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WashPost:
"Secretary of State John F. Kerry said in an interview broadcast
Sunday that it would be 'impossible' to extend nuclear negotiations with
Iran if an agreement on fundamental principles is not reached in the
coming weeks. Using more categorical language than he has employed
previously, Kerry definitively precluded a third extension to talks with
Iran about reducing its ability to make a nuclear bomb or easing
sanctions. In November, when no deal could be struck by a self-imposed
deadline, a temporary agreement, which had been in place for a year and
had been extended once before, was pushed to late June. Kerry said at the
time that the major points of agreement would have to be reached by late
March. In an interview with NBC's 'Meet the Press,' taped Saturday in
Munich where he was attending an international security conference, Kerry
appeared to close the door on another extension... 'But if we're not able
to make the fundamental decisions that have to be made over the course of
the next weeks, literally, I think it would be impossible to extend,' he
said. 'I don't think we would want to extend at that point. Either you
make the decisions to prove your program is a peaceful one, or if you're
unable to do that, it may tell a story that none of us want to hear.'"
http://t.uani.com/1zNBO5A
WSJ:
"A final deal to curb Iran's nuclear program remains elusive after
the latest talks, with Tehran refusing to move on a central demand to
significantly curtail uranium enrichment, Western officials said Sunday.
Iran's lead negotiator, Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, got a boost Sunday
from Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who signaled he could back a
compromise accord but would oppose a deal he saw as hurting Iran's
interests. Mr. Khamenei is widely seen as the final arbiter of Iran's
security policies. With political pressure mounting in Washington and
Tehran, Mr. Zarif met this weekend with U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry and other members of the six-power group that Iran negotiates with
on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference. He said now is the
time-and perhaps the last chance-to clinch a final deal... Still, Western
officials say that despite Iran's public haste, Tehran isn't offering
compromises that would make a deal possible... Since negotiations were
extended on Nov. 24, there have been a flurry of meetings, especially
between the U.S. and Iranian teams. More are expected in the coming days.
Privately, Western diplomats have depicted the talks as advancing
technical work needed to underpin an agreement. Officials say they have
also produced greater clarity on the kind of trade-offs that could help
both sides sell a deal... On the central Western demand that Iran agree
to a significant reduction in its current enrichment program for the
coming years, one senior Western diplomat said Sunday that Tehran isn't
budging. 'I'm pretty pessimistic....Unless the Iranians change their
position dramatically,' there is little chance of a deal, the diplomat
said... Mr. Zarif, never shy about attacking his domestic or foreign
critics, appeared more combative than usual Sunday. He said it would not
be the 'end of the world' if talks failed and lambasted U.S.
lawmakers." http://t.uani.com/1znTalT
AFP:
"Iran's supreme leader said Sunday he would rather see talks with world
powers over Tehran's nuclear programme fail than reach a 'bad deal', as
both sides spoke out against extending the negotiations. Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei's comments came as US Secretary of State John Kerry met Iranian
counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif in Germany to ratchet up efforts for a
lasting nuclear accord. 'I agree with a deal that can take place but I do
not agree with a bad deal,' the Iranian leader said, according to the
Khamenei.ir website. 'The Americans keep reiterating that it's better to
have no deal than a bad one. I fully agree with that,' he said. 'It's
better to have no agreement than one that goes against our national
interests.'" http://t.uani.com/1C91HLo
Nuclear Program & Negotiations
AFP:
"Secretary of State John Kerry stressed to his Iranian counterpart
Friday that the US aimed to meet a late March deadline for a deal reining
in Iran's nuclear programme. Kerry 'reiterated our desire to move toward
a political framework by the end of March', a senior US official said
after the secretary met Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif for two
hours in Munich." http://t.uani.com/1DvRQUq
Reuters:
"Iran's foreign minister has warned the United States that failure
to agree a nuclear deal would likely herald the political demise of
pragmatist President Hassan Rouhani, Iranian officials said, raising the
stakes as the decade-old stand-off nears its end-game. Mohammad Javad
Zarif pressed the concern with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry at
several meetings in recent weeks, according to three senior Iranian
officials, who said Iranhad also raised the issue with other Western
powers. Zarif's warning has not been previously reported. In a statement
posted on the Iranian Foreign Ministry's website, Zarif later denied
discussing domestic issues with Western officials. Western officials
acknowledged the move may be just a negotiating tactic to persuade them
to give more ground, but said they shared the view that Rouhani's
political clout would be heavily damaged by the failure of talks... One
of the Iranian officials, who also had direct access to the talks, said
