Thursday, February 25, 2016

Eye on Iran: Another American Citizen Arrested in Iran








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WashPost: "An elderly U.S. citizen whose son was arrested in Iran last fall has also been detained in Tehran, his family said Wednesday. Baquer Namazi, 80, was arrested Monday evening and apparently taken to Tehran's Evin prison, according to a Facebook posting by his wife, Effie. Their son, Siamak, an Iranian American businessman based in Dubai, has been held by Iranian security authorities since October. It is not clear what crime he is accused of committing, and no charges in his case have been announced. In an open Facebook message to friends and relatives, Effie Namazi wrote that neither she nor a family lawyer has been able to get more information about the circumstances behind her husband's arrest. 'Now both my innocent son Siamak and my Baquer are in prison for no reason,' she wrote. 'This is a nightmare I can't describe.' The Iranian lawyer, Mahmoud Alizadeh Tabatabei, told the Associated Press on Thursday that he does not believe the elder Namazi will face 'political charges,' and is being held 'for some investigation only.' 'It is unlikely that he will be charged,' the lawyer told AP. Baquer Namazi has a heart ailment and other conditions requiring medication, his wife wrote. She described herself as 'extremely concerned and worried sick' about his health. Her husband was a prominent official during the rule of the shah, who was toppled in the Islamic revolution of 1979. Namazi, a former governor of the oil-rich province of Khuzestan, was allowed to leave Iran with his family in 1983 and immigrate to the United States. He subsequently moved permanently back to Iran. Most recently, Namazi was the head of Hamyaran, a group of Iranian nongovernmental organizations. His son worked for Crescent Petroleum in the United Arab Emirates... 'I pray to God that my Siamak and Baquer return home to me and that they are released,' Effie Namazi wrote. 'Please keep them in your prayers.'" http://t.uani.com/1S3BWsk

Reuters: "Iran's top leader warned voters on Wednesday the West was plotting to influence elections pitting centrists close to President Hassan Rouhani against conservative hardliners in a contest that could shape the Islamic Republic for years to come. In remarks reflecting an abiding mistrust of Rouhani's rapprochement with the West, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said he was confident Iranians would vote in favor of keeping Iran's anti-Western stance on Friday in the first elections since last year's nuclear accord with world powers. Rouhani's allies, who hope the deal will hasten Iran's opening up to the world after years of sanctions, have come under increasing pressure in the election campaign from hardliners who accuse them of links to Western powers including the United States and Britain... Rouhani on Wednesday denied accusations from hardliners that the candidates close to him were affiliated with Western powers, calling it an insult to the intelligence of Iranians. In remarks on his official website, Khamenei was quoted as saying he was certain the United States had concocted a plot after the nuclear deal to 'infiltrate' the Islamic Republic. 'When I talked about a U.S. infiltration plot, it made some people in the country frustrated,' said the Shi'ite clerical leader, who has final say on all major state policy in Iran... 'They complain (about) why we talk about infiltration all the time ... But this is a real plot. Sometimes even the infiltrators don't know they are a part of it,' he said. 'One of the enemy's ruses is to portray a false dichotomy between a pro-government and anti-government parliament,' Khamenei was quoted as saying by state news agency IRNA. 'The nation does not want a pro- or anti-government parliament, but rather a strong and faithful parliament that is aware of its duties and is not intimidated by the United States,' he said... potential detente with the West has alarmed hardliners, who have seen a flood of European trade and investment delegations arrive in Tehran to discuss possible deals in the wake of the nuclear agreement. Since then, hardline security officials have arrested dozens of artists, journalists and businessmen, including Iranians holding joint U.S. or British citizenship, as part of a crackdown on 'Western infiltration.'" http://t.uani.com/1mXL6tm

AFP: "Israel on Thursday denounced an Iranian decision to give thousands of dollars to relatives of Palestinians killed during Israeli-Palestinian violence that has soared in recent months. Iran's ambassador to Lebanon, Mohammad Fathali, said Wednesday that Tehran would offer $7,000 to the families of each Palestinian killed in what he called the 'Jerusalem intifada'. Iran will also give $30,000 to Palestinian families whose homes have been destroyed by Israel because a member is accused of carrying out an anti-Israeli attack, he told a news conference in Beirut. According to Iran's official news agency IRNA, representatives of the Palestinian militant movements Hamas and Islamic Jihad, as well as Lebanese Shiite militia Hezbollah, met with Fathali in Beirut. The money pledged is in addition to the monthly aid paid since 1987 by an Iranian institution to families of Palestinians killed in the violence, he said. 'This shows that Iran, even after the nuclear agreement (with world powers), is continuing to aid terrorism, including Palestinian terrorism, Hezbollah terrorism and its assistance to Hamas,' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday before meeting his Bulgarian counterpart Boyko Borisov in Jerusalem. 'This is something that the nations of the world must confront and condemn and assist Israel -- and other countries, of course -- in repelling,' he added. Israel's ambassador to the United Nations, Danny Danon, has written to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon urging condemnation of the Iranian initiative, Israel public radio reported." http://t.uani.com/1Qgx3HM

