Monday, November 30, 2015

Eye on Iran: Building a Bomb Now Easier for Us Than Putting in a Contact Lens, Claims Iran Official






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Times of Israel: "Iran is 'closer than ever' to the bomb, and completing it would be 'easier than putting in a contact lens,' a senior Iranian official was quoted saying on Thursday. The claim by Hassan Karimpour, an adviser to Iran's Quds Force commander Qassem Suleimani, was reported Thursday in Iranian media, and quoted on the BBC's Persian language website and Israel's Hebrew-language Channel 2 TV. Finishing a nuclear bomb would be 'easy to do, as soon as the spiritual ban on nuclear weapons were lifted,' Channel 2 quoted Karimpour as saying. The Iranian regime has repeatedly vowed that it is not seeking a nuclear weapon, and spiritual leader Ali Khamenei has issued fatwas forbidding nuclear weapons. According to Fars news, Karimpour also said Iran has 14 missile depots, buried between 30 and 500 meters underground, equipped with automatic launchers, and that any country that dared to attack Iran would be riddled with large numbers of missiles fired from these depots... A former Iranian president reportedly admitted last month that the country's nuclear program was started with the intent of building a nuclear weapon. The reported comments by Hashemi Rafsanjani to the state-run IRNA news agency marked the first time a top Iranian official - current or former - had said the country sought a nuclear weapon." http://t.uani.com/1OqlXCW

AP: "The conclusions of a secret U.N. nuclear agency document leaked six years ago were explosive. Iran, it said, had likely worked on developing an atomic bomb. Two years later the agency went public. It detailed a list of alleged activities based on 'credible' evidence that Tehran did work 'relevant to the development of a nuclear explosive device.' This week, the bitter debate that for years pitted Iranian denials against U.S. claims of a cover-up appears set for an anticlimactic ending, with a final report from the U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency expected to stop short of proving or disproving the claims. And Washington? It now has opted to let bygones be bygones as it focuses on curbing Tehran's future weapons-making prowess. The U.S. has long urged that Iran not only trim its present nuclear program but also admit to what it says was past nuclear weapons work. Iran's refusal to address those demands led since 2006 to a series of U.N. Security Council resolutions and sanctions against Tehran... Tehran has warned it might renege if the IAEA report is stacked against it - and Washington now is signaling that it is prepared to shut an eye, even if the threat is no more than bluster. The long-standing U.S. mantra accused Iran of 'deception and deceit,' on the weapons issue. As late as mid-June, Secretary of State John Kerry said the IAEA report must 'resolve our questions about it with specificity' before any nuclear-related sanctions on Iran are lifted. Just weeks later, however, Kerry said Washington is not 'fixated on Iran specifically accounting for what they did at one point in time or another.' Instead, he said the U.S. is concerned about 'going forward.' ... IAEA chief Yukiya Amano has been careful to diminish expectations, describing his upcoming report last week as 'not black and white.' Long before he spoke, Iranian officials used those exact words, suggesting they already know that the agency's conclusions won't be damning. But Iran is not taking chances. With only a day or two remaining before the report's publication, Iranian officials continue to publicly threaten to hold back on commitments to the July 15 deal if the IAEA's assessment is unfavorable to their country. Two Western diplomats familiar with the issue say those same threats have been made in negotiations with IAEA officials." http://t.uani.com/1OzIvPD

WSJ: "A container terminal at Bandar Abbas, a port city on the Strait of Hormuz, highlights one challenge for companies hoping to win business in Iran after sanctions on Iran are eased as part of a nuclear agreement between Tehran and global powers. Shahid Rajaee, the main container terminal at the port, is operated by Tidewater Middle East Co., which the U.S. placed under sanctions in 2011 for being owned by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. The facility, according to Congressional testimony by U.S. officials, is responsible for 90% of Iranian container traffic. The IRGC will remain under sanctions after the nuclear deal is implemented and its sprawling business empire means Western companies will have to tread careful to avoid breaching those sanctions. Tidewater has to relinquish its ownership of the Bandar Abbas facility, and transfer it to someone not under sanctions, for transactions at the facility to not be subject to secondary sanctions, according to the text of the nuclear agreement. 'The indirect impact of U.S. sanctions on the IRGC remaining in place could be very broad, in some cases,' said Glen Kelley, a partner at Jacobson Burton Kelley PLLC who has 14 years of experience advising companies on matters involving U.S. sanctions. Though the IRGC will remain under U.S. sanctions, its tentacles across the Iranian economy make it difficult to avoid, according to data compiled by Dow Jones Risk & Compliance. The IRGC owns or has stakes in more than 1,000 companies, from banks to tractor companies, the data show. Dow Jones Risk & Compliance is a data provider owned by Dow Jones & Co., also the publisher of the Wall Street Journal." http://t.uani.com/1NisAlr

