Monday, August 29, 2016

Eye on Iran: Iran Deploys Russian-Made S-300 Missiles at Its Fordow Nuclear Site

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Reuters: "Iran has deployed the Russian-supplied S-300 surface-to-air missile defence system around its Fordow underground uranium enrichment facility, Iranian state media reported on Monday. Iranian state TV on Sunday aired footage of deployment of the recently delivered missile system to the nuclear site in the central Iran. 'Our main priority is to protect Iran's nuclear facilities under any circumstances,' Brigadier General Farzad Esmaili, commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps' (IRGC) air defense force told state TV... The IRGC's Esmaili did not say whether the system was operational, but added: 'Today, Iran's sky is one of the most secure in the Middle East'. Iran's top authority Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Sunday that the country's military power was for defensive purposes. 'The S-300 system is a defence system not an assault one, but the Americans did their utmost to prevent Iran from getting it,' Khamenei said in a speech broadcast live on state TV." http://t.uani.com/2bv2TWq

AP: "A $400 million cash delivery to Iran to repay a decades-old arbitration claim may be unprecedented in recent U.S. history, according to legal experts and diplomatic historians, raising further questions about a payment timed to help free four American prisoners in Iran. The money was sent to Iran on Jan. 17, the same day Tehran agreed to release the prisoners. The Obama administration claimed for months the events were separate, but recently acknowledged the cash was used as leverage until the Americans were allowed to leave Iran. Only then, did the U.S. allow a plane with euros, Swiss francs and other foreign currency loaded on pallets to take off in the other direction for Tehran. 'There's actually not anything particularly unusual about the mechanism for this transaction,' White House press secretary Josh Earnest said this week of the initial cash payment. But diplomatic historians and lawyers with expertise in international arbitration struggled to find any similar examples. Asked to recall a similar payment of the U.S. using cash or hard money to settle an international dispute, the office of the State Department historian couldn't provide an example." http://t.uani.com/2bLYtgl

Fox News: "Dangerous confrontations between Iranian and American warships in the Persian Gulf are up more than 50 percent in 2016 compared with this time last year, according to a U.S. defense official - despite the highly touted nuclear accord, as well as a recent $1.7 billion U.S. payment to Tehran. The latest incidents of provocative Iranian behavior flared in the Persian Gulf earlier this week, including one filmed by the U.S. Navy. The video showed four Iranian gunboats from its Revolutionary Guard Corps coming within 300 yards of USS Nitze, an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer. The incident was part of a troubling pattern, according to stats shared with Fox News. In 2015, there were roughly 30 dangerous interactions between Iranian and U.S. Navy warships in the Persian Gulf, according to the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet. The Iranian vessels acted as the aggressors every time, the Navy says. Yet already this year, that number is at least 30. Through the first six months alone of 2016, there were 26 dangerous confrontations that U.S. military officials called 'unsafe and unprofessional.' 'We are on pace to exceed last year's numbers by more than fifty percent,' the defense official told Fox News, while saying the confrontations have risen by that much so far." http://t.uani.com/2bLYqwg

Nuclear & Ballistic Missile Program

NYT: "Iran said on Sunday that a person close to the government team that negotiated its nuclear agreement with foreign powers had been arrested on accusations of espionage and released on bail. The disclosure, reported in the state news media, appeared to be the latest sign of the Iranian leadership's frustration over the agreement, which has failed so far to yield the significant economic benefits for the country that its advocates had promised. Iranian officials have blamed the United States for that problem... There were unconfirmed reports last week that the Iranian authorities had arrested Abdolrasoul Dorri Esfahani, who has dual Iranian and Canadian citizenship, on espionage suspicions. Mr. Esfahani, an adviser to Iran's central bank, helped the Iranian nuclear negotiators bargain for sanctions relief in exchange for Iran's pledges of verifiably peaceful nuclear work. The official Islamic Republic News Agency said a spokesman for Iran's judiciary, Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejei, speaking at a weekly news conference on Sunday in Tehran, had 'confirmed the arrest of an individual from the negotiating team.' But the spokesman also said that 'his charge of spying has not been proved' and that the suspect had been released on bail pending an investigation." http://t.uani.com/2bxID3O

IRNA (Iran): "Financial resources have been allocated for construction of two new nuclear power plants in Iran, says the spokesman for the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran. Behrouz Kamalvandi told reporters on Sunday that President Hassan Rouhani has given the go-ahead for the construction of two nuclear plants in the country and that financial resources have been earmarked by the Presidential order. 'We are going to set a date in the near future for the ground-breaking ceremony,' Kamalvandi said.  He also said that the Islamic Republic and the United Nations Atomic Energy Organization are closely cooperating with each other." http://t.uani.com/2clVdZA

U.S.-Iran Relations

Reuters: "Iran's military detected a U.S. drone entering Iranian airspace on Monday and issued a warning for it to leave, which it subsequently did, Iran's Tasnim news agency reported. 'Iran's army air defence detected and warned an American drone in the eastern airspace of the country. It was coming from Afghanistan. The drone left the area,' Tasnim quoted the Iranian military as saying. Tasnim gave no details on how the Iranian authorities had warned the unmanned drone to leave its airspace." http://t.uani.com/2c8LNiY

