Archive for February 17, 2013

Iran plans to establish new navy base – Israel News, Ynetnews

February 17, 2013

Show of Force

Iran naval exercise Photo: MCT

Iran naval exercise Photo: MCT

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Iran plans to establish new navy base

Tehran announces plans to build new base near Pakistan’s border in Sea of Oman

Associated Press

Published: 02.17.13, 10:42 / Israel News

Iran’s official news agency reported Sunday that the country’s navy plans to establish a new base near Pakistan’s border in the Sea of Oman.

The plans are part of Iran’s ambitions to exert its naval power outside the Persian Gulf, including sending warships to the Mediterranean and claiming it might someday have ships in the Atlantic.

via Iran plans to establish new navy base – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Iran reaches out to Egypt in bid for increased regional power – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper

February 17, 2013

Iran reaches out to Egypt in bid for increased regional power – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper.

Iran reaches out to Egypt in bid for increased regional power

Iran’s letter inviting Egypt to ‘adopt the Iranian model and join Tehran to build a new Islamic culture’ is indicative of Tehran’s desire to redraw the new Middle East and the pressure it feels over the developments in Syria.

By | Feb.17, 2013 | 11:12 AM
Khamenei

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Photo by AFP

Iran reached out to Egypt on Saturday, just as Egyptian sources leaked to a Saudi newspaper what Egyptian intelligence officials had told Morsi: that resuming diplomatic ties with Iran would do more harm than good.

“I suggest you adopt the Iranian model and join Tehran to build a new Islamic culture,” read a letter sent by 17 advisers of Iranian leader Ali Khamenei to Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi. The letter, signed by senior adviser Ali Akbar Veyalati, among others, was reported Saturday in the Saudi newspaper Asharq Al Awsat, which also received the Egyptian intelligence leak.

The letter will not decide the issue of rebuilding relations between Egypt and Iran, which is not on the agenda at the moment. The slap in the face that the heads of Al-Azhar University gave Ahmadinejad during his Cairo visit when they demanded that he stop spreading Shiite doctrine in Egypt, together with the shoe that was thrown at him, were only a dramatic public expression of the deeply-felt view in Egypt that Iran is a threat.

Iran’s letter is more indicative of its diplomatic effort to set itself up as a contender in the battle to redraw the post-revolutionary Middle East and the pressure it feels over the developments in Syria.

The letter was intended as more than a message to Egypt. Its purpose was also to hint to Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states that Iran would make every effort to weaken their power and influence over the region’s future, and to tell them that after getting Iraq, Syria and Lebanon to come under Iran’s influence, the traditional Arab axis would be next. Iran is already preparing itself for 2014, when American forces will be leaving Afghanistan, turning that stricken country into the focus of a struggle for political influence between Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Iran is concerned by two foci of conflict. One is Iraq, where Sunni districts and tribes are rising up in protest, threatening to overthrow the regime of Nouri al-Maliki, Iran’s ally. The other is in Syria and Lebanon. Officials of the Iraqi opposition report that Iran gave al-Maliki $6 billion to put down the Sunni rebellion and that the commander of Iran’s Quds Force, General Qasem Soleimani, promised to send 50,000 recruits from the Basij volunteer militia to help suppress the protests.

While these reports can be viewed with skepticism, their publication provides evidence of the rising tension between the Sunnis and the Kurds on the one hand and the Iraqi government and its patron, Iran, on the other.

Iranian officials describe the crisis in Syria as a strategic threat that could crush Iran’s most important access route to the Arab Middle East. From Iran’s perspective, Syria and Lebanon are a single sphere of influence over which it is fighting with Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which are funding and evidently arming the opposition forces. Iran, which continues to support Assad – spending enormous sums to prop up his regime (recently it opened a credit line of $1 billion for the regime’s use) – is an active participant in the struggle on the ground.

Revolutionary Guard troops and Hezbollah fighters are operating in Syrian territory on two fronts. They provide consulting and training for the high command, and they also fight against radical Sunni militias that have managed to take over strategic locations and bases there.

The battle has also trickled into Lebanon, whose northern portion is crowded with Sunni citizens who support the Syrian opposition. Over the past few days, it was reported that the radical Al-Nusra Front, an affiliate of Al-Qaida, had reached southern Lebanon, where they were trying to establish bases in Palestinian refugee camps. If these reports are correct, Hezbollah could find itself in a tough battle in Lebanon against armed Sunni troops who would split the area of fighting between Syria and Lebanon. This comes at a time when Lebanon is preparing for general elections planned for June, in which Iran and Hezbollah need to ensure a majority in the parliament that will maintain their political control over the country.