the Americans were talking in terms of years for the sanctions relief
while Iran wanted curbs on oil and banking to be lifted within six
months... The United States, officials familiar with the talks say, has
already compromised on the issue of how many centrifuges Iran would be
allowed to operate... Another Western official said Rouhani appeared to
have underestimated the resolve of Washington and Europe to demand
limitations on Iranian nuclear activities for a decade or more in
exchange for sanctions relief. 'Rouhani thought that by speaking nicely
and not calling for Israel's destruction, Western powers would rush to
sign a deal, any deal, with Iran,' the official said. 'He
miscalculated.'" http://t.uani.com/1vzHeTh
WSJ:
"Talks between Iran and the United Nations' atomic agency have
yielded no significant progress in recent months, although the two sides
agreed to step up senior-level dialogue, the agency's head said this
weekend. Yukiya Amano, director general of the International Atomic
Energy Agency, met Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif on Saturday on
the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference annual meeting... After
some initial progress, Iran has offered little new information to the
IAEA since May. 'There has not been significant progress,' Mr. Amano told
The Wall Street Journal. 'Much more needs to be done' to clarify
outstanding issues... Mr. Amano said that for Iran, failing to address
the issues thrown up by its past work 'is not an option.'" http://t.uani.com/1KERCuj
ISNA (Iran):
"Rouhani's Chief of Staff hails national solidarity. Mohammad
Nahavandian attributed the administration's progress in the P5+1 nuclear
talks to the solidarity of the people and added: 'So far in the
negotiations we have witnessed victories that have left the other party
with no choice but to accept the reality and acknowledge Iran's right to
science and technology in the nuclear field, and to accept the reality
that criminal sanctions are ineffective.' 'We hope, thanks to this
solidarity, our negotiators in the coming days can make great strides
towards a dignified comprehensive agreement that maintains Iran's nuclear
rights.'" http://t.uani.com/1FpLeGn
Sanctions
Relief
Tehran Times:
"Foreign companies are waiting to pounce on Iran's oil and gas
projects once sanctions are lifted. Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zangeneh
says foreign energy companies are waiting to pounce on Iran's oil and gas
projects once sanctions are lifted. The Islamic Republic is in talks with
the U.S. and the Europeans and they hope to put decades of their standoff
over Tehran's nuclear energy program to rest. Zangeneh says numerous
negotiations have been held with international entities over the past one
and half years over their participation in Iran's oil industry projects.
'These companies are waiting for the sanctions against Iran to be lifted
so that they can swiftly sign deals,' the minister told the national
television during a live program. 'America and its allies however are
trying with all their power to impede our work,' he said. Zangeneh said
the Americans even oppose a conference in London to present Iran's oil
development projects to multinational companies." http://t.uani.com/1Dcf81g
Terrorism
Haaretz:
"The government of Uruguay officially confirmed reports over the
weekend that an Iranian diplomat had left the country after being
suspected by Uruguayan security forces of collecting intelligence about
the Israeli embassy in Montevideo. Ahmed Sabatgold, 32, a political
consultant in the Iranian embassy in Montevideo, was suspected of being
involved in placing an explosive device near the new Israeli embassy in
early January, the Uruguayan El Observador newspaper reported Sunday.
Haaretz reported on Friday that the Uruguayan government had expelled an
Iranian diplomat on suspicion of involvement in the attempted bomb attack
on the Israeli embassy. The publication caused a great deal of
embarrassment in Montevideo, where the government had tried to keep the
affair quiet so as not to damage its relations with Tehran." http://t.uani.com/1CaFpeE
Iraq Crisis
NYT:
"At their victory rally, the Shiite militiamen used poetry, song and
swagger to sweeten their celebration of an ugly battle. More than a
hundred fighters from the militia, the Badr Organization, had been killed
in the farms and villages of Diyala Province in recent fighting against
the Sunni extremists of the Islamic State. During the battle, thousands
of residents had been forced from their homes - including Sunni families
who accused Shiite paramilitary groups like Badr of forced displacement
and summary executions... Speaking at the rally, to an audience that
included giddy fighters barely past their teens, the head of the Badr
Organization, Hadi al-Ameri, boasted of the towns his men and allied
militias had set free. 'These were big operations that others must learn
lessons from,' he said. But even as Mr. Ameri was fishing for broad
support and recognition, his group stands among the most divisive in
Iraq, accused of atrocities against Sunnis and known for its close ties
to Iran... Erin Evers, a researcher for Human Rights Watch, said it was
dangerous for the government to outsource military operations to Badr and
other militias in Diyala, a mixed province home to Sunnis, Shiites, Kurds
and Turkmen." http://t.uani.com/1znDIWW
Human Rights
IranWire:
"Human rights activists visited Gouhar Eshghi, the mother of Sattar
Beheshti, on February 6. Since her son's death in an Iranian jail in
2012, Gouhar Eshghi has pushed for an investigation into her son's case
and spoken regularly to the international community about human rights.
