Thursday, August 23, 2012

Eye on Iran: UN Visit Will Set Back a Push to Isolate Iran







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NYT:
"Efforts led by the United States and Israel to isolate Iran suffered a setback on Wednesday when the United Nations announced that Ban Ki-moon, the secretary general, would join officials from 120 countries in Tehran next week for a summit meeting that Iran has trumpeted as a vindication of its defiance and enduring importance in world affairs. Mr. Ban's decision to attend the meeting of the Nonaligned Movement, announced by his spokesman, Martin Nesirky, came despite objections from both the Americans and Israelis, including a phone call from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel. It was announced a few days after the new president of Egypt, a country that has long been estranged from Iran, said he would attend the summit meeting as well, a decision that had already unsettled the Israelis. Taken together, the moves reinforced Iran's contention that a reordering of powers is under way in the Middle East, where Western influence is waning, and that the American-Israeli campaign to vilify Iran as a rogue state that exports terrorism and secretly covets nuclear weapons is not resonating in much of the world." http://t.uani.com/Q3fOil

Daily Telegraph: "Iran's Supreme Leader has ordered the country's Revolutionary Guards to intensify its campaign of terror attacks against the West and its allies in retaliation for supporting the overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad in Syria. According to Western intelligence officials, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei gave the order to the elite Quds Force unit following a recent emergency meeting of Iran's National Security Council in Tehran held to discuss a specially-commissioned report into the implications for Iran of the Assad regime's overthrow. Damascus is Iran's most important regional ally, and the survival of the Assad regime is regarded as vital to sustaining the Iranian-backed Hizbollah militia which controls southern Lebanon. The report, which was personally commissioned by Mr Khamenei, concluded that Iran's national interests were being threatened by a combination of the U.N. sanctions imposed over Iran's nuclear programme and the West's continuing support for Syrian opposition groups attempting to overthrow the Syrian government." http://t.uani.com/RgEYcJ

Reuters: "Iran appears to be supplying Syria with weapons, the United Nations said on Wednesday, as the 17-month conflict that began as a popular uprising against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad slides deeper into civil war. The U.N. accusation backs charges by Western officials that Iran is providing funds, weapons and intelligence support to Assad in his bid to crush the opposition. Syrian rebels also say Tehran has sent Revolutionary Guards and Hezbollah fighters. 'The Secretary-General has repeatedly expressed his concern about the arms flows to the two parties in Syria, which in some cases appear to violate resolution 1747 passed by this council banning arms exports under Chapter 7 authority,' U.N. political affairs chief Jeffrey Feltman told the U.N. Security Council. In a prepared copy of his speech, Feltman noted that the ban was on Iranian arms exports." http://t.uani.com/P3l2uu
Lebanon Banking Campaign 
Nuclear Program & Sanctions

Reuters: "The U.S. Navy is cutting short home leave for the crew of one of its aircraft carriers and sending them back to the Middle East next week to counter any threat from Iran, according to the official Navy News Service. Defence Secretary Leon Panetta told sailors aboard the USS Stennis in their home port of Seattle on Wednesday they were needed back in the Middle East soon, after approving calls from the U.S. Central Command for Stennis to return to the region. 'Obviously, Iran is one of those threats,' the U.S. military news service quoted Panetta as saying during a send-off event at a military base on the U.S. West Coast. 'Secondly, it is the turmoil in Syria,' he said. 'We're obviously following that closely as well.'" http://t.uani.com/P3r1Qc

Reuters: "The U.N. nuclear watchdog chief played down chances of a breakthrough when talks with Iran resume on Friday but said the agency would pursue access to a military site that diplomats say may have been cleansed of evidence of illicit nuclear activity. Visiting the Parchin complex has become a priority for the International Atomic Energy Agency as it seeks to end what the West sees as Iranian stonewalling of an IAEA investigation into allegations that Tehran has sought to design a nuclear weapon. 'I cannot be too optimistic ... We have been making our best efforts in a constructive spirit to work out an agreement between Iran and IAEA, but so far we have not been successful in reaching agreement,' agency Director General Yukiya Amano told reporters on Wednesday during a visit to Finland." http://t.uani.com/RgEoM3

WSJ: "Imports of Iranian crude oil to South Korea were suspended in July as a result of EU sanctions, which cut off insurance for tankers carrying Iranian crude. Yet data released Thursday showed Seoul imported 4.259 million barrels of Iranian crude in July. How so? An official from state-run Korea National Oil Corp., which compiles monthly crude import figures from the country's four oil refiners including SK Energy and Hyundai Oilbank-the two importers of Iranian crude-attributed the import figure to belated customs procedures." http://t.uani.com/OymvWI

