Archive for April 28, 2011

Ahmadinejad and Khamenei rift appears to widen in Iran

April 28, 2011

Ahmadinejad and Khamenei rift appears to widen in Iran.

ednesday, 27 April 2011

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, right, kissed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in Tehran. (File Photo)

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, right, kissed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in Tehran. (File Photo)

Iran’s president was missing from a cabinet meeting on Wednesday for the second consecutive time adding to speculation that the rift with the country’s supreme leader was widening on Wednesday, agencies reported.

The rift is over President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s decision to dismiss Intelligence Minister Heidar Moslehi last week, a decision that was revoked by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Mr. Moslehi was present on Tuesday at a meeting of the Supreme Council of the Cultural Revolution, the body that regulates educational and cultural issues, and which he chairs, Agence-France Press reported.

Mr. Ahmadinejad’s absence in that meeting was particularly noted, as he is known for never missing any opportunity to appear in the media and delivery fiery speeches, AFP said.

No reason was given for his absence by the state’s media.

Earlier on Saturday, in a speech that aired on state TV, Mr. Khamenei said he would intervene in government’s affairs “whenever necessary”—a rebuke to the president for challenging his all-encompassing authority.

The power struggle between the two leaders could be indicative of a serious political crisis in the making—especially ahead of legislative elections scheduled for March 2012. The presidential election will take place in 2013.

Analysts told The Associated Press that Mr. Ahmadinejad is looking to control the intelligence ministry in a bid to influence the next parliament as well as to determine the next president.

However, Mr. Khamenei is also seen as intent on helping shape a new political team, free of Ahmadinejad loyalists, to lead the next government.

The analysts added that in the absence of meaningful political parties, unforeseen political factions and groups have emerged prior to the elections, and that Mr. Khamenei feels threatened by a single political faction remaining in office for more than eight years.

AFP quoted Bornanews, which is linked to state news agency IRNA, as saying on its website that Mr. Ahmadinejad felt there was a “conspiracy” to curtail his powers.

Bornanews said Mr. Ahmadinejad has decided to “settle the problem directly with the supreme leader.”

The reformist opposition website Rahesabz reported that the president had expressed his frustration at not being able to dismiss Mr. Moslehi.

However, there are people who want to understand why the president wanted Mr. Moslehi in the first place. The conservative website Khabaronline said on Wednesday that around 50 lawmakers signed a petition demanding the president to appear before parliament and explain himself.

(Dina Al-Shibeeb of Al Arabiya can be reached at: dina.ibrahim@mbc.net)

More resignations from Assad’s Party, tanks in Damascus

April 28, 2011

More resignations from Assad’s Party, tanks in Damascus.

The 203 members of Syria’s ruling Baath Party see violence against the protesters as contradictory to their party’s values. (File Photo)

The 203 members of Syria’s ruling Baath Party see violence against the protesters as contradictory to their party’s values. (File Photo)

Some 203 members of President Bashar al-Assad’s ruling Baath Party resigned late Wednesday, bringing the total to 233 loyalists who have quit in April, according to Al Arabiya and other news reports.

Meanwhile, a convoy of at least 30 Syrian army tanks was seen moving on tank carriers on the Damascus circular highway on Wednesday, a witness said, as a rights group said that 453 civilians were killed during almost six weeks of pro-democracy protests.

The tanks were coming from the southwest of Damascus near the Golan Heights frontier with Israel and passed on the highway at about 0500 GMT, the witness told Reuters.

They were heading in the direction leading to the northern suburb of Douma and to the southern city of Deraa, where President Bashar al-Assad sent forces to crush peaceful protests against his autocratic rule.

Republican Guards units are based all around Damascus. Another mechanized division is stationed 20 to 30 kilometers southwest of the capital, in charge of defending the occupied Golan Heights frontier with Israel, which has been relatively quiet since a 1974 ceasefire brokered by the United States.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, meanwhile, said it had collected the names of at least 453 civilians killed during pro-reform protests in the geopolitically strategic country of 23 million.

