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WSJ: "Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad arrived to cheers from crowds of adoring Lebanese Shiites in this Arab nation for his first state visit, a trip seen as a move to bolster Tehran's ally, Hezbollah. The trip comes amid growing political tension with the group's pro-Western partners in a delicate coalition government and has put the region on a tense footing. Mr. Ahmadinejad is expected to visit southern Lebanon later this week, perhaps venturing as far as the tense border with Israel. That frontier was the site of a deadly border clash between Israeli and Lebanese forces as recently as August. That incident sharply raised regional tensions and heightened worry in the U.S. that Lebanon's independent-and partially U.S.-funded-military is being influenced by Hezbollah, the Shiite political and militant group supported by Iran and Syria." http://bit.ly/aBdVdN
AP: "Iran on Wednesday said 18 members of the powerful Revolutionary Guard were killed in an explosion that struck the force's base in the country's west a day earlier. The state IRNA news agency said 14 other Guard troops were wounded in Tuesday's blast in the city of Khoramabad, some 300 miles (500 kilometers) southwest of the capital, Tehran. The injured were taken to hospitals in Khoramabad. The report said the blast was caused by a fire that had reached the ammunition storage area, but there was no word on what had ignited the blaze. In their first reports of the blast late Tuesday, most Iranian media said the explosion was an accident. Although Khoramabad has not seen violence recently, it is geographically close to Kurdish-populated areas that have been the scene in recent months of several attacks by Kurds disgruntled with the central government." http://bit.ly/9FLiQp
AP: "Tehran's chief prosecutor says authorities have arrested five people on suspicion of spying for the country's 'enemies' - a common reference in Iran for the United States and Israel. Abbas Jafari Dowlatabadi says the suspects had passed on information to the enemies, including data about Iran's space program, economy and defense. The prosecutor, whose comments were carried Wednesday by the state IRNA news agency, didn't identify those arrested." http://bit.ly/cPCBMx
Nuclear Program
AFP: "Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Wednesday hailed Lebanon's resistance in the face of Israeli 'aggression' as he began an official visit that will take him to the border of the Jewish state. Ahmadinejad was showered with rice and rose petals by tens of thousands of Hezbollah supporters who lined the roads as his convoy made its way from the airport to the presidential palace. 'We fully support the resistance of the Lebanese people against the Zionist regime and we want full liberation of occupied territory in Lebanon, Syria and Palestine,' the hardline leader said at a joint press conference with his Lebanese counterpart Michel Sleiman." http://yhoo.it/dr12N9
AFP: "European Union Foreign Affairs chief Catherine Ashton has received no written response from Tehran to offers to resume talks on its nuclear programme, her spokeswoman said Wednesday. 'We offered to meet them at different levels, last time in New York (on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly), and our readiness to meet them is still there,' Maja Kocijancik told AFP. 'We haven't received anything in writing in response to our offers in the last weeks,' she added. Tehran this week blamed Ashton for the stalemate in talks, urging her to be 'more active' in pursuing the dialogue." http://bit.ly/d12j9f
Human Rights
NYT: "Germany and Iran faced off Tuesday over the case of two Germans arrested in Iran over the weekend while interviewing the son of a woman whose sentence to death by stoning raised an international uproar. There were indications that the arrests were taking on political overtones similar to those surrounding the arrest of three Americans by Iranian border guards more than a year ago. Both Iran and Germany confirmed Tuesday for the first time that the two were indeed Germans. Leaders here said the two were journalists, giving no further identification. Chancellor Angela Merkel called for their release, and Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said, 'We work with full strength at all diplomatic levels' for their freedom." http://nyti.ms/bpD5Cx
AFP: "Acclaimed Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami has revealed that the political climate in his homeland is forcing him to work overseas. Speaking on the sidelines of the 15th Pusan International Film Festival, Kiarostami said the situation saddened him but that he had to accept it as he wanted to continue making films... 'The (political) situation inside Iran is not ideal for making a film. Naturally I would prefer to make a film in my own language but at the moment this is just not possible.'" http://bit.ly/axEh5P
Domestic Politics
AFP: "Iran's health minister warned on Tuesday that the Islamic republic could see a 'volcanic explosion of AIDS' on the back of rising 'immoral behaviour' among its people. 'Seven percent of those who have AIDS have been infected because of immoral behaviour and attitudes and because of a rise in such dangerous behaviour. In the future, we could have a volcanic explosion of AIDS in our country,' Marzieh Vahid Dastjurdi said at a seminar on AIDS, according to ISNA news agency." http://bit.ly/apNa4G
Foreign Affairs
AFP: "Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Saudi King Abdullah discussed regional affairs by telephone on Tuesday amid tensions over Iraqi and Lebanese politics and a Gulf arms buildup, the official SPA news agency said. The leaders of the two rival powers 'discussed bilateral relations and reviewed the overall situation in the region' in the rare call, SPA said. The conversation took place as the two sides appeared to be at odds over the formation of Iraq's government, stalemated seven months after parliamentary elections." http://bit.ly/937kF3