These pressure points obligate Iran to examine its options and try to set up new centers of influence in case Assad falls and Iraq enters a violent civil conflict. That is why Iran attaches such importance to its relations with Egypt and why it is trying to establish a base of influence for itself in Yemen. It is doubtful whether its efforts will bear fruit, particularly against the barricade Saudi Arabia has put up. At the same time, it seems that Iran’s diplomacy and military intervention are actually strengthening the Arab alliance that opposes it.

Iran’s vulnerable array of interests, together with the Arab world’s solid stance against Iran, could benefit Israel if the latter were willing to resume the peace process and heal the crisis with Turkey. But as Israel’s strategic vision shrinks to the point of seeing only more housing units in the settlements, this opportunity, too, will pass it by.

 

‘Iran will never shut down Fordo… JPost – Iranian Threat – News

February 17, 2013

‘Iran will never shut down Fordow nuclear plant’

By REUTERS

02/17/2013 15:41

Head of Iranian parliament’s national security and foreign policy c’tee says enrichment plant is essential to defend Tehran against enemy threat, adds that suggestion to shut down Fordow “is meant to help the Zionist regime.”

Iran MP Alaeddin Boroujerdi.

Iran MP Alaeddin Boroujerdi. Photo: REUTERS/Raheb Homavandi

DUBAI – Iran will never shut down its Fordow uranium enrichment plant, a senior legislator was quoted as saying on Sunday, brushing off a demand from world powers who fear Tehran is working to develop an atomic weapons capability.

The Islamic republic, which insists its nuclear program is purely peaceful, started building the plant inside a mountain in secret as early as 2006, to protect it from air strikes.

Related:

Iran denies mystery explosion at Fordow facility

‘West to ease sanctions if Iran shuts nuke bunker’

Last week, Reuters reported world powers were planning to offer to ease sanctions barring trade in gold and other precious metals with Iran in return for steps to shut down Fordow.

Alaeddin Boroujerdi, head of parliament’s national security and foreign policy committee, referred to the reported offer on Sunday and dismissed any idea of a closure, the Iranian Students’ News Agency reported.

“Fordow will never be shut down because … our national duty is to be able to defend our nuclear and vital centers against an enemy threat,” Boroujerdi was quoted as saying by the agency.

“This suggestion (shutting down Fordow) is meant to help the Zionist regime (Israel),” he added.

Click here for full Jpost coverage of the Iranian threat

Israel has threatened to attack Iran if diplomacy and sanctions fail to curb its nuclear program, raising fears of a regional war.

The United States and its allies are particularly worried about Fordow because Iran is refining uranium there to a fissile concentration of 20 percent, which Iran says it needs for a medical reactor. Twenty percent purity is only a short technical step from weapons-grade uranium.

Western officials said last week the offer to ease sanctions barring gold and other precious metals trade with Iran would be presented at February 26 talks between Iran and world powers in Almaty, Kazakhstan.

They acknowledged it represented a relatively modest update to proposals that the six major powers put forward last year.

Iran’s parliament has little control over the Islamic Republic’s foreign policy, which is decided by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

via ‘Iran will never shut down Fordo… JPost – Iranian Threat – News.

‘Iranian nuclear chief observed … JPost – Iranian Threat – News

February 17, 2013

‘Iranian nuclear chief observed Korean nuke test’

By JPOST.COM STAFF

02/17/2013 06:38

Western officials say Mohsen Fakhrizadeh-Mahabadi is believed to have been in N.Korea for test, ‘The Sunday Times’ reports.

Kim Yong-Nam arrives at NAM conference in Tehran

Kim Yong-Nam arrives at NAM conference in Tehran Photo: REUTERS/Handout

The alleged father of Iran’s nuclear program, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh-Mahabadi, is believed to have been present in North Korea last week in order to observe its third nuclear test, Britain’s The Sunday Times reported citing Western intelligence sources.

According to the sources, Fakhrizadeh-Mahabadi was responsible for the development of a warhead “small enough to fit on to one of the ballistic missiles developed by Iran from North Korean prototypes,” the report stated.

Related:

As world slams N. Korea, Iran urges disarmament

Israel, UNSC condemn North Korea nuclear test

North Korea said its test on Tuesday had “greater explosive force” than the 2006 and 2009 tests, which were widely seen as small-scale.

The report echoes comments made earlier in the week by a security expert that the nuclear test may have also been carried out on behalf of Iran, and in the presence of Iranian atomic scientists.

