Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Eye on Iran: White House and Top Democrat Clash Over Iran's Nuclear Program








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FP: "The long-simmering fight between the White House and the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has roared back to life over the Obama administration's efforts to rein in Iran's nuclear program. On Tuesday, Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) announced his desire to pass new legislation to sanction Iran's economy before Congress's session ends next week -- despite the White House's repeated warnings that such a bill would derail the fragile negotiations taking place on the international stage in Vienna. 'If we continue down this course we will weaken ourselves to a point that Iranians will think there's no credible military threat on the table any more,' Menendez said at a Wall Street Journal event. 'They will believe the sanctions will never be reimposed.' Menendez and the White House have clashed over this issue for more than year, but the dispute is reaching new depths, with the White House planning to hold a Situation Room briefing on Wednesday with top Democrats but not Menendez, and declining to send any senior officials to Menendez's open Iran hearing planned for the same day. Unlike a variety of top Democrats who issued statements of support for a seven-month extension of the negotiations last month, Menendez has openly blasted administration efforts to reach a deal that would curb the size of Iran's nuclear enrichment program in exchange for sanctions relief." http://t.uani.com/1rTeBif

AFP: "Top US diplomats will this week make a 'strong case' to lawmakers to hold off on fresh Iran sanctions, hoping to avoid an ugly political showdown which could scupper nuclear talks. Acting Deputy Secretary Wendy Sherman, who has led the tense, secretive negotiations for months, will be at the vanguard of an administration drive to persuade Congress not to push ahead with draft legislation which would slap even more punitive sanctions on Iran. Hawkish lawmakers are eager to pass new sanctions through Congress aiming to prod the Islamic republic into a lasting deal that prevents Iranian leaders from developing a nuclear weapon... Sherman will brief lawmakers behind closed doors on Thursday, a State Department spokeswoman said Tuesday, ahead of a flurry of consultations over the next two weeks... 'We will make a very strong case to them why now is not the time for new sanctions,' deputy State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf told reporters of Sherman's planned meetings in Congress." http://t.uani.com/1wraMSa

WSJ: "A wild card in the seven months of extended negotiations between the U.S. and Iran over its nuclear program is the continuing plunge in global oil prices and its impact on Tehran's finances. U.S. and European officials said they had a growing sense earlier this year that Tehran and its Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei believed they were weathering the West's international sanctions - despite the halving of Iranian oil exports since 2012, largely driven by a European embargo. Under an interim agreement reached with the West a year ago, Iran has been receiving $700 million in monthly payments from oil revenues frozen in overseas accounts... But pressure on Iran's finances has re-emerged over the past week, potentially giving the U.S. more leverage in the nuclear talks, which were extended last week until July. The failure of Iran and global powers to reach a comprehensive agreement in Vienna by a Nov. 24 deadline depressed the rial and the Tehran Stock Exchange, according to Tehran-based businessmen. Optimism had been growing in Iran's business community that a deal was imminent that would bring an easing of Western sanctions... Even more problematic for Iran, though, was the decision by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, last Thursday to maintain its production output levels. The decision has led crude oil exports to plunge below $70 a barrel from over $110 in recent years." http://t.uani.com/11TQlQF

   
Nuclear Program & Negotiations

Reuters: "The U.N. atomic agency says it needs an extra 4.6 million euros ($5.67 million) from member states to finance monitoring of an extended nuclear deal between Iran and six world powers, a document seen by Reuters said on Wednesday... In a confidential note to member states ahead of an extraordinary IAEA board meeting next week to discuss the issue, the U.N. agency said it estimated the cost of its extended monitoring work at 5.5 million euros. A part of this would be covered internally and by earlier unspent contributions, but an additional 4.6 million euros 'of voluntary extra budgetary contributions would be required'. IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano 'invites member states which are in a position to do so to make the necessary funding available for the continuation of the agency's monitoring and verification' in Iran, it added. Because of the deal's political importance, diplomats have said there should be no problem raising the required funds... The IAEA earlier this year asked for contributions of 6.5 million euros to cover its extra Iran-related costs. Amano last month said the IAEA's 'verification effort in Iran has doubled.'" http://t.uani.com/1rXdoR9

IRNA (Iran): "Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on Tuesday that nuclear talks between Iran and the world six powers are one of the most important issues in the post-Cold War age. Zarif, also the head of Iran's nuclear negotiating team, made the remarks while addressing a meeting of university students in Tehran. Hosted by Tehran's Tabatabaei University, the meeting was dubbed the 'Nuclear Diplomacy.'" http://t.uani.com/1w0ZLre

