{"id":3459,"date":"2020-12-22T20:03:06","date_gmt":"2020-12-22T20:03:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.radiofree.org\/?p=142398"},"modified":"2020-12-22T20:03:06","modified_gmt":"2020-12-22T20:03:06","slug":"u-s-sanctions-put-spotlight-on-irans-international-network-of-religious-seminaries","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2020\/12\/22\/u-s-sanctions-put-spotlight-on-irans-international-network-of-religious-seminaries\/","title":{"rendered":"U.S. Sanctions Put Spotlight On Iran’s International Network Of Religious Seminaries"},"content":{"rendered":"
Since the Islamic Revolution in 1979, Iran’s clerical establishment has used religious organizations to expand its clout abroad.<\/p>\n
Key among them is the Al-Mustafa International University, a network of religious seminaries based in the Shi’ite holy city of Qom that has branches in some 50 countries.<\/p>\n
The university claims to teach Shi’ite Muslim theology<\/a><\/strong>, Islamic science, and Iran’s national language, Persian, to tens of thousands of foreign students across Asia, Europe, Africa, and South America.<\/p>\n But Tehran’s adversaries say the university has been involved in espionage and recruited foreign fighters for Iran’s proxy war in Syria.<\/p>\n For years, experts have documented the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps’ (IRGC) recruitment, training, and deployment of thousands of Shi’ite fighters to Syria to defend the country’s president, Bashar al-Assad, Tehran’s key ally in the brutal civil war that erupted in 2011.<\/p>\n ‘Recruitment Platform’<\/strong><\/big><\/p>\n The United States imposed sanctions on the massive university network on December 8, alleging that it was involved in the recruitment of Afghan and Pakistani students to fight in the Syrian conflict.<\/p>\n The U.S. Treasury Department said Iran’s elite Quds Force, the overseas operations arm of the IRGC, used the university’s foreign branches as a “recruitment platform”<\/a><\/strong> for “intelligence collection and operations,” including recruitment for pro-Iranian militias.<\/p>\n The Treasury Department alleged that the Quds Force used the Al-Mustafa International University as a “cover” to recruit Afghans for the blacklisted Fatemiyoun Brigade, a pro-Iranian militia that fought in Syria.<\/p>\n Moreover, Treasury said the Quds Force also used Al-Mustafa’s campus in Qom “as a recruitment ground” for Pakistani students to join the blacklisted Zeynabiyoun Brigade, a militia that consisted of Pakistani Shi’a.<\/p>\n Treasury added that “multiple students from the university have been killed fighting in Syria.”<\/p>\n In a statement<\/a><\/strong> on December 9, the university said it promoted “peace, friendship, and brotherhood among nations” and slammed the U.S. decision as “hegemonic.”<\/p>\n ‘High-Value Individuals’<\/strong><\/big><\/p>\n Ali Alfoneh, a senior fellow at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington who has closely monitored IRGC activity in Syria, said that, according to his database from January 2012 to December 2020, 3,059 Iranian and allied foreign fighters were killed in combat in Syria.<\/p>\n Alfoneh says of those, only three were students or graduates of the Al-Mustafa International University — known as Jamiat al-Mostafa University in Iran.<\/p>\n “This indicates that Jamiat al-Mostafa has never served as the primary recruitment ground for the IRGC’s war effort in Syria,” he says.<\/p>\n The IRGC recruited thousands of Afghan migrants and refugees within its own borders and covertly drafted hundreds of Shi’a inside Afghanistan. The same strategy was used to recruit Pakistanis.<\/p>\n Alfoneh says the “three individuals identified appear to have been in command, intelligence, or political-ideological indoctrination positions.”<\/p>\n That means, he said, that the IRGC perceived the graduates or students of the Al-Mustafa International University as “high-value individuals.”<\/p>\n Regular fighters in the poorly trained forces of the Fatemiyoun and Zeynabiyoun brigades were often used as the first line of attack.<\/p>\n Alfoneh says the IRGC considered the Afghan fighters “cannon fodder,” considering the seemingly minor investment made to train them and the exposure they faced on the battlefield.<\/p>\n The total number of Fatemiyoun members who fought in Syria is unclear. Experts estimate the number was between 5,000 to 20,000, although Alfoneh says the figure is likely closer to the lower figure cited.<\/p>\n Iranian authorities said the fighters travelled to Syria voluntarily to defend Shi’ite holy sites. Human rights groups said Afghan migrants and refugees in Iran were offered financial rewards and Iranian residency permits to join the fight in Syria<\/a><\/strong>.<\/p>\n The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) estimates there to be some 3.5 million documented and undocumented Afghan refugees and migrants<\/a><\/strong> living in Iran. Tehran has expelled many Afghans and periodically threatens those who remain with mass expulsion.<\/p>\n Afghan Commander<\/strong><\/big><\/p>\n Among the three Al-Mustafa students or graduates killed in Syria was Seyyed Hashmat-Ali Shah, a Pakistani national and graduate of Al-Mustafa. He was a member of the Zeynabiyoun Brigade and was killed in combat in Syria in September 2016.<\/p>\n Another Pakistani national was Mohammad-Hossein Momeni, also known as Mohammad Hosseini, a student at Al-Mustafa who was killed in Syria in April 2017.<\/p>\n