One of the activists, Zartosht Ahmadi Ragheb, published these photographs
on his Facebook page, with the following text: 'Today, the 17th of
Bahman, 1993, a group of political and social activists visited Gouhar
Beheshti's house. The mother of resistance and kindness welcomed them
with homemade soup. I would like to thank all our friends who stand by this
brave and strong woman.'" http://t.uani.com/1A4w4Yo
Domestic
Politics
Al-Monitor:
"Iran's Vice President for Women and Family Affairs, Shahindokth
Molaverdi, criticized the administration's lack of attention to
opportunities for women to play an active role in society and her own
lack of executive authority to implement changes. At a meeting in
Esfahan, speaking to a special working group on women's issues, Molaverdi
criticized the administration's Sixth Development Plan, saying, 'In these
plans, the religious and legal demands of women ... in getting away from
poverty, corruption and discrimination must be considered. The time has
come that women must fulfill their share in the ... development
prospects.' ... When Molaverdi was asked at the meeting why Rouhani has
an adviser for women's affairs but not for men's, she answered,
'Mechanisms for the development of women is one of the 12 concerns of the
international community according to a 1995 United Nations report. And as
long as Iranian women do not have desirable conditions, but have unjust
conditions in comparison to men, this office and similar institutions
will continue their activities.' This isn't the first time that Molaverdi
has voiced her frustrations with the administration over her working conditions.
On Jan 3, Molaverdi said that she felt like her 'feet and hands were tied
... but they want to me race with people who are standing.'" http://t.uani.com/16J7HlH
FT:
"Plunging oil prices have already undermined Iran's fledgling
economic recovery. But another energy issue is also holding back
President Hassan Rouhani's attempts to revive the country's
underperforming industrial base: a lack of power-generating capacity. 'It
is absolutely wrong to think we can achieve economic growth without having
sufficient electricity production,' Hamid Chitchian, Iran's energy
minister, warned recently. 'The electricity sector has consistently been
weakened over the past five years and investment has dramatically
decreased.' Decades of heavy government subsidies have left Iran with
high levels of energy consumption - per capita consumption of electricity
is about 2,160 kilowatt hours compared with 1,300 kWh for neighbouring
Iraq. While Iran's energy demands are growing at about 6 per cent a year,
growth in capacity is limited to a third of that. The energy ministry
admits its depleted power network requires at least 120tn rials ($4.4bn)
of investment." http://t.uani.com/1vAaSI2
Foreign Affairs
JPost:
"The toppling of the Yemeni government by Iranian backed Shi'ite
Houthis has upped the ante in the regional sectarian Sunni-Shi'ite
struggle. Yemen is perfectly set to become a sectarian war that will see
millions more in foreign funds transferred to various proxy forces in the
country, as in the case of the ongoing civil war in Syria. Sunni states
are likely to dramatically increase support for their brothers in the
country, not holding back funds from jihadists and other Islamists, just
as has been done in Syria. Iran and its allies in the region are not
going to sit by either." http://t.uani.com/1z0AIAN
Opinion &
Analysis
UANI Executive
Director David Ibsen & UANI Research Analyst Julie Shain in JPost:
"In the coming weeks, Congress is expected to resume consideration
of Iran sanctions. In response, US and Iranian officials as well as
sanctions opponents are preparing their usual barrage of anti-sanctions
rhetoric. Sanctions are a clumsy and violent weapon, they say. They are
at once devastating and impotent. And most absurd, they are a form of
violent extremism. To support these claims, misleading pronouncements
about Iranian sanctions will recirculate. Most have been debunked time
and again, but because Iranian officials and their surrogates parade them
so persistently, some of the most dubious assertions have managed to
masquerade as fact. Take the myth that sanctions have devastated Iran's
healthcare system. While this is a widely circulated claim, it is also
patently untrue. Sanctions are drafted with broad exemptions for
humanitarian goods and services. US sanctions specifically allow for the
sale of agricultural commodities, food, medicine and medical devices to
Iran. The Iranian regime, on the other hand, cynically restricts public
access to drugs and medicine, depriving its citizens of quality
healthcare. In fact, Iran's former health minister Marzieh Vahid
Dastjerdi was fired in 2012 after exposing such corrupt practices.
