Monday, September 19, 2016

Eye on Iran: Iran Must Stand Strong Against US on Region Conflicts: Khamenei


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Iran's supreme leader said the Islamic republic must stand strong against Washington on the region's conflicts, in an address Sunday to commanders of the elite Republican Guards force. "The Americans insist we negotiate with them on regional issues, especially on Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and Yemen," Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in the speech published on his official website. "What is their main goal for requesting these talks? They have no aim but to prevent the presence in the region of the Islamic Republic of Iran, the main factor of America's failures," said Khamenei.


The United States made at least two separate payments to the Iranian government via wire transfer within the last 14 months, a Treasury Department spokesman confirmed Saturday, contradicting explanations from President Barack Obama that such payments were impossible. Responding to questions at an Aug. 4 press conference about a $400 million payment delivered in cash to the Iranian government, Obama said, "[T]he reason that we had to give them cash is precisely because we are so strict in maintaining sanctions and we do not have a banking relationship with Iran that we couldn't send them a check and we could not wire the money." But a Treasury Department spokesman acknowledged on Saturday that on at least two occasions, the U.S. did make payments to the Iranian government via wire transfer.


Iran is pressing the United States to ease banking obstacles to the reopening of trade under last year's nuclear deal and hopes for progress on the sidelines of United Nations meetings in New York this week, an Iranian official said on Sunday. The country's national airline has provisionally agreed to buy U.S. and European aircraft worth over $50 billion at list prices, marking a high-profile test case for the reopening of its economy under a deal with world powers to ease sanctions. Nine months after the sanctions deal took effect, foreign banks are reluctant to get involved because of concerns that they could be caught up in restrictions applying to U.S. banks, which are still banned from doing business with Iran... "We are negotiating and I hope that during the trip of President (Hassan) Rouhani to the U.S. today or tomorrow, we can have some news on the subject," Deputy Roads and Urban Development Minister Asghar Fakhrieh Kashan told foreign investors at the CAPA Iran Aviation Finance Summit in Tehran. IranAir Chairman Farhad Parvaresh is traveling to New York as part of Rouhani's delegation for the U.N. General Assembly.

U.S.-IRAN RELATIONS


Iran expects the U.S. Treasury to grant licenses by the end of this month that should help pave the way for the completion of the purchase of more than 200 aircraft from Boeing Co. and Airbus Group SE, Iran's deputy transport minister Asghar Fakhrieh Kashan said in Tehran on Sunday... "The U.S. should've issued the licenses already and they haven't done that," Kashan said, adding that they will be granted by the Office of Foreign Assets Control, known as OFAC. Kashan said Iran has an agreement with a leasing company for $10 billion in financing for the Airbus deal and that it will be signed within days... "Our latest forecast is that by the end of the current Iranian year (March 2017), we will definitely see a number of those planes, both from Airbus and Boeing, arrive in Iran," he said.

BUSINESS RISK


Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards, champions of a deadly war with Iraq in the 1980s and more recently active in battlefields in Iraq and Syria, have long been big players in the Islamic Republic's economy. Since coming to power three years ago, Hassan Rouhani, the moderate president, has tried to contain their influence. This month, some of those efforts bore fruit when two Iranian banks refused to do business with Khatam-al Anbia, a construction business linked to the guards, which still face international sanctions despite last year's nuclear deal. The move has angered hardliners and is likely to intensify the struggle between Rouhani's supporters and the guards. "This is banking capitulation" and "self-sanctioning", said Ahmad Alamolhoda, a senior hardline cleric, of the decision by the two privately owned banks Mellat and Sepah. The banks feared they would be tarnished by association. The president's supporters have been emboldened by a plan agreed in June with the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) - the Paris-based body that seeks to combat money laundering and financing of terrorism.

