Order Code IB93033
Issue Brief for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Iran: Current Developments
and U.S. Policy
Updated April 25, 2003
Kenneth Katzman
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

CONTENTS
SUMMARY
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
Iran’s Strategic Buildup
Conventional Weapons
Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)
Nuclear Program
Chemical and Biological Weapons
Missiles
Iranian Foreign Policy and Involvement in Terrorism
Persian Gulf
Saudi Arabia/Khobar Towers
Gulf Islands Dispute With UAE
Iraq
Middle East/North Africa
Lebanon/Hizballah
Sudan
Central and South Asia/Azerbaijan/Former Yugoslavia
Al Qaeda/Afghanistan/Pakistan
Former Yugoslavia
Human Rights Concerns
Religious Persecution
Trial of 13 Jews
U.S. Policy and Sanctions
Economic Sanctions
Terrorism/Foreign Aid
Proliferation Sanctions
Counternarcotics
Trade Ban
The Iran-Libya Sanctions Act (ILSA)
Caspian/Central Asian Energy Routes Through Iran
Europe and Japan’s Relations With/Lending to Iran
Multilateral Lending to Iran
WTO
Travel Sanctions
Assets Disputes/Victims of Terrorism
Military Containment
Iran’s Opposition Movements


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Iran: Current Developments and U.S. Policy
SUMMARY
During the late 1990s, signs of modera-
Iran has opposed the U.S.-led Middle
tion in Iran had stimulated the United States to
East peace process since its inception in Octo-
try to engage Iran in broad, official talks. Iran,
ber 1991. It continues to provide material
still split between conservatives and reformers
support to Hizballah in Lebanon and to Pales-
loyal to President Mohammad Khatemi, re-
tinian groups that oppose the Arab-Israeli
mains distrustful of the United States and has
peace process, such as Hamas and Palestinian
not accepted. Relations took another
Islamic Jihad. Some Al Qaeda activists are
downturn when Iran was grouped with North
reportedly in Iran as well, although their
Korea and Iraq as part of the “axis of evil”
relationship with the regime, if any, is unclear.
identified in President Bush’s January 29,
Iran’s human rights practices, particularly its
2002 State of the Union message. The group-
treatment of the Baha’i and the Jewish com-
ing came despite Iran’s tacit cooperation with
munities, are frequently criticized by U.S.
the United States against the Taliban in the
officials and Members of Congress.
post-September 11, 2001 war in Afghanistan.
Iran was also quietly helpful in the U.S. effort
The Bush Administration has continued
to oust Iraq’s Saddam Hussein in 2003, al-
most aspects of the containment policies
though Iran might be attempting to support
toward Iran that characterized preceding
Shiite Islamic factions there that would greatly
administrations. During the first term of the
boost Iran’s influence in post-war Iraq. The
Clinton Administration, as part of a policy of
Bush Administration has warned Iran not to
“dual containment” of Iran and Iraq, President
meddle in post-war Iraq, but has sought to
Clinton imposed a ban on U.S. trade and
dampen speculation that the United States
investment in Iran in 1995, and a 1996 law
might move against Iran militarily as part of a
imposed sanctions on foreign investment in
next step in the “war on terrorism.”
Iran’s energy sector (Iran-Libya Sanctions Act,
ILSA). In keeping with a 1997 policy shift
President Bush has identified Iran’s
toward engagement, the Clinton Administra-
efforts to acquire weapons of mass destruction
tion and Congress later eased sanctions to
and delivery means, coupled with its support
allow U.S. exports to Iran of food and medical
of terrorist groups, as key U.S. concerns. In
supplies and importation from Iran of goods
particular, Iran’s nuclear program has made
such as carpets and caviar. The United States
major strides recently and prompted a level of
has consistently worked with its allies to
Administration concern that some describe as
prevent arms and advanced technology sales
alarm. The Bush Administration has identi-
to Iran and to limit Iran’s influence over
fied Iran’s modernization of its conventional
regional energy flows. U.S. purchases of
forces as a potential threat to U.S. interests in
Iranian crude oil and U.S. company invest-
the Persian Gulf, but others argue that the
ments in Iran remain barred. ILSA was re-
buildup has been minor and that Iran still is
newed for another 5 years on August 3, 2001
relatively poorly equipped.
(H.R. 1954, P.L. 107-24).

Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
In December 2002, U.S. officials said that Iran is building two previously unknown
nuclear sites at Arak and Natanz, which could be used in a nuclear weapons program. A visit
by the International Atomic Energy Agency to the Natanz facility on February 21 found that
the facility contained a more advanced uranium enrichment program than was expected. On
April 23, Administration officials warned Iran not to meddle in post-Saddam Iraq by
supporting Shiite Islamist organizations seeking power there, although without specifically
threatening military action if Iran defied the warning.
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
A power struggle in Iran between revolutionary purists and more moderate reformists
colors Iran’s domestic and foreign policies. Since February 2002 testimony, DCI George
Tenet has been saying that Iran’s reform movement is “losing momentum” to the “unelected”
hardliners. Since mid-2002, President Mohammad Khatemi has become more vocal in
criticizing obstructions by hardliners, and in late August 2002, he proposed new legislation
that would strengthen the power of his office; it was passed by the Majlis but still pending
before the legislative review body called the Council of Guardians.
Khatemi, who was re-elected on June 8, 2001 by a landslide 77% of the vote against
nine more conservative candidates, remains popular, by most accounts. His reelection
victory was larger than his 69% first win in May 1997. His supporters have held about 70%
of the seats in the 290-seat Majlis (parliament) since their victory in the February 18, 2000
Majlis elections. However, Khatemi’s reform program has been largely obstructed by
hardliners, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamene’i (successor to Ayatollah Khomeini),
who control key revolutionary institutions such as the Council of Guardians. Since early
2000, hardliners in the judiciary have closed more than 60 reformist newspapers and
imprisoned or questioned several editors and even some members of the Majlis. Khatemi
suffered a political setback in February 28, 2003, local elections, with hardliners winning
most of the seats in Tehran in a low turnout (14% in Tehran) election that suggested
reformist disillusionment at the slow pace of reform thus far.
