"During the 1990s, President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani was keen to improve Iran's relations with the West. The radicals, and possibly elements of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards, who were bitter over his favoring technocrats over Muslim revolutionaries, were intent on sabotaging his efforts. For example, in July 1991, the Iranian vice president announced that several European heads of states were to visit Iran. But, in just the next month, the Shah of Iran's last prime minister, Shapur Bakhtiar, was assassinated in Paris, preventing such visits. And in December 1992, separatist Kurdish leaders in Berlin were assassinated in a restaurant called Mikonos.
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A German judge implicated Iran's minister of intelligence and even Rafsanjani himself in this Berlin assassination, largely on the testimony of Iran's former president, Abolhassan Bani Sadr. This raises the question why Rafsanjani, who wanted to improve relations with the West, would engage in acts that were certain to ruin stronger ties. One answer is that his domestic and foreign enemies conducted these killings to sabotage him."
Sound familiar?