North Korea is making progress both in its nuclear weapons capabilities and its ICBM missile research, Dr. Alon Levkowitz, coordinator of Bar-Ilan University’s Asian Studies Program and a member of the BESA Center for Strategic Studies, told The Jerusalem Post.

“The most disturbing question is whether the Iranians are using North Korea as a backdoor plan for their own nuclear program. The Iranians didn’t carry out a nuclear test in Iran, but they may have done so in North Korea,” Levkowitz said. “There is no official information on this… but Iran may have bypassed inspections via North Korea. If true, this is a very worrying development.”

Speaking to the Post in April, sources highly familiar with North Korea said a nuclear test was imminent, and that Iranian scientists could be present at the explosion site. During North Korea’s previous two nuclear detonations, Iranian nuclear scientists were present, according to several indicators, Levkowitz said.

It remains unclear whether the North Koreans detonated a plutonium- based nuclear device or one that was based on enriched uranium on Tuesday. The latter option would further suggest increased cooperation with Iran, he added.

“There is regular cooperation, since the 1980s, between North Korea and Iran. North Korea also helped set up a plutonium nuclear facility in Syria, which was bombed by Israel in 2007, according to foreign sources,” he said.

The feeble response by the international community to North Korea was due to China and Russia’s refusal to pass harsher binding UN Security Council resolutions, Levkowitz said, adding that this sent a worrying message to Iran. Tehran was learning that the international community would fail to monitor and prevent nuclear proliferation, and that consequences for blatant transgressions were mild, he added.

In April 2012, Iranian officials from the Shahid Hemmat Industrial Group observed a failed North Korean rocket launch, according to a report by the South Korean Yonhap news agency.

Although Seoul has neither confirmed nor denied the report, it believes that a delegation of a dozen Iranian scientists may have been technically involved in North Korea’s failed long-range missile launch, which was disguised as a satellite launch. North Korea has tested two atomic bombs in recent years, once in 2006 and again in 2009 – both times after it carried out failed missile tests.

The North’s nuclear weapons program is mainly based on plutonium, while Iran is mostly relying on uranium in its efforts to build a bomb. Yet some analysts believe that Tehran may be pursuing a parallel, secret plutonium nuclear program. Similarly, North Korea is also known to have enriched uranium through spinning centrifuges, a process Pyongyang has recently made much progress in, Levkowitz said.

Responding to the North Korean test, Iran’s Foreign Ministry on Tuesday called for the destruction of all nuclear weapons in the world. The statement said countries had a right to use “peaceful” nuclear technology.

Iran also confirmed on Tuesday reports that it was diverting a portion of its enriched uranium to the Tehran Research Reactor, where it will be converted into nuclear fuel rods that cannot be used for weapons construction.

Iran exercises this option whenever it wishes the international community to believe that it is moving away from a nuclear breakout stage. It is widely believed that Israel defines this breakout stage as having 240 kilograms of uranium enriched to 20 percent.

In recent weeks, Iran sent a very different signal, by announcing that it was installing faster, more advanced uranium enrichment centrifuges at Natanz.

Yaakov Lappin contributed to this report

via ‘Iranian nuclear chief observed … JPost – Iranian Threat – News.

Israel Hayom | EU won’t add Hezbollah to list of terrorist groups

February 17, 2013

 

EU won’t add Hezbollah to list of terrorist groups

European Union sources say that if Hezbollah’s involvement in last July’s terrorist attack in Bulgaria is proved, EU will consider implementing pinpoint sanctions against it, but will refrain from calling it a terrorist organization.

Dan Lavie, Daniel Siryoti and Israel Hayom Staff

No proof? The scene of the terrorist attack against Israeli tourists in Burgas, Bulgaria, last July.

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Photo credit: AP

If the required proof implicating Hezbollah in the terrorist attack in Bulgaria last July is provided, then the EU would lean toward implementing pinpoint sanctions against elements involved in the attack, but would refrain from formally declaring Hezbollah a “terrorist organization,” European Union sources said on Sunday.

According to Israel Radio, French Foreign Ministry spokesman Philippe Lalliot said Saturday that the Council of European Foreign Ministers could discuss the possibility of measures against Hezbollah following the recent report from Bulgaria that pinned responsibility for the attack on Hezbollah.

Lalliot also said, however, that Bulgaria had thus far failed to present tangible evidence of Hezbollah involvement, despite clearly fingering the group as culprits.

EU foreign ministers will meet on Feb. 18 for a regular gathering, and may discuss the issue.

The U.S. already lists the group as a terrorist organization and U.S. and Israeli authorities want to see the EU take a similar position.