Nuclear Program & Agreement

Ars Technica: "Just weeks after North Korea successfully launched a satellite into orbit, Iran is preparing an attempt to match that effort-and rocket ahead in the development of its own ICBM technology in the process. Images obtained by Melissa Hanham, Catherine Dill, and Dr Jeffrey Lewis of Arms Control Wonk from Apollo Mapping and Airbus Defense and Space show that the Imam Khomeni Space Center near Semnan, Iran, is actively preparing for a launch. The Iranian government has issued a NOTAM (notice to airmen) warning them away from the area from March 1 to March 2. The Khomeni Space Center is near Semnan, Iran-about 200 kilometers east of Tehran. The launch vehicle being stacked there, called the Simorgh, is designed to put a 100 kilogram payload (220 pounds) into a low-earth orbit of 500 kilometers (310 miles, or roughly 270 nautical miles). The satellite, which was unveiled in February, is called the Friendship Testing Satellite. It's essentially a giant 'cubesat' carrying a number of experiments. And like the North Korean Kwangmyŏngsŏng-4 satellite launched in February, the Friendship Testing Satellite is roughly the mass of a nuclear warhead. That's a significant step forward from Iran's first orbital effort-a much smaller (27 kilogram, or 59 pound) satellite using a previous two-stage rocket, the Seman, in February of 2009. And the Simorg has a first stage that closely resembles the first stage of the Taepodong-2 rocket used by North Korea in its successful launch. The Simorg has raised concerns about Iran's potential development of an intercontinental ballistic missile. 'There are differences,' wrote Lewis, who is director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute of International Studies. 'But the Simorgh demonstrates two essential technologies for an ICBM-clustered engines and staging. That said, the Simorgh itself is not an ICBM. What the US intelligence community says is: This technology could be used for an ICBM-class vehicle.'" http://t.uani.com/1TB0Fnu

Sanctions Enforcement

AP: "Secretary of State John Kerry told lawmakers Wednesday that slapping Iran with additional sanctions right now would not be helpful. In testimony before a Senate panel, Kerry advised waiting to see how the landmark nuclear deal proceeds before making a decision on imposing additional measures to punish Tehran for belligerent behavior. Lawmakers are considering legislation that would address Iran's ballistic missile tests, human rights violations and a reauthorization of the Iran Sanctions Act, which expires at the end of the year. Republicans are especially incensed over Iran's detention of U.S. sailors in January. But Kerry counseled a go-slow approach. 'I don't think there's a need to rush here,' he told members of the Senate appropriations state and foreign operations subcommittee. 'I'd like to see how the implementation goes so we can do whatever we're doing advised by that process.' Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper told lawmakers during testimony earlier this month that since 2010 Iran has fired about 140 missiles in violation of a U.N. resolution. About half of the launches occurred during negotiations over the nuclear deal. The two most recent firings took place last fall, according to Clapper, who said Iranian officials were sending a message 'that they are still going to continue to develop what is already a very robust missile force.' The Obama administration imposed new sanctions against 11 individuals and entities involved in Iran's ballistic missile program a day after the nuclear deal went into effect. But Republicans derided the new sanctions as weak and have urged a more forceful response. 'I have a list a mile long,' said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., the subcommittee's chairman." http://t.uani.com/1QgcChD

Free Beacon: "The Obama administration has announced that it will not enforce new counter-terrorism measures passed by an overwhelming bipartisan majority in Congress because they could harm Iranian business interests, according to new instructions issued by the Department of Homeland Security. The administration's decision to waive portions of a new counter-terrorism law aimed at preventing terrorism-linked individuals from traveling to the United States comes on the heels of a lobbying effort by pro-Iran organizations and other Arab advocacy groups, including the Council on American-Islamic Relations, or CAIR. Congress last year tightened restrictions on the Visa Waiver Program, which facilitates travel between the United States and 38 other partner countries, to ensure that individuals from Iran and other countries with a terrorist footprint do not enter the United States without first obtaining a visa... 'The administration has the authority to waive' the counter-terrorism measures and will ensure they do not 'interfere with legitimate business interests of Iran,' Kerry wrote to Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif. 'Such waivers will be granted only on a case-by-case basis in the near future,' DHS and U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced this week. 'Categories of travelers who may be eligible for a waiver include individuals who traveled to these countries on behalf of international organizations, regional organizations, and sub-national governments on official duty; on behalf of humanitarian non-governmental organizations on official duty; or as a journalist for reporting purposes.' Additionally, 'individuals who traveled to Iran (only after July 14, 2015) or Iraq for legitimate business-related purposes may be eligible for a waiver,' according to DHS." http://t.uani.com/1mZG937

Sanctions Relief

Reuters: "Bank Muscat, Oman's largest lender by market value, is opening a representative office in Iran, the bank said on Thursday, underlining rapid growth in business ties between the countries after the lifting of sanctions on Tehran. The announcement appears to make Bank Muscat one of the first foreign financial firms to establish a presence in Iran since the international sanctions, imposed over Tehran's disputed nuclear programme, were removed in January. A brief statement by Bank Muscat did not say when the process of opening the office would be completed, or give any further details. Oman is keen to strengthen ties in order to obtain natural gas supplies for its industry and diversify its economy beyond oil. In late January, an Omani sovereign wealth fund signed an understanding with Iran's biggest auto maker, Iran Khodro Industrial Group, to study a proposal for a $200 million auto plant in Oman." http://t.uani.com/21jtJpT