Nuclear Program & Agreement

WSJ: "The United Nations atomic energy arm is unlikely to draw clear conclusions in its report next month on whether Tehran once had a nuclear weapons program, the agency's chief suggested on Thursday. Failure to reach a final judgment on whether Iran was once seeking nuclear weapons know-how appears unlikely to scuttle the full implementation of July's nuclear accord between Iran and six world powers. However, it could slow the process of completing the agreement, which is currently expected early in 2016. At a news conference in Vienna, International Atomic Energy Agency Director-General Yukiya Amano confirmed he would present his final report on the five-month probe into Iran's past nuclear work early next week. Diplomats have said they expect the report to be circulated on Tuesday. It will be discussed by the IAEA's Board of Governors on December 15. 'As I said in the past, the assessment...will not be black and white,' Mr. Amano said. 'This is like a jigsaw puzzle and...we have (a) better understanding now' of Iran's past actions... Mr. Amano on Thursday said his report will cover all issues raised in 2011 and will be factual. It will then be up to the IAEA's board to decide how to respond to it, he said. The key question for IAEA members is whether to conclude that Iran has provided enough answers about its past work to close the agency's investigation. U.S. officials have said that since Iran complied with all the formal steps in the IAEA probe, there is no reason to block the implementation of July's nuclear deal and the lifting of sanctions. The agency has confirmed that Iran complied with its pledges to provide written explanations of its past work, to hold expert meetings with the IAEA and to provide access to a key military site. Diplomats familiar with the investigation, however, say that while Iran formally met its commitments, Tehran provided little new significant information about its past work. They also say Iran provided only limited access to key people, documents and sites the agency had wanted to see. That has deepened concerns of U.S. lawmakers and other critics of July's deal who believed the probe would sweep Iran's past work under the carpet." http://t.uani.com/1OqqjcY

Reuters: "The U.N. nuclear watchdog must provide all the information it possesses with the 'necessary detail' on whether Iran has in the past carried out work related to nuclear weapons, France's Foreign Ministry said on Monday. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is due to publish a report this week on the matter, which could allay remaining concerns on Iran's intentions as part of a deal between world powers and Tehran. It could provide for a lifting of sanctions against the Islamic Republic in exchange for restrictions on its nuclear program - but that could be scuppered if any of the parties, including France, are not satisfied. A clear verdict that weapons-related work occurred would make it difficult for the deal to proceed, but diplomats have said for weeks that they do not expect it to be clear-cut. France, which was deemed to have had the toughest stance during talks between the major powers and Iran, was especially concerned during negotiations that the issue of the past would not be correctly addressed after a final accord was agreed. 'France will with interest become aware of this report this week,' Foreign Ministry spokesman Romain Nadal said in a daily news briefing. 'We are expecting that the IAEA provides with the necessary detail all the information it possesses.'" http://t.uani.com/1IjMsc1

AFP: "Iran said Sunday there would be no final implementation of a nuclear deal with world powers unless a probe into allegations of past weapons research is closed. The declaration, by a top security official, comes after the head of the UN nuclear watchdog said a report into the possible military dimensions of Iran's activities would not be 'black and white.' Iran has always denied seeking to develop an atomic weapons capability, insisting its nuclear programme is for peaceful energy production and medical purposes only. Referring to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the July 14 agreement's official name, Admiral Ali Shamkhani, said anything short of the watchdog's probe being closed was unacceptable to Iran. 'Without the closure of the file regarding past issues, there is no possibility of implementing the JCPOA,' the official IRNA news agency reported him as saying. Shamkhani is secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council (SNSC), the country's highest security body, which was tasked with supervising the nuclear deal... 'The P5+1 must choose between the JCPOA and leaving open the so-called PMD file,' he said." http://t.uani.com/1l2d6Mr