Congressional Sanctions Debate

The Hill: "Senate Republicans are stepping up pressure on President Obama to place sanctions on Iran. The Senate Republican Policy Committee posted a statement on its website saying that Obama should request that the Congress impose new sanctions in Iran before the end of the year. If Obama doesn't make the request, the committee said it should become 'an early order of business for the next Congress in January,' when Republicans take over the chamber." http://t.uani.com/1wrhnfD

The Hill: "Placing additional sanctions on Iran would 'blow up' negotiations over the country's nuclear program, national security adviser Susan Rice said Tuesday. 'The P5+1 would fracture, the international community would blame the United States rather than Iran for the collapse of the negotiations, and the Iranians would conclude that there's little point in pursuing this process at the negotiating table,' Rice said at a conference hosted by The Wall Street Journal." http://t.uani.com/1ykttGN

Sanctions Relief

AFP: "US car manufacturers remain barred from doing business in Iran even though European automakers are eyeing huge deals as sanctions are eased against the Islamic republic, a US official said Tuesday. France's PSA Peugeot-Citroen was in 'intense' talks about resuming production in Iran, halted since March 2012, a company representative said in Tehran on Monday at the start of the Iran Auto Show. 'We are aware of this auto show,' a State Department official told AFP. 'As we have said previously, we do not consider Iran open for business, though our sanctions on foreign companies doing business with Iran's auto sector are suspended,' he said, following an interim deal with Tehran on reining in its suspect nuclear program... 'Put simply, US companies cannot do business in Iran at this time, including in or with Iran's automotive sector.'" http://t.uani.com/1ykpry3

IRNA (Iran): "Trade transactions between Iran and Turkey in the first 10 months of the current year reached $11.229 billion and despite a drop of 10% in comparison with the same figure last year trade between the two countries has taken an upward trend in recent months. Volume of trade between Iran and Turkey amounted to over $12.464 billion in the first 10 months of 2014 showing a decrease of $1.235 billion as compared to the same period last year. Data about Turkey's foreign trade shows that in recent months trade exchanges between the two countries took an upward trend so that in October the volume of bilateral trade reached $1.092 billion which shows an increase as compared to $1.008 billion transactions in October last year. During the same month Turkey's exports to Iran increased by 27.9% and amounted to $339.397 million and its import from Iran increased by 1.2%, amounting to 753.439 million. In the first 10 months of the current year, Turkey's export to Iran amounted to $2.876 billion and its import from Iran was $8.352 billion." http://t.uani.com/11PyOsN

IRNA (Iran): "Spokesman for the Majlis Energy Commission Hossein Amiri Khamkani referred to the reduced dependence of Iran on oil revenues and said the US and Saudi Arabia are willing to exert more pressures on Iran by cutting oil price. Speaking to IRNA, the parliamentarian said the oil price slump has its root in political and economic factors, adding that the Iranian government is used to low oil revenues and during the past year has administered the country with the least amount of oil income. Rejecting pressures imposed on Iran as futile, Khamkani said reduced oil revenues cannot have a significant impact on the economic situation of the country." http://t.uani.com/12l4Igw

Iraq Crisis

LAT: "Iranian warplanes have launched several airstrikes in recent days against Islamic State militants in eastern Iraq, U.S. and Iranian officials said Tuesday, the latest sign that America's longtime adversary is conducting a parallel but largely unacknowledged military campaign in the conflict. At least some of the bombing runs were by F-4 Phantom jets, American-built warplanes provided to Tehran before the 1979 Islamic Revolution that ousted Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, a close U.S. ally. In the shifting political landscape of the latest Iraq war, Tehran and Washington are in effect aligned on the same side and are conducting dual but separate military operations to back the beleaguered Baghdad government... Four Iranian jets attacked Islamic State positions during an offensive in Iraq last month to retake two towns, Saadiya and Jalawla, less than 20 miles from the Iranian border in the eastern province of Diyala, said Hamid Reza Taraghi, a conservative Iranian politician who is well informed on military matters. 'Iran regards the area as a buffer zone and does not tolerate any military threats within that buffer zone,' Taraghi said in an interview in Tehran. He said Iraqi officials 'asked us to be quiet about it.'" http://t.uani.com/1FO0gGh

Human Rights

IHR: "18 people were executed in three different Iranian prisons on Tuesday according to unofficial sources. All the prisoners were convicted of drug-related charges and there were two women and one Afghan citizen among them." http://t.uani.com/1yLmPYU