Reuters: "Hellenic Petroleum, Greece's biggest oil refiner, will receive its first shipment of Iranian crude oil next month, a company executive said on Thursday. 'It was announced at a board meeting today that the first shipment will arrive at the end of March,' the executive told Reuters on condition of anonymity. Hellenic Petroleum was the first European company which agreed last month to buy crude oil from the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) after sanctions on Iran were lifted. Iran's deputy oil minister Amir-Hossein Zamaninia has said Hellenic Petroleum would buy 60,000 barrels of crude per day and could increase it to 150,000 bpd." http://t.uani.com/1KNBZH7

Yonhap (South Korea): "Iran's Mellat Bank plans to normalize operations of its branch in Seoul as early as next month following the lifting of sanctions on the Middle East country, a bank official said Wednesday. Last month, the U.S. and the European Union removed decades-long economic curbs on Tehran on the heels of its landmark deal on nuclear armaments with Washington. Since the opening of the branch in the South Korean capital in June 2001, Mellat Bank had supported bilateral trade and foreign exchange transactions, as well as the transfer of wages for Iranians working in South Korea. Its operations, however, were restricted in 2010 upon the international economic and financial sanctions against Tehran over its nuclear pursuit, with the bank carrying out limited won-based transactions. 'We've been working to rebuild the necessary infrastructure to resume normal operations,' said Kim Tae-gil, the head of the Seoul branch... 'Discussions are also under way with the U.S. to establish the substitute settlement system using euro, as we cannot take U.S. dollars when trading with Iran due to separate sanctions by Washington, and we expect to reach positive conclusions within next month,' Kim said. Following the lifting of sanctions, Iran's Persia International Bank has also been pushing to set up a branch in Seoul amid hopes for brisk bilateral exchanges. If given the nod, the Persia Bank, known as one of four major banks in Iran, would be the second Iranian bank operating in South Korea." http://t.uani.com/1TGTziR

Business Risk

Reuters: "A threat to add countries who are slow to combat terrorism financing to a public black list has proved effective in pushing them into action, a top executive at an international task force said ahead of G20 talks on the topic opening Friday. Since the Paris attacks in November, some 50 countries have responded to a new call by the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF) for concrete steps to choke the funding of terrorist organisations, the body's executive secretary, David Lewis, told AFP. The threat of inclusion on the FATF's black list of governments failing to comply has been instrumental to get this response, he said in an interview, as states tried to avoid being named and shamed. 'The prospect of the FATF taking such action has led to more than 50 countries amending legislation or being in the process of doing so,' Lewis said. 'So we see countries act very quickly to ensure that they do not get onto that list.' The FATF's current black list includes North Korea, Afghanistan and Syria. Iran is also high on the list but Tehran, which last July signed a deal with western powers ending economic sanctions, has now signalled its willingness to cooperate, Lewis said. 'Iran is coming back to the table. They have approached us. They have shown a willingness to start cooperating with us,' he said." http://t.uani.com/1Oxev3Q

Terrorism

The Record: "More than a dozen American families - including one from Teaneck and another from West Orange - that lost loved ones in Iran-sponsored terrorist attacks agreed to accept checks from the federal government 16 years ago to settle diplomatically sensitive lawsuits against Iran. But the families had one demand - and American officials agreed to it: Iran would eventually be forced to pay for this settlement as soon as the United States could tap a $400 million Iranian account that had been frozen years before. That promise appears to have been broken. Last month, without fanfare, U.S. officials returned that money to the Iranians, effectively saddling American taxpayers with a bill that Iran was supposed to pay. 'My stomach dropped. My heart sank when I heard this news,' said Arline Duker of Teaneck, whose daughter Sara was killed 20 years ago Thursday in an Iranian-financed bus bombing in Jerusalem. The move by the Obama administration to close out the terrorist claims without holding Iran financially accountable attracted little attention when American and Iranian diplomats finalized a joint agreement last month to limit Iran's nuclear program and also complete a swap of prisoners from each nation. In a footnote to that larger deal, the U.S. Treasury agreed to send the $400 million in previously frozen assets back to Tehran, along with $1.3 billion in interest... Interviews with current and former State and Treasury department officials indicate that the Obama administration opted to sweep away any old liens that had been placed on Iranian assets as a way of improving relations with Tehran. The move, however, has angered many families who were victims of Iranian terror." http://t.uani.com/1oJMgKX

Times of Israel: "Israel's Channel 2 reported Wednesday that Hamas officials met recently in Tehran with Qassem Suleimani, the head of the Al-Quds Force of Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps, and discussed Iranian funding for the terror group. He said he 'kissed the foreheads' of all those thousands engaged in anti-Israel activities, the TV report said." http://t.uani.com/1TGUsId

Yemen Crisis

Reuters: "Yemen's Gulf-backed government on Wednesday accused the Lebanese Shi'ite Muslim militia Hezbollah of training the Houthi rebels and fighting alongside them in attacks on Saudi Arabia's border, it said in a statement carried by official media. Yemen's government and its Gulf partners have long accused Hezbollah's ally Iran of backing the Houthis and seeking to transform the group into a replica of the Lebanese militia to use as a proxy against its main regional rival, Saudi Arabia. Its latest assertion is based on 'many documents and physical evidence' which Hezbollah would not be able to deny, it said, but that it did not immediately produce." http://t.uani.com/1QHz5pX