The arrests and trials of reformists are one example of Khatemi’s difficulty. In
November 2002, a popular history professor and ally of Khatemi, Hashem Aghajari, was
convicted by a local (Hamadan) court of apostasy and sentenced to death, prompting several
days of student demonstrations and some clashes with hardline security enforcers.
Khamene’i ordered the sentence reviewed; Iran’s Supreme Court revoked the sentence in
February 2003.
Iran’s Strategic Buildup
Iran is not considered a major conventional threat to the United States, but some of its
weapons of mass destruction (WMD) programs, particularly its nuclear and ballistic missile
programs, are making significant progress and could put U.S. allies and forces at risk.
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Conventional Weapons
Iran’s armed forces total about 550,000 personnel, including both the regular military
and the Revolutionary Guard, the latter of which is loyal to the hardliners. According to U.S.
military officials, Iran’s forces could block the Strait of Hormuz at least temporarily, but Iran
is largely lacking in ability to project power far beyond its borders. See CRS Report
RL31529, Conventional Arms Transfers to Developing Nations, 1994-2001.
Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)
It is partly because of Iran’s attempts to acquire WMD that President Bush, in his
January 29, 2002 State of the Union message, labeled Iran part of an “axis of evil” along
with Iraq and North Korea. Iran’s programs continue to be assisted primarily by entities in
Russia, China, and North Korea. For further information, see CRS Report RL30551, Iran:
Arms and Weapons of Mass Destruction Suppliers
.
Nuclear Program. Concerns are growing about the scope of Iran’s nuclear program,
despite Iran’s occasional voluntary revelations about its facilities. In response to allegations
by Iran’s exiled opposition, Iran acknowledged in December 2002 that it is building two
additional facilities, at Arak and Natanz, that could be used for a nuclear weapons program.
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) director Mohammad Baradei visited the Natanz
site on February 21, 2003, and said that it was a more advanced uranium enrichment facility
than was expected. It could produce enriched uranium by 2005. The Arak facility reportedly
is a heavy water reactor that could be used to produce plutonium. Khatemi also announced
before the visit that Iran is mining its own uranium. The Bush Administration said the sites
indicate Iran is planning to try to acquire a nuclear weapon, despite Iran’s assertion that the
sites are for electricity generation purposes only, and the revelations mean Iran might
produce a nuclear weapon sooner than the 8 to 10 years previously thought. During the
IAEA visit, Iran refused the IAEA’s urging that it sign the “Additional Protocol” to the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which would allow no-notice inspections, but it did pledge
to inform the IAEA in advance of constructing any new nuclear facilities. The Arak and
Natanz revelations have overshadowed the previous focus of U.S. concern: Russia’s work,
under a January 1995 contract with Iran, to complete a nuclear power plant at Bushehr. The
plant is to be operational by the end of 2003. Russia says that it has reached agreement with
Iran to supply fuel for the reactor for ten years and for Russia to reprocess the plant’s spent
nuclear material.
Chemical and Biological Weapons. Official U.S. reports state that Iran is seeking
a self-sufficient chemical weapons infrastructure, mainly from Chinese sources, and that it
has stockpiled chemical weapons, including blister, blood, and choking agents. This raises
questions about Iran’s compliance with its obligations under the Chemical Weapons
Convention (CWC), which Iran signed on January 13, 1993, and ratified on June 8, 1997.
The reports say Iran may have some capability to produce biological agents, but that its
ability to weaponize them is limited.
Missiles. Largely with Russian help, Iran is making progress in its missile program.
Two of its first three tests of the 800-mile range Shahab-3 (July 1998, July 2000, and
September 2000) were either inconclusive or unsuccessful (the July 2000 test appears to have
been a success), but Iran conducted an apparently successful test in late May 2002, and the
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Defense Department now assesses the missile as operational. Iran might have produced 10 -
20 of them, according to press reports. Iran is also trying to make a 1,200 mile range
Shahab-4, but U.S. officials told journalists in late October 2002 that an Iranian test of an
extended-range Shahab had failed. In March 2002, an intelligence community official
upgraded the missile threat from Iran, testifying that the United States would “most likely”
face an intercontinental ballistic missile threat from Iran by 2015. On September 6, 2002,
Iran said it successfully tested a 200 mile range “Fateh 110” missile, and Iran said in late
September 2002 that it has begun production of the missile.
Iranian Foreign Policy and Involvement in Terrorism
Iran’s continued support for terrorism contributed to President Bush’s strong criticism
of Iran in his 2002 State of the Union message. The State Department report on international
terrorism for 2001, released May 21, 2002, again stated, as it has for most of the past decade,
that Iran “remained the most active state sponsor of terrorism in 2001,” although the report
attributes the terrorist activity to two hardline institutions — the Revolutionary Guard and
the Intelligence Ministry. On the other hand, Iran strongly condemned the September 11
attacks and tacitly supported the U.S. war on the Taliban and Al Qaeda. (See also CRS
Report RL31119, Terrorism: Near Eastern Groups and State Sponsors, 2002.)
Persian Gulf
Khatemi has largely succeeded in improving relations with Iran’s neighbors, particularly
the six states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC; Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar,
Oman, and the United Arab Emirates). Since he came into office, Iran has reduced support
for Shiite Muslim dissident movements in the Gulf states. In early October 2002, Iran and
Kuwait signed a defense and intelligence cooperation agreement. See also CRS Report
RL31533, Persian Gulf: Issues for U.S. Policy, 2003.
Saudi Arabia/Khobar Towers. Iran and Saudi Arabia restored relations in
December 1991 (after a 4 year break), and progressively higher level contacts have taken
place since December 1997. In May 1999, Khatemi became the first senior Iranian leader
to visit Saudi Arabia since the Islamic revolution; he visited again on September 11, 2002,
to discuss possible U.S.-Iraq war. Supreme Leader Khamene’i has been invited to visit the
Kingdom as well but has not yet done so. These exchanges suggest that Saudi Arabia has
tried to move beyond the issue of the June 25, 1996 Khobar Towers housing complex
bombing, which killed 19 U.S. airmen, and was believed orchestrated by Iranian agents. On
June 21, 2001, a federal grand jury indicted 14 suspects, 13 Saudis and a Lebanese citizen,
for the Khobar bombing. The indictment indicated that Iranian agents were likely involved,
but no indictments of any Iranians were announced. In June 2002, Saudi Arabia reportedly
sentenced some of the eleven Saudi suspects held there. (See CRS Issue Brief IB93113,
Saudi Arabia: Postwar Issues and U.S. Relations.)