Speaking on state television, Dastjerdi revealed that Iran's Central Bank
delivered only $600 million worth of imported medicine and medical
supplies out of the $2.5 billion earmarked in Iran's annual budget. The
former head of Iran's Central Bank later confirmed Dastjerdi's report,
and acknowledged that officials were importing large quantities of cars
and luxury goods in place of medicine and other essential products.
Iran's government has also placed artificial constraints on the drugs and
medicines it does import. One government employee revealed that out of 20
units of medication in government supply, only two are available to the
public. The rest are 'reserved' for Iranians with influence or good
connections... In concert, critics would have us believe that sanctions
starve and devastate the Iranian people by depriving them of food,
education and healthcare while failing to affect policy change among
regime leaders. The inconvenient truth however is that the Iranian
regime's rampant corruption, mismanagement and repression have devastated
the Iranian economy and restricted freedoms for millions of Iranians. The
targeted and multilateral Iran sanctions regime is an effective
non-violent policy tool that has raised the costs of the Iranian regime
leadership's ongoing intransience and illicit behavior while
complementing US diplomatic efforts. It was after all US Secretary of
State John Kerry who stated that 'outreach alone is not a strategy. If
diplomacy is to work, it must be backed by the prospect of tough,
escalating multilateral sanctions strong enough to actually change
behavior.' Absent continued sanctions enforcement and the prospect of
additional sanctions measures the Iranian regime will have little
incentive to abandon its nuclear program. It is time to cut through the
cloud of fictions that surround the Iranian sanctions debate. Targeted
international sanctions, coupled with responsible humanitarian
exemptions, have effectively and responsibly pressured the Iranian
regime. These are the facts of the Iranian sanctions. It is time to
discern them from the fictions." http://t.uani.com/1xVlpIb
WSJ Editorial:
"The ghost of Scoop Jackson is hovering over the Obama
Administration's troubles with the Senate and its nuclear negotiations
with Iran. Senator Henry M. 'Scoop' Jackson, a respected
national-security Democrat from Washington state, was often a thorn in
the side of Presidents who were negotiating arms-control agreements with
the Soviet Union in the 1970s. President Obama wishes Senate critics such
as Democrat Robert Menendez and Republican Bob Corker would simply get
their noses out of the deal. This President needs a history lesson:
Senate involvement in arms-control agreements goes back at least 50
years. Threatening vetoes of anything the Senate sends him on Iran,
President Obama seems to think his job is to negotiate nuclear arms
agreements unilaterally, while the Senate's job is to keep its mouth
shut. It was never thus. The idea of nuclear-arms agreements negotiated
by an Administration with little or no input from Congress is a
relatively recent phenomenon. The Clinton Administration unilaterally
negotiated the 1994 Agreed Framework with North Korea to stop its
construction of nuclear reactors. The George W. Bush Administration
followed, producing five sets of Six-Party Talks with North Korea. They
all fell apart because the North Koreans cheated by continuing to test
nuclear devices and develop missiles capable of delivering a bomb. The
Obama negotiation with Iran is called P5+1, which asks everyone to
believe that the five permanent members of the United Nations Security
Council, plus Germany, can be trusted to put Iran's nuclear genie to
sleep. That arms-control model may appeal to the Nobel Peace Prize
committee, but it should not impress U.S. Senators. The Senate's
experience with nuclear-arms control dates at least to the Kennedy
Presidency in 1963 and the Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, which emerged
after eight years of negotiations with the Soviet Union. Like virtually
all Soviet-era arms agreements, that deal was a formal treaty and subject
to the Constitution's treaty-making process: The President may commit the
U.S. to a treaty with the advice and consent of two-thirds of the Senate.