Iran has fully complied with its commitments under last year's landmark nuclear agreement, but eight months after the official removal of sanctions, the west is failing to deliver on its promises, the country's vice president has told the Guardian. Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of the country's Atomic Energy Organisation, said that if the agreement was to remain intact, both sides had to meet their commitments... "As has been stated by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Iran has remained committed to its commitments," Salehi said. "While the other side - it's very clear now to public opinion and it's not a secret - has not really delivered on the promises; that the sanctions would be removed and that banking transactions would go back to normal, that trade would speed up and economic relations would be enhanced. These have not been materialised to the extent that we expected."

SANCTIONS RELIEF


Iran may adopt a key international agreement that would protect the rights of foreign leasing companies as it seeks to renew its elderly fleet of passenger jets, the country's transport minister said on Sunday. The 2001 Cape Town Convention makes it easier to attract foreign leasing companies by protecting their rights to re-possess aircraft if airlines go bankrupt and is widely considered a benchmark for the international jet market... Deputy Roads and Urban Development Ashgar Fakhrieh said the ministry was in the process of getting internal approval to join the pact, subject to a decision in parliament. Industry sources say a decision to adopt the agreement could make it easier to finance aircraft deals, including a provisional deal to buy more than 100 jets from Airbus. To finance the deal, Iranair is expected to sell most of the jets to two leasing companies and buy them back. Two people familiar with the matter said the airline is in advanced negotiations with leasing company Dubai Aerospace for the bulk of the deal.


Advertising giant WPP has proved resilient to the fragile state of the world economy with shares nearing an all-time high. And seismic global events haven't deterred CEO Martin Sorrell from eyeing expansion into new markets, including the Middle East. He speaks to Bloomberg's Haslinda Amin at the Singapore Summit about the potential in the region and in Iran.

REGIONAL DESTABILIZATION


Saudi Arabia accused Iran of supplying weapons to Shiite rebels in Yemen and urged the U.N. Security Council to impose sanctions on Tehran for violating an arms embargo. Saudi Ambassador Abdallah Al-Mouallimi said in a letter to the council obtained late Saturday by The Associated Press that the smuggling of arms to Houthi rebels violates council resolutions and constitutes "a direct and tangible threat" to Saudi Arabia, Yemen, the region and international peace... Al-Mouallimi cited several examples of the seizure of Iranian weapons shipments at sea by the U.S., Australia and France. He said the Houthis and forces loyal to Yemen's former president "must be held accountable for their continued irresponsible and criminal behavior." He urged the council "to take all necessary measures" - diplomatic language for sanctions - to demand that Iran complies with U.N. resolutions.

EXTREMISM


The Iranian president said world challenges should not be allowed to divert attention from the plight of the Palestinians. "The Zionist regime seeks to devise and exploit the ongoing developments in the Middle East, particularly the emergence and spread of terrorist and extremist groups such as Daesh to overshadow its crimes against the oppressed Palestinian nation and others regional nations."

OPINION & ANALYSIS

Ronald Reagan was fond of quoting John Adams, who famously said: "Facts are stubborn things." So when Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif made public pronouncements about fighting extremism, the facts show that his comments are ironic at best and little more than insincere propaganda. The fact is that Iran is the leading state-sponsor of terrorism, with government officials directly responsible for numerous terrorist attacks since 1979. These include suicide bombings of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut and the Marine barracks at Beirut International Airport; the bombing of Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia in 1996; attacks against more than a dozen embassies in Iran, including those of Britain, the U.S. and Saudi Arabia; and the assassination of diplomats around the world, to name a few examples. Nor can one get around the fact that Iran uses terrorism to advance its aggressive policies. Iran cannot talk about fighting extremism while its leaders, Quds Force and Revolutionary Guard continue to fund, train, arm and facilitate acts of terrorism. If Iran wants to demonstrate sincerity in contributing to the global war on terrorism, it could have begun by handing over al Qaeda leaders who have enjoyed sanctuary in Iran. These have included Osama bin Laden's son, Saad, and al Qaeda's chief of operations, Saif al-Adel, along with numerous other operatives guilty of attacks against Saudi Arabia, the U.S. and other targets. It is a fact that Saif al-Adel placed a call from Iran in May 2003 giving orders for the Riyadh bombings that claimed more than 30 lives, including eight Americans. Yet he still benefits from Iranian protection... It is this ideology of "Khomeinism"-driven by an appetite for expansion, fueled by anti-Western hatred and motivated by sectarianism-that has energized and empowered extremism. Only by ridding the world of this toxic and radical mind-set can sectarianism be contained, terrorism defeated and calm restored to the region. If Iran is serious about combating extremism, then it should refrain from policies and actions that give rise to extremism... Iran's record is one of death and destruction, as the situation in Syria and parts of Iraq clearly attests. Words will not change that; concrete action will. Saudi Arabia's position has remained constant with regard to Iran. The kingdom would welcome better relations with Iran, based on the principles of good neighborliness and noninterference in the affairs of others. That means Iran has to abandon its subversive and hostile activities and stop its support for terrorism. Thus far, Iran's record has not been encouraging.