Gulf Islands Dispute With UAE. Relations between Iran and the UAE have been
strained since April 1992, when Iran asserted complete control of the Persian Gulf island of
Abu Musa, which it and the UAE shared under a 1971 bilateral agreement. (In 1971, Iran,
then ruled by the U.S.-backed Shah, completely seized two other islands, Greater and Lesser
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Tunb, from the emirate of Ras al-Khaymah, and it seized part of Abu Musa that year from
the emirate of Sharjah.) The UAE wants to refer the dispute to the International Court of
Justice (ICJ), but Iran insists on resolving the issue bilaterally. Several GCC states have
attempted to mediate in recent years and Iran-UAE tensions have eased somewhat, but Iran
insists that it has sovereignty over the islands. The United States, which is concerned about
Iran’s military improvements to the islands, generally supports UAE proposals but takes no
position on sovereignty.
Iraq. A legacy of the 8-year long Iran-Iraq war (September 1980 - August 1988) is
deep lingering suspicion between Iran and Iraq, and Iran appears to be benefitting politically
from the ouster of Saddam Hussein. Iran, which fears potential encirclement by pro-U.S.
regimes, publicly opposed a major U.S. military offensive against Iraq because it was not
authorized by the United Nations. However, Iran offered the United States at least tacit
backing for the war, in the hope that Saddam’s overthrow would put Tehran’s proteges in
power there. Several press reports said that U.S. and Iranian diplomats met in Europe prior
to the war to discuss tacit cooperation on humanitarian and refugee issues.
Tehran is now benefitting from its long-term support for Shiite militants in southern
Iraq — the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) and the Da’wa
(Islamic Call) party. In the political vacuum left by the ousting of the Baath regime of Iraq,
these and similar parties have seized control over many of the towns and cities of southern
Iraq. SCIRI loyalists from its armed wing called the “Badr Corps” were reported in late
April to be moving into southern Iraq to help SCIRI become the dominant political force
there and to prepare for the return to Iraq of SCIRI leader Mohammad Baqr al-Hakim. Some
Badr fighters moved into northern Iraq in March 2003. The upsurge of Shiite activism after
the fall of Saddam Hussein prompted an April 23, 2002, warning from the White House to
Iran not to meddle in Iraq’s affairs, although no specific consequences were mentioned. Iran
denied that it is “meddling” in Iraq’s affairs, saying that longtime Iraqi activists were
returning to Iran to participate in the politics of post-Saddam Iraq. (For more information
on Shiite and other groups contending for power in post-war Iraq, see CRS Report RL31339,
Iraq: U.S. Regime Change Efforts and Post-War Governance. )
Overt the past five years Saddam Hussein had sought to improve relations with Iran to
reduce Iraq’s regional isolation. Since early 1998, Iran and Iraq exchanged almost all
remaining prisoners from the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war. An October 2000 visit to Iraq by
Iran’s Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi resulted in apparent agreement to abide by the
waterway-sharing and other provisions of their 1975 Algiers Accords, which Iraq had
abrogated prior to its September 1980 invasion of Iran. In exchange for a share of the
proceeds, Iran’s naval forces sometimes cooperated with Iraq’s illicit export of oil through
the Gulf, although U.S. officials say Iran was preventing the smuggling in recent months.
Middle East/North Africa
Many of the U.S. concerns about Iran’s support for terrorism center on its assistance
to groups opposed to the Arab-Israeli peace process, primarily Hamas, Palestinian Islamic
Jihad (PIJ), Hizballah, and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General
Command. U.S. terrorism reports state that, following the start of the September 2000
Palestinian uprising, Iran increased its support for terrorism by encouraging coordination
among Palestinian terrorist groups. Iran also incites anti-Israel violence, including hosting
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conferences of anti-peace process organizations (April 24, 2001, and June 2-3, 2002).
Khamene’i has continued to call Israel a “cancerous tumor” and make other statements
suggesting that he seeks Israel’s destruction. Khatemi, while publicly pledging support for
the anti-peace process groups, has sometimes tried to moderate Iran’s position somewhat.
On October 15, 2002, the Iranian Foreign Ministry said Iran would not seek to block any
final, two-state Israeli-Palestinian settlement. It was viewed as a new development when
Israel and the United States asserted in early January 2002 that Iran was the source of a
shipment, intercepted by Israel, of 50 tons of arms bought by the Palestinian Authority (PA).
Iran has traditionally had few ties to the non-Islamist Palestinian organizations, including
elements linked to the PA, that have conducted some of the day-to-day violence against Israel
in the current uprising.
Lebanon/Hizballah. About 150 Iranian Revolutionary Guards remain in Lebanon
to coordinate Iranian arms deliveries to Hizballah, which are offloaded in Damascus and
trucked into Lebanon. The shipments have included Stingers obtained by Iran in
Afghanistan, mortars that can reach the Israeli city of Haifa if fired from southern Lebanon,
and, in 2002, over 8,000 Katyusha rockets, according to press reports. In mid-April 2002,
Foreign Minister Kharrazi visited Lebanon and urged Hizballah to exercise restraint on the
Israeli-Lebanese border at a time of heightened tensions between Israel and the Palestinians.
However, Hizballah is believed to take cues from harder line Iranian elements. On March
11, an Argentinian judge issued arrest warrants for four Iranian diplomats, including former
Intelligence Minister Ali Fallahian, for alleged complicity in the 1994 bombing of a Jewish
community center in Buenos Aires, which killed 85. Hizballah is believed to have
committed the act, as well as the 1992 bombing of Israel’s embassy in that city.
Sudan. Sudan’s close relations with Iran in the early 1990s contributed to Sudan’s
placement on the U.S. “terrorism list” on August 18, 1993. However, Sudan’s alliance with
Iran frayed in the mid 1990s as Sudan sought to burnish its international image.