Iran-Saudi Tensions

AP: "Kuwait and Qatar on Wednesday became the latest Arab countries to follow in Saudi Arabia's footsteps by urging their citizens already in Lebanon to leave and issuing a travel warning for nationals planning to visit there. Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain - all member-states of the tight-knit Gulf Cooperation Council - have called for their citizens to avoid travel to Lebanon. The Kuwait News Agency, which carried the travel advisory by Kuwait's Embassy in Lebanon, gave no details on the nature of the security threat. Qatar's Foreign Ministry issued a similar advisory later Wednesday, published on state-run news agency. The move comes days after Saudi Arabia cut $4 billion in aid to Lebanese security forces in retaliation for Lebanon siding with Iran in the Sunni kingdom's proxy wars with the Shiite power. Lebanon is home to the powerful Iran-backed Hezbollah group. The Saudi decision came after the Lebanese foreign minister, Gibran Bassil, an ally of Hezbollah, declined to support Saudi resolutions against Iran during two meetings of Arab and Muslim foreign ministers. The spat is inflaming tensions in Lebanon between the pro-Saudi and pro-Hezbollah camp in Lebanon." http://t.uani.com/1UmOxHB

Human Rights

ICHRI: "The secretary general of the Teachers Association of Iran, Esmail Abdi, has been sentenced to six years in prison for 'propaganda against the state' and 'collusion against national security' by Judge Abolqasem Salavati of Branch 15 of the Revolutionary Court. The verdict was issued to Abdi's lawyer on Tuesday, February 14, 2016, a source told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. 'His lawyer will appeal this decision within 20 days and his family hopes it will be reversed by the Appeals Court,' the source added. 'Mr. Abdi objected to his sentence and said he's a teacher and had nothing to do with state secrets. What kind of secrets are they talking about? What sort of confidential documents could a teacher have and publish?' a source close to Abdi told the Campaign. Labor activism in Iran is seen as a national security offense. Independent labor unions are not allowed to function, strikers are often fired and risk arrest, and labor leaders are consistently prosecuted under catchall national security charges and sentenced to long prison terms. The source added that Abdi's role as secretary general of the Teachers Association of Iran came under scrutiny after a May 2015 demonstration by teachers and their supporters in front of Parliament." http://t.uani.com/1Q43NGa

IHR: "In the months leading to the Iranian 2016 elections, authorities have cracked down heavily on Iran's fragile civil society. On Sunday February 21 Branch 54 of Tehran's Appeals Court reportedly confirmed prison sentences for four civil rights activists: Arash Sadeghi, 15 years in prison; Golrokh Irayee, six years in prison; Navid Kamran, one year in prison; and Behnam Mousivand, one year in prison. Close sources say the court justified the rulings by citing peaceful activities, such as: posting on Facebook, participating in a protest gathering of Gonabadi Dervishes, having contact with human rights activists and groups in addition to having contact with news media groups and independent journalists outside Iran. This is the second case file for Arash Sadeghi and Behnam Mousivand; Sadeghi also has a four-year suspended prison term and Mousivand a two-year suspended prison term... IHR considers the current human rights situation in Iran a crisis that requires the attention of the public, in particular European governments and the United Nations. 'The Iranian judiciary and security insitutions are ruthless in their repression of Iran's fragile civil society and are attempting to silence any voice of dissent in Iran. The Eruopean Union and the United Nations should not be silent to the unlawful behavior of Iranian authorities,' says Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, spokesperson of Iran Human Rights." http://t.uani.com/1LHHpyd

IHR: "Iranian vice-president claims there is a village in the Sistan & Baluchestan province (southern Iran) where every single man has been executed on drug charges. Talking to state run news agency Mehr on Tuesday February 23 about the huge problem of drug usage and offenses in Iran, Shahindokht Molaverdi, Iranian Vice President for Women & Family Affairs (appointed by Hassan Rouhani in 2013) said: 'We have a village in Sistan & Baluchestan where every single man has been executed. Today the children [of these men] are potential drug traffickers; either because they will seek revenge for the deaths of their fathers or because they will need to financially provide for their families, as a result of lack of support by the government [and since the breadwinners of their families were the men who were executed].' Every year several hundred people are hanged in Iran for drug related charges. According to IHR, majority of people executed in Iran belong to the most marginalized groups in society, and ethnic regions are the most affected. 'Iranian authorities have repeatedly admitted that the death penalty has not solved the problem of drug trafficking, but they still continue to execute people for drug charges. In 2015 the number of executions in Iran for drug offenses was the highest in 20 years,' says Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, spokesperson of Iran Human Rights. IHR once again calls on the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and country donors to stop providing equipment, funding, and technology to Iran until the death penalty is no longer issued for drug offenses... The UN must not continue funding the Iranian authorities' 'killing machine' under the pretext of fighting drug trafficking." http://t.uani.com/1oJOz0p

