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Daily Beast: "Newly released satellite images of
Iran's top-secret Parchin military complex reveal that even as Iran was
working to negotiate a nuclear deal, it was apparently working to hide
its atomic work of the past and hedge its bets for the future.
Forecasting site Stratfor.com says the images published Monday show
Iran building a tunnel into a heavily guarded mountain complex inside
the Parchin facility, some 20 miles southeast of Tehran, while also
working to erase signs of alleged high-explosive testing at another
area on the site. 'We're not saying they're cheating on the nuclear
deal,' Stratfor analyst Sim Tack told The Daily Beast. 'The images show
Iran was going through the motions to hide what it's done before, and
it is still...developing facilities that the IAEA may or may not have
access to,' Tack said, referring to the International Atomic Energy
Agency. The progression of satellite images tracking construction at
Parchin from 2012 to 2015 show how Iran's leaders apparently worked to
keep regime hardliners happy by moving forward with weapons programs,
even as the leadership worked to erase signs of an illegal nuclear
weapons program, Tack said... Tack said the publication of images
of the near-simultaneous construction of the tunnel entrance to another
part of the complex is new. 'The imagery showed they were working on a
tunnel entrance within the Parchin complex...and it looks like it's
complete,' Tack said. A 2014 image Stratfor did not release showed
construction equipment outside tunnel entrance. 'They were still going
forward with that construction during the talks,' he said... Whatever's
hidden beneath that mountain, the IAEA didn't get a look at it last
September, he said. 'There are places where nobody knows what's going
on,' he said." http://t.uani.com/1PKdpaf
WSJ: "Iran plans to sell 300,000
barrels of crude oil a day to European customers now that Western
sanctions have been lifted, the country's oil minister told state media
Saturday. It is the first time Iran's top oil official, Bijan Zanganeh,
has said how much of its new exports would be headed for Europe, a
major market for the Islamic Republic before much of the West imposed
sanctions in response to Tehran's nuclear program in 2012. Iran is
trying to boost its oil exports by 500,000 barrels a day in the next
few months, with much of the rest going to Asia... Mr. Zanganeh's
comments, reported by state-run oil news agency Shana, came amid signs
that European oil-tanker companies were finding ways to ship Iranian
oil despite remaining American sanctions on Iran related to terrorism
and the country's human-rights record... Glencore PLC, the
Switzerland-based mining and trading giant, became the first Western
company to load Iranian oil on Friday night, shipping company officials
said. A tanker chartered by Glencore AG loaded 80,000 metric tons of
fuel oil at the Iranian oil-products terminal of Bandar Mahshahr late
Friday and left bound for the United Arab Emirates, according to
shipping officials and ship-tracking website FleetMon... Many
shipowners have been reluctant to carry Iran's oil because the
remaining American sanctions prohibit transactions in dollars with Iranian
entities. Most oil is paid for in dollars, and many European insurers
use the American financial system or pool resources with American
companies, making it difficult to insure vessels. One British insurer,
whose clients include a tanker owner booked to carry Iranian crude,
said he wouldn't oppose such shipments, but warned that accidents may
not be fully covered. Glencore's shipment is the first in a wave of
European purchases of Iranian oil, though the others have yet to be
loaded." http://t.uani.com/1RilXpL
AP: "Iran's constitutional
watchdog, the hard-line Guardian Council, reversed a ban on 1,500
candidates who had registered to run in Feb. 26 parliamentary
elections, state media reported on Saturday. The report on Iranian
state TV on said a list of approved candidates has been conveyed to the
Interior Ministry. It said over 6,200 candidates have been approved to
run for the 290-seat parliament. The council, which is responsible for
vetting candidates, had disqualified a large number of moderates, but
it's not clear how many of the approved candidates are considered to be
reformists. Over 12,000 hopefuls had initially registered for the
election. While some hard-liners and conservatives had also been
barred, reformists were the most affected. Many were disqualified
because they were not seen to be sufficiently loyal to the ruling
system, as defined by the Guardian Council members. Nine moderate
parties issued a statement last month complaining that only 30 of the
3,000 reformist candidates fielded across the country were allowed to
run... Reformists had registered in large numbers, hoping that many of
them would survive the screening process even if their best-known
figures were disqualified. But they expressed shock at the size of the
initial mass disqualifications." http://t.uani.com/1RinKLH
Nuclear
Program & Agreement
AP: "Iran awarded medals of honor
on Monday to its nuclear negotiators, who helped clinch a landmark deal
with world powers last year. President Hassan Rouhani presented the
'Medal of Merit' to Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and the
'Medal of Courage' to Defense Minister Hossein Dehghan and Vice
President Ali Akbar Salehi, who is also the country's nuclear chief...
