK. U.S. officials also condemned Iran over the foiled bomb plot that France blames on Tehran. In December 2018, Albania expelled two Iranian diplomats due to alleged involvement in the bomb plot against the MEK (where Mayor Giuliani and other US government officials were also gathered) accusing the two of "violating their diplomatic status". Iranian President
Hassan Rouhani said that the MEK incited violence during the
2017–2018 Iranian protests. In October 2019, Albanian police discovered an Iranian paramilitary network that allegedly planned attacks against MEK members in Albania. Albania's police chief, Ardi Veliu, said that the Iran Revolutionary Guard's foreign wing operated an "active terrorist cell" that targeted members of the MEK. A police statement said that two Iranian security officials led the network from Tehran, and that it was allegedly linked to organised crime groups in Turkey. It also said that the network used a former MEK member to collect information in Albania. Valiu also said that a planned attack on the MEK by Iranian government agents was foiled in March. In 2020, newspaper
De Standaard said evidence that Iranian intelligence and security was involved in the failed 2018 bomb plot against an MEK rally was mounting. In a note to the federal prosecutor's office, the State Security writes that "the attack was devised in the name and under the impetus of Iran", with the note also describing one of the case's suspects,
Asadollah Asadi, as a
MOIS agent. Amir Saadouni and Nasimeh Naami, who in 2018 were found with half a kilo of explosives and are also being charged in the case, admitted that they had been in contact with Asadollah Asadi. In February 2021, Asadi and his accomplices were found guilty of attempted terrorism and Asadi was sentenced to 20 years in prison. In September 2022, Albania suffered a second cyber-attack, resulting in it cutting diplomatic ties with the Islamic Republic and ordering Iranian embassy staff to leave. According to the
FBI and
CISA, the cyberattacks were motivated by Albania's hosting of the MEK. In 2023, Deputy Minister of International Affairs of the Judiciary
Kazem Gharibabadi opened a case against 107 members of the MEK for treason, calling the organization "a terrorist group whose hands are stained with the blood of thousands of Iranians". == Ideology ==