Thursday, March 27, 2014

Eye on Iran: Iran Heads for 5th Month of Oil Exports Above Sanctions Limit








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Reuters: "Iran's oil exports have stayed above levels allowed under Western sanctions for a fifth month, according to sources who track tanker movements, in a further sign that a deal to ease some restrictions is helping Tehran sell more crude. Under the deal, Iran's exports are supposed to be held at an average 1 million bpd for the six months to July 20. But shipments to Asia have topped that level at least since November, according to ship tracking data. The Obama administration believes that exports will fall in coming months and on average will fall to the 1 million bpd level stipulated by the interim agreement which went into effect on January 20. Iran's crude exports have averaged 1.3 million barrels per day (bpd) in March, down from 1.4 million bpd in February, said one of the sources. That is still an elevated rate, as imports of Iranian oil in 2013 averaged 1.1 million bpd. A second tanker tracking source said Iranian crude exports, excluding to Japan, reached 1.28 million bpd in March and included sales to top buyers such as China and India as well as South Korea, Turkey and Tehran's major ally Syria. That points to steady Iranian shipments overall, he added." http://t.uani.com/NYMWZm

RFE/RL: "Rights group Amnesty International says Iran and Iraq were responsible for a 'sharp global spike' in executions last year. Salil Shetty, Amnesty's Secretary-General, said the two states had indulged in a 'virtual killing spree.' The findings of the annual report on the death penalty were presented on March 26 in London by Audrey Gaughran, director of global issues for Amnesty International. 'Almost 100 more people were put to death in 2013 compared to 2012. The countries responsible for that sharp spike are largely Iran and Iraq,' said Gaughran... In Iran, officially acknowledged executions had risen to at least 369 in 2013 -- from at least 314 in 2012, but Amnesty said at least another 335 executions had been reported to them by sources. Gaughran said Hassan Rohani's presidency had not had any positive impact toward abolishing the death penalty. 'We haven't seen any positive developments since the new president came into office in relation to the death penalty,' said Gaughran. 'In fact we have seen, as this report highlights, an increase in executions in Iran this year. We are deeply concerned by a number of factors around those executions, including the fact that many of the trials are grossly unfair trials. Death sentences are given out for drug related offenses.'" http://t.uani.com/OXEV87

Reuters: "Iran aims to increase its gasoline imports over the next year, a senior Iranian oil official said on Thursday, as the country has stopped using domestic petrochemical plants to produce the fuel... 'Iran will triple gasoline imports in the next Iranian calendar year,' Iran's semi-official Mehr news agency quoted the head of the National Iranian Oil Products Distribution Company, Mostafa Kashkouli, as saying on March 4. 'It will be around 11 million litres.' ... The National Iranian Oil Co.'s director of international affairs in 2010, Ali Asghar Arshi, said Iran had become self-sufficient in producing gasoline and also other top oil ministry officials were quoted by Iranian media as saying that 'Iran won't have to rely on imports anymore.' Many analysts were skeptical, saying it was part of the country's 'political and psychological' propaganda to cope with sanctions." http://t.uani.com/1jQ72j2
      
Nuclear Program & Negotiations

Al-Monitor: "A conservative Iranian analyst has said that the upper echelon of the political system had made the decision before the 2013 elections to address Iran's disagreements with the international community and needed someone with Hassan Rouhani's background to implement the necessary policies. 'I think the system had the intention to make a calculated move in the field of international engagement,' Amir Mohebbian, a political analyst and editor of Arya News, told Mosallas magazine. 'Neither [Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad could play this role, nor was it expedient for this to fall in the hands of the Reformists, who do not have the strength for a project this important. Naturally, Rouhani, with his experience and his particular security perspective, had the necessary skill for this matter.'" http://t.uani.com/1eUoTpc