'We passed behind us difficult days, difficult hours and nights,'
Rouhani said at the ceremony. 'But we did not lose the right path and
God did not leave us alone.' ... Rouhani expressed gratitude for the
support he received from Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
who has the final say on all major policies. 'Without the supreme
leader, there was no national unity. Without the supreme leader, our
(nuclear) accomplishment would have not been as great as it is today
and maybe we would not have had such an achievement,' he said." http://t.uani.com/1nY4bwV
U.S.-Iran
Relations
Politico: "As champagne corks popped
for several Americans freed in a dramatic prisoner exchange with Iran
last month, another U.S. citizen didn't get to enjoy the bubbly. He
stayed behind in the same notorious Tehran prison from which the others
were released. Nearly a month after a prisoner deal between Washington
and Tehran, the friends and family of business consultant Siamak Namazi
- who holds degrees from Tufts and Rutgers universities and has ties to
many Washington foreign policy insiders - fear he has been forgotten in
the warm afterglow of last month's swap and are pressing the Obama
administration to step up efforts to free him. 'Siamak was left
behind,' said Bijan Khajepour, Namazi's former business partner and a
cousin by marriage. 'He was as much innocent as all the other U.S.
citizens who were in Iranian prisons. And we should not forget him.'
Iranian intelligence agents arrested Namazi, 44, in mid-October. He had
traveled to Iran in July to attend a funeral but was blocked from
leaving the country. He is being held in Tehran's Evin prison, where he
is subjected to constant interrogations and almost never allowed
visitors. Sources familiar with the case said that Secretary of State
John Kerry has been pressing his Iranian counterpart, Foreign Minister
Javad Zarif, for Namazi's release. On Friday, five Iranian-American
groups sent a letter to Kerry, obtained by POLITICO, urging him to
'redouble your efforts' to win Namazi's freedom... Namazi's arrest
accomplishes several goals for Iran's hardliners, including members of
the IRGC opposed to President Hassan Rouhani's efforts to liberalize
the country, said Karim Sadjadpour, a senior associate at the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace. 'It deters diaspora businessmen from
visiting Iran, which is less competition for the IRGC. It signals to
the U.S. that the nuclear deal was only about getting sanctions lifted
and should not be misinterpreted as a desire to normalize relations...
'Many of his friends and former employees in the Iranian business
community are doing non-stop media about how Iran is such a terrific
place for foreign investment and don't even mention his name,' he
added. 'It's shameful.'" http://t.uani.com/1Q59R4g
Sanctions
Relief
Reuters: "Canada said it was lifting
some sanctions against Iran, including a ban on financial services,
imports and exports, thereby allowing companies such as plane maker
Bombardier Inc to compete against rivals. In a statement on Friday, the
new Liberal government said all applications for export permits would
be considered on a case-by-case basis... Foreign Minister Stephane Dion
said Bombardier, as well as oil, gas, chemical and agricultural
companies, should benefit. 'For them, of course, it's great news,' he told
reporters, citing the importance of gaining access to a market of 80
million people. Dion said last week that if Airbus can to sell to Iran,
then Bombardier should be allowed to export there as well... 'Canada
continues to have serious concerns regarding Iran's nuclear ambitions
and will continue to maintain tight restrictions on exports to Iran of
goods, services and technologies considered sensitive from a security
perspective,' the government said in a statement... Dion said Ottawa
would work to restore diplomatic relations with Iran gradually despite
concerns over its 'very questionable' human rights record and the
threat it poses to regional allies such as Israel. The former
Conservative government cut all diplomatic ties with Iran in
2012." http://t.uani.com/1QmWy9G
Reuters: "French car-maker PSA Peugeot
Citroen will pay Iran over 400 million euros ($446 million) in
compensation for losses after it quit the country due to sanctions, the
managing director of the country's largest carmaker said on Sunday.