Central and South Asia/Azerbaijan/Former Yugoslavia
Iran’s policy in Central Asia has thus far emphasized economic cooperation over
Islamic ideology, although Iran has become increasingly assertive in its relations with
Azerbaijan. In early 1992, Iran led the drive to bring the Central Asian states and Azerbaijan
into the Economic Cooperation Organization (founded in 1985 by Iran, Pakistan, and Turkey,
as a successor to an organization founded by those states in 1964). Iran is hoping to attract
energy pipeline routes through it, rather than through other countries. However, Iran does
host at least one anti-Azerbaijan guerrilla leader (Hasan Javadov), and it allegedly harbors
leaders of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), including founder Tahir Yuldashev.
Tensions with Azerbaijan flared in late July 2001 over energy exploration rights in the
Caspian; Iranian warships and combat aircraft threatened a British Petroleum (BP) ship on
contract to Azerbaijan out of an area of the Caspian Iran considers its own. The United
States called that action provocative, and it offered new border security aid and increased
political support to Azerbaijan. Iran and Armenia, an adversary of Azerbaijan, agreed on
expanded defense cooperation in early March 2002. Iran-Azerbaijan tensions eased
somewhat in conjunction with the mid-May 2002 visit of Azerbaijan’s President Heydar
Aliyev to Iran, although there was little evident progress on a bilateral division of their
portions of the Caspian.
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Al Qaeda/Afghanistan/Pakistan. Iran long opposed the puritanical Sunni Muslim
regime of the Taliban in Afghanistan on the grounds that it oppressed Shiite Muslim and
other Persian-speaking minorities. Iran nearly launched a military attack against the Taliban
in September 1998 after Taliban fighters captured and killed several Iranian diplomats based
in northern Afghanistan, and it provided military aid to the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance
coalition, made up of mostly Persian-speaking minority groups. Iran — along with the
United States, Russia, and the countries bordering Afghanistan — attended U.N.-sponsored
meetings in New York (the Six Plus Two group) to try to end the internal conflict in
Afghanistan. Iran and the United States also participated in a U.N.-sponsored group in
Geneva, which includes Italy and Germany.
Iran tacitly supported the U.S.-led war on the Taliban and Al Qaeda, but some of Iran’s
subsequent activities in Afghanistan reflect official suspicion of the United States and the
influence of hardliners in Iran’s regime. Iran is said to fear the pro-U.S. tilt of the new
government of Afghanistan and the waning of Iran’s traditional sway in western, central, and
northern Afghanistan where Persian-speaking Afghans predominate. There have been press
reports and U.S. official statements since in January 2002 that hardliners in Iran are
harboring, or at least not aggressively moving to arrest, senior Al Qaeda operatives who have
fled Afghanistan (Sayf al-Adl and Abu Hafs the Mauritanian) as well as perhaps a few
hundred Al Qaeda fighters that reportedly might include Osama bin Laden’s son, Saad bin
Laden. The United States reportedly has U.S. special operations forces in Afghanistan to
areas near the Iranian border to hunt for Al Qaeda fighters. On the other hand, press reports
say Iran has been arresting and extraditing Al Qaeda members to Saudi Arabia.
Other reports say Iran is arming local Afghan strongmen including Herat governor
Ismail Khan, Mazar-e-Sharif governor Abdul Rashid Dostam, and others, and President Bush
has warned Iran not to seek to exert influence over the new government of Afghanistan.
Apparently seeking to deflect the U.S. criticism, in March 2002 Iran reportedly expelled
exiled Pashtun figure Gulbuddin Hikmatyar, an opponent of the new Afghan government.
The expulsion followed a February 24, 2002 visit to Iran by Afghan leader Hamid Karzai;
the two countries agreed to broad cooperation. (See CRS Report RL30588, Afghanistan:
Current Issues and U.S. Policy Concerns
.)
Former Yugoslavia. On June 26, 1996, and again on May 5, 1997, President
Clinton certified to Congress that Bosnia had expelled foreign forces and ended intelligence
cooperation with Iran. The certifications were required by P.L. 104-122, an FY1996
supplemental appropriation, and P.L. 104-208, the FY1997 foreign aid appropriation, in
order to provide U.S. aid to Bosnia.
Human Rights Concerns
U.S. and U.N. human rights reports cite Iran for widespread human rights abuses,
(especially of the Baha’i faith), including assassinations and executions of regime opponents
(Kurds, People’s Mojahedin, and others) in Iran and abroad. These reports note that
Khatemi’s efforts to promote rule of law have met repeated challenges from hardliners, and
the U.S. State Department report for 2002, released in March 2003, said Iran’s human rights
situation had deteriorated further in the past year. However, in April 2002, the U.N. Human
Rights Commission narrowly voted not to investigate Iran’s human rights record during
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2002-2003. On January 30, 2003, Iran released the 80-year-old Ayatollah Montazeri, from
house arrest; Montazeri was Khomeini’s designated successor until being dismissed by
Khomeini in 1989, and he later emerged as a critic of the post-Khomeini leadership. In the
108th Congress, two resolutions (S.Res. 82 and H.Res. 140) were introduced on March 12,
2003, expressing concern about Iran’s human rights practices, particularly its treatment of
women.
Religious Persecution. I n October 2001, the State Department again named Iran
as a “Country of Particular Concern,” under the International Religious Freedom Act, and
little progress in Iran’s performance on this issue was noted in the October 2002 religious
freedom report. No sanctions were added, on the grounds that Iran is already subject to
extensive U.S. sanctions. Religious persecution continues, especially against the Baha’i
community, because Iran’s Shiite Muslim clergy views the sect as heretical. Two Baha’is
(Dhabihullah Mahrami and Musa Talibi) were sentenced to death in 1996 for apostasy. On
July 21, 1998, Iran executed Ruhollah Ruhani, the first Bahai executed since 1992 (Bahman
Samandari). The United States condemned the execution. In February 2000, Iran’s Supreme
Court set aside the death sentences against three Bahais, Sirus Zabihi-Moqaddam, Hedayat
Kashefi-Najafabadi, and Manucher Khulusi. On April 21, 1999, the Clinton Administration
expressed concern about the sentencing to prison of four Baha’is. Recent resolutions
condemning Iran’s treatment of the Baha’is, including S.Con.Res. 57, which passed the
Senate July 19, 2000, and H.Con.Res. 257, which passed the House on September 19, 2000.