ICHRI: "The imprisoned political journalist Issa Saharkhiz has resumed his hunger strike after being placed in solitary confinement on February 21, 2016 despite having lost an alarming amount of weight. He has also not been allowed to meet with his lawyer, according to his son. 'My father has lost more than 20 kilos (44 lbs.). When my family saw him more than 10 days ago, they said he did not look well at all, physically. Now they have transferred him to solitary and we have no news at all [about his health],' Mehdi Saharkhiz told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. Saharkhiz has been charged with 'acting against national security' and 'propaganda against the state' but has not been allowed to meet with his lawyer nor has Saharkhiz's lawyer been allowed to read the indictment. 'Why aren't they treating prisoners according to their own laws? According to the law, those accused of political crimes should be tried by a jury. The law says the accused should be released from detention after interrogation until the start of the trial. But none of these laws are being carried out,' said Mehdi Saharkhiz. 'Why do they expect others to surrender to the law but they themselves don't do so?'" http://t.uani.com/1Ox7tvY

Domestic Politics

WSJ: "When hard-line lawmaker Esmail Kowsari puts callers to his office on hold, they are treated to an anti-American song popular among his constituents. 'America, death to your deceit!' the lyrics go. 'The blood of our youth is dripping from your claw!' Mr. Kowsari and other ultraconservatives are fighting to define Iran's ties with the West along the lines of the song ahead of Friday's general election for parliament and the Assembly of Experts, a clerical body. But the vote also presents an opportunity for relative moderates led by President Hassan Rouhani to cement political gains from last year's nuclear deal with world powers. That pact brought the Islamic Republic relief from sanctions and an opportunity to reset relations with the U.S. and other countries. 'The priority of reformists now is the return of peace and rationality,' said Ali Jamali, a party leader from the main reform-minded bloc. 'The nuclear deal was a significant event to get the country back on this track.' Yet the reformists face steep odds. Most change-minded candidates were barred from running by the Guardian Council, a powerful body effectively controlled by the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, according to the moderate camp... On Wednesday, Mr. Khamenei appeared to endorse the ultraconservatives. 'The Iranian people want a parliament that has the cure for people's pain, and a religious, committed and brave parliament that doesn't fall for the enemy's tricks, a parliament that puts importance on dignity and independence,' he said, according to his website... Mr. Kowsari, a parliament member since 2008, said the president's promises of improvements to living conditions in return for accepting curbs on Iran's nuclear program haven't been realized. 'Mr. Rouhani said they would let both the [uranium enrichment] centrifuges and the wheels of the economy spin,' he said. 'But practically, we don't see this happening.'" http://t.uani.com/1oCLoHl

Reuters: "The preliminaries to both contests underlined that elected politicians are ultimately under the thumb of clerics, Islamic jurists and their opaque institutions, with the supreme leader at their apex. Even if his hardline allies were to lose the parliamentary race to their moderate rivals, Khamenei will continue to hold ultimate authority, while presidents and lawmakers come and go. 'Let's presume we have a reformist government that has a majority, I don't think they will make a big difference. The supreme leader and the Revolutionary Guards set the tone and the limit and determine the overall direction of the country,' said one Tehran analyst who requested anonymity. 'We shouldn't have high expectations. The conservatives have the levers of power. The media, the military, the intelligence, the actual financial resources are in their hands. It is a dual system and the other side is still very powerful,' he added. The last time reformers won the upper hand in parliament, under former President Mohammad Khatami, the Guardian Council vetoed several laws it passed as contrary to Islamic principles... The polarization gripping the country had hit young people, many of whom are voting for the first time. While some said they would vote for reformists because they seek change and want to block the hardliners, others planned to vote for conservatives out of loyalty to Khamenei. Some said they would boycott because their vote won't make any difference. 'I won't waste my time and vote as nothing will change because the conservatives have the power in their hands,' said Area Behfuruz, 18, a first-year student of dentistry at Tehran University. Sahar, 26, an art student, said: 'I don't think fundamental change will happen at all. Those running the country are the same. The few times we had some change, we had the hardliners blocking them. Even if the reformists gain power now they will be blocked by the hardliners.' ... 'This is fundamentally a status quo political system which is not interested in real change,' said the Tehran analyst. 'Change is very gradual, cosmetic. This election won't usher a new era for Iran.'" http://t.uani.com/1XOJUGe

AFP: "The field for Iran's parliamentary election on Friday has narrowed sharply with more than a fifth of the candidates pulling out, apparently urging voters to back the main political lists instead. The head of the interior ministry's election headquarters, Mohammad Hossein Moghimi, said on Thursday that 4,844 hopefuls would contest the 290 seats, meaning 1,385 candidates have withdrawn. Polls will open at 0430 GMT and are scheduled to close at 1430 GMT but voting could be extended if required, Iranian media quoted him as saying. His comments followed a state television appearance late Wednesday by Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli who revealed the fall in numbers. 'It now leaves around 17 people competing for each parliamentary seat,' Fazli said. 'Ten percent of the total candidates are women,' he added... For the first time, voting will also take place on the same day for the 88 members of the Assembly of Experts, a powerful committee of clerics that will choose Iran's next supreme leader. Fazli said the number of candidates in that ballot had also fallen, from 161 to 159." http://t.uani.com/24rlxTz