U.S.-Iran Relations

AFP: "Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, on Sunday condemned the West's 'double standards' in a letter to the youth of America and Europe following the Paris attacks that killed 130 people. 'Anyone who has benefited from affection and humanity is affected and disturbed by witnessing these scenes -- whether it occurs in France or in Palestine or Iraq or Lebanon or Syria,' he wrote in the letter, translated into English and French. 'It is correct that today terrorism is our common worry,' he said, while condemning the 'contradictory policies' of the United States in 'creating, nurturing and arming Al-Qaeda, the Taliban and their inauspicious successors'. 'The military invasions of the Islamic world in recent years -- with countless victims -- are another example of the contradictory logic of the West,' Khamenei argued. 'The pain that the Islamic world has suffered in these years from the hypocrisy and duplicity of the invaders is not less than the pain from the material damage,' he said. So long as 'double standards dominate Western policies' and 'terrorism... is divided into good and bad types' and 'governmental interests are given precedence over human values and ethics, the roots of violence should not be searched for in other places.'" http://t.uani.com/1Nlkhtt

Sanctions Relief

AP: "Iran unveiled a new model of oil contracts Saturday aimed at attracting foreign investment once sanctions are lifted under a landmark nuclear deal reached earlier this year, and said U.S. companies would be welcome to participate. The new Iran Petroleum Contract replaces a previous buyback model, in which contractors paid to develop and operate an oil field before turning it over to Iranian authorities. Iran has sweetened the terms, hoping to bring in $30 billion in new investment. The new contracts last 15-20 years and allow for the full recovery of costs. The older contracts were shorter term, and investors complained of heavy risks and suffering losses... Some 50 upstream oil, gas and petrochemical projects are being introduced during a two-day conference in Tehran that began Saturday. Iran will pay foreign oil companies larger fees under the new contracts to provide greater incentives to investors. Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh told the conference that under the new contracts, foreign investors will be required to form a joint company with an Iranian partner to carry out exploration, development and production operations. 'To continue to play the role (as a major oil supplier), we hope to enjoy working with reputable international oil companies under a win-win situation,' he told the conference... Oil Ministry officials said 137 foreign companies attended Saturday's conference, including Repsol, BP, Royal Dutch Shell, Total, Technip, Schlumberger, Eni, Enel, Rosneft, Lukoil, Gazprom, Inpex, Statoil and Daewoo." http://t.uani.com/1lUniXn

Bloomberg: "Total SA, Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Lukoil PJSC are among international companies that have selected oil and natural gas deposits to develop in Iran as the holder of the world's fourth-largest crude reserves presents $30 billion worth of projects to investors. Total is one of the companies that have been in the forefront of discussions and Eni SpA is also looking to invest, Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said. Shell, Total and Lukoil all specified fields they would be interested in developing in Iran, Ali Kardor, deputy director of investment and financing at National Iranian Oil Co. said in an interview in Tehran. 'Many companies are interested. Europeans are interested, Asian companies are interested,' Zanganeh told reporters at a conference in Tehran on Saturday. 'Total is interested, Eni is interested.' ... 'We are interested to come back to Iran when the sanctions are lifted and if the contracts are interesting,' Stephane Michel, Total's head of exploration and production in the Middle East said at the conference. 'We have worked in this country for a long time, so we know specific fields on which we've worked.' Representatives of Lukoil and Shell declined to comment at the conference." http://t.uani.com/1TnQj8W

Bloomberg: "Iran, OPEC's fifth-largest crude producer, has potential to generate more revenue from mining than it does from crude if the government puts more focus on developing the metals sector, according to Mojtaba Khosrowtaj, first deputy minister in charge of trade at Iran's Ministry of Industry, Mine and Trade. Metals such as copper and lead and higher-priced rare earth elements could be worth 'much more' than the nation's oil industry revenue of about $30 billion, assuming crude at $40 a barrel and exports of 2 million barrels a day, Khosrowtaj said in an interview. Iran is opening $30 billion of energy projects and $29 billion of mining deals to investors once international sanctions are lifted. Iran has more than 3,000 active mines, mostly privately owned, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The sector is still using equipment developed 15 or 20 years ago because of lack of funds due to sanctions, Khosrowtaj said. 'We could use new technologies,' he said. 'Expansion of construction projects in oil and gas or mining is reliant on banks and insurance companies, and sanctions have delayed them.'" http://t.uani.com/1NiBdMM