Sanctions Enforcement & Impact

FT: "Washington is 'bullying' UK banks into refusing to support legal exports to Iran, costing British companies hundreds of millions of pounds in lost sales, senior politicians claimed at Westminster on Wednesday. While US exports to Iran have been rising, Washington is suspected by British parliamentarians of using extraterritorial threats to hinder UK companies wanting to legally export food, pharmaceuticals and medical devices to Iran. Jack Straw, the former Labour foreign secretary, and Norman Lamont, former Tory chancellor, claim Washington's behaviour is a direct challenge to British sovereignty. 'The US Congress and government would not tolerate this for a moment were the situation reversed,' Mr Straw said. Lord Lamont said Britain 'should not be bullied by the American authorities.'" http://t.uani.com/1eUpQh8

Terrorism

WSJ: "Osama bin Laden's son-in-law was found guilty of conspiring to kill Americans and of providing material support to terrorists, one of the most prominent al Qaeda operatives to be convicted in a U.S. civilian court... Mr. Abu Ghaith fled Afghanistan in April 2002 to Iran, where he was detained along with senior al Qaeda leaders. While in Iran, he married bin Laden's daughter, Fatima, as his second wife. In February 2013, Mr. Abu Ghaith left Iran for Turkey, where he was arrested by Jordanian authorities and handed off to U.S. law enforcement on a layover in Amman." http://t.uani.com/1dviToo

Domestic Politics

Reuters: "Looming fuel price rises in Iran will be the first major test of President Hassan Rouhani's ability to retain public support in the face of attacks from his hardline rivals... He has promised more social freedoms and repaired some of the economic damage of the sanctions; the rial currency has stabilized and sky-high inflation has started to come down. But this could be threatened if Rouhani's government mishandles planned cuts in the massive state subsidies which keep domestic prices of gasoline and other fuels far below global levels. The cuts are a key part of Rouhani's efforts to reform the economy after years of erratic management under his predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. But they will be painful for many Iranians and therefore eat into Rouhani's political capital, which he needs to overcome domestic resistance to a nuclear deal. 'People voted for Rouhani in the hope that he would decrease their living costs, not increase them,' said Karim Sadjadpour, an Iran expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in the United States." http://t.uani.com/1loybhv

Foreign Affairs

AP: "In his first visit to Afghanistan as Iran's president, Hassan Rouhani called for regional unity Thursday as regional leaders celebrated the Persian New Year in Kabul. Rouhani is visiting at a crucial time for Afghanistan, with national elections being held in just over a week and most U.S. and allied troops withdrawing by year's end. With Western influence diminishing in Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan, Tajikistan and other countries are vying to fill the vacuum. The Iranian leader, accompanied by his foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, also met separately with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Tajik President Emomali Rahmon for a summit of Farsi-speaking countries to discuss ways to increase cooperation between their three countries, according to the semiofficial Fars news agency. Dari, a dialect of Farsi, and Pashto are the official languages of Afghanistan." http://t.uani.com/1dQov7w