As Iranian President Hassan Rouhani prepares to address leaders from around the world at the 71st session of the United Nations General Assembly, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum calls on the international community to condemn the Iranian state's continuing promotion of Holocaust denial and antisemitism. "The Iranian state has a long-standing pattern of promulgating Holocaust denial on a global stage, which incites violence, promotes hatred, and stokes antisemitism. Most recently, it has sponsored a series of exhibitions across Iran of cartoons distorting or mocking the Holocaust. Additionally, senior Iranian leaders have demonized Israel and called for its elimination. The UN and international leaders at the General Assembly have an obligation to clearly denounce these actions," said Tad Stahnke, director of the Museum's Initiative on Holocaust Denial and Antisemitism. The Museum is greatly concerned about the global rise in antisemitism and Holocaust denial, in the Middle East, Europe, and elsewhere. "President Rouhani should face hard questions from global leaders. Ultimately, antisemitism poses a threat to all peoples and societies," continued Stahnke. "Hatred, once unleashed, can rapidly spread. We must combat it wherever and whenever it arises."


The partial cease-fire in Syria's civil war is welcome news. But it must not be allowed to obscure a dangerous new development - the emergence from the war of a Russian-Iranian military axis that could upset hopes for stability in the Middle East, and for containing Russia's global ambitions, into the future. The extent of Russian-Iranian cooperation was signaled last month, when Russia used an Iranian air base to bomb targets in Syria. American officials dismissed the event as unsurprising and tactical, and some Iranian officials said Russia's access was for a "one-time antiterrorism operation." But a spokesman for Iran's foreign ministry attached the words "for now" to his announcement that the access "is finished," clearly leaving room for repetition. In fact, a Russian-Iranian bond for military cooperation is rapidly forming, based on a meeting of interests between Russians competing with the West for strategic influence throughout the Middle East, and Iranian hard-liners seeking to dominate local and regional politics.


Last week, the Obama administration admitted, during a congressional hearing, that it had authorized cash payments to Iran, timed with the release of U.S. hostages, in January. Cash was reportedly loaded onto an unmarked Iranian cargo plane before it was flown back to Tehran. Congress was right to criticize the administration over this episode. So why should it now let the president approve the largest sale of U.S.-manufactured airplanes to Iran Air, an accomplice to mass murder in Syria? Iran Air is negotiating an agreement for the purchase of 100 aircraft from the aviation industry giant Boeing. It is also taking part in the weapons and military personnel airlift to Syria that Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC, is coordinating on Tehran's behalf... Iran has never hidden its resolve to keep Syrian President Bashar Assad in power at whatever cost. The ayatollahs also have a track record of suborning their country's economy to the pursuit of revolutionary goals. It is not surprising that they instructed Iran Air to contribute to the Syria war effort, but it is disconcerting that Washington has ignored this evidence and allowed Boeing to continue its negotiations. Disconcerting, but given how badly the administration wants the nuclear deal to succeed, not surprising. Success, however, cannot come at the cost of compliance. The next president should take note of what is by now glaringly obvious: Iran Air should be sanctioned for its role in perpetuating and exacerbating the Syrian civil war.






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@uani.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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