FT: "The US was Iran's major market for Persian rugs and the sanctions caused total carpet exports to drop by 30 per cent - the embargo meant no American could buy, sell or import Persian rugs, even if they were purchased outside of the Islamic republic. But now, with many of the west's sanctions lifted after Tehran reached a historic nuclear deal with western powers last year, the industry is enjoying a boom as sales to America soar. Persian carpet exports were up 39 per cent in the four months to July 21, with American devotees of the Iranian artistry the main buyers. The surge is providing a rare bright spot for Iran amid mounting frustrations about foreign companies' wariness to take advantage of the post-sanctions era and provide the economic dividend Iranians expected. 'The most important reason for the rise is the lifting of the US sanctions,' says Hamid Kargar, director of the Iran National Carpet Center, the state body in charge of handmade carpets." http://t.uani.com/2c8NtJi

Sanctions Relief

AFP: "French Environment Minister Segolene Royal met with her Iranian counterpart in Tehran on Sunday to announce plans for a number of joint projects addressing energy, water shortages and pollution. Royal held talks with the head of Iran's Environmental Protection Organisation, Massoumeh Ebtekar, and said they would build several key partnerships by February. 'Several highly operational subjects were discussed,' Royal told reporters. The French minister is travelling for three days with senior business figures from environmental and renewable energy firms specialising in water, pollution and energy efficiency -- including the boss of multinational Engie. 'They were chosen by Iran on the basis of the challenges they face,' said Royal." http://t.uani.com/2bxDOr2

Reuters: "Iraq's government would consider selling crude through Iran should talks with the autonomous Kurdish region on an oil revenue-sharing agreement fail, a senior oil ministry official in Baghdad told Reuters. Iraq's State Oil Marketing Organisation (SOMO) plans to hold talks with the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG), possibly next week, about Iraqi oil exported through Turkey, Deputy Oil Minister Fayadh al-Nema said in an interview on Friday evening. 'If the negotiations come to a close' without an agreement 'we will start to find a way in order to sell our oil because we need money, either to Iran or other countries', he said by telephone." http://t.uani.com/2c8Kd0q

Extremism

IRNA (Iran): "Ayatollah Khamenei said that enmity with the Iranian nation and Islamic system is far from the customary hostilities experienced in four corners of the world. 'Our enemies are made up of the global arrogance and the world Zionism, the dirty natured and deceitful camp with tyrannical ideology. They have resentment to the Iranian religious beliefs, independence and the non-compromisory spirit of Iranian nation.' He added that hostility of the arrogant camp is evident in many ways. 'Once the hostility is represented in the form of the US administration and another day in the form of such tyrannical regime as Saddam; but what's of importance is that we should use many capacity available to the country and identify the stances and plans of the enemy to make right decision to thwart the threats.'" http://t.uani.com/2bugJLK

Cyberwarfare

Reuters: "Iran has detected and removed malicious software from two of its petrochemical complexes, a senior military official said on Saturday, after announcing last week it was investigating whether recent petrochemical fires were caused by cyber attacks. The official said the malware at the two plants was inactive and had not played a role in the fires. 'In periodical inspection of petrochemical units, a type of industrial malware was detected and the necessary defensive measures were taken,' Gholamreza Jalali, head of Iran's civilian defense, was quoted as saying by the state news agency IRNA." http://t.uani.com/2bwmcvD

Saudi-Iran Tensions

AP: "Iraq's Foreign Ministry said the government on Sunday formally requested that the Saudi ambassador in Baghdad be replaced after he claimed that Iranian-backed Shiite militias are plotting to assassinate him. Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmed Jamal told The Associated Press that the government sent a formal request to Saudi Arabia to replace the kingdom's ambassador in Baghdad, Thamer al-Sabhan. Jamal said al-Sabhan's reported comments are untrue and harm relations between the two countries. He said the allegations are considered interference in Iraq's internal affairs and that al-Sabhan has not provided the ministry with any proof or evidence of these claims... Al-Sabhan was quoted as telling the Saudi-owned al-Hayat newspaper that Iraqi intelligence provided him with information about the assassination plans. He said this was happening as Iran tries to block reform efforts in Iraq and other Arab countries." http://t.uani.com/2bwp23L

Human Rights

AP: "The scratchy, echo-filled tape recording carries the voice of a man who once was in line to become Iran's supreme leader, talking about one of the darkest moments of the country's post-revolution history still not recognized by its government. The recording has Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri condemning Iran's execution of thousands of prisoners at the end of the country's bloody war with Iraq in 1988. He warns those gathered they've committed 'the biggest crime in the history of the Islamic Republic,' while criticizing them for misleading the country's then-ailing supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. The criticisms by Montazeri, who lived for years under house arrest and died of natural causes after Iran's disputed 2009 presidential election, long ago surfaced in his own memoirs and writings. But the furor ignited by the release of the tapes by his family this month expose the lingering, unhealed wounds of the chaotic years that followed Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution, as well as politics now at play in the greater Middle East. 'All advice and criticism from my father was for saving the ruling system - which he had paid so much for,' his son, Ahmad Montazeri, recently wrote online." http://t.uani.com/2bDbjdl