Opinion & Analysis

Michael Doran in Mosaic: "But the real consequences of the Syria debacle can be seen with respect to Iran. If the Iranians understand one thing, the president assured Jeffrey Goldberg, it's that, if cornered, he will resort to military force to stop them from acquiring a nuclear weapon. But, just as in Syria, Obama's primary goal in Iran is to avoid ever being cornered. Gary Samore, a former Obama White House official, has expressed it with admirable clarity: 'Our strategy is to buy time.' Unfortunately, time does not come cheap. Although the president insists that a policy of delaying the arrival of an Iranian nuclear bomb is perfectly consistent with a policy of preventing its arrival altogether, in fact the two aims are largely incompatible. Delay comes at the cost of prevention. Stopping Iran's march toward nuclear capability would require instilling in Ali Khamenei the certain knowledge that if he fails to drop his program, he will suffer economic ruin, or a devastating military attack, or both. To be successful, therefore, the interim diplomacy must be carried out under a hard deadline. The Iranians must be left in no doubt whatsoever that failure to reach a deal by a date certain will leave them in a much worse position than before the negotiations ever started. Obama's diplomacy fails this elementary test. Rather than forcing Khamenei to make a hard choice, the 'interim deal' struck in Geneva last November explicitly offers him an escape route: endless negotiations. According to the terms of that deal, diplomacy can be extended indefinitely. Although defenders of the administration downplay the significance of this fact, claiming that the Iranian program is 'frozen' during the period of negotiations, that claim is false. The program advances even as the diplomats haggle. For one thing, the interim deal is silent on ballistic missiles and warheads, two key components of any nuclear program. For another thing, although the deal does extract concessions on centrifuges and enrichment, even in these areas the Iranians are still moving forward. In recent congressional testimony, David Albright, a leading expert on counter-proliferation, pointed to a major loophole in the agreement that allows continued 'research and development' on second-generation centrifuges. Since, he explains, these so-called IR-2Ms are more efficient than the first-generation machines currently in operation, 'At the end of the interim period Iran is likely to be far better positioned to deploy reliable IR-2m centrifuges on a mass scale at its enrichment plants. This gain would allow Iran to make up for time lost more quickly.' Over the next months, we can expect Khamenei's negotiators to test Obama's red lines. What then? If the president finds himself compelled to assume a firm posture, as he did with Syria last fall, the Iranians might present him with a fig leaf in the form of a revamped interim deal. For example, they might agree to dismantle first-generation centrifuges in return for the right to replace them with IR-2Ms, thereby increasing the program's overall capacity to enrich uranium with a decreased number of centrifuges. Would Obama reject such a deal and launch a military strike, or would he embrace it in order to buy more time? Odds are, he'd embrace it. Congress would certainly balk, but the big showdown between Capitol Hill and the White House would not come, if ever, until after this year's mid-term elections, by which time the president will be less constrained by domestic critics. In addition, he could deal with those critics as his staffers did when November's interim deal was first announced, painting dissenters in Congress as warmongers and subtly suggesting that they are dancing to the tune of a foreign power (i.e., Israel). At the same time, the president could turn to the American people and proclaim, 'Just as I forced Assad to give up chemical weapons, I have now compelled Iran to destroy nuclear infrastructure.' In brief, it is undoubtedly the case that Obama's policies have weakened the deterrent credibility of the United States everywhere. While many are now decrying the results of that weakness in the case of Ukraine, its effects are even more directly visible, and more alarming, in the case of Iran. Maybe, just maybe, the president will keep his promise to prevent Iran from going nuclear on his watch. But the emphasis is entirely on the last phrase-on his watch. That's very different from a policy aimed at preventing Iran from going nuclear, period. Meanwhile, interim deal or no interim deal, Tehran, as aware of American election cycles as is Barack Obama himself, steadily moves toward a point within a hair's breadth of an undetectable breakout capability." http://t.uani.com/1gFwMkq

Ephraim Asculai & Emily B. Landau in INSS: "The claim by US negotiator Wendy Sherman that 'verification' is the key element in ensuring that the Iranian nuclear program is and remains completely peaceful has resonated in a string of US statements in the same vein, aimed to reassure skeptics that the United States will be able to detect and deal in a timely manner with an Iranian breakout to nuclear weapons. However, while verification is no doubt an essential component of any comprehensive deal with Iran, it should not be regarded as the linchpin of a successful agreement. Placing so much weight on successful verification is a dangerous proposition, and raises the concern that the P5+1 may be willing to entertain a deal that does not dismantle all the key components of Iran's program that support military ambitions. The role of verification is to ensure that Iran upholds its commitment to remain non-nuclear, but verification is no substitute for the commitment itself... The true key to a successful deal with Iran is not verification; it is, rather, clear indication that Iran has opted to abandon its military nuclear ambitions. If Iran decides to do so, the problematic aspects of its program would be rendered unnecessary. Moreover, verification, while helpful, is not guaranteed to stop Iran in time. The history of intelligence in general, and of verification in particular, is replete with instances of failure. The limitations inherent in verification attempts as well as past experience in actual verification missions demand extreme caution in this regard. The role of verification is to ensure that Iran upholds its commitment to remain non-nuclear, but verification is no substitute for the commitment itself. In order to convince Iran to back away from its military intentions, the leverage that accrues from strong international pressure is critical. In addition, it must be made fully clear that for decades Iran has been working on a military nuclear program while cheating on its NPT commitment. Iran's current and consistent narrative is that it does not have, and never had, military nuclear ambitions. Yet Iran cannot be allowed to hold onto the claim that it has done no wrong; otherwise it can say that it is being required to back away from something that does not exist. As such, clarifying what is known as the Possible Military Dimensions (PMD) of Iran's nuclear program must be an integral part of any comprehensive deal. On this critical PMD issue, Sherman has not communicated a determined, unequivocal US stance... Exaggerated and unwarranted expectations regarding the ability of the IAEA to verify Iranian compliance with a nuclear deal could end in disaster. The only true basis for a comprehensive deal with Iran is if it owns up to its military program and agrees to dismantle - as Assad did in the chemical realm last summer. Excessive reliance on verification as the key to a successful deal is an illusion. There is no basis in reality for the expectation that verification and intelligence - which are not actions in and of themselves, but only the basis upon which international actors can then take action - will enable these actors to coordinate and respond to an Iranian breakout in time." http://t.uani.com/1hx5aJj