ICHRI: "In a continuing series of attacks against women in Iran, a suspect has been arrested for the stabbing of six women in the southern town of Jahrom in Fars Province over the past week. The stabbings follow the numerous acid attacks against women in Isfahan over the last few months, which were allegedly linked to vigilante justice that was aimed at punishing 'improper' hijab and encouraged by the Iranian Parliament's proposed 'Plan to Promote Virtue and Prevent Vice.' There is growing concern that the stabbings reflect a continuation of such 'Virtue Plan'-inspired attacks, especially as state officials have rushed to dissociate the suspect in the stabbing attacks from the proposed Parliamentary Plan. Moreover, Saham News reported that the perpetrator is a Basij militia member (an all-volunteer paramilitary force under the supervision of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards, which is used to enforce the regime's ideological dictates) and the Parliament has designated the Basij to be the principal enforcers of the proposed Plan." http://t.uani.com/1HZFkOG

IRNA (Iran): "The UNDP Resident Representative in Iran, Gary Lewis, in Tehran on Monday lauded good cooperation between Iran and the UN about the issues consistent with women and said Iranian women are in a more favorable condition than those in the region. Speaking to the Conference of Women Entrepreneurship in the Islamic Countries, held at Iran Chamber of Commerce, Lewis said Iran has implemented very good programs for women education and health, which is favorable. He lauded suitable and helpful cooperation of Iranian officials with the UN to improve status of women." http://t.uani.com/1vGWXNY

Domestic Politics

Reuters: "Afghanistan will send a delegation to Iran to ask the government to extend temporary visas to allow 760,000 Afghan refugees who have no documents and risk deportation to stay on for at least a year, an Afghan government spokesman said on Wednesday. There are almost 1 million registered Afghan refugees in Iran, according to the United Nations, most of whom arrived before 2001 when U.S.-led troops toppled the hard-line Taliban Islamist regime. But those who arrived afterwards are required to have their permits assessed on an individual basis, making it harder for them to obtain the paperwork needed to be officially registered, according to the United Nation's refugee agency. 'The delegation will request the Iranian government to extend the visas for at least one more year,' said the Afghan chief executive's deputy spokesman, Javid Faisal." http://t.uani.com/1yOteUn

Foreign Affairs

Tasnim (Iran): "Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi lauded Iran for standing by his country in very critical conditions, when other countries were hesitant to help the Arab nation in the face of threats posed by terrorists. 'We are now grappling with the war of life and death, and Iran is standing by us in this war,' Abadi said in an interview with the Lebanese-based Al Mayadeen TV channel. Heaping praise on Iran for not leaving Iraq alone in dire conditions, Abadi made it clear that his government will not ruin ties with its ally and neighbor. 'I would not damage our relations with Iran just because the others want so,' the Iraqi premier underlined. He said Iran rushed to help Iraq and 'never ever had any doubts' even about assisting the Kurdish residents of Arbil when the city faced the threat of ISIL militants, while Americans were hesitating over whether to support Baghdad or not when the capital city was in jeopardy." http://t.uani.com/1rSzXvZ

Reuters: "Iran is seeking a senior post on a United Nations committee that decides accreditation of non-governmental organizations, a move that Israel on Tuesday compared to gangster Al Capone running the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation. Iran was elected to the 19-member committee in April for a four-year term from 2015. The United States and Israel are also members of the committee, which acts as a kind of gatekeeper for rights groups and other NGOs seeking access to U.N. headquarters to lobby and participate in meetings and other events. When Iran was first elected to the committee, the United States sharply criticized it as a 'troubling outcome' because of what it said was Tehran's poor human rights record. The U.S. mission to the United Nations did not respond to a request for comment on Iran's bid to become vice chair of the committee. In a letter obtained by Reuters, Iran presented its candidacy for vice-chair of the committee, which will begin meeting in late January." http://t.uani.com/11TV58E