Opinion
Reza Khalili in WT: "President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's visit to Lebanon today marks not only a historic point for the Islamic regime in Iran but also its victory over Israel and the West in gaining control of Lebanon. This reinforces for the Iranians that their philosophy of radicalism and strategy of terrorism have big payoffs. Just a few years into the Iranian revolution of 1979, supreme leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini ordered the Revolutionary Guards to take the fight to the Americans and Israelis and expand their operation in Lebanon. I was a member of the guards then and was told that the Shiite militias of the Amal Movement did not have the courage and the commitment to Allah to fight the Israelis and that there was a need for a more aggressive force committed to martyrdom and the destruction of Israel and America. This was when the guards created Hezbollah by sending hundreds of their officers into Lebanon along with planes loaded with arms and explosives." http://bit.ly/9upWgj
Rami Khouri in The Daily Star: "If there is a symbolic seminal moment in the broad ideological struggle that defines the Middle East these days, it will be this week's visit to Lebanon by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. His visit already generated significant advance debate in the Lebanese and regional media before it started, most of which - like so much else related to Lebanon, Iran, Hizbullah, Israel and the US these days - was divisive, polarized and not particularly enlightening. This is a moment of intensity and drama, but probably not one of political innovation or substantive change. If Ahmadinejad, as planned, goes to south Lebanon and visits Hizbullah-controlled villages near the Israeli border, we should expect political emotions to go through the roof in both the pro-Iranian and anti-Iranian camps. This will not be a surprise, because Ahmadinejad overlooking the northern border of Israel in the company of his Hizbullah allies is a nightmare for most Israelis and many of their friends in the West, while for Hizbullah and its allies in the region this would be a prize-winning moment of defiance to be savored for a long time." http://bit.ly/9TU8iU
Karim Sadjadpour in FP: "For three decades, the Islamic Republic of Iran has bedeviled the United States, resisting both incentives and disincentives and working all the while to foil American designs in the Middle East. If 20th-century Russia was to Winston Churchill a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma, for observers of contemporary Iran, the Islamic Republic often resembles a villain inside a victim behind a veil. Seeking to understand their mysterious foe, American analysts most commonly invoke three historical analogies to explain its character and future trajectory: Red China, Nazi Germany, and the Soviet Union. The chosen metaphor pretty much dictates the proposed response, and most prescriptions for U.S. policy have come down to one of these variations: attempt to coax the Iranian regime into modernity; forget the diplomatic niceties and 'pre-emptively' attack it to prevent or delay its acquisition of nuclear weapons; or contain it in hopes it will change or collapse under the weight of its internal contradictions." http://bit.ly/cfB9eP Jonathan Schanzer in The Hill: "Despite international sanctions designed to derail Iran's nuclear program, the Islamic Republic legally owns 15 percent of the third largest uranium mine in the world. How is this possible? Ask the management of Rossing Uranium Limited in the southern African nation of Namibia. According to the company's most recent annual report, Iran has owned a sizeable stake in it since the early 1970s. The United Nations has made it illegal to sell fissile material to the Iranians, but it somehow allows them to own a major stake in a uranium mine. This is a loophole that needs to be addressed at Turtle Bay." http://bit.ly/9dV2J8
Bob Feferman in American Thinker: "Wednesday this week, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the President of Iran, will visit Lebanon and go to the hottest flash point in the world: the border between Israel and Lebanon. What makes this border so dangerous? The 40,000 missiles supplied by Iran to Hezb'allah pointed at every Israeli city make this place the epicenter of international terror. That puts Israel squarely on the front lines of the war against Islamic extremism. Let there be no mistake: this is a war between the forces of liberty and the extremists who want to bring about the downfall of the West. That puts Israel, Egypt, and Jordan, along with even the moderates in the Palestinian camp, on the same side together with Europe and the United States. The forces of liberty also include the millions of brave Iranians who have risked their lives to protest the actions of their own government." http://bit.ly/9DuS8S
News Analysis
AP: "Ahmadinejad is making his first state visit to Lebanon at a time when tensions are mounting between Hezbollah and Western-backed parties in the government. The growing crisis could bring down Lebanon's unity government, in which both sides share power in a tenuous arrangement. The divisions were thrown into sharp relief by Ahmadinejad's presence. The exuberant welcome in the streets was largely organized by Hezbollah, who encouraged the mostly Shiite crowd to come out in droves. Ahmadinejad's trip also includes a provocative excursion to the border with archenemy Israel on Thursday. But the Iranian leader's splashy arrival only exacerbates fears among many Lebanese - particularly Sunnis and Christians - that Hezbollah and Iran are trying to impose their will on the country and possibly pull Lebanon into a conflict with Israel." http://yhoo.it/ajf2TJ
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