FT: "Italy is poised to send a large trade delegation to Iran at a time when heightened anti-US rhetoric in the Islamic Republic is raising doubts about post-sanctions opportunities for US businesses - potentially opening doors in the $400bn economy for Tehran's historic European partners. Some 300 delegates from five sectors - medical, green energy, automobiles, construction and manufacturing equipment - are scheduled to arrive in Tehran on Saturday for a three-day visit to meet senior officials and business figures, Riccardo Monti, president of the Italian Trade Commission, said. Representatives from Danieli, the steel group, energy company Enel, agricultural machinery maker CNH Industrial, Telecom Italia and several banks would be among the delegates, Mr Monti said... Many companies in the Italian trade delegation had no US interests and were free to do business with Iran once nuclear sanctions were lifted, said Mr Monti. But half had US exposure and so were 'more careful and are on a purely exploratory mission'. Nonetheless, Italian exports to Iran, which totalled €1.2bn in 2014, could rise to €2bn as soon as next year, he said." http://t.uani.com/1TnR95H

Press TV (Iran): "An Iranian car manufacturer is in talks with Italian automaker Fiat SpA to produce cars in Iran which is billed as the Middle East's biggest auto market, a minister says. 'Fiat has announced its readiness for cooperation with the Iranian automaker and Iran has welcomed it,' Minister of Industry, Mine and Trade Mohammad Reza Nematzadeh said in Tehran Sunday on the sidelines of a joint trade forum. About 370 Italian traders, including representatives of steel group Danieli, energy company Enel, agricultural machinery maker CNH Industrial, Telecom Italia and several banks, are currently visiting Iran to discuss business opportunities. Fiat, which controls Chrysler, and its subsidiary heavy-truck maker Fiat Industrial SpA halted sales to Iran in 2012 following similar moves by other carmakers under US pressure to cut ties with Tehran... The minister said Iran was ready to cooperate with Fiat on production of light and commercial vehicles and buses as well as gas-fueled engines. 'We are planning to produce 3 million automobiles in less than 10 years, one-third of which will be exported,' the minister added... The announcement came as Iran Khodro Managing Director Hashem Yekke-Zare said his company and PSA Peugeot Citroen had agreed on a 50-50 venture worth 500 million euros for production of cars in Iran." http://t.uani.com/1HA3jam

Press TV (Iran): "Daimler AG's commercial vehicles division says it is in talks with potential partners in Iran to resume production in the country as sanctions look set to be lifted.  Roland Schneider, president and CEO of Daimler Commercial Vehicles in the Middle East and North Africa, said the German manufacturer intends to open a representative office in Iran 'as soon as possible'. 'Iran offers great opportunities for Daimler Commercial Vehicles, and we are currently preparing to re-enter this market,' he was reported as saying on Sunday... In August, Iran Khodro Managing Director Hashem Yekke-Zare said his company and Daimler's subsidiary Mercedes-Benz would sign a deal 'soon' for production of luxury cars and commercial vehicles. The German company, he said, intended to buy 30% of shares in the Iranian Diesel Engine Manufacturing (IDEM) in Tabriz to build diesel engines. Mercedes-Benz gave up its 30% stake in IDEM and quit plans to export three-axle trucks to Iran in 2010 in fear of reprisals from the US where Daimler reportedly controls about 40% of the heavy truck market... Another German company, Volkswagen, has held negotiations with Iran Khodro for production of cars and investment in Iran, as well as transfer of technology, Yekke-Zare has said." http://t.uani.com/1HA3B12