AFP: "As Iranians vote on Friday for a new parliament and the clerics who choose the Islamic republic's supreme leader, many poorer people believe that major change is unlikely to happen. 'The people have so many problems they can't be counted,' said Yadollah Sabzi, a small trader in the busy Molavi district of south Tehran. His is a gesture of stoic defiance more than anything else, in an area of rundown buildings and small colourful shops. Overloaded handcarts and rusty cars jam the streets, as women in long black veils do their shopping. Molavi is in stark contrast with the visible wealth of north Tehran. There, Maserati and Porsche sports cars, chic fashion and modern architecture characterise the Western decadence that the late revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini railed against. Iran's nuclear deal with world powers, which lifted sanctions and ended a 13-year crisis that has badly battered the economy, had raised hopes of better times ahead. But amid much hype about the diplomacy, expectations are now colliding with the realisation that improvements cannot come overnight... Nearby, 40-year-old housewife Fatemeh Hodjati, walking with her small daughter and a friend, was initially reluctant to speak on camera, but relented when she heard it was not domestic media for broadcast inside Iran. 'Prices have gone really high' and it's 'very tough' for the poor ahead of Nowruz, the Persian New Year beginning on March 20, she said. 'Jobs have dropped in the last year and there's a lot of unemployment. It's awful.'" http://t.uani.com/1QHBb9h   

AFP: "The Guardian Council, a constitutional watchdog that vets election candidates, excluded all 16 women seeking one of the assembly's 88 seats, meaning the panel, which will pick Khamenei's successor when he dies, will remain men only. Breaking the gender gap would not be unprecedented. The first Assembly of Experts after the Islamic revolution of 1979 included a woman, Monireh Gorji. Women make up 50.4 percent of Iran's population, according to the last census. But despite President Hassan Rouhani's cabinet having three female ministers, all vice presidents, women still dramatically lag behind men in high office. Shariatpanahi, a physicist on Iran's nuclear programme between 1975 and 1987, has studied Islamic texts closely and says their interpretation, not the actual words, is to blame. 'I have reached the conclusion that we need to present new interpretations. If we have this there won't be this much discrimination imposed on women on religious grounds,' she said... with more women than men in university, Shariatpanahi says there can be no educational justification for the shortfall. The campaign is urging female and male voters to back candidates who do not have an 'anti-women record' in public office or in their careers. 'Our ultimate goal, over time, is to get 50 percent of parliament's members to be women,' she said, stressing that age-old traditions must be broken down. It will be a hard task... Of the 6,229 candidates in Friday's parliamentary polls, only 586 -- nine percent -- are women... The issue has resonated strongly in the election campaign, with a gathering of female reformists, many of them youths, chanting 'Equal Rights for Women' at a pro-Rouhani gathering last week." http://t.uani.com/1KNG4eB

Guardian: "Apathy is a huge problem, however. 'I voted for the revolution when I was a young man, and that was it,' shrugged Hassan, a burly 60 something driver stuck in the traffic around the capital's Ferdowsi Square. 'Why should I bother now?' The cynicism is just as strong in the leafy north Tehran suburb of Jamaran, where Ayatollah Khomeini lived. 'If you are educated you never vote because you would just make a fool of yourself,' said Negin, a young dentist smoking shisha with four friends - their loose headscarves, makeup and fashionable clothes and boots a reminder of far-reaching social changes of recent years. 'It's easier to live in Iran without thinking about politics,' sighed Melina, a designer. 'People opposed to voting think those who do are sheep or donkeys,' said one still undecided middle-aged voter... Above all, Iranians are approaching this contest in a realistic mood - and not least because of the violence elsewhere in the region. 'The simple-minded, idealistic fantasy of an Iranian-style Arab spring has gone,' argues the veteran analyst Saeed Barzin, 'Iranians have become more conservative and more inclined to get involved in elections even though they know they are not free and fair. That's important after what happened in 2009. This is based on a social contract where the state says it will provide security and a chance of economic progress and allow you to choose between political programmes that are somewhat different. It's fairly limited on both sides.'" http://t.uani.com/1UmOZFC

