by Clifford D. May and Toby Dershowitz
Hat tip: Dr. Jean-Charles Bensoussan
Argentines now face a choice: Pursue justice or surrender to the terrorists responsible for attacks on the Israeli Embassy and Jewish community center in Buenos Aires.
For  more than a decade, Alberto Nisman had been investigating the worst  terrorist attack ever committed on Argentine soil: the 1994 bombing of  the AMIA Jewish community center in Buenos Aires. Eighty-five people  were killed and hundreds wounded.
Four years ago this week, the federal  prosecutor was putting the finishing touches on a report that would  accuse then-President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and a dozen others  of helping cover up the Islamic Republic of Iran's responsibility for  the attack.
On Jan. 18, the day before he was to  present that report to Argentina's Congress, Nisman was found dead in  the bathroom of his locked 13th-floor apartment. A .22-caliber bullet  had been fired at close-range into his head.
Kirchner initially called his death a  suicide – even though his fingerprints were not found on the Bersa  pistol left close to his body, and there was no gunpowder residue on his  hands.
Just over a year ago, however, an  investigation by 28 forensic experts and law enforcement officials  conclusively determined that he did not kill himself. In fact, they were  able to deduce, two people roughed him up, sedated him, and then shot  him.
Who were those people? And from whom were  they taking orders? Argentines attempting to answer such questions place  themselves in danger.
Late last month, Federal Judge Sandra  Arroyo Salgado, who also is Nisman's former wife and the mother of their  two daughters, withdrew from formal involvement in the investigation.  The reason: ongoing threats – the "need to guarantee the protection and  safety of the family," as she phrased it in a written statement.
Nisman used wire-tapped conversations to  build his case against Kirchner. Among them was one concerning an ally,  former intelligence official Antonio Stiuso. Kirchner says on tape:  "We have to kill him." Her defenders claim she did not intend to be  taken literally. Stiuso, unconvinced, subsequently fled the country with  his family.
In September 2017, former Argentine Ambassador to Syria Roberto Ahuad revealed  in testimony that Foreign Minister Hector Timerman had visited Syria in  January 2011 to finalize an agreement with Iran, at a meeting hosted by  Syrian dictator Bashar Assad. A message sent to Ahuad asked: "When are  you committing suicide?" Another warned: "Beware of an induced suicide."
And Eduardo Taiano, the head prosecutor  investigating Nisman's murder, has received messages threatening to do  to him and his son what was done to Nisman.
Nevertheless, Taiano is continuing to  investigate, focusing most immediately on calls made over more than 150  phone lines – many of them reportedly to intelligence agents – on the  day Nisman's body was found.
Long before implicating Argentine officials  in a conspiracy, Nisman had found solid evidence that officials of the  Islamic Republic of Iran planned and financed the AMIA bombing, and that  Hezbollah, its terrorist proxy, carried it out.
Mohsen Rabbani became cultural attaché at  the Islamic republic's embassy in Buenos Aires just months before the  AMIA bombing. In 1997, after Argentine authorities issued an arrest  warrant for him, and INTERPOL a red notice (a request to locate and  provisionally arrest an individual pending extradition), he managed to  return to Tehran. Red notices for four other Iranian officials in connection with the bombing remain in effect to this day.
Evidence points also to Hezbollah's  responsibility for the bombing of the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires in  1992, in which 29 people were killed, and more than 200 wounded.  Argentine authorities charged Imad Mughniyah, Hezbollah's infamous  former military commander, who also masterminded the bombing of the U.S.  Marine barracks in Beirut in 1983. (He was killed in Damascus in 2008  in what may have been a joint Israeli/U.S. operation).
The most likely motive for the AMIA attack:  Iran's rulers, in their own special way, were conveying displeasure  over the Argentine government's suspension of nuclear cooperation.
As for the cover-up, Nisman believed a deal was in the works to lift the red notices in exchange for oil.
Tehran and Hezbollah have long been seeking  influence and power in Latin America, not least through illicit means.  As far back as 2004, the U.S. Treasury Department designated  Assad Ahmad Barakat, a Lebanese-born citizen of Paraguay, as a  terrorist and Hezbollah financier. He and other members of his family  are believed to have provided logistical support for both the AMIA and  embassy bombings.
Recently, Argentina froze the assets of 14  members of the Barakat clan. That sent a message that Mauricio Macri,  elected Argentina's president in 2015, is unwilling to give Hezbollah  free rein.
A few weeks ago, the U.S. State Department hosted a ministerial meeting with key Latin American officials that sent another message: Hezbollah operatives in the Western hemisphere must be thwarted.
That said, it remains to be seen whether  Hezbollah or Iran will ever be held accountable for the terrorist  attacks of 1992 and 1994, and whether anyone will be brought to justice  for attempting to cover their tracks – and for the murder of the  investigator who followed the facts wherever they led him.
That investigator, just days before he was  assassinated, said prophetically: "With Nisman around or not, the  evidence is there." Argentines now face a choice: to act on that  evidence or to surrender to terrorists and murderers. To put it another  way, they must decide what kind of nation Argentina is, and what kind of  nation Argentina will become.
Clifford  D. May (Twitter @CliffordDMay) is president of the Foundation for  Defense of Democracies and a columnist for The Washington Times. 
Toby  Dershowitz (Twitter @tobydersh) is FDD senior vice president for  government relations and strategy.
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/opinions/crimes-without-punishment-in-argentina/
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