The Senate ratified the Kennedy test ban 80-19. With a few exceptions,
that public process was followed for decades. The agreements were openly
debated by Senators with input, pro and con, by national-security
specialists from inside and outside the government... Barack Obama's Iran
project is the outlier in the history of arms control. His insistence
that no one may interfere in his negotiations has only increased
misgivings in Congress about the details. If Mr. Obama were pursuing the
traditional route to gain approval of an Iran agreement, exposing it to
formal public debate and a vote, there would have been no need for
Speaker John Boehner to invite Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
to address Congress. Details matter. The Defense Intelligence Agency in
its annual threat assessment last February said, 'In addition to its
growing missile and rocket inventories, Iran is seeking to enhance
lethality and effectiveness of existing systems with improvements in
accuracy and warhead designs.' Missile delivery systems and warhead
design were make-or-break issues during arms agreements with the Soviet
Union. In Mr. Obama's negotiations with Iran, they are virtually
non-subjects. Senators Menendez, Corker and Mark Kirk have led the effort
for more accountability on an Iranian arms deal. President Obama's
response is a threat to veto any advice or consent the Senate may enact
that doesn't simply assent to whatever he signs. What an irony that his
unilateral point man is former Senate Foreign Relations Chairman John
Kerry. This new Senate needs to re-establish its traditional role in
letting the American people know what is in-and what is not in-these
deals with the next generation of nations seeking nuclear bombs." http://t.uani.com/1FoN4aq
Danielle Pletka in
AEI: "The immolation of a Jordanian pilot is only
one of many signs of a Middle East collapsing into brutal disorder.
Leaders have fallen, civil wars are spreading and terrorism is thriving.
It's tempting to yearn for the relative security of years past, when the
United States' client dictators kept the region quiet, and to look for
another candidate to play the role. Of course, the lore of the old,
stable Middle East is more myth than reality - the half-century before
the Arab Spring saw multiple governments fall, the rise of Islamist
terror, three Arab-Israeli wars and civil wars in Yemen and Lebanon.
Still, the allure of the strongman pervades Washington. The latest
example is what appears to be the Obama administration's efforts to
create a regional compact centered on Iranian power. Few dispute the
notion that Iran has designs on the Middle East. Even before the Islamic
Revolution, Persia's leaders long aimed - without success - to restore
the empire of old. Over the past 36 years, however, the clerical regime
has built an army of proxies that have hobbled governments and emerged
politically and militarily dominant across the region. Since creating
Hezbollah in 1982, Iran has sought to dictate policy in Lebanon. Syrian
dictator Bashar al-Assad is now a wholly owned subsidiary of Tehran, and
Hamas is well on its way to becoming the same. With the U.S. retreat from
Iraq and the collapse of the Arab Spring, Iranian diktat has spread
farther and wider. In Iraq, Revolutionary Guard commanders and
Iranian-trained militias are a bulwark of the fight against the Islamic
State. In Bahrain, Tehran has sought to transform the downtrodden Shiite
majority's demand for rights into an Iranian-armed uprising. And in
recent weeks, Iranian-backed Houthi rebels have overthrown a Yemeni
government vital to the fight against al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
(AQAP). Kuwait and Saudi Arabia have both rounded up Iranian agents and
detained Iranian-backed terrorists in the past few years. When President
Obama initiated talks with Iran on its nuclear program, both he and
Iran's leaders insisted they would be limited to the outstanding nuclear
dispute. But it soon became clear that Obama had higher hopes and had begun
to see the talks as a prism through which to view, and even solve, the
region's troubles. The clearest sign of a new attitude was the growing,
if tacit, coordination between Washington and Tehran in Iraq. Secretary
of State John Kerry lauded Iranian efforts while Martin Dempsey, chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, went further, declaring, 'Iranian influence
will be positive.' Gulf allies in the fight against the Islamic State
view Obama's coziness with Iran with trepidation: United Arab Emirates
forces have reportedly pulled back from airstrikes against Islamic State
targets in Syria, in part because of disagreements with Washington over
the growing Iranian role. Even the Iraqi government is privately fretting
over Iran's growing domination of Shiite militias... The slow-motion
acquiescence to Iran's terms in talks over Tehran's nuclear weapons
program is the icing on the cake. If the president's State of the Union
threat to veto new Iran sanctions wasn't enough, reports that Washington
is now comfortable with Iran keeping most of its current arsenal of
10,000 uranium-enriching centrifuges are a clear sign that change is
afoot. On its face, taking the Iranian side in a sectarian war in which
the Islamic State stands on the other side may make sense in an enemy-of-my-enemy
way. What could be wrong with using Iran to kill the Islamic State and
al-Qaeda, even if the price is keeping a few bad guys in power in
Damascus or Sanaa? Unfortunately, lots. There is no reason to believe
that a Shiite version of the one-stop dictator shop that characterized
U.S. diplomacy for much of the 20th century will work any better than the
earlier Sunni compact that denied tens of millions their democratic
aspirations and paved the way to today's turmoil." http://t.uani.com/191h1CM
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