Peugeot, the biggest-selling European carmaker in pre-sanctions Iran,
suspended sales in 2012 when an international boycott against Iran due
to its nuclear program was extended to the automobile sector. Most
sanctions were lifted in January. 'Based on the deductions ... 427.6
million euros of compensation will be paid by Peugeot to Iran Khodro
because of the losses,' Hashem Yekke-Zare, managing director of
Iran-Khodro Company, was quoted by the ISNA news agency as saying.
Yekke-Zare said the compensation would be mostly in services and
discounts, including auto parts for current models being produced in
Iran and devices for Peugeot 207 models. Peugeot had also written off
11 million euros of Iran Khodro debts plus 65 million euros in
royalties owed between 2012 and 2016, he said, adding 317 million euros
would be in the form of future co-operation, including training.
Peugeot declined to comment on details of the deal on Saturday but its
spokesman told Reuters that 'the deal signed with Iran is a good and
balanced one'. Last month, Peugeot and IKCO signed a joint-venture deal
to produce latest-generation vehicles in Iran." http://t.uani.com/1SZX6Hh
Bloomberg: "Iran will start sending
300,000 barrels a day of crude to Europe, 54 percent of the total it
shipped before authorities on the continent put an embargo in place.
Paris-based Total SA has agreed to buy about 160,000 barrels a day
starting on Feb. 16, the ministry of oil's Shana website reported,
citing Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh. The company also expressed
interest in developing the South Azadegan oil field in western Iran
near the border with Iraq and in a liquid natural gas project, Shana
reported. Total asked for the necessary information to submit a
proposal for the LNG plant. The move shows Iran's determination to
fulfill promises to re-establish its relationship with European clients
who halted purchases in 2012 after the European Union imposed an
embargo on imports... No agreement has been signed yet with Italian oil
company Eni SpA, Zanganeh said. Italian officials are expected in
Tehran soon to sign an oil purchase agreement for about 100,000 barrels
a day, he said. Italy's Saras SpA refinery is also interested in buying
60,000 to 70,000 barrels a day." http://t.uani.com/20jPG2g
Bloomberg: "Refiners have chartered
tankers this month that will deliver about 136,000 barrels a day of
Iranian crude to Europe, equivalent to almost a quarter of the Middle
Eastern nation's shipments to the region before sanctions were imposed.
Spanish refiner Compania Espanola de Petroleos, France's Total SA and
Russia's Lukoil PJSC have all provisionally booked cargoes of Iranian
crude to sail from Kharg Island to European ports in the next two
weeks, according to shipping reports compiled by Bloomberg. While some
of those bookings may not be completed, more cargoes could also be
chartered before the end of the month. The cargoes show that Iran is
following through on its pledge to quickly re-establish its
relationship with European customers, who halted purchases in 2012
after the European Union imposed an embargo on imports." http://t.uani.com/1nY58VV
Bloomberg: "The world's largest
independent oil trader said it's 'business as normal' with Iran as
Vitol Group BV confirmed it has already bought cargoes from the country
after the end of economic sanctions. 'We've bought some, yes we have,'
Vitol Chief Executive Officer Ian Taylor told Bloomberg in a television
interview. 'We've bought a bit of everything really. Bit of products, bit
of condensate. It's very much business as normal.' The comments ahead
of the annual IP Week oil-industry gathering in London are the first
confirmation by a trading company that it has resumed buying from Iran.
