Top Stories
AP: "Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani said his country will press efforts to ward off
military action by the U.S. and its allies against the Tehran-backed
regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad, Iranian state TV reported on
Thursday. The report said the remarks came late Wednesday during a phone conversation
between Rouhani and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin. Rouhani was
quoted as saying 'military action will bring great costs for the region'
and 'it is necessary to apply all efforts to prevent it.' According to
the report, he said both Iran and Russia would work in 'extensive
cooperation' to prevent any military action against Syria. Rouhani also
called such military action an 'open violation' of international
laws." http://t.uani.com/18n0129
Reuters: "Iran's
Revolutionary Guards chief said a U.S. military attack on Syria would
lead to the 'imminent destruction' of Israel and would prove a 'second
Vietnam' for America, according to an Iranian news agency. ... Mohammad
Ali Jafari, commander of Iran's powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps, said in an interview late on Wednesday with the Tasnim news agency
that a U.S. strike on Syria would not help Israel. 'An attack on Syria
will mean the imminent destruction of Israel,' Jafari said, according to
Tasnim." http://t.uani.com/18ndLtG
Reuters: "A
U.N. nuclear agency report that Iran has boosted its uranium enrichment
capacity led to a renewed a call on Wednesday in the U.S. Congress for
tighter sanctions on Tehran over its nuclear program. The International
Atomic Energy Agency's quarterly report - the first since relative
moderate Hassan Rouhani won Iran's June presidential election - said Iran
has installed about 1,000 advanced uranium enrichment centrifuges and is
set to test them. 'This IAEA report makes clear that Iran continues to
rapidly expand its nuclear weapons program and underscores the urgency of
Congress passing new Iran sanctions legislation into law,' Eliot Engel,
the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said in a
statement." http://t.uani.com/19PTFvi
UANI Corporate
Campaigns
Algemeiner:
"New York City's Warwick Hotel will not count the Iranian delegation
among its guests during this year's United Nations General Assembly,
breaking a controversial two-year run of playing host to the Islamic State's
official representatives. United Against a Nuclear Iran, an advocacy
group that works to persuade companies against doing business with Iran
in an effort to dissuade the country from pursuing its ambition to obtain
nuclear weapons, has lobbied the hotel in past years to have the
delegation refused accommodation, and said on Tuesday it was pleased by
the news. 'This year, the Warwick made the right decision. Any hotel that
hosts [Iranian President Hassan] Rouhani and the Iranian delegation will
be putting profit above principle, and subjecting its guests and the New
York community to great inconvenience,' UANI CEO, Ambassador Mark D.
Wallace said in a statement." http://t.uani.com/19PCsSA
Finweek:
"New York-based lobby group against Iran, United Against Nuclear
Iran (UANI), which has been calling for Sasol and MTN to stop doing
business in Iran for quite some time, applauded Sasol for ending its
business in the Islamic republic. UANI Spokesperson Nathan Carleton told
Finweek in an email that this was the right decision, adding, 'We hope
that Sasol considered the views of the American people in this matter,
particularly those in the state of Louisiana, where they plan to do
extensive business. Sasol had to make a choice: do business in Iran, or
do business in the US.' Portfolio Manager at Vestact Byron Lotter says
that it was a simple situation-especially considering that the energy and
chemical company was investing as much as its market cap equivalent in
North America's Louisiana-Sasol had to make the choice between the US and
Iran. 'The US relations with Sasol are core to its future,' Lotter told
Finweek, adding that he did not think that Sasol's relations with the US
were in any way becoming sour." http://t.uani.com/1dtmra0
South Florida
Sun-Sentinel: "The Jewish Community Relations
Council of the Jewish Federation of Palm Beach County on Sunday hosted a
special briefing in West Palm Beach on 'Preventing a Nuclear-Armed Iran.'
Bob Feferman, the Midwest coordinator for the advocacy group, United Against
Nuclear Iran (UANI), was featured speaker. Feferman began his address by
lauding Florida, saying the Sunshine State'"has led the way on state
divestment from Iran and Sudan since 2007,' with 'strong support' from
the Jewish Community Relations Councils of Greater Miami, Palm Beach and
South Palm Beach County, Broward County, and Tampa, as well as the ADL,
Sudan Divestment Task Force and the interfaith community across the
state. 'Your state has led the nation in efforts to stop a nuclear Iran,'
he said. ... Feferman said UANI urges that more pressure be put on
companies doing business with Iran and proposes a full economic blockade
of the Iranian Regime. 'Either [companies] choose to do business in Iran
- or in the U.S. - not both,' he said." http://t.uani.com/192phg4
Nuclear Program
& Sanctions
NY Times:
"In their first report since a new Iranian president took office,
international nuclear inspectors said Wednesday that Iran was slowing its
accumulation of uranium that could be quickly turned into fuel for an
atomic bomb. The new report also disclosed that Iran had agreed to hold a
new round of talks with the inspectors next month to discuss outstanding
issues, including what the West sees as military aspects of Iran's
nuclear program. The last such meeting, in May, ended with no agreement
on how to proceed. But the quarterly report by the International Atomic
Energy Agency also detailed how Iran is expanding its installation of a
new generation of advanced equipment for the purification of uranium, which
can fuel nuclear reactors or atomic bombs. Iran has long insisted that
its program is entirely peaceful, which the West disputes." http://t.uani.com/14Gpnur
Bloomberg:
"Iran's interest in better relations with the West is likely to keep
nuclear talks on track even if the U.S. and allies attack Iranian ally
Syria to punish it for using chemical weapons, analysts said. ... The
proposed strikes against Syria, denounced by Iranian leaders, may delay
that process without derailing it. The U.S. has warned it's ready to use
force against Iran, too, to stop it obtaining atomic weapons. Rohani,
whose mandate for economic revival requires an easing of the tensions,
will probably win out over any hardliners advocating anti-Western
policies in solidarity with Syria, said Volker Perthes, director of the
Berlin-based German Institute for International and Security Affairs,
which advises Chancellor Angela Merkel's government. 'Strikes would make
Iran see that the U.S. is serious about red lines,' Perthes said in a phone
interview. While there'll be protests from Iran, 'the pragmatists will
win the day by saying "Look, we don't like the U.S. but we have to
deal with them."'" http://t.uani.com/1427Zlk
Syria Conflict
Eli Lake in the
Daily Beast: "For more than a year, as President
Obama has considered the options for military intervention in Syria, the
specter of an Iranian retaliation has weighed heavily on the White House.
