Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Iranian parliament approves two AMIA bombing suspects to cabinet positions

Ahmad Vahidi and Mohsen Rezai, both selected by recently elected President Ebrahim Raisi, received confirmation on Wednesday to serve as Iran’s new interior minister and Iran’s vice president of economic affairs.

The Islamic Consultative Assembly of Iran. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
The Islamic Consultative Assembly of Iran. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

Two suspects of the 1994 bombing at the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA) Jewish community center in Buenos Aires were confirmed by Iran’s parliament to take on new positions in the cabinet, Reuters reported.

Ahmad Vahidi and Mohsen Rezai, both selected by recently elected President Ebrahim Raisi, received confirmation on Wednesday to serve as Iran’s new interior minister and Iran’s vice president of economic affairs, respectively.

In 2007, Interpol issued Red Alert notices for Vahidi, Rezai and four other men suspected of involvement in the AMIA bombing, meaning they are wanted for arrest internationally. The attack killed 85 people and wounded hundreds.

Vahidi, a former defense minister under Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad between 2009 and 2013, was blacklisted by the U.S. in 2010. He headed the Quds Force, the paramilitary arm of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard, at the time of the 1994 AMIA attack. Rezai is a former commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard.

Argentina’s Foreign Ministry condemned Vahidi’s nomination when it was first announced, calling the move an “affront” to the country’s justice system and to the victims of the terrorist attack. They demanded that the Iranian government “cooperate fully” with Argentina to allow “the people who have been accused of participating in the attack against the AMIA to be tried by the competent courts.”

DAIA, the Argentine Jewish umbrella group, said when Vahidi was nominated for the Cabinet position, “This decision once again exposes the Iranian government’s contempt for Argentine justice and the victims of terrorism.”

The Mossad reportedly funneled captured terrorist arsenals to Kurdish opposition groups as part of an initiative to destabilize the central government.
“When journalists make these requests, they’re really made on behalf of the public, not to bury the issue and respond 11 months later,” Randy Mastro, a former deputy New York City mayor, told JNS.
“Under any Republican administration, Israelis are never going to be sanctioned for simply advocating against aid to Hamas or advocating against illegal Palestinian construction,” Eugene Kontorovich, a law professor, told JNS.
The USAID Inspector General’s office is “also working to prevent Hamas-linked staff from jumping to other aid organizations operating in Gaza,” a senior Trump admin official told JNS.
“Regardless of how it is ultimately classified, incidents like this send shockwaves through the Jewish community,” Rabbi Noah Farkas of Jewish Federation Los Angeles told JNS.
Prosecutors said the man caused damage to both facilities before sending texts boasting about the vandalism.