Several European oil companies have chartered tankers this month to
load Iranian crude, but none has yet acknowledged it's buying... Taylor
said the nation's return to international markets hasn't been
particularly complicated, though he acknowledged 'some inevitable
teething problems as we get Iran back going again with things like
banks and insurance' for the tankers. 'We, like everybody else, did
some preparatory work,' he said. 'It was clear that it was coming. We
obviously talked to them about what would happen once it did come. So
people were relatively ready.' ... Vitol executives planned to meet
with Iranian officials in London during the IP Week gathering, Taylor
said. 'They're very sharp, very good. They haven't changed a lot,' he
said. 'So we'll carry on the discussions that we dropped off a few
years ago.'" http://t.uani.com/23SMHCn
FT: "Iran plans to keep most of
the $100bn in assets it holds in foreign banks out of the country now
the funds have been unfrozen, in a bid to fend off inflationary
pressure from a sudden injection of cash into its economy, according to
the country's vice-president. 'The money will not come to Iran,'
says Mohammad-Bagher Nobakht as he outlined plans for how the government
would deal with the assets released following Iran's nuclear agreement
with world powers last year. Instead, he said, 'we will use it the same
way as oil revenues', with the central bank opening letters of credit
for domestic companies, taking their payment in rials and paying
overseas creditors in hard currency. Despite high levels of public
debt, analysts say, Tehran plans to direct the funds at infrastructure
projects and the purchase of capital goods in a bid to end a recession
that has seen negative growth in most years since 2011 and sent youth
unemployment to 25 per cent... Only about $7bn of the unfrozen assets
belong to the central administration and will be transferred to Iran,
converted to rials and used for development projects, Mr Nobakht says.
The rest includes about $38bn in central bank foreign exchange reserves
held in a basket of currencies; up to $50bn belonging to the National
Development Fund of Iran, the sovereign wealth fund that collects oil
price windfalls for infrastructure investment; and about $6bn that
belongs to state-owned companies and banks." http://t.uani.com/20FblHJ
Reuters: "Iran holds a stake in a
refinery project in Malaysia and is considering taking stakes in
projects in five other countries, the managing director of the National
Iranian Oil Engineering and Construction Company (NIOEC) was quoted as
saying on Monday. Hamid Sharif Razi said the NIOEC holds a 30 percent
stake in a 250,000 barrel a day refinery project in Malaysia, and was
planning to take a 40 percent stake in a 300,000 barrel a day refinery
in Indonesia, according to the Shana news agency. The NIOEC is also in
talks with South Africa, Sierra Leone, Brazil and India, he said,
adding the purpose of the projects was to guarantee Iranian crude
exports and, if necessary, a source of product imports." http://t.uani.com/1SE9Ox4
Syria
Conflict
Reuters: "The head of Iran's elite
Revolutionary Guard said on Saturday Saudi Arabia lacked the courage to
go through with a plan to send ground troops to Syria, and warned they
would be wiped out if they went in. Mohammad Ali Jafari's blunt words
on the Fars news agency were Iran's first official reaction to a
statement from its regional rival Saudi Arabia this week that it was
ready to join ground operations in Syria if a U.S.-led military
alliance decided to start them. '(The Saudis) have made such a claim
but I don't think they are brave enough to do so ... Even if they send
troops, they would be definitely defeated ... it would be suicide,'
Jafari was quoted as saying. Iran has already sent forces to Syria to
back its ally President Bashar al-Assad in his country's five-year-old
civil war." http://t.uani.com/1K7Pmll
Human
Rights
Reuters: "There are several detained
dual citizens in Iran, most of whom face espionage charges, the
judiciary spokesman was quoted as saying on Sunday, although he did not
give details of any individual cases. The comments come after an
Iranian-British former BBC journalist, Bahman Daroshafaei, was detained
last week in Tehran. His family said on Saturday they had not been
informed of any charges against him... Tehran released four
Iranian-Americans on Jan. 16 in a prisoner swap deal with Washington,
including Jason Rezaian, the Washington Post's Tehran bureau chief who
was arrested in July 2014 and accused of espionage. 'We have several
dual citizens in jail. Their charges are mostly the same (as
Rezaian's),' the judiciary spokesman Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei was
quoted as saying by the Fars news agency. Ejei said that no verdict had
been reached on Rezaian's espionage charges. 'It is still important to
know what he and those related to him were doing in Iran. So their case
is still open.'" http://t.uani.com/20F2jKE
Reuters: "The family of an
Iranian-British former BBC journalist who was detained last week in
Tehran were told on Saturday that he was in the capital's Evin prison,
a friend told Reuters. Bahman Daroshafaei, 34, a translator and former
BBC Persian service reporter, was detained on Wednesday at his home,
according to the opposition website Kaleme.com. 'His family went to
Evin prison today. They managed to talk to someone on the phone who
said Bahman was in Evin but he would not be able to contact his family
for another week or so,' said the friend, who was in direct touch with
the family but declined to be named... After living in London for
several years, Daroshafaei returned to Iran in 2014 to be near his
family." http://t.uani.com/20jKZpd
IranWire: "Press TV bosses, including
news director Hamid Reza Emadi sexually harassed former news anchor
Sheena Shirani for years, the young female reporter revealed on
Thursday, February 4. Two days later, Emadi and Payam Afshar, a studio
manager at Press TV, were suspended. Emadi has since removed his
Facebook account. Shirani made the information public after she published
a series of messages that she had received from Emadi on her Facebook
page and the voice recording of a phone conversation between her and
Emadi on the Facebook page for news site Rooz Online. Shirani, 32, who
is divorced with a son, first became an employee at Press TV in 2007,
where she worked as an editor, producer and news presenter up to
mid-January 2016. Shirani has now reportedly left Iran with her son.