Asked who killed them, Observatory director Rami Abdul Rahman told Reuters: “It does not require a comment. The names we have are from Deraa, Damascus, rural Damascus and the coast.”

Syria is a single-party state in which Mr. Assad’s organization, known formally as the Arab Socialist Baath party, leads the National Progressive Front in the 205-member legislature, known as the Majlis al-Sha’ab, or People’s Council. The party is guaranteed 167 seats, while 81 are notionally “independent.” Legislators are “elected” from 15 multi-seat constituencies around the country.

The People’s Council is essentially a rubber stamp for the Baath Party’s policies, which are dictated by Mr. Assad and his tight circle.

In the meantime, the United Nations Human Rights Council will hold a special session on Syria on Friday, a UN spokesman said.

The special session “will be held on Friday 29 April at 11 a.m.,” Cedric Sapey, spokesman at the Office for the High Commissioner for Human Rights, told Agence-France Presse.

The request, filed by the United States, was jointly submitted by 10 European states, as well as Japan, Mexico, South Korea, Senegal and Zambia. No Arab countries were among those requesting the session, which requires one-third of the forum’s membership of 27 countries to proceed.

France summoned Syria’s ambassador in Paris to the foreign ministry Wednesday to repeat its demand that Damascus halt the use of military force against political protests, the ministry said, according to AFP.

In addition, Syrian ambassadors were summoned to foreign ministries in Rome, Madrid, Berlin, and London.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy on Tuesday condemned as “unacceptable” the situation in Syria, where troops are waging an assault against pro-democracy protests.

Germany on Wednesday said it would strongly back European Union sanctions against Syria over its bloody crackdown on anti-government protesters.

Government spokesman Steffen Seibert told a media briefing that Berlin condemned “severe human rights violations” by Syrian forces against demonstrators and would back punitive measures by the EU, according to AFP.

Foreign ministry spokesman Andreas Peschke said that Germany had called a meeting Friday in Brussels to discuss possible EU punitive measures against Syria and would unveil its own concrete proposals for sanctions.

(Dina Al-Shibeeb of Al Arabiya can be reached at: dina.ibrahim@mbc.net. Abeer Tayel, also of Al Arabiya, can be reached at: abeer.tayel@mbc.net)

Computer Worm Wreaking Havoc on Iran’s Nuclear Capabilities

April 28, 2011

Computer Worm Wreaking Havoc on Iran’s Nuclear Capabilities.

An internal report by a special intelligence unit in Iran has concluded that the Stuxnet malware computer virus that has infected Iran’s nuclear facilities is so dangerous it could shut down the entire national power grid.

The report, written by the Iranian Passive Defense Organization, chaired by Revolutionary Guards Gen. Gholam-Reza Jalali, states that Stuxnet has so thoroughly infected the operating systems at the Bushehr power plant that work on the plant must be halted indefinitely.

If the Bushehr power plant were to go on line, “the internal directives programmed into the structure of the virus can actually bring the generators and electrical power grid of the country to a sudden halt, creating a “heart attack type of work stoppage,” the report states.

The report was obtained by the “Green Liaison news group,” Iranian journalists affiliated with presidential candidate Mir Hussein Mousavi, and was translated into English by Reza Kahlili, a former Revolutionary Guards officer who spied on behalf of the CIA for over a decade while inside Iran.

The report claims that Stuxnet “has automatic updating capabilities in order to track and pirate information,” and that it “can destroy system hardware step-by-step.”

Gen. Jalali has held two press conferences in recent weeks where he has given tantalizing glimpses into the conclusions of his top-secret task force to analyze and defuse the Stuxnet computer worm.

At one, he blamed Israel for collaborating in developing the worm and claimed that his experts had traced “reports” sent by the worm back to Texas.