Opinion & Analysis

UANI Chairman Joseph Lieberman in WashPost: "For more than 50 years, national security leaders have gathered annually at the Munich Security Conference, a conclave established during the depths of the Cold War as a meeting place for the Western allies standing against the communist threat. I have been privileged to attend almost half of these meetings - from the era of hope and excitement that followed the Soviet collapse in the early 1990s through the divisive and difficult wars of the post-9/11 decade - but none has been as troubling as the one held this month. That is because the world has never seemed as dangerous and leaderless as it does now. Only the extremists and bullies act boldly, and therefore they have seized the initiative. It is a moment in history that evokes the haunting words of W.B. Yeats: 'The best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity.' The simple fact is that there is more instability in the world today than at any time since the end of World War II. The threats come from emboldened expansionist powers such as Iran, Russia and China, and also terrorist aggressors such as the Islamic State and al-Qaeda. In short, the enemies of freedom are on the march. At the same time, the United States - which assumed global leadership after World War II to protect our domestic security, prosperity and freedom - has chosen this moment to become more passive in the world. The absence of American leadership has certainly not caused all the instability, but it has encouraged and exacerbated it. For example, while the threat of violent Islamist extremism has existed for several decades, the military and political disengagement of the United States from Iraq after the success of the surge and our failure to intervene to stop the slaughter in Syria have conspired to create a vacuum in the heart of the Middle East. This vacuum has been exploited by the region's most dangerous anti-American forces: totalitarian Sunni fanatics and the Islamic Republic of Iran. The result is the creation of a terrorist sanctuary of unprecedented scale and Iranian domination over multiple Arab capitals. Russian President Vladimir Putin has also moved to exploit the vacuum, first by seizing Crimea and moving into eastern Ukraine in 2014. The United States reacted to that breach of world order with words of outrage and some sanctions against Moscow, but also by refusing to give Ukrainians the defensive weapons that might impose a heavier military cost on Russia for its adventurism. Rather than deterring Russia from further aggression, our hesitation in Ukraine signaled to the Kremlin that the United States itself could be deterred when Russia acted boldly and decisively. Putin soon extended this lesson to Syria, where he dispatched his forces last year in order to turn the tide of war in favor of a weakening Bashar al-Assad. Despite predictions of 'quagmire,' that is precisely what Russia's intervention has achieved - while reestablishing Moscow as a force to be reckoned with in yet another vital region. The U.S. response? To ask for Putin's help in extinguishing fires that he himself has been feeding. This fits a broader pattern. In too many places in recent years, the United States has treated its adversaries as essential partners to be courted, while dismissing or denigrating its historic allies and partners as inconveniences or obstacles to peace. But as frustrated as they are with the United States, our friends also recognize that they are incapable by themselves of managing the crises that confront them without the United States. In Munich this month, the United States ratified its diminished role by reaching an agreement on Syria that elevates the standing of Russia, pressures the Syrian opposition and stands little chance of ending the campaign of indiscriminate violence being waged on behalf of the Assad regime against the long-suffering Syrian people. Almost no one in Munich thought it would work. At the end of the conference, I shared these fears about the state of the world with an Arab diplomat. 'I agree,' he replied, 'and when we return to Munich next February, it will all be much worse.' The best way to defy that prediction is for the United States to reassert its historic leadership role - not by acting alone, but in concert with our worldwide network of allies and friends, which is yearning for this. In a conversation with the leader of a European ally, some of us asked what the United States could do to be most helpful to him and his country. His answer was direct: 'Elect a president who understands the importance of American leadership in the world.' That would be in our national interest and is also wise counsel to American voters as we decide whom to support in this year's topsy-turvy presidential election." http://t.uani.com/1LHGk9U

FP: "In a Jan. 9 speech to commemorate a 1978 uprising in Qom, Iran's religious center, in which the country's then-royal regime killed protesters opposed to its rule, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei extolled the event as an example of Islamic exceptionalism. The deadly incident, known as the 19th of Dey, its date in the Persian calendar, is widely considered a prelude to the revolution that one year later established the clerical theocracy that rules Iran today. Khamenei boasted that the flame of Iran's revolution, unlike its French and Russian forebears, has never been extinguished. And he pledged to keep it that way. 'It is very important that a revolution manages to survive, keep itself alive, and confront its enemies and defeat them,' he said. 'Our revolution is the only revolution that has managed to achieve these things, and these achievements will continue.' The tribute served as a warning that, regardless of the outcome of the elections this Friday, Iran's path is unlikely to change. Having warmed up his audience, Khamenei turned his attention to more recent demonstrations - the street protests, led by Iran's reformist candidates, against then-President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's re-election in 2009, after a ballot widely considered to have been rigged. Unlike the remembrance of the 19th of Dey, future history lessons in Iranian schools are unlikely to cast these protests as glorious if Khamenei gets his way. That election's outcome is the gaping sore that scars Iranian politics and the low point of Khamenei's near 27-year tenure as supreme leader. To him, the protests were not a reaction to the betrayal of the electorate by those intent on securing Ahmadinejad's re-election, but a U.S.-engineered plot to weaken the Islamic revolution. The same specter of foreign plots hangs over all Iranian elections, including the upcoming vote. 'In order to magnify the losing minority and make them visible, they use a color to represent them.... Our lot was green,' he said of the movement that opposed Ahmadinejad's victory. Despite the protests resulting in dozens of Iranians being killed by their own security forces, the crowd laughed at Khamenei's remarks about the pro-democracy Green Movement, according to the official transcript of the speech posted on his website. This mocking of Iran's reformists and the tragic fate they met in 2009 presaged what took place a few weeks later, when Khamenei's allies excluded thousands of reformist candidates from this week's elections. The only reformist candidates who survived the cull were those whom most voters had never heard of. Paradoxically, the reformist list's best-known candidate is Ali Motahari, parliament's most outspoken member. A lifetime conservative scion of a famous cleric, his recent realignment with the reformists is testament to the country's changing political landscape. While the regime wants 2009 to be forgotten, Motahari has criticized the detention of Green Movement leaders Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, simultaneously winning respect from centrists and moderates as well as reformists. The reformists have also toned down their ideological aims markedly in this election - a step backward from President Mohammad Khatami's administration of the early 2000s, when they openly aimed to alter the Islamic Republic's rigid ideology and pass new laws to tackle gender inequality and promote personal freedoms. This was due to the crackdown that followed the 2009 vote: The judiciary locked up so many activists and shut down so many newspapers that, right now, their goals are far more modest, including avoiding being outlawed as a political force entirely. In the present election, they have formed an ad hoc coalition with political factions supporting the country's moderate president, Hassan Rouhani, who has tended to seek more gradual change... For the country's reformists, the contradictions of the orchestrated selection process and the predominantly octogenarian makeup of Iran's highest clerical body make a mockery of claims that the polls are democratic. This dissonance is increasingly hard for a young population to stomach. (Iran's median age is 30, and around 60 percent of its population of roughly 80 million is younger than that.) It is, according to Khamenei, the duty of all citizens to vote. But the underlying meaning of his pronouncements is that the purpose of doing so is to enshrine the system's legitimacy, rather than allow people to register disapproval. 'My father says I should vote, but the way I see it there is no point,' said Mira, a 28-year-old fashion designer in Tehran who believes she and her peers would only be powerless dupes should they cast a ballot. She has voted only once in her lifetime - in 2009, in Ahmadinejad's controversial re-election. 'It doesn't make a difference who we support,' Mira said. 'We saw that then with the results, and it's no different now.' Such remarks reflect the fact that those inside Iran are less optimistic for dramatic reform at home than some foreign observers, who have been gripped by the prospect of a post-nuclear-deal domestic shake-up. The vetting process has played its part in dampening hopes of change. But it remains true that Iran, in the words of Matthew Trevithick, the American student who was recently released after being imprisoned by the regime, 'is at war with itself' - and it's not yet clear who will win the battle in the long term. The wounds that were opened by the suppression of the 2009 protests show no sign of healing. At the first rally of the pro-Rouhani Alliance of Reformists and Government Supporters, which aims to topple hard-line conservatives on Friday, thousands chanted 'no more house arrest' and 'free the prisoners.' The chants were a reference to Mousavi, Karroubi and the countless others deprived of liberty. The thousands who convened in the sports hall rally also held up a modified version of a poster of the reform movement's éminence grise, Khatami, from the presidential campaign that saw him elected in 1997. The original shows his face in studied concentration, chin resting on hands. But the 2016 version shows only the hands, due to censorship under a media ban on Khatami's face being published or his words used. The moderate alliance's logo fills the blank space." http://t.uani.com/1WLngNy