According to her friends, she has chosen not to disclose her
whereabouts." http://t.uani.com/1KB1qLG
Domestic
Politics
AFP: "Iran has approved an extra
1,500 candidates to contest this month's parliamentary election,
raising the total number of hopefuls by around a third, an electoral
official said Saturday. The increase came after previously rejected
candidates presented new evidence of their credentials, allowing a
partial reversal of the mass disqualification of thousands last
month... On January 18, officials said 4,700 prospective candidates had
been approved from more than 12,000 original applications. But 6,180
are now eligible, said interior ministry spokesman Hossein Ali Amiri on
Saturday, according to official IRNA news agency... Reformists have yet
to announce how many of their candidates were re-approved. One official
said last month that only one percent of its applicants -- 30 from
3,000 -- were deemed eligible but others have said many more would be
allowed to stand. The 6,180 number could rise again, as a number of
initially approved candidates were subsequently rejected by the
Guardian Council. They have three days to appeal... A final list of
candidates is to be published on February 16." http://t.uani.com/1Ph3zer
Foreign
Affairs
Guardian: "A trip to London this week
by the Iranian foreign minister, the first such visit in 12 years, has
been hailed as a 'symbol of warming relations' in spite of decades of
mistrust and ongoing differences on regional issues and human rights.
Mohammad Javad Zarif, the chief of Iran's diplomatic apparatus, has
gained international recognition for his role in securing last year's
landmark nuclear deal. He had to walk on a tightrope in London not to
upset hardliners back home, who were scrutinising his every action and
word. Six decades after MI6 engineered a coup against Iran's
democratically elected prime minister to safeguard the UK's oil
interests in Iran, still unacknowledged by the British establishment,
Britain, or 'England' as it is mostly referred to in Iran, has a
special place in the psyche of Iranian hardliners, who still think of
it as 'little Satan' or 'the old fox' - cunning and sly. The foreign
secretary, Philip Hammond, met Zarif for breakfast on Friday, the day
after Iran took part in a summit on Syria in London. He later tweeted
that the visit was a symbol of warming relations. It emerged after the
meeting that the British embassy in Tehran and the Iranian mission in
London will begin providing visa services from next month. Britain and
Iran reopened embassies in their respective capitals last August.
Relations reached a nadir in November 2011, when a mob attacked the UK
mission in Tehran, ransacking offices and diplomatic residences." http://t.uani.com/1K7SuNU
Opinion
& Analysis
Greta
Van Susteren in Fox News: "What disappoints me most about the media - and I
will throw myself into this - is how we forget people, forget stories
and move on. The truth is that we in the media can multi task -
do more than one story at one time. Yes, I know, everyone is
currently consumed with politics (and that is an important story) but
why not likewise talk about Bob Levinson? Even a tweet to the
White House helps put pressure on the White House to help. Former FBI
agent Bob Levinson has been missing in Iran since March 9, 2007.