If such proof is provided, according to Lalliot, it would be possible to discuss, among other measures, the option of adding Hezbollah to the list of terrorist organizations. Lalliot said that the matter was complex and largely dependent on evidence the Bulgarians are able to present.

Canada, meanwhile, was pushing EU countries to add Hezbollah to the terror list. A Canadian government official said evidence of Hezbollah involvement in terrorism across the globe, with Iranian support, was abundant.

Following the publication of the Bulgarian report, which said a Canadian citizen was involved, Canada’s Immigration Minister Jason Kenney said last week that he was considering revoking citizenship for Canadians convicted of terrorist activity.

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said Saturday that he would not comment on the Bulgarian report blaming his group for the attack that killed five Israeli tourists and one Bulgarian national, saying only that the “issue is being followed calmly and closely.”

via Israel Hayom | EU won’t add Hezbollah to list of terrorist groups.

US plan for UN to endorse Khamenei’s fatwa? Shock in Jerusalem

February 17, 2013

US plan for UN to endorse Khamenei’s fatwa? Shock in Jerusalem

DEBKAfile Special Report February 17, 2013, 1:59 PM (GMT+02:00)

Tags: Iran nuclear Barack Obama Israel Ayatollah Ali Khamenei North Korea

From a British blog

From a British blog

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad declared Iran was a “nuclear state” during his Cairo visit two weeks ago. Saturday, Feb. 16, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei shed more light by saying, “Iran is not seeking nuclear weapons but no power could stop Tehran’s access to an atomic bomb if it intended to build it. “

debkafile: Iran’s leaders are therefore quite frank about the state of their nuclear program: the components of a nuclear weapon have been procured – defying Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu red lines – but Tehran has not yet crossed the threshold to assemble it – although this could be done modularly.

And if the Islamic Republic has acquired the components and knowledge for surreptitiously building one bomb, it stands to reason that three or five would be no object.

On Feb. 12, debkafile revealed that Iranian scientists attended the latest North Korean atomic test. Six days later, the Sunday Times repeated the story, naming Mohsen Fakhrizade-Mahabadi, the senior Iranian scientist of Iran’s nuclear weapons program, as the official present. Our Iranian sources strongly doubt that Mahabadi was there because he is too afraid of kidnapping or assassination to ever leave Iran.

We also revealed how the Iranian-North Korean nuclear partnership worked and the division of clandestine labor between them. Their arrangement – to which Washington and Jerusalem prefer to turn a blind eye –assigns to Iran the development of small nuclear warheads for delivery by missiles and to North Korea the development of ballistic missiles able to land a warhead at any point on the planet.

The two governments work smoothly in tandem, regularly pooling the data obtained from advances in their respective programs.

One such advance was Iran’s successful launch of a monkey into orbit at an altitude of 120 kilometers on Jan. 28 and its apparent return it to earth. Washington tried hard to throw cold water on the Iranian feat, but Tehran countered by citing Western sources as confirming the launch.

A gap still remains in their accounts: Washington does not question the launch of a space capsule – only the monkey aboard.

However, the North Korean test of a “miniature nuclear device,” combined with Iran’s ability to launch a capsule with a monkey payload into orbit, add up to their having achieved a nuclear warhead capacity through shared technology.

After registering these menacing strides, officials in Jerusalem were dismayed to learn that instead of planning to cut them short, US President Barack’s Obama’s circle in Washington was studying a bizarre plan for the opposite objective.

It surfaced in an article published Tuesday, Feb. 12, by Ambassador Thomas Pickering, a veteran American diplomat who is influential in the framing of Obama’s Iranian policy.

This what he wrote: “In years past, he (Khamenei) issued a fatwa condemning nuclear weapons. Washington could take advantage of this fact by drafting a UN Security Council resolution endorsing the fatwa. This could be a small step toward boosting Khamenei’s international profile while simultaneously pressuring Iran to follow its own religious decree.”

Instead of dismantling these rogue nuclear programs, Pickering was proposing to legitimize Iran’s possession of a nuclear bomb capacity that only stopped one step short of assembling a bomb.

For the Shiite republic, UN endorsement as a nuclear power would be an epic triumph with ramifications for many years to come on its standing and the shape of the Middle East and Persian Gulf.

It would also endow Khamenei’s fatwa with false religious value – and not just for Sunni Muslims. Khamenei has neither the authority nor the erudition for issuing a binding Shiite fatwa either. Yet Pickering proposes extending the supreme leader a religious honor denied him by the leading Shiite clerics of Qom.

This fatwa has always been dismissed until now as a piece of propaganda designed to disguise the military aspects of Iran’s nuclear program and support Tehran’s claim that it was purely for peaceful use and research.