“Enemies have attacked industrial infrastructure and undermined industrial production through cyberattacks. This was a hostile action against our country,” Jalali said. “If it had not been confronted in time, much material damage and human loss could have been inflicted.”

Jalali also lashed out at Siemens, the German firm that sold Iran the Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) process controllers used to run the Bushehr power plant, the Natanz uranium enrichment plant, and other industrial facilities in Iran.

“Our executive officials should legally follow up the case of Siemens SCADA software, which prepared the ground for the Stuxnet virus,” he said.

“The Siemens company must be held accountable and explain how and why it provided the enemies with the information about the codes of SCADA software and paved the way for a cyberattack against us,” he said.

Siemens has said it was blindsided by Stuxnet, and began publishing its own research and tools to remove the worm from infected computers last fall.

On Monday, Jalali claimed that his intelligence unit, which merges computer analysts from the intelligence ministry and the Revolutionary Guards intelligence service, had found a new computer virus attacking Iran’s nuclear facilities called “Stars.”
He called “Stars” an “espionage virus,” and said that it copied government files and was difficult to destroy in its early stages.

Kahlili believes that Gen. Jalali’s admission of the damage wrought by Stuxnet is significant, since until now the Iranian authorities have suggested that everything was under control. “This is the first official statement out of Iran that the U.S. and Israel should be blamed for this attack,” Kahlili told Newsmax.

“They held back for a long time in order to solve the problem, but have gone public because they haven’t succeeded in doing so. This shows the extent of the damage to the Bushehr power plant. What Jalali is saying is that they are holding the U.S. and Israel responsible and that Iran will retaliate,” he added.

Ralph Langner, the German computer security expert who first identified the specifics of the malicious code used by Stuxnet, says that the worm contains two “digital warheads” that seek out specific control systems to attack. But its targets are computers driving Iran’s uranium enrichment program, not the control systems at Bushehr, he insists. The larger of the two warheads loads onto S7-415 controllers in Siemens SCADA process control software. While these controllers are found “in power plant turbine control” systems, such as those at Bushehr, Langner now believes the warhead was not programmed to affect those systems.
“Anything that went wrong in Bushehr cannot be attributed to Stuxnet. It may be attributed to other sabotage acts, to stupidity, or whatever,” he told Newsmax in an email.

Because the Iranians reported early on that Stuxnet had infected Bushehr, Langner spent several months investigating what systems Stuxnet might attack at the Russian-built plant, before setting aside that thesis based on his analysis of the worm’s internal code.

“It would certainly be a good idea for Iran to clean up all systems before going operational in Bushehr (and before resuming operations in Natanz) as any further attempts to remove the virus when the plant is running will be much harder or even impossible,” Langner wrote in his blog on Feb. 1. “As long as there is even a single system in the nuclear program still infected with Stuxnet, those centrifuges continue to be at risk.”

Russian experts and officials have been warning for several months that the Bushehr power plant has become too dangerous to operate because of the Stuxnet infection. In February, Russia’s envoy to NATO, Dmitry Rogozin, described to reporters an incident he claimed had been witnessed by Russian engineers working at the plant.

The engineers “saw on their screens that the systems were functioning normally, when in fact they were running out of control,” he said. This was because Stuxnet was sending out false messages to the control instruments the engineers normally monitored.

The Russian engineers performed additional tests that determined physical malfunctions were occurring at the plant and then removed all nuclear fuel from the reactor. “The virus which is very toxic, very dangerous, could have had very serious implications,” Rogozin said.

Iran was forced to shut down its uranium enrichment plant at Natanz last November and removed nearly 1,000 centrifuges because of malfunctions caused by Stuxnet. See “Cyberwar Declared on Iran.”

Earlier this month, Iran refueled the Bushehr nuclear power plant and seemed ready to start the reactor, but Jalali’s report has put an indefinite hold on operations there.