UN: "The United Nations rights expert on the situation of human rights in Iran has called on the Government to immediately halt the execution of 12 individuals, all of whom have been reportedly sentenced to death for drug-related offences. The executions are reportedly scheduled for tomorrow, Saturday, 27 August, the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) said in a news release today. 'It is regrettable that the Government continues to proceed with executions for crimes that do not meet the threshold of the most serious crimes as required by international law, especially the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Iran is State party,' Ahmed Shaheed, Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Iran, said in the news release." http://t.uani.com/2c8Ns88

Reuters: "The death penalty has failed to reduce drug trafficking in Iran, a senior Iranian judiciary official said on Saturday shortly before the scheduled execution of 12 people for narcotics-related offences. His criticism was unusual in a judiciary that has long been a bastion of the hardline security establishment in the Islamic Republic, which carries out more executions per capita than any other country. Nearly 1,000 prisoner were put to death in 2015, most of them for drug trafficking. Most narcotics are smuggled into Iran along its long, often lawless border with Afghanistan, which supplies about 90 percent of the world's opium from which heroin is made. 'The truth is, the execution of drug smugglers has had no deterrent effect,' Mohammad Baqer Olfat, deputy head of judiciary for social affairs, was quoted as saying by the semi-official Tasnim news agency. 'We have fought full-force against smugglers according to the law, but unfortunately we are experiencing an increase in the volume of drugs trafficked to Iran, the transit of drugs through the country, the variety of drugs, and the number of people who are involved in it,' Olfat said. He said he had suggested to the judiciary chief that rather than the death penalty, traffickers should serve long prison terms with hard labor." http://t.uani.com/2bDaKjz

Domestic Politics

AFP: "The Tehran prosecutor recommended strict new rules Saturday for concerts in the capital, the latest in a tug of war between moderates and conservatives that has already seen live music banned in Iran's second city Mashhad. Police should record all events, while the culture ministry and the provincial governor should take greater responsibility for the content of performances and the behavior of audiences, the judiciary's official Mizan news agency quoted Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi as saying. It comes amid a wave of last-minute cancellations of concerts in Iran under pressure from hardliners and religious leaders which has been criticized by the more liberal President Hassan Rouhani... A row erupted earlier this month when a prayer leader in Mashhad, which is a Shiite pilgrimage site as well as Iran's second city, lashed out at the 'debauchery' of concert-goers and called for them to be banned. Although no concerts have been held in Mashhad for 11 years, Culture Minister Ali Jannati agreed to the ban, only to find himself criticized by the president for caving into conservative demands. 'As far as I am concerned, no minister should give in to any pressure,' Rouhani said this week... On Thursday, a letter signed by 5,000 people in Iran's music industry was published in the reformist press, describing the ban on concerts in Mashhad as a 'catastrophe that sacrifices music today, and the rest of the culture and the reputation of this country tomorrow.'" http://t.uani.com/2bwo0Ez

AP: "Iran's official news agency is reporting the country has inaugurated first phase of its 'National Network of Data.' Iran has long sought to create its own national Intranet. The Sunday report by IRNA says the network aims to promote online Islamic content, and encourage less dependency on the Internet while providing safer data transfer and protection against cyber-attacks. It said the second phase of the decade-old project will go online in February 2017 and it will be completed in August 2017. Critics say the network may eventually lead to more restrictions for users, but officials deny that." http://t.uani.com/2bLCS5N

Opinion & Analysis

Farzin Nadimi in WINEP: "The strategic Strait of Hormuz has once again been the scene of close encounters between U.S. Navy vessels and speedboats from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy (IRGCN), leaving observers to guess at the motivations behind the Iranian moves. The multiple incidents that occurred this week raised the risk of miscalculation in a sovereignly cramped part of the world. On August 23-24, several IRGCN speedboats aggressively approached American warships as the latter were reportedly transiting international waters in or approaching the Strait of Hormuz in accordance with maritime law. On each occasion, the Iranians conducted what the U.S. Navy called 'unsafe intercepts,' crossing the bows of the American ships at high speed and close range without any attempt to establish radio contact. In at least one of the incidents, they even reportedly uncovered their weapons. During yet another incident on August 25, the USS Squall fired several warning shots well in front of the Iranian boats to warn them off. These events are only the latest example of provocative encounters between American and Iranian naval forces in the Persian Gulf -- especially by the IRGCN, which is much more prone to such behavior than Iran's regular navy. It is certainly not a new thing for IRGCN boats to harass Western and American ships crossing the strait. They have also made it a habit to conduct surprise live rocket fire exercises in proximity to U.S. Navy vessels in the international waters of the Persian Gulf, most recently on August 15 according to Defense News. The nature and timing of the latest incidents provide some clues about the intentions of the IRGC's high-risk behavior. In particular, the provocations may have a domestic political dimension, aimed at those within President Hassan Rouhani's government who advocate better relations with the West. The IRGC is closely aligned with Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's hardline circle and frequently takes actions in accordance with his spoken or unspoken policies." http://t.uani.com/2bwnN9k
       

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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