WSJ: "Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC has approached regulators on both sides of the Atlantic to discuss whether its business dealings with Iran could have breached U.S. sanctions, according to a person familiar with the bank's position, increasing the prospect that more U.K. banks could face fines for breaking U.S. rules. The U.S. investigation has been going on for years, and banks have been periodically disclosing their involvement in it. But the probe has taken on a higher profile in recent weeks following an unusual flare-up between the U.K.'s Standard Chartered PLC and a New York financial regulator over the bank's alleged misconduct involving Iranian transactions." http://t.uani.com/NHjmaa

Reuters: "Iran has started moving nearly two million barrels of fuel oil to Singapore in the first such shipment since June, according to an Iran-based port source and Reuters shipping data on Thursday. Asia's top marine fuel trading hub secured exemption from U.S. financial sanctions on Iran late in June, after authorities leaned on oil companies operating in the city state to cut dealings with Iran. Although Singapore had been left off the first list of nations exempted from U.S. sanctions, it secured the reprieve after showing a significant dip in oil imports from Tehran. Shipping data shows the Iranian owned supertanker Leadership, which is set to arrive in Singapore sometime in early October, departed Iranian waters this week." http://t.uani.com/RgE0Ns

Bloomberg: "KRBL Ltd. (KRB), India's biggest basmati rice exporter, plans to seek new markets in Africa to counter international sanctions against Iran and revive profit amid sliding grain prices... The company has scaled back outbound shipments to Iran after some buyers in the Persian Gulf nation defaulted on payments as the rial slumped amid trade sanctions imposed by the U.S. and the European Union to discourage what they say is the Persian Gulf country's pursuit of a nuclear bomb. Iran says its atomic program is for peaceful purposes. Two Iranian private companies owed nine Indian rice exporters about 1.84 billion rupees ($33 million) as of February, Jyotiraditya Scindia, junior trade minister, said on March 14." http://t.uani.com/R3v7D1

Vancouver Sun: "Despite repeated Harper government boasting about imposing some of the toughest sanctions against Iran, newly released documents show Canadian customs agents are stretched thin - and have been missing some shipments intended for Iran's surreptitious nuclear program. The documents raise questions about the effectiveness of Canadian sanctions - and whether efforts to prevent Iran from acquiring Canadian technology for its nuclear program are mere rhetoric given a lack of resources and personnel... The Canada Border Ser-vices Agency is responsible for enforcing those prohibitions - and according to the documents, there have been some successes. A paper prepared by the agency's counter-proliferation intelligence section in October said that since July 2010, when the sanctions were first imposed, the agency had seized 14 shipments worth about $3.96 million." http://t.uani.com/RgGPOE

Human Rights

AFP: "Two leading rights groups on Tuesday called for an end to international cash and technical assistance to Iran's anti-drug campaign, which they said was bolstering a rise in executions. In 2010 and 2011, Iran executed more than 1,000 drug offenders, more than triple the number in the previous two years, according to Harm Reduction International, a narcotics lobbying group which issued the call with Human Rights Watch. UN agencies, Canada, Japan and European nations have provided millions of dollars in the past decade to support drug control efforts in Iran and neighboring countries that are intended to reduce the supply and demand of illicit drugs, the two groups said. However the assistance has made it 'easier to prosecute alleged offenders based on unfair trials, and even apply the death sentence under the draconian drug laws of Iran's revolutionary courts,' said Rebecca Schleifer of HRW." http://t.uani.com/PeyqYG
Foreign Affairs 

Reuters: "North Korea's figurehead head of state, not supreme leader Kim Jong-un, will attend a summit of non-aligned developing nations in Iran next week, Pyonyang's official KCNA news agency reported on Thursday. There had been rumors Kim, who succeeded his father Kim Jong-il in December, would visit Tehran to mark his first trip abroad as leader of the isolated and impoverished state. However, KCNA said figurehead leader Kim Yong-nam would represent the North at the summit for developing nations not tied to any major political alliances." http://t.uani.com/R3qXuR

AFP: "Iran is to host some 30 leaders, including those of India, Egypt and Cuba, at an August 30-31 summit of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) that officials are billing as proof the Islamic republic is not as isolated as the West would like. 'So far, more than 100 countries have said they are ready to participate, and around 30 nations will be represented by presidents, prime ministers or vice-presidents, which is a very good number,' Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi told the ISNA news agency. The Tehran summit, foreign ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said, 'is the greatest political summit in Iran's history.'" http://t.uani.com/R3uaKI 