The Iranian parliament recently sent a separate report to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei saying that Bushehr had become so expensive and so many years behind schedule that it would be cheaper and quicker to build a new nuclear power plant and shut the Bushehr site definitively, Kahlili said.

BBC News – Syria: EU push for UN condemnation fails

April 28, 2011

BBC News – Syria: EU push for UN condemnation fails.

A deeply divided United Nation Security Council has failed to agree on an EU-proposed statement condemning Syria’s violent crackdown against protesters.

A draft proposed by France, Britain, Germany and Portugal was opposed by several within the 15-member council.

Russia insisted that events in Syria did not constitute a threat to international peace.

More than 450 people have allegedly been killed since the pro-democracy protests began nearly six weeks ago.

China and India called for political dialogue and peaceful resolution of the crisis, but stopped short of condemning the violence.

“A real threat to regional security could arise from outside interference in Syria’s domestic situation, including attempts to force ready-made solutions or taking of sides,” said Alexander Pankin, Russia’s Ambassador to the UN.

‘Abhorrent violence’

The BBC’s Barbara Plett, at the UN headquarters in New York, says that, apart from Libya, the UN Security Council has not responded very much to revolts across the Arab world.

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As a government we cannot accept that some claim to value the lives of our sons more than we do”

Bashar Jaafari Syrian ambassador to UN

She adds that Russia’s growing uneasiness about the international intervention in Libya – which Moscow says is going beyond its UN mandate to protect civilians – had probably hardened its position on Syria.

But the US ambassador called on Syria to stop what it called the government’s abhorrent violence, and on the international community to act.

“My government calls on President [Bashar] Assad to change course now and heed the calls of his own people,” said Susan Rice.

“We also call on the international community to respond to this brutal crackdown and to hold accountable those who are perpetrating these gross human rights violations,” she added.

Both the US and the Europeans warned that, unless the demands for reform are heeded quickly, they will be pressing for additional sanctions.

The text proposed by the European states at the Security Council condemned the violence against civilians and backed UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon’s call for a “transparent” independent investigation into deaths in the protests.

But, speaking at the UN, Syria’s ambassador to the organisation, Bashar Jaafari, said his government would resist external intervention in his country’s affairs.

“As a government, we cannot accept that some claim to value the lives of our sons more than we do. The policies of interfering in affairs of other states through various justifications and pretexts have always proven to be erroneous,” he said.

Communications cut

On Wednesday, five EU nations – France, Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain – jointly summoned Syrian ambassadors to condemn Damascus’ crackdown.

There were reports of further shooting in the southern city of Deraa where the rallies first erupted last month and more tanks were said to be headed towards the city, where army troops have attacked protesters.

President Assad’s government disputes the Western view that the demonstrations have been non-violent.

In a statement carried by the official news agency, it said it had sent troops to several cities on the request of citizens who were worried about “armed extremists”. Opposition leaders say the protests are peaceful.

Footage posted on the internet appeared to show Syrian tanks heading towards Deraa to reinforce troops who moved into it on Monday.

Amnesty International quoted eyewitnesses as saying army snipers were shooting at wounded residents lying in the streets and that other people were trying to save them.

But with communications apparently cut off from Deraa, it is hard to be sure what is happening there, the BBC’s Jim Muir in neighbouring Lebanon says.

On Wednesday, a human rights activist said he had documented the case of a soldier being shot by the army for refusing to fire on protesters in Baniyas.

The army blamed radical Islamists for his death, but mourners at the soldier’s funeral “openly accused the security forces of shooting that soldier”, Wissam Tarif, director of the Syrian human rights organisation Insan, told the BBC.

On Friday, the UN Human Rights Council is due to hold an emergency session to consider a draft resolution demanding an immediate end to President Assad’s efforts to crush the challenge to his rule.

The text also calls on Syria to lift its ban on nearly all foreign media and ease its restrictions on the internet and telecommunications.