WSJ: "Despite the international sanctions that have choked off much of Iran's foreign trade, many German companies have continued to do business here-legally-in recent years. Now those companies are likely to be among the first to benefit from the country's expected reopening, after a U.S.-led deal in July to ease the sanctions in exchange for curbs on Iran's nuclear program. As of last year, more than 75 German companies had operations in Iran, according to the Tehran-based German-Iranian Chamber of Industry and Commerce. Most of them were small, family-owned businesses that make specialty products not directly covered by the sanctions, often for the health-care, construction or automotive markets. Those companies-many of which are privately held-can typically afford to keep a presence here in part because many have limited ties to the U.S., whose sanctions on Iran are especially strict. The U.S. often has relatively little leverage over such companies, experts say. By contrast, many of Germany's publicly listed multinational companies, including engineering group Siemens AG , are listed in the U.S. and have acknowledged they have little choice but to comply with the U.S. restrictions. 'We never really left the country,' said Mark Pace, the chief executive and co-owner of Dentaurum GmbH, which has done business in Iran for decades... Iranians 'are hungry for our products. They want to have state-of-the-art technology,' said Michael Hack, director for automotive-business development at Hilger u. Kern GmbH, a Mannheim-based supplier of pumps, valves and other industrial equipment that has sold its products in Iran since the 1980s." http://t.uani.com/1YDd23R

Terrorism

Reuters: "Kenyan security forces have arrested two Kenyan men with links to Iran on suspicion of planning attacks in the East African nation, the Interior Ministry said on Saturday... 'The two men, Abubakar Sadiq Louw and Yassin Sambai Juma, have admitted to conspiring to mount terror attacks against Western targets in Kenya,' the ministry said. It said their targets included 'hotels in Nairobi frequented by Western tourists and diplomats.' Louw, 69, was a Kenyan passport holder and a prominent figure in Nairobi's Shi'ite Muslim community, the ministry said in the statement. Suspected of working on behalf of Iran's elite military Qods Force, Louw recruited 25-year-old Juma from Nairobi, it said. Louw told investigators he had arranged for Juma to travel to Iran and introduced him to a Qods force contact, the ministry added... Two Iranian men were sentenced to life in prison by a Kenyan court in 2013 for planning to carry out bombings a year earlier in the East African country. The ministry said those two men also had links to Qods Force." http://t.uani.com/1NDKEwJ

Syria Conflict

WashPost: "An increasing number of Iranian soldiers and militiamen appear to be dying in Syria's civil war, and observers credit media from an unexpected country for revealing the trend: Iran. A flurry of reports in Iran's official and semi­official news outlets about the deaths - including funerals and even a eulogy to a fallen general by Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei - have surprised analysts who monitor the country's tightly controlled media. The reports, they say, indicate that at least 67 Iranians have been killed in Syria since the beginning of October. Just a few months ago, Iranian media said little about the country's military intervention in ­Syria to shore up the government. But as Iranian fighters participate in a new Russian-led offensive against Syrian rebels, Iran's leaders might have a reason to offer more details of their country's involvement, said Ali Alfoneh, an Iran expert at the ­Washington-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies. 'They are proud of this and they want to show it,' he said. Since Iranian forces became increasingly involved in the conflict in 2013, he noted, about 10 fighters were being killed every month, but the numbers surged after Russia, another ally of Syria's government, began launching airstrikes at rebels in late September." http://t.uani.com/1Ivt2f5

Reuters: "The commander of foreign operations by Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards has shrugged off reports of his death or injury in fighting in Syria, an Iranian news agency said on Monday. Suggestions that General Qassem Soleimani had been hurt or killed were widespread in recent weeks. The Guards denied them repeatedly and said they were part of a 'psychological war'. 'This (martyrdom) is something that I have been seeking in the plains and the mountains,' the general was quoted as saying by Tasnim news agency in comments he reportedly made at his Tehran office on Monday. Exiled Iranian opposition group Mujahedin-e-Khalq said on Saturday he had suffered severe shrapnel wounds on Aleppo's southern front in Syria two weeks ago and had been hospitalized in Tehran. As commander of the Quds Force, which plays a leading role in fighting in Iraq and Syria, the general reports directly to Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Once a reclusive figure directing covert operations abroad, Soleimani now enjoys almost celebrity status among Shi'ites, with Iraqi fighters and Syrian soldiers posting selfies with him from the battlefield on social media." http://t.uani.com/1RgMBi8