Opinion & Analysis

Ray Takeyh in The National Interest: "More than thirty years after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini came to power-and two decades after his passing-the Islamic Republic remains an outlier in international relations. Other non-Western, revolutionary regimes eventually eschewed a rigidly ideological foreign policy and accepted the fundamental legitimacy of the international system. But Iran's leaders have remained committed to Khomeini's worldview. The resilience of Iran's Islamist ideology in the country's foreign policy is striking. China's present-day foreign policy isn't structured according to Mao's thought, nor is Ho Chi Minh the guiding light behind Vietnam's efforts to integrate into the Asian community. But Iran's leadership clings to policies derived largely from Khomeini's ideological vision even when such policies are detrimental to the country's other stated national interests and even when a sizable portion of the ruling elite rejects them. Many Western observers of Iran don't understand that its foreign policy has been fashioned largely to sustain an ideological identity. Thus, we can't understand Iran's foreign relations and its evident hostility by just assessing its international environment or the changing Mideast power balance. These things matter. But Iran's revolutionary elite also seeks to buttress the regime's ideological identity by embracing a confrontational posture. The question then becomes why the Iranian leadership continues to maintain this ideological template so long after its revolutionary emergence. After all, other revolutionary regimes, after initially using foreign policy for ideological purposes, later moved away from that approach. Why has China become more pragmatic but not Iran? The answer is that the Islamic Republic is different from its revolutionary counterparts in that the ideology of its state is its religion. It may be a politicized and radicalized variation of Shia Islam, but religion is the official dogma. Thus, a dedicated core of supporters inevitably remained loyal to this religious ideology long after Khomeini himself disappeared from the scene. Revolutionary regimes usually change when their ardent supporters grow disillusioned and abandon the faith. It is, after all, much easier to be an ex-Marxist than an ex-Shiite. In one instance, renouncing one's faith is political defection; in the other, apostasy. Although the Islamic Republic has become widely unpopular, for a small but fervent segment of the population it is still an important experiment in realizing God's will on earth. To understand this, it helps to review some pertinent Iranian history, beginning with the thought and actions of Ayatollah Khomeini. Khomeini offered a unique challenge to the concept of the nation-state and the prevailing norms of the international system. The essence of his message was that the vitality of his Islamist vision at home was contingent on its relentless export. Moreover, because God's vision was not to be confined to a single nation, Iran's foreign policy would be an extension of its domestic revolutionary turmoil. For the grand ayatollah, the global order was divided between two competing entities-states whose priorities were defined by Western conventions; and Iran, whose ostensible purpose was to redeem a divine mandate. Of course, no country can persist on ideology alone. Iran had to operate its economy, deal with regional exigencies and meet the demands of its growing population. But its international relations would be characterized by revolutionary impulses continually struggling against the pull of pragmatism. Khomeini's internationalism had to have an antagonist, a foil against which to define itself. And a caricatured concept of the West became the central pillar of his Islamist imagination. The Western powers were rapacious imperialists determined to exploit Iran's wealth for their own aggrandizement." http://t.uani.com/O85Gjb 

NYDN Editorial Board: "UN Secretary General Ban Ki- m oon made the fateful announcement Wednesday: He will attend the summit of nonaligned nations in Tehran - handing a massive propaganda victory to the belligerent, anti-Semitic regime of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. What is Ban thinking? Or let's put it another way: Is Ban thinking at all? Just five days ago, he mildly rebuked Iran's leaders for engaging in what Ban called 'offensive and inflammatory' rhetoric. Actually, Ahmadinejad and Khamenei had gone on a death-to-Israel tear. 'The Zionist regime and the Zionists are a cancerous tumor,' Ahmadinejad declared, adding: 'The nations of the region will soon finish off the usurper Zionists in the Palestinian land... A new Middle East will definitely be formed. With the grace of God and help of the nations, in the new Middle East there will be no trace of the Americans and Zionists.' The U.S. and Israel had pleaded with Ban to skip the diplo-meetings as a statement that Iran is at present a nation non grata and to prevent Ahmadinejad from exploiting Ban's prestige. No such sanity emerged from a world leader who had previously shown good sense while surrounded by the UN's blackguards. At the worst moment, Ban is giving Ahmadinejad a stunning public relations coup with a gesture that he can trumpet as an imprimatur of respectability." http://t.uani.com/OyoNFa 

Eye on Iran is a periodic news summary from United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) a program of the American Coalition Against Nuclear Iran, Inc., a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Eye on Iran is not intended as a comprehensive media clips summary but rather a selection of media elements with discreet analysis in a PDA friendly format. For more information please email Press@UnitedAgainstNuclearIran.com

United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) is a non-partisan, broad-based coalition that is united in a commitment to prevent Iran from fulfilling its ambition to become a regional super-power possessing nuclear weapons.  UANI is an issue-based coalition in which each coalition member will have its own interests as well as the collective goal of advancing an Iran free of nuclear weapons.

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