Natasha Bertrand in Business Insider: "Saudi Arabia warned its citizens against traveling to Lebanon on Tuesday after one of its biggest allies, the United Arab Emirates, banned travel to Lebanon altogether. The move, which followed the Kingdom's decision last week to halt $4 billion in funding for Lebanese security forces, shows that the Saudis 'appear to have had enough,' said Tony Badran, a researcher at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies specializing in the military and political affairs of the Levant. 'Saudi Arabia is signaling that they're not going to bankroll an effective Iranian satrapy that's actively aligned against them,' Badran told Business Insider on Tuesday. That satrapy is Hezbollah, a Lebanese militant organization sending fighters to Syria to support Iran-backed Shi'ite militias battling Saudi-backed Sunni rebel groups that oppose Syrian President Bashar Assad. One of Hezbollah's staunchest allies is the right-wing Christian Free Patriotic Movement, headed by Lebanese Foreign Minister Gibran Bassil. Saudi Arabia cut diplomatic ties with Iran earlier this year, after the Saudi embassy in Tehran was attacked by protestors decrying Riyadh's decision to execute a prominent Shi'ite cleric. Lebanon has long had a strong relationship with Saudi Arabia, but Bassil apparently took Iran's side in the most recent spat between Tehran and Riyadh. Elie Fawaz, writing for the Lebanese news outlet NOW, notes that the Saudis have withdrawn aid because of how state institutions are, 'one way or another, support[ing] Hezbollah's military effort in Syria.' The Saudis, then, are now 'showing their seriousness about confronting Iran' and warning Lebanon that they won't underwrite an Iranian vassal, Badran said. 'The talk is that the GCC [Gulf Cooperation Council] might take tough action against Hezbollah's allies, especially the Christian ones, who support Hezbollah's domination of Lebanon,' Badran said. 'And some believe that these allies are the weakest link.' The Saudis' determination to take on Iran and its proxies is clearly growing. Earlier this month, the spokesman of the Saudi-led coalition force in Yemen told reporters that the Kingdom had made a 'final' decision to send ground troops into Syria. And last week, Saudi foreign minister Adel al-Jubeir called for sending surface-to-air missiles to rebel groups in Syria 'to change the balance of power on the ground.' The Saudis have since walked back both announcements somewhat. But they clearly have remained eager to counter Iran's expanding influence in the region. 'The question now for the Saudis is about how to align that determination with means and actual steps,' Badran said. 'Obama is a big hurdle.' The Saudis have shown no signs of abandoning their proxy war with Iran in Syria, especially since doing so would effectively guarantee Assad's indefinite hold on power and, by extension, a bridge to Hezbollah for Iran. Though it has softened its position on Assad's ouster, the White House has reiterated that it believes the war cannot end as long as Assad in power. But the Kingdom is still waiting for reciprocity and readiness from the Obama administration to more aggressively support anti-Assad rebels, who are rapidly losing ground to pro-regime forces as Russian airstrikes clear the way for them to advance in the north. Indeed, as the Saudis continue to balk at the US's decision to lift nuclear-related sanctions on Iran, Washington has shown few, if any, signs that it intends to prevent Syria from becoming a Russian-Iranian sphere of influence.And that may be intentional. 'The Iranians hold the Obama legacy in their hands,'Aaron David Miller, a former Middle East negotiator and now the vice president at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, said in a January interview with Bloomberg View. 'We are constrained and we are acquiescing to a certain degree to ensure we maintain a functional relationship with the Iranians.'" http://t.uani.com/1WLnJQ5
       

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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