Trial of 13 Jews. Although the 30,000 member Jewish community (the largest in the
Middle East aside from Israel) enjoys more freedoms than Jewish communities in several
other Muslim states, during 1993-1998 Iran executed five Jews allegedly spying for Israel.
In June 1999, Iran confirmed that it had arrested 13 Jews — teachers, shopkeepers, and
butchers — from the Shiraz area that it said were part of an “espionage ring” for Israel. After
an April - June 2000 trial in which eight of the suspects “confessed” to the allegations, ten
of the Jews and two Muslims accomplices were convicted (July 1, 2000) and received
sentences ranging from 4 years to 13 years. Three Jews were acquitted. On September 21,
2000, a three-judge appeals panel reduced the sentences slightly, now ranging from 2 to 9
years. On February 8, 2001, Iran’s Supreme Court let the revised sentences stand. In March
2001, Iran released one of the Jews on the grounds that his sentence included time served;
another was released on January 16, 2002. Three more were given early release in late
October 2002. Iran said on April 24, 2003, that the remaining five had been released.
Several bills in the 106th Congress called for the release of the detainees and for linking U.S.
relations with Iran to the trial’s outcome; the Senate passed S.Con.Res. 39 (June 23, 1999)
and S.Con.Res. 109 (May 4, 2000). In April 2001, a similar bill, H.Con.Res. 29, was
introduced in the 107th Congress.
U.S. Policy and Sanctions
The February 11, 1979 fall of the Shah of Iran, a key U.S. ally, opened a long rift in
U.S.-Iranian relations. On November 4, 1979, radical “students” seized the U.S. Embassy
in Tehran and held its diplomats hostage until minutes after President Reagan’s inauguration
on January 20, 1981. The United States broke relations with Iran on April 7, 1980, and the
two countries have had no official dialogue since. The exception was the abortive 1985-86
clandestine arms supply relationship with Iran in exchange for some American hostages held
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by Hizballah in Lebanon (the so-called “Iran-Contra Affair”). Iran maintains an interests
section in Washington (Embassy of Pakistan), staffed by Iranian permanent resident aliens
or U.S. citizens of Iranian descent. The U.S. protecting power in Iran is Switzerland.
Upon taking office in 1993, the Clinton Administration moved to further isolate Iran
as part of a strategy of “dual containment” of Iran and Iraq. In 1995 and 1996, the Clinton
Administration and Congress added sanctions on Iran in response to growing concerns about
Iran’s weapons of mass destruction, its support for terrorist groups, and its efforts to subvert
the Arab-Israeli peace process. The election of Khatemi in May 1997 precipitated a shift in
U.S. policy toward engagement; the Clinton Administration offered Iran official dialogue,
with no substantive preconditions. In January 1998, Khatemi publicly agreed to increase
“people-to-people” exchanges with the United States but ruled out official dialogue.
In a June 1998 speech, then Secretary of State Albright stepped up the U.S. outreach
effort by calling for mutual confidence building measures that could lead to a “road map” for
normalization of relations. Encouraged by the reformist victory in Iran’s March 2000
parliamentary elections, Secretary Albright gave another speech on March 17, 2000,
acknowledging past U.S. meddling in Iran, easing sanctions on some Iranian imports, and
promising to work to resolve outstanding claims disputes. Iran welcomed the steps, but
called them insufficient to warrant the beginning of a dialogue. In early September 2000
meetings at the United Nations in connection with the Millennium Summit, Secretary
Albright and President Clinton sent a positive signal to Iran by attending Khatemi’s speeches.
Until early 2002, the Bush Administration appeared to be continuing the Clinton
Administration efforts, in part by building on the cooperation between the two countries in
Afghanistan. The Administration’s November 13, 2001 continuation of the 1979 national
emergency on Iran said that U.S. “relations with Iran have not yet returned to normal,” a far
softer statement than previous justifications sighting a continued threat from Iran. Supreme
Leader Khamene’i sought to undermine any warming; on October 30, 2001, he threatened
to dismiss any Iranian official who tried to forge relations with the United States. His
statement came a few weeks after several Members of Congress had dinner in the Senate
with Iran’s U.N. representative.
The thawing in relations halted in January 2002. Allegations that month of Iran’s sale
of arms to the Palestinian Authority and reputed meddling in Afghanistan, and late 2002
revelations of new undeclared nuclear sites at Arak and Natanz (see above) have caused the
Administration and Congress to become more critical of Iran’s intentions and actions. As
noted above, President Bush named Iran as part of an “axis of evil” in his State of the Union
message. On July 12, 2002, President Bush issued a statement supporting those Iranians
demonstrating for reform and democracy, a message he reiterated on December 20, 2002
when he inaugurated a new U.S. broadcast to Iran, Radio Farda (Tomorrow). The statements
signaled a shift in U.S. policy from attempting to engage and support Khatemi and his faction
to publicly supporting Iranian reformers and activists. This view, based on the conclusion
that engaging Khatemi would not produce more moderate Iranian policies on key issues, was
mirrored in Congress during 2002 when several Members called for U.S. efforts to promote
civil society in Iran. Two resolutions introduced in late July 2002 (S.Res. 306 and H.Res.
504) called for positive U.S. gestures toward “the people of Iran, and not political figures
whose survival depends upon preservation of the current regime.” Some interpreted the U.S.
shift as a move toward a regime change policy for Iran.
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The aftermath of the U.S.-led war on Iraq has led to speculation that Iran might be a
future target of U.S. military action. The Bush Administration has not threatened military
action against Iran, either in response to assertions it is meddling in post-war Iraq or to try
to force it to end its nuclear program. However, experts say that the Administration is
considering a number of options, most of which are diplomatic but some of which might
include certain military actions, to address Iran’s suspected nuclear weapons program.
Economic Sanctions
Since the November 4, 1979 seizure of the U.S. hostages in Tehran, economic sanctions
have formed a major part of U.S. policy toward Iran. On November 14, 1979, President
Carter declared a national emergency with respect to Iran, renewed every year since 1979.