A proof of life photo showed he was alive in 2010. His family has
been in agony - they have no information. Recently a deal was
negotiated between US and Iran to return several Americans held in an
Iranian prison (and I am thrilled they are home!) ... but not Bob
Levinson. Why didn't the Obama Administration demand information
about Levinson in connection with this deal? I don't know if Levinson
is dead or alive, but I do believe Iranian government knows whether he
is. I also think the White House knows something it is not
telling the family (see below.) That is mean. In January, the AP
reported: 'U.S. officials believe Robert Levinson may no longer
be in Iran..' If US believe he is no longer in Iran, upon what do
they believe this? That means US knows something. Tell the
family! It is cruel to keep them in the dark all these years. And
the media? how about just a tweet about Bob Levinson to the White
House? @WhiteHouse @HelpBobLevinson. And if you are not in the media,
you can still help big time. You can likewise tweet @WhiteHouse
@HelpBobLevinson. We should not leave Americans behind. We need
to 'bang the drums' on this one And even if the government won't help
at least the Levinson people know we care." http://t.uani.com/1UYk0ht
Minky
Worden in HRW:
"Beach volleyball is testing women's rights in Iran. Yes, beach
volleyball in Iran. You may think that women's rights there are a
secondary issue, compared with recent headlines focusing on a nuclear
agreement, the freeing of the Washington Post's correspondent in Tehran
and other prisoners, and an almost-international incident when American
sailors veered into Iranian waters. But in fact, this issue goes to the
heart of whether Iran upholds its international agreements. Later this
month, Iran will host a prestigious international beach volleyball
tournament on Kish Island, south of the mainland in the Persian Gulf.
This is a first for Iran, which was selected as the host country by the
Lausanne-based International Volleyball Federation, or FIVB. The
problem is that Iran bans women from attending volleyball matches
(indeed, women have been also banned since 1979 from watching soccer in
stadiums). This is in clear violation of the 4th Fundamental Principle
of the Volleyball Federation's own constitution and the Olympic
Charter, both of which promise nondiscrimination. It also represents a
missed opportunity: Iran's national volleyball team has become one of
the world's best, and the sport has spiked in popularity in the
country. The upcoming men's beach volleyball tournament could be a
celebratory occasion not just on the volleyball courts but also for
equality in Iran - if authorities reverse the discriminatory ban
keeping women out of matches. The irony is that volleyball was once an
established public space for women, who could attend men's matches in
Iran until 2012, when the decision was made to ban them, without any
clear explanation. Since then, gathering online and outside stadiums
during the volleyball matches, Iranian women have tried to reverse this
ban. Their efforts led to harassment and even arrest. In 2014, Iranian
authorities arrested Ghoncheh Ghavami and some 20 others when they
sought to attend a Volleyball World League match at Tehran's Azadi
('Freedom') Stadium complex. They were released soon afterward, but
Ghavami was rearrested and charged with 'propaganda against the state.'
She was held in the city's notorious Evin Prison, including a stretch
in solitary confinement, for nearly five months. Across Iran, women
face significant discrimination in law and in practice, as well as restrictions
on exercising their rights. Given the repressive environment activists
face every day there, women behind campaigns like @OpenStadiums have
taken enormous risks to demand their right to watch sports in public.
Last June, Iran hosted the Volleyball Federation's World League
matches. In a demoralizing bait-and-switch, women were first promised
they could attend the international tournament, then yet again
threatened and excluded. However, the FIVB did not raise a public
stink, even when only men were allowed to buy tickets and police were
stationed around Azadi Stadium to stop any women who might try to get
in. One would think such blatant rule-breaking by the Iranians would
cause the FIVB to rescind or cancel Iran's hosting privileges; even
FIFA, soccer's international governing organization, says Iran can't
host its tournaments until women can attend. Instead, the Volleyball
Federation awarded Iran another two volleyball tournaments: the Kish
Island FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour, from February 15-19, and
Tehran's World League matches in June 2016. So that sets the volleyball
gender equality calendar for the year, and gives the international
federation two more chances to use its enormous leverage to insist that
Iran must play by the rules." http://t.uani.com/1SE4hGU
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Eye on Iran is a periodic news summary from United Against
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