The Nisman Murder and the
AMIA Terror Bombing: A Tangled Thread
By Gareth Porter
February 08, 2015 "ICH"
- The evidence already available about
Argentine Prosecutor Alberto Nisman’s death
from a gunshot to the head creates a strong
presumption that he was murdered. He was
about to present publicly his accusation
that President Christina Fernández de
Kirchner and her foreign minister, Héctor
Timerman conspired to absolve Iran of the
1994 AMIA bombing and lift the Interpol red
notices on the accused Iranians.
And it was Nisman’s 2006
request for the arrest of six former senior
Iranian officials for the bombing that
prompted his push for those red notices. In
the context of Argentine political culture,
with its long experience of impunity for
crimes committed by the powerful, the
circumstances of his death have led to a
general conviction that the government must
have been behind his murder.
But there is good reason
to be cautious about that assumption.
Nisman’s case against Kirchner was
problematic. The central accusation in his
affidavit,
made 96 times, according to press
accounts, was that Kirchner and Timerman had
sought to revoke the Interpol arrest
warrants against the former Iranian
officials. But Ronald K. Noble, the
secretary general of Interpol for fifteen
years until last November,
denied Nisman’s accusation. Noble
declared, “I can say with 100 percent
certainty, not a scintilla of doubt, that
Foreign Minister Timerman and the Argentine
government have been steadfast, persistent
and unwavering that the Interpol’s red
notices be issued, remain in effect and not
be suspend or removed.”
Noble’s denial raises an
obvious question: Why would the Kirchner
government, knowing that Nisman’s main claim
could be easily refuted, have any reason to
kill him on the eve of the presentation of
his case? Why give those seeking to
discredit the government’s policy on the
AMIA bombing the opportunity to shift the
issue from the facts of the case to the
presumption of officially sponsored
assassination?
The Kirchner-Timerman
negotiation of an
agreement with Iran in January 2013 for
an “international truth commission” on the
AMIA bombing that would have sent five
respected international judicial figures to
Iran to question the accused Iranians. That
was a way of getting around the Iranian
refusal to subject former high-ranking
officials to Argentine justice. But Nisman
was trying to prove that was an illicit
cover-up for a cynical deal with Iran. He
considered it “a betrayal of the country
and his work”, according to his friend,
Gustavo Perednik.
Nisman’s “criminal
complaint” against Kirchner and Timerman
claimed the government’s negotiations with
Iran involved a
“sophisticated criminal plan” to make a
deal with one of the Iranians the prosecutor
accused of the AMIA bombing, former cultural
attaché Mohsen Rabbani. It asserted that
Argentina promised Iran that it would lift
the Interpol notices on the six Iranian in
exchange for an “oil for grains” deal.
Nisman’s accusation was
based on snippets of transcripts from
5,000 hours of wiretaps of conversations
of allies of Kirchner government that have
now been made public by a judge. One of the
excerpts
quotes Rabbani himself, in a
conversation with an ally of Fernandez, as
saying:
Iran was Argentina’s main
buyer and now it’s buying almost nothing.
That could change. Here [in Iran] there are
some sectors of the government who’ve told
me they are willing to sell oil to Argentina
… and also to buy weapons.
The statement proves
nothing, however, except that that Rabbani
knew some Iranian officials who were
interested in oil sales to Argentina. No
evidence of Rabbani being involved in
negotiating on behalf of Iran is suggested
in the Nisman document, and the person at
the other end of the line was not an
Argentine official. So the conversation did
not involve anyone who even had direct
knowledge of the actual negotiations between
the governments of Iran and Argentina.
The same thing applies to
the other individuals who have been
identified as speaking on the wiretaps in
favour of such a deal. Those individuals
are friendly with officials of the Kirchner
government and friendly with Iran, but the
actual negotiations were carried out by
senior officials of the foreign ministries
of Iran and Argentina, not by private
individuals. The distinction between
knowledge and hearsay is a fundamental
principle in judicial processes for a very
good reason.