Terrorism/Foreign Aid. Following the October 1983 bombing of the U.S. Marine
barracks in Lebanon, believed perpetrated by Hizballah, Iran was added to the “terrorism list”
in January 1984. The designation bans direct U.S. financial assistance and arms sales,
restricts sales of U.S. dual use items, and requires the United States to oppose multilateral
lending to the designated countries. Separate from its position on the terrorism list,
successive foreign aid appropriations laws since the late 1980s ban direct assistance to Iran
(loans, credits, insurance, Eximbank credits) and indirect assistance (U.S. contributions to
international organizations that work in Iran). Section 307 of the Foreign Assistance Act of
1961 (added in 1985) names Iran as unable to benefit from U.S. contributions to international
organizations, requiring proportionate cuts if these institutions work in Iran. Iran also has
been designated every year since 1997 as not cooperating with U.S. anti-terrorism efforts,
under the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (P.L. 104-132). That Act
penalizes countries that assist or sell arms to terrorism list countries, and another law (the
Defense Department Authorization Act of 1987) limits Defense Department contracts with
companies controlled by terrorism list states ($100,000 contract limit). U.S. regulations do
not bar disaster relief and the United States donated $125,000, through relief agencies, to
help victims of two earthquakes in Iran (February and May 1997), and another $350,000
worth of aid to the victims of a June 22, 2002 earthquake.
Proliferation Sanctions. Several sanctions laws are unique to Iran. The Iran-Iraq
Arms Nonproliferation Act (P.L. 102-484) requires denial of license applications for exports
to Iran of dual use items, and imposes sanctions on foreign countries that transfer to Iran
“destabilizing numbers and types of conventional weapons,” as well as WMD technology.
The Iran Nonproliferation Act (P.L. 106-178) authorizes sanctions on foreign entities that
assist Iran’s WMD programs. It bans U.S. extraordinary payments to the Russian Aviation
and Space Agency in connection with the international space station unless the President can
certify that the agency or entities under the Agency’s control had not transferred any WMD
or missile-related technology to Iran within the year prior. The provision contains certain
exceptions to ensure the safety of astronauts who will use the space station and for certain
space station hardware. During 2001 and 2002, a number of entities in North Korea, China,
India, Armenia, and Moldova were sanctioned under the Iran Nonproliferation Act, the Iran-
Iraq Arms Nonproliferation Act of 1992 (P.L. 102-484), and another law, the Chemical and
Biological Warfare Elimination Act of 1991, for sales to Iran.
Counternarcotics. In February 1987, Iran was first designated as a state that failed
to cooperate with U.S. anti-drug efforts or take adequate steps to control narcotics production
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or trafficking. U.S. and U.N. Drug Control Program (UNDCP) assessments of drug
production in Iran prompted the Clinton Administration, on December 7, 1998, to remove
Iran from the U.S. list of major drug producing countries. The decision exempts Iran from
the annual certification process that kept drug-related U.S. sanctions in place on Iran. Britain
reportedly has sold Iran small arms for its anti-drug efforts on the Afghan border.
Trade Ban. On May 6, 1995, President Clinton issued Executive Order 12959
banning U.S. trade and investment in Iran, including the trading of Iranian oil overseas by
U.S. companies. This followed an earlier March 1995 executive order barring U.S.
investment in Iran’s energy sector. The trade ban was partly intended to blunt criticism that
U.S. trade with Iran made U.S. appeals for multilateral containment of Iran less credible.
Each March since 1995, most recently on March 13, 2003, the U.S. Administration has
renewed a declaration of a state of emergency that triggered the March 1995 investment ban.
An August 1997 amendment to the trade ban (Executive Order 13059) prevented U.S.
companies from knowingly exporting goods to a third country for incorporation into
products destined for Iran. Some goods related to the safe operation of civilian aircraft can
be licensed for export to Iran, and in December 1999, the Clinton Administration allowed
the repair of engine mountings on seven Iran Air 747s (Boeing). Implementing regulations
do not permit U.S. firms to negotiate investment deals with Iran.
Following a 1998 application by a U.S. firm to sell Iran agricultural products, and in the
context of Clinton Administration and congressional reviews of U.S. unilateral sanctions
policies, the Clinton Administration announced in April 1999 that it would license, on a
case-by-case basis, commercial sales of food and medical products to certain countries on
which unilateral U.S. trade bans are in place (Iran, Libya, and Sudan). Under regulations
issued in July 1999, private letters of credit can be used to finance approved sales, but no
U.S. government credit guarantees are available and U.S. exporters are not permitted to deal
directly with Iranian banks. Iran says the lack of credit makes U.S. sales, particularly of
wheat, uncompetitive. The FY2001 agriculture appropriations (P.L. 106-387), contained a
provision banning the use of official credit guarantees for food and medical sales to Iran and
other countries on the U.S. terrorism list, except Cuba, although allowing for a presidential
waiver to permit such credit guarantees. Neither the Clinton Administration nor the Bush
Administration has provided the credit guarantees.
In the March 2000 speech mentioned above, the trade ban was eased to allow U.S.
importation of Iranian nuts, dried fruits, carpets, and caviar; regulations governing the
imports were issued in April 2000. The United States was the largest market for Iranian
carpets before the 1979 revolution, although U.S. anti-dumping tariffs imposed on Iranian
pistachio nut imports in 1986 (over 300%) dampened imports of that product. In January
2003, the tariff on roasted pistachios was lowered to 22% and on raw pistachios to 163%.
Iranian caviar and carpets are now sold in the United States.
The Iran-Libya Sanctions Act (ILSA). The Iran-Libya Sanctions Act (ILSA, H.R.
3107, P.L. 104-172, signed August 5, 1996) is a law that sanctions foreign investment in Iran
or Libya’s energy sector. It was to sunset on August 5, 2001, but it was renewed for another
five years (H.R. 1954, P.L. 107-24, signed August 3, 2001). The renewal law requires an
Administration report on its effectiveness within 24-30 months (as early as August 2003).
No sanctions have been imposed under ILSA, although three companies involved in one
project (South Pars) were deemed in violation in September 1998; sanctions were waived.