Opinion & Analysis

Benjamin Weinthal in JPost: "Since the world powers reached an interim agreement to slow down Iran's nuclear weapons program last year, there has been an astonishingly fast-paced change by some European countries and institutions to ignore the Islamic Republic's wretched human rights record. Put simply, a topsy-turvy situation is unfolding where an abnormal regime in Tehran is being mainstreamed as normal. A telling example is an Iran-Italy conference this week in Rome titled 'Protection of Human Rights in the Penal-Judicial System of Iran and Italy.' The head of Iran's Human Rights Council, Mohammad Javad Larijani, appeared at the event. This is the same Larijani who defended the stoning of women and denied the Holocaust at a 2008 German foreign ministry event. According to a Sunday report by the Fars News Agency, which is affiliated with Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps, Larijani said at the conference that Iran is 'the most powerful and advanced democracy in the region.' He lamented that 'since the victory of the Islamic Revolution, there have been many discussions between Iran and the West on different topics, and unfortunately some of these topics have been misunderstood and misinterpreted due to a lack of information about the rational nature of the Islamic Republic system's pillars and its mechanisms.' ... Saba Farzan, a German-Iranian journalist and executive director of the Berlin-based think tank Foreign Policy Circle, told The Jerusalem Post on Sunday, 'The recent joint Iranian- Italian conference in Rome is yet another shameful example of how much European democracies are throwing Iran's civil society heavily under the bus. Europe needs to learn a political lesson urgently: human rights in dictatorships don't improve when you sit down and discuss them with those dictators. On the contrary, as long as any kind of negotiations continue, the Islamic Republic can torture and kill innocent Iranians with impunity.' She added, 'Political sanctions aren't enough to support Iran's democracy activists as long as Iran's leadership doesn't go financially bankrupt. Therefore, tough economic punishment is needed as well so that Iranians won't be punished anymore, but reclaim their freedom and country back.' ... Italy's northern neighbor Austria sent a delegation to visit a sanctioned Iranian university involved in illicit nuclear weapons work. Peter Moser, vice rector of the Montanuniversitat Leoben, along with Hubert Dürrstein, CEO of the Austrian Agency for International Cooperation in Education and Research, traveled in November to Tehran's Sharif University of Technology. Stefan Schaden, a spokesman for the Vienna-based NGO Stop the Bomb, told the Post Iran exploited the visit 'for their propaganda.' In short, Iran's attempts to turn illegal nuclear proliferation activity into a normal part of its social fabric that the West must accept. Schaden also was one of the few voices in Austria to note that Iran's university system engages in ubiquitous discrimination against women, and against ethnic and religious minorities such as the struggling Baha'i community. Erhard Skupa, a spokesman for Montanuniversitat Leoben, told the Post: 'Prior to the visit, Montanuniversitat Leoben checked the legal situation and concluded that a meeting with researchers does not break the embargo.' Skupa's explanation hardly seems to be the point, according to critics who see a kind of institutionalization of a rogue regime in Tehran by European elites. To be fair, at one point, Europe took the business of human rights seriously. In 2012, the European Parliament awarded Iranian human rights attorney Nasrin Sotoudeh its Sakharov human rights prize. The EU's decision to publicize her case probably helped force Iran to release her early from prison in 2013... Some European countries appear to have a short-term memory deficit. European human rights pressure targeting Iran's regime could breathe change into the backward Islamic Republic. With or without an agreement to end Iran's nuclear crisis, human rights will continue, absent external pressure, to be trampled." http://t.uani.com/1wlp86M

Energy Policy Information Center: "This morning, Securing America's Future Energy (SAFE) and Roubini Global Economics (RGE) released a report assessing the impact of current global oil market dynamics on Iran and the ongoing negotiations with the P5+1 over the country's uranium enrichment activities. Today's well supplied oil market, the report finds, has increased the economic challenges facing Iran under current sanctions while also creating room for additional sanctions, potentially tilting the balance in favor of the P5+1 as negotiations extend into 2015. Specifically, if current oil market dynamics persist, Iranian oil export revenue will decline by 25 percent year-over-year in 2015 to $40 billion-well short of Iran's projected budget requirement of more than $70 billion. In 2015, according to EIA's oil price forecast of an $83 average Brent crude oil prices for the year, Iran's oil revenues will drop by $10.2 billion from an estimated $49.6 billion in 2014 to $39.4 billion. This revenue shortfall is in addition to the significant losses Tehran has already experienced from sanctions-in 2013 alone, restricted oil exports removed $55 billion in estimated revenue from Tehran's coffers, likely cutting the central government's budget nearly in half. Ultimately, today's lower prices add pressure on Iran to bring a successful end to nuclear negotiations, while allowing Western negotiators to work toward the best possible deal without risking damaging consequences for the global economy. However, current supply conditions also limit the relative benefits to Iran of returning its oil supplies to the market, since these additional volumes are likely to cause further price collapse. In this way, Iran is caught in a catch-22. Oil revenues are declining year-over-year and Iran is desperate to meet its government's spending goals. But today's well-supplied market and low prices give Iran little option but to negotiate in the hopes of increasing foreign investment and spurring economic relief. Lower than expected global oil demand, increased non-OPEC oil production, and the return of Libyan oil production have all contributed to oil's $40 per barrel price drop since June. Estimates suggest prices will remain between $75 and $85/bbl in 2015, far below Iran's required price of $120/bbl to satisfy federal spending requirements. Thus, for the time being, oil markets are unlikely to constrain the United States as it works to negotiate a deal with Iran consistent with its long-term national security objectives, and this condition is extremely likely to hold in 2015 and potentially beyond. In fact, greater market flexibility could enable the P5+1 to not only maintain current sanctions at low-cost, but also to credibly threaten implementation of even more biting sanctions without risking economically-destructive oil price volatility." http://t.uani.com/1zj81jJ
    

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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