Princeton Faces Demands to Fire Researcher for Alleged Role in Iran’s Campaign of Terror — Including Hezbollah Murders [incl. Hossein Mousavian]

Princeton University is facing demands to fire a specialist once accused of being part of an Iranian campaign to murder the country’s enemies, The Post has learned.

The school is also facing a congressional probe into why it hired specialist researcher Seyed Hossein Mousavian — who works to form policy on Middle East security and nuclear policy — despite him being a former top Iranian diplomat steeped in Tehran’s regime of fear.

Mousavian was hired by the Ivy League school in 2009. Before that, he was a prominent figure in the Iranian government, both as a diplomat and editor of the Tehran Times, the English-language newspaper which is a mouthpiece for the regime.

He was Iran’s ambassador to Germany in 1992 when four dissidents were murdered in the back of a restaurant in Berlin in 1992, leading to an anti-regime group demanding he be stripped of his role at the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs.

The House Education and the Workforce Committee, chaired by Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC), is demanding to know what checks Princeton made and whether the Obama administration lobbied the school to give Mousavian a job.

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