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A number of other investments have remained “under review” for ILSA sanctions since
1999. In the 107th Congress, H.Res.434 called on the President to sanction Canadian oil
company Sheer Energy, which, in May 2002, announced an $80 million contract to develop
an Iranian oil field. In October 2002, Norway’s Statoil agreed to invest $300 million to
develop phases six, seven, and eight of the South Pars gas field. See CRS Report RS20871,
The Iran-Libya Sanctions Act (ILSA).
Caspian/Central Asian Energy Routes Through Iran. The U.S. trade ban
permits U.S. companies to apply for licenses to conduct “swaps” of Caspian Sea oil with
Iran, but, as part of a U.S. policy to route Central Asian energy around Iran (and Russia), a
Mobil Corporation application to do so was denied in April 1999. The Bush Administration
continues to oppose, and to threaten imposing ILSA sanctions on, pipeline projects that route
Caspian/Central Asian energy through Iran. U.S. policy has been to strongly favor
construction of a pipeline that would cross the Caspian Sea and let out in Ceyhan, Turkey
(Baku-Ceyhan pipeline), avoiding Iran or Russia. Four Caspian nations (Turkey, Georgia,
Azerbaijan, and Kazakhstan) signed an agreement embracing Baku-Ceyhan on November
18, 1999, and regional and corporate support for the project has gained momentum to the
point where pipeline construction is expected to begin in earnest soon. Kazakhstan
nonetheless has been pushing for construction of an oil pipeline across Iran. Despite U.S.
pressure not to import Iranian gas, in December 2001 Turkey began doing so through a new
cross-border pipeline, under an August 1996 agreement. (See CRS Report 98-86, Iran:
Relations With Key Central Asian States
.)
Europe and Japan’s Relations With/Lending to Iran. U.S.-allied differences
on Iran narrowed in the late 1990s in concert with the Clinton Administration’s attempt to
engage Iran, a policy consistently favored by the European countries as a way to moderate
Iran’s behavior. During 1992-1997, the European Union (EU) countries maintained a policy
of “critical dialogue” with Iran. The United States did not oppose those talks but maintained
that the EU’s dialogue would not change Iranian behavior. The dialogue was suspended
immediately following the April 1997 German terrorism trial (“Mykonos trial”) that found
high-level Iranian involvement in assassinating Iranian dissidents in Germany. Alongside
the post-1997 U.S. shift toward engagement, the EU-Iran dialogue formally resumed in May
1998. Since then, Khatemi has undertaken state visits to several Western countries,
including Italy (March 1999), France (October 1999), Germany (July 2000), and Japan
(November 2000). The United States publicly welcomed these visits. On December 12,
2002, Iran and the EU began formal negotiations on a trade pact that would lower the tariffs
or increase quotas for Iranian exports to the EU countries, with some linkage to Iran
addressing EU concerns on Iran’s human rights practices and terrorism sponsorship.
The resolution of the “Rushdie affair” to Britain’s satisfaction sparked improvement in
its relations with Iran. Iran maintains that Ayatollah Khomeini’s 1989 death sentence against
author Salman Rushdie cannot be revoked (his “Satanic Verses” novel was labeled
blasphemous) because Khomeini is no longer alive to revoke it. However, on September 24,
1998, Iran’s Foreign Minister pledged to Britain that Iran will not seek to implement the
sentence and opposes any bounties offered for his death. Britain then upgraded relations
with Iran to the ambassadorial level, and Foreign Ministers of the two countries have
exchanged several visits. In October 2000, Britain began extending longer term credit (two
years or greater) for exports to Iran. Some Iranian clerics (outside the formal government
structure) have said the death sentence stands, and the Iranian government has not required
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the Fifteen Khordad foundation to withdraw its $2.8 million reward for Rushdie’s death.
Khatemi said on June 4, 2001 that he considers the issue closed.
In August 1999, Japan continued a gradual improvement in relations with Iran by
announcing a resumption of Japan’s official development lending program for Iran to
construct a hydroelectric dam over the Karun River. However, the $70 million increment
announced was less that Iran had wanted, and Japan said that this tranche would close out
Japan’s involvement in the project. (In 1993, Japan provided the first $400 million tranche
of the overall $1.4 billion official development loan program, but the lending was
subsequently placed on hold as the United States sought to persuade its allies to pressure
Iran.) In late January 2000, Japan agreed to resume medium- and long-term export credit
insurance for exports to Iran, suspended since 1994. Economic relations improved further
during Khatemi’s November 2000 visit to Tokyo, which resulted in Iran’s granting Japanese
firms the first right to negotiate to develop the large Azadegan field, and Iran and a Japanese-
led consortium are moving forward with preliminary studies of the field. Some press reports
suggest that Royal Dutch/Shell might join the Azadegan project, apparently because it can
provide needed technology. In exchange, Japan agreed to prepay Iran $1 billion per year for
the next 3 years for Iranian oil. Partly at U.S. urging, Japan refused to extend to Iran
additional official loans.
During 1994-1995, and over U.S. objections at the time, Iran’s European and Japanese
creditors rescheduled about $16 billion in Iranian debt. These countries (governments and
private creditors) rescheduled the debt bilaterally, in spite of Paris Club rules that call for
multilateral rescheduling and International Monetary Fund (IMF) involvement. Iran has
worked its external debt down from $32 billion in 1997 to about $20 billion as of March
2002, according to Iran’s Central Bank. The improved debt picture has led most European
export credit agencies, including Germany’s Hermes, France’s COFACE, and that of Spain,
to restore insurance cover for exports to Iran. In July 2002, Iran tapped international capital
markets for the first time since the Islamic revolution, selling $500 million in bonds to
European banks. At the urging of the U.S. government, in May 2002 Moody’s stopped its
credit ratings service for Iran’s government bonds on the grounds that performing the credit
ratings service might violate the U.S. trade ban.
Multilateral Lending to Iran. Section 1621 of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective
Death Penalty Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-132) amended the Foreign Assistance Act to require
the United States to vote against international loans to countries on the U.S. terrorism list.
Acting under provisions of successive foreign aid laws, in 1993 the United States voted its
16.5% share of the World Bank against loans to Iran of $460 million for electricity, health,
and irrigation projects. To signal opposition to international lending to Iran, the FY1994
foreign aid appropriations (P.L. 103-87) cut the Administration’s request for the U.S.
contribution to the World Bank by the amount of those loans. That law, as well as the
foreign aid appropriations for FY1995 (P.L. 103-326) and FY1996 (P.L. 104-107), would
have significantly reduced U.S. payments to the Bank if it had provided new loans to Iran.