Human Rights

Reuters: "Ahead of two key elections in Iran in February, the Supreme Leader's hard-line allies have cracked down on activists, journalists and artists to try to tighten their grip on the country's faction-ridden politics, officials and analysts say. Rights groups and opposition websites said dozens were summoned by the intelligence ministry for interrogation and had been detained. The Iranian government has denied there has been a wave of arrests, describing the reports as 'baseless'. Some officials and analysts believe that the aim is to limit pragmatist President Hassan Rouhani's influence and popularity after his success in reaching a historic nuclear deal with the six major powers in July that ended over a decade-old stand-off. 'The hard-liners are wary of Rouhani's influence at home and abroad. They fear it may harm the balance of power in Iran,' a senior official close to Rouhani told Reuters on condition of anonymity... Analysts say that suppressing dissenting voices has been stepped up since September when the country's most powerful figure Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned of 'infiltration' by Iran's enemies... 'Growing prestige at home and abroad for Rouhani means less authority for Khamenei and it has always been Khamenei's red line,' said political analyst Hamid Farahvashian. 'More flexibility in foreign policy, has always led to more pressure at home in Iran,' he said... Some supporters of Rouhani are losing patience, fearing now that he might lack the authority to create a freer society. 'Rouhani blames hard-liners for the limitations but words are not enough. I still support him because there is no other option,' said a journalist in Tehran, who asked not to be named. 'His only concern is the economy and keeping his position.' ... some doubt that Rouhani, who represented Khamenei on the Supreme National Security Council for more than two decades, has the stomach to confront the leader and his hard-line supporters to improve Iran's human rights record. 'He is part of the establishment. He has gained this status because of the Islamic republic of Iran. Why should he shoot himself by weakening the system?' said Farahvashian." http://t.uani.com/1jtRzum

IHR: "According to the Baluchestan Activists Campaign, five people were hanged at Minab Prison (in Hormozgan province) on the morning of Tuesday November 24. The prisoners were reportedly executed for alleged drug related offenses; one of the prisoners was Kurdish and another was a Pakistani citizen." http://t.uani.com/1lpPLUg

AFP: "A high-profile performance in Iran by the Tehran Symphony Orchestra was cancelled at the last minute because it was due to feature female musicians, its furious conductor said on Sunday. Ali Rahbari said he was told 15 minutes before the orchestra was scheduled to play at a major sporting event that they could not. 'The chairs were laid out and everything looked fine,' he said, referring to the World Wrestling Clubs Cup competition which opened in the Iranian capital on Thursday. 'But before performing the national anthem, all of a sudden they announced women cannot play on stage.' Neither Rahbari or the ISNA news agency, which reported his comments, detailed who 'they' were. 'I was offended and said it was impossible for me to accept such an insult,' Rahbari added. 'We either play all together or we leave'. Efforts to resolve the issue failed. 'It's absolutely impossible for women to play musical instruments on stage,' Rahbari quoted organisers of the ceremony as saying. Banned from singing solo in public since the Islamic revolution of 1979, female Iranian musicians have repeatedly complained of having been stopped from performing, particularly outside Tehran. But Thursday's refusal, according to ISNA, was the first time a performance by the Symphony Orchestra, one of Iran's oldest, had been cancelled because of its female members. 'They invited us themselves and yet they disrespected us,' Rahbari said. 'Why shouldn't they be allowed to perform the national anthem of their country?'" http://t.uani.com/1lpTNMv

Foreign Affairs

AFP: "Bahrain's foreign ministry has summoned Iran's envoy and accused Tehran of interfering in its affairs after remarks by the Islamic republic's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, BNA state news agency said. Iran's acting charge d'affaires Hameed Shafee Zad was handed an official letter protesting the 'blatant interference' in Bahrain's internal affairs, BNA reported late Saturday. Khamenei's remarks 'carry an explicit incitement and reflect a clear determination to foment discord and fuel tensions in the region,' BNA quoted foreign ministry undersecretary Abdulla Abdullatif Abdulla as saying. The protest by the Sunni-ruled kingdom appeared to refer to remarks posted on Khamenei's Twitter account accusing Bahrain's 'tyrant minority' of 'desecrating' things sacred to the Shiite majority." http://t.uani.com/1Q8oAZZ
       

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

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