The presentation of facts
or allegations as proof of guilt, even
though they proved nothing of the sort, was
also a pattern that permeated Nisman’s 2006
“Request for Arrests” in the 1994 AMIA
bombing. Contrary to the general
reverence in the news media for his
indictment of senior Iranian officials for
their alleged responsibility for the
bombing, his case was built on a massive
accumulation of highly dubious and
misleading claims, from the “irrefutable
evidence” of Rabbani’s participation in
planning to the identification of the
alleged suicide car bomber. This writer’s
investigation of the case over several
months, which included interviews with US
diplomats who had served in the Embassy in
Buenos Aires in the years following the AMIA
bombing as well as with the FBI official
detailed to work on the case in 1996-97,
concluded that the Argentine investigators
never found any evidence of Iranian
involvement.
Nisman asserted that the
highest Iranian officials had decided to
carry out the bombing at a meeting on 12 or
14 August, 1993, primarily on the
testimony of four officials of the
Mujahedeen E-Khalq (MEK), the Iranian
exile terrorist group that was openly
dedicated to the overthrow of the Iranian
regime. The four MEK officials claimed to
know the precise place, date and time and
the three-point agenda of the meeting.
When US Ambassador,
Anthony Wayne, meeting with Nisman in
November 2006, asked him about Argentine
press reports that had criticised the
document for using the testimony of
“unreliable witnesses,” Nisman responded,
according to the Embassy reporting cable,
that “several of the witnesses were “former
senior Iraqi [sic] officials, e.g. Bani Sadr,
with direct knowledge of events surrounding
the conception of the attacks.”
Nisman’s suggestion that
former Iranian president Abolhassen Banisadr
had “direct knowledge” related to the AMIA
bombings was a stunningly brazen falsehood.
Banisadr had been impeached by the Iranian
legislature in June 1981 and had fled to
Paris the following month – thirteen years
before the bombing.
Nisman also cited the
testimony of Abolghassem Mesbahi, who called
himself a “defector” from the Iranian
intelligence service, that Iranian officials
had made such a decision sometime in August
1993. But Mesbahi was known by US
intelligence analysts as a
“serial fabricator”, who had also told
an obviously false story about Iranian
involvement in the 9/11 attacks. Nisman
failed to mention, moreover, that Mesbahi
had given
a secret 100-page deposition to
Argentine investigators in 2000 in Mexico in
which
he had claimed the planning for the
attack had begun in 1992.
Nisman’s was so convinced
of Iran’s guilt that he was ready to see
almost any fact as supporting evidence, even
when there was an obvious reason for
doubting its relevance. For example, he
cited Rabbani’s shopping for a van “similar
to the one that exploded in front of the
AMIA building a few months later.” In fact,
however,
as I reported in 2008, the Argentine
investigation files include the original
intelligence report on the surveillance of
Rabbani showing that Rabbani’s visit to the
car dealer was not “a few months” before the
bombing, but a full fifteen months earlier.
Despite the Argentine
intelligence following Rabbani’s every move
and tapping his telephones for all those
months, Nisman cites nothing indicating that
Rabbani did anything indicating his
involvement in preparations for a terror
bombing. The FBI official who assisted the
investigation
told me in a November 2007 interview
that the use of phone metadata to suggest
that Rabbani was in touch with an
“operational group” nothing but
“speculation”, and said that neither he nor
officials in Washington had taken it
seriously as evidence or Rabbani’s
involvement.
The fact that Nisman’s two
indictments related to Iran and AMIA were
extremely tendentious obviously does not
dispose of the question of who killed him.
But whatever the reason for his being
killed, it wasn’t because he had revealed
irrefutable truths about AMIA and Argentine
government policy.
Gareth Porter is
an independent investigative journalist
and historian writing on US national
security policy. His latest book,
“Manufactured Crisis: The Untold Story
of the Iran Nuclear Scare,” was
published in February 2014.
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