By 1999, Iran’s moderating image had led the World Bank to consider new loans.
In May 2000, the United States was unsuccessful in obtaining further delay on a vote on new
lending for Iran, and its allies outvoted the United States to approve $232 million in loans
for health and sewage projects. Twenty one of the Bank’s twenty four governors voted in
favor, and France and Canada abstained. Earlier, Iran also had asked the International
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Monetary Fund for about $400 million in loans (its quota is about $2 billion) to help it deal
with its trade financing shortfalls. However, Iran balked at accepting IMF conditionality, and
there was no agreement. Despite the required U.S. opposition, on May 10, 2001, the World
Bank’s executive directors voted to approve a two-year economic reform plan for Iran that
envisions $775 million in new Bank loans. In May 2003, the Bank will consider a $112
million loan to Iran for low- and middle-income housing.
WTO. The Bush Administration said in July 2001 that U.S. opposition to Iran’s
membership in the World Trade Organization (WTO) was “under review,” but there have
been no recent indications that the United States will drop that opposition. On several
occasions since then, the WTO, at U.S. urging, has postponed discussion on whether to
launch entry talks with Iran.
Travel Sanctions. Use of U.S. passports for travel to Iran is permitted, but a State
Department travel warning, softened somewhat in April 1998, asks that Americans “defer”
travel to Iran. Iranians entering the United States are required to be fingerprinted.
Assets Disputes/Victims of Terrorism. Iran views the issue of disputed claims
and blocked assets as an obstacle to improved relations. A U.S.-Iran Claims Tribunal, at the
Hague, is arbitrating cases resulting from the break in relations following the Iranian
revolution. The major cases yet to be decided center on hundreds of Foreign Military Sales
cases between the United States and the Shah’s regime, which Iran claims it paid for but
were unfulfilled. About $400 million in proceeds from the resale of that equipment is in a
DOD account, and about $22 million in diplomatic property remains blocked.
The assets issue moved to the forefront following several U.S. court judgements against
Iran for past acts of terrorism against Americans, filed under the Anti-Terrorism and
Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996. For information on suits against Iran that have been
filed, their outcomes, and legislation regarding these suits, see CRS Report RL31258, Suits
Against Terrorism States by Victims of Terrorism
.
Regarding the mistaken U.S. shootdown on July 3,1988 of an Iranian Airbus passenger
jet, on February 22, 1996, the United States, responding to an Iranian case before the
International Court of Justice (ICJ), agreed to pay Iran up to $61.8 million in compensation
($300,000 per wage earning victim, $150,000 per non wage earner) for the 248 Iranians
killed in the shootdown. The funds for this settlement came from a general appropriation for
judgments against the United States. The United States previously paid $3 million in death
benefits for 47 non-Iranians killed in the attack, but has not compensated Iran for the airplane
itself. A different case, pending before the ICJ, involves an Iranian claim for damages to
Iranian oil platforms during U.S. naval clashes with Iran in October 1987 and April 1988.
Military Containment
U.S. policy has focused on containing the military threat posed by Iran to the United
States, U.S. allies in the Persian Gulf, and international shipping. Although containing Iraq
has been the primary goal of U.S. forces in the Persian Gulf region since the Iraqi invasion
of Kuwait, U.S. military officials note that U.S. forces could potentially be used against Iran,
if the President so decides. U.S. military officers note that their encounters with Iranian
naval vessels in the Gulf have been more professional since Khatemi took office. It is
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possible that the U.S. military posture in the Gulf might change in the aftermath of the war
against Iraq, probably to lower force levels. Such a reduction might, in the view of some
experts, reduce U.S. military containment against Iran.
Iran’s Opposition Movements
Although the Bush Administration seeks to strengthen the voices of reform, it is not
declared U.S. policy to change Iran’s regime, and the United States does not fund Iranian
opposition movements. In 1995, the Clinton Administration accepted a House-Senate
conference agreement to include $18-$20 million in funding authority for covert operations
against Iran in the FY1996 intelligence authorization act (H.R. 1655, P.L. 104-93) — about
$14 million more than requested — according to a Washington Post report of December 22,
1995. The Clinton Administration reportedly focused the covert aid on changing the
regime’s behavior, rather than its overthrow. The conference report on H.R. 2267 (H.Rept.
105-405), the FY1998 Commerce/State/ Justice appropriation, provided $4 million for a
“Radio Free Iran,” to be run by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL). The radio,
which the Administration called the Farsi service of RFE/RL, began operations in Prague on
October 31, 1998, and has become, as of December 2002, Radio Farda (Tomorrow), which
broadcasts nearly around the clock. Another $4 million for the radio for FY1999 was
provided by the omnibus appropriation (H.R. 4328, P.L. 105-277).
Since the late 1980s, the State Department has refused contact with the anti-regime
People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI) and its umbrella organization, the National
Council of Resistance (NCR). It was designated as a foreign terrorist organization (FTO)
in October 1997 under the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, and the
NCR was named as an alias of the PMOI in the October 1999 re-designations. In November
2002, a letter signed by about 150 House Members was released, asking the President to
remove the PMOI from the FTO list. U.S. forces attacked PMOI military installations in
Iraq during Operation Iraqi Freedom and subsequently agreed to a ceasefire with PMOI
military elements in Iraq. The PMOI says the agreement allows their forces to retain some
weaponry, a development that drew protest from Tehran, which wants the group removed
from its bases in Iraq permanently. For further information on this group, see CRS Report
RL31119, Terrorism: Near Eastern Groups and State Sponsors, 2002.
Some Iranian exiles follow the son of the late former Shah, who lives in the United
States. On January 24, 2001, the Shah’s son, Reza Pahlavi, 40 years old, ended a long period
of inactivity by giving a speech in Washington calling for unity in opposition to the current
regime and for the institution of a constitutional monarchy and genuine democracy in Iran.
He has since broadcast messages into Iran from a station in California, and press reports say
a growing number of Iranians are listening to his broadcasts.
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