
DATE:03/31/93 TITLE:IRAN'S SPONSORSHIP OF TERRORISM (03/31/93) TEXT:*93033101.TXT IRAN'S SPONSORSHIP OF TERRORISM (VOA Editorial) (320) (Following is an editorial, broadcast by the Voice of America March 31, reflecting the views of the U.S. government.) Ambassador Thomas McNamara, U.S. Coordinator for Counter-terrorism, recently warned that of the six nations currently listed as state sponsors of international terrorism, the most dangerous is Iran. In testimony before members of the U.S. Congress, McNamara said, "The Iranian regime has practiced state terrorism since it took power in 1979; it is currently the deadliest state sponsor and has achieved a worldwide reach." As Ambassador 1cNamara pointed out, it was Islamic Jihad, a front for the Iranian-sponsored Hizballah terrorist group, that carried out one of the worst attacks of 1992 -- the bombing of the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina. That act of terrorism killed 29 people and wounded more than 240. There is also a long-established pattern of murders of Iranian dissidents outside Iran, many of which have been traced directly to agents of the Tehran government. Iran has even targeted for death one citizen of a foreign country -- the British author Salman Rushdie. For four years, Rushdie has been forced to live in hiding. Both the Italian and the Japanese translator of his novel, "The Satanic Verses," were attacked; the Italian translator was killed. The United States is deeply concerned over Iran's continuing use of international terrorism and the threat to American interests and citizens from potential terrorist attacks by Hizballah and other groups linked to Iran. Many of the newly emerging Middle Eastern radical groups supported by Iran and other state sponsors of international terrorism have adopted extremist ideologies, which they falsely claim are Islamic. With regard to Islam, Ambassador McNamara made U.S. policy abundantly clear: "Our problem is not with Islam," he said. "It is with those who use violence and terror to advance their political objectives." NNNN .