Mansour Osanlou in ICHRI: "As an Iranian labor activist, I have always looked for models that my country can follow to improve. Striking a balance between worker rights, economic developments, international trade, and vital social-programs is indeed no easy task, especially for countries with troubled pasts. Charged with unprecedented challenges after transitioning to a democracy in 1985, Brazil has pleasantly surprised the world. Brazil today is a global player that has become a model for emerging states like Iran to follow, particularly with regards to labor rights and human rights. As a labor organizer and head of the Tehran Bus Drivers Union, I am well aware of the obstacles workers face in Iran. For most Iranians, wages are dangerously low, health and safety in the workplace is non-existent, and needed social programs are being slashed. Yet, in Iran, advocating for the rights workers and the poor is out of the question. Even contemplating organizing union meetings or engaging in strikes, for example, can bring about devastating consequences. I know this from personal experience. I was imprisoned for more than five years. I was physically tortured, and threatened with death and rape. My wife and children were harassed, jailed, and abused. My alleged crime: advocating for higher wages for bus drivers. Can a country progress when its government doesn't tolerate the divergent views of its own citizens? Can ordinary Iranians find dignity in work when they can't advocate for better conditions? Contrary to the new government's public relations efforts, the human rights situation has not improved since President Hassan Rouhani assumed office eight months ago. And for workers, things are bleak. The new government has set a minimum wages that cover only a fourth of what working families actually need to sustain their livelihoods. On average, five workers die everyday in unsafe construction sites and factories. Workers that complain can be called into 'Herasat (Security) Offices' - found in most public companies, technical guilds, and all universities, and staffed by representatives of the Ministry of Intelligence - and dismissed from their jobs. And while recent sanctions have certainly hurt the Iranian economy, most of these and other anti-worker policies pre-date sanctions. Just a couple of weeks ago, two workers from the Tehran Bus Company who were seeking to reopen the company's union were arrested. Hassan Saedi and Morteza Komsari had carried out informal meetings where they taught workers the basics of advocacy, highlighted the rights they were entitled to, and gathered signatures for a petition advocating for the union's reopening. After collecting over 2,000 signatures, they handed their petition over to the Iranian Ministry of Labor. A week later, they were arrested without any real explanation and amid accusations of 'acting against public order and national security'. Whereas Iran continues to take steps backwards, Brazil has made significant improvements over the last decade. As a child worker himself and a member of the ABC metalworkers union, former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva carried out significant reforms and advocated for the dignity of workers. Victories like when Lula's government's successfully secured wage increases for 40,000 São Paulo metalworkers in 2010 have become a source of inspiration for us in the Iranian labor movement and a road map of where we can go. Iranian workers don't just need Brazil to be a role model, however. Brazil must also be an ally in the pursuit of human rights." http://t.uani.com/1hdIamk

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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