Recent U.S. intelligence assessments are not entirely comforting, but one
silver lining is that for now the government's analysts do not expect
Iran to attempt terrorist attacks outside the Middle East or Afghanistan
in the event of limited U.S. air strikes on Syria, according to U.S.
officials who spoke with The Daily Beast on the condition of anonymity.
Although Iran as recently as 2011 plotted a terrorist attack in
Washington, D.C., a statement Wednesday from the country's supreme
leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, hinted that Iran would focus
retaliation inside the Middle East. After meeting with members of Iran's
new cabinet, Khamenei said American 'threats and possible intervention in
Syria are a disaster for the region and if such an act is done,
certainly, the Americans will sustain damage like when they interfered in
Iraq and Afghanistan.'" http://t.uani.com/1a1R3Or
Human
Rights
AP:
"The United States on Wednesday repeated its call for Tehran to help
three Americans - Robert Levinson, Amir Hekmati and Saeed Abedini -
return to their families after lengthy detentions in Iran. The State
Department said in a statement that the U.S. is "respectfully"
requesting the assistance from Iran's new president, Hasan Rouhani, who
is seen as more moderate than his predecessor. Previous requests made to
former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad used slightly harsher rhetoric.
'President Rouhani has shared in his speeches and interviews over the
past few months his hope and vision to improve the Government of the
Islamic Republic of Iran's relationship with the world,' the statement
said in the latest plea for the release of the three." http://t.uani.com/12OShaf
Domestic
Politics
AP:
"Iran's state TV is reporting the country has appointed its first
ever Foreign Ministry spokeswoman. The Thursday report quotes Foreign
Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif as saying Marzieh Afkham has been appointed
spokesperson for the country's diplomatic apparatus. Afkham has been
working in the ministry for nearly 30 years and was head of its public
relations department under former reformist President Mohammad Khatami."
http://t.uani.com/17omQnb
Foreign Affairs
Terrorism
Reuters:
"Nigeria charged two citizens on Wednesday with assisting an Iranian
militant cell in planning possible attacks on Israeli targets, accusing
one of traveling to Tehran and Dubai, United Arab Emirates, to receive
cash and of knowing about spying on Israeli interests. The two, Abdullahi
Mustapha Berende and Saheed Oluremi Adewumi, were arrested in February
and are accused of being members of a 'high-profile terrorist network.'
Iran did not respond to the accusations. Mr. Berende is accused of
traveling to Iran to help with "material assistance and terrorist
training" and of knowing about spying on two Israeli targets in
Lagos but failing to alert the police. The charges also say he took $30,000
to carry out operations." http://t.uani.com/1dpKlCk
Opinion &
Analysis
Joseph Menn in
Reuters: "If the United States attacks Syria, it
will be the first time it strikes a country that is capable of waging
retaliatory cyberspace attacks on American targets. The risk is
heightened by Syria's alliance with Iran, which has built up its cyber
capability in the past three years, and already gives the country
technical and other support. If Iran stood with Syria in any fray with
the United States that would significantly increase the cyber threat,
security experts said. Organized cyber attacks have already been carried
out by the Syrian Electronic Army (SEA), a hacking group loyal to the
government of President Bashar al-Assad. It has disrupted the websites of
U.S. media and Internet companies and is now threatening to step up such
hacking if Washington bombs Damascus. 'It's likely that the Syrian
Electronic Army does something in response, perhaps with some assistance
from Iranian-related groups,' said former White House cybersecurity and
counter terror advisor Richard Clarke. Little is known about the hackers
behind the Syrian Electronic Army, and there is no evidence that the
group is capable of destructive attacks on critical infrastructure.
However, former U.S. National Security Agency director Michael Hayden
told Reuters that the SEA 'sounds like an Iranian proxy,' and it could
have much greater ability than it has displayed." http://t.uani.com/19PSFXW
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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
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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
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