Belgium is waving the white flag on terrorism. This week the nation’s Parliament voted to ratify a treaty with Tehran that may allow Iranians convicted of crimes in Belgium to serve their sentences in Iran and vice versa. However the treaty additionally permits every occasion to grant amnesty, and there’s little doubt that Tehran will launch its terrorists now caught in Belgian prisons.

One among them is

Assadolah Assadi,

who was a Vienna-based credentialed diplomat when he masterminded a brazen terrorism plot. In 2018 authorities in Belgium, France and Germany arrested a number of Iranian Intelligence Ministry operatives, together with Mr. Assadi, who deliberate to bomb a political rally in Paris. Had the assault succeeded in opposition to

Maryam Rajavi,

the chief of the Nationwide Council of Resistance of Iran, it might have killed scores of harmless civilians—probably together with high-profile Westerners who have been scheduled to talk, together with former New York Mayor

Rudy Giuliani,

former Canadian Prime Minister

Stephen Harper

and former New Mexico Gov.

Invoice Richardson.

Mr. Assadi used his diplomatic cowl to convey a pound of explosives and a detonator from Iran in his baggage. He drove to Luxembourg, the place he handed them over to an Iranian-Belgian couple at a Pizza Hut. They took the bomb to Belgium, the place they have been arrested. On his approach again to Austria, Mr. Assadi was arrested at a service station in Germany, the place he didn’t have diplomatic immunity.

Belgian state safety basic administrator Jaak Raes pictured throughout a press convention in Brussels in 2021.



Photograph:

Jasper Jacobs/Zuma Press

The pinnacle of Belgium’s State Safety Service,

Jaak Raes,

stated in a letter to the prosecutors that intelligence officers had decided the deliberate bombing was a state-sanctioned operation, authorised by Tehran. A Belgian courtroom later sentenced Mr. Assadi to twenty years in jail.

Iran has retaliated by taking random Europeans hostage. The regime has held a Belgian support employee in isolation for 5 months, accusing him of spying. Tehran has detained a number of different Western residents on spurious expenses, then used them as leverage to acquire launch of frozen funds or Iranian residents incarcerated in different international locations. Below the Brussels-Tehran treaty, the Belgian authorities will probably be required to show over such Iranians as a matter after all.

Different European nations face this risk. On July 14 a Swedish courtroom convicted former Iranian jail official

Hamid Nouri

of homicide and “critical crimes in opposition to worldwide regulation” and sentenced him to life in jail. Mr. Nouri was arrested and tried in Stockholm after he was lured there with the promise of a luxurious cruise. In Could, after Mr. Nouri’s indictment, Tehran stated it might execute

Ahmadreza Djalali,

an Iranian-Swedish scientist accused of spying for Israel.

Let’s hope Sweden and different international locations don’t observe Belgium’s lead in giving Iranian criminals a get-out-of-jail-free card.

Ms. Alinejad is the creator of “The Wind in My Hair: My Battle for Freedom in Fashionable Iran.” Ms. Safai is a member of the Belgian Chamber of Representatives for the New Flemish Alliance.

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