The stratagem floating around the White house for buttering up Khamenei and granting his edict international legitimacy just weeks before President Obama’s March 20 visit to Jerusalem is causing consternation among his Israeli hosts. It is a worrying pointer to the direction in which his Iran policy is heading.

via US plan for UN to endorse Khamenei’s fatwa? Shock in Jerusalem.

Israel Hayom | Nasrallah threatens to ‘plunge Israel into darkness’

February 17, 2013

Israel Hayom | Nasrallah threatens to ‘plunge Israel into darkness’.

Nasrallah threatens to ‘plunge Israel into darkness’

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah threatens to target Israeli power plants and ports if Israel takes military action in Lebanon: “A few missiles would plunge Israel into darkness” • Hamas official accuses Israel of being behind Bulgaria expulsion.

The Associated Press and Israel Hayom Staff
Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah speaks via a video link, Saturday.

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Photo credit: AP

Nasrallah warns Israel against attacking Lebanon

February 17, 2013

Nasrallah warns Israel against attacking Lebanon – Israel News, Ynetnews.

On Martyrs’ Day, Hezbollah leader says group has all the arms it needs to fight a war with Israel; threatens to attack Israel’s power plants

Roi Kais

Published: 02.16.13, 18:06 / Israel News

Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah said Saturday that the terrorist group has all the arms it needs to fight a war with Israel.

“The resistance has never been this strong. It does not need Syria or Iran,” he said in a speech. “Israel needs to think hundreds of thousands of times before attacking Lebanon.”

Nasrallah was speaking on Martyrs’ Day.” His speech was screened at the Sayyed Shohada’a compound in one of Beirut’s suburbs.

He warned Israel against attacking Lebanon: “I am warning the Israelis and their allies that the Resistance in Lebanon will not keep quiet over any violation that occurs on Lebanese territory,” he said.

“They know that their energy plants and their airports… are under threat. Their power plants would require six-months to be repaired. Can Israel remain six months in the dark? Lebanon, on the other hand, is used to being without electricity.”
נאומו של נסראללה שודר על מסכי ענק בביירות  (צילום: AFP)

Nasrallah’s speech screened in Beirut (Photo: AFP)

“A few missiles would plunge Israel into darkness,” Nasrallah said, referring to plans to attack power stations. “From Kiryat Shemona to Eilat,” he added.

The Hezbollah leader opened his speech with commends on Bulgaria’s investigation of the Burgas terror attack. He decried the speculation by the Lebanese opposition that Israel will attack Lebanon as a result of the accusations.

“The ones predicting an Israeli war on Lebanon are unfortunately Lebanese and some Arab figures, which is based on the alleged accusations against Hezbollah,” he said adding:” They seek to put Lebanon on a terrorist blacklist. ”

“When Israel wants to wage a war, it does not look for any excuse. Israel has a project and that’s what drives it into a war.”

Earlier on Saturday, French Foreign Ministry spokesman Philippe Lalliot said that his country was considering officially recognizing Hezbollah a terror organization, if, as Bulgaria had claimed, the Shiite group turns out to be behind the terror attack in Burgas that killed five Israeli tourists last July, Lebanese Al-Nahar newspaper reported.

Iranian regime loyalists call for exporting Islamist rule to Egypt

February 17, 2013

Iranian regime loyalists call for exporting Islamist rule to Egypt.

A protester, who opposes Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi, starts a fire to close a road for riot police during clashes in front of the Presidential Palace “Qasr El-Quba” in Cairo February 15, 2013. (Reuters)

A protester, who opposes Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi, starts a fire to close a road for riot police during clashes in front of the Presidential Palace “Qasr El-Quba” in Cairo February 15, 2013. (Reuters)

A group of Iranian regime loyalists delivered a message to Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi expressing their readiness to export means of Islamizing the state to post-revolution Egypt.

The group is made up of 17 figures close to Iran’s Supreme Leader, Grand Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Hosseini Khamenei, including his international affairs advisor and brother-in-law, the conservative website Afkar News reported.

According to the website, the signatories of the message addressed to Mursi took this initiative on the occasion of the second anniversary of the Egyptian revolution and owing to their belief that the experience of the Islamic revolution in Iran should be emulated in Egypt to establish a religious state.

“In spite of the economic sanctions and political blockade, Iran is proud to have achieved a great progress thanks to its Islamic law and the wise leadership of Sayyid Ruhollah Mostafavi Musavi Khomeini and Khamenei,” said the message.

This progress, the message added, can be seen in the elimination of poverty in Iran’s countryside and impoverished towns as well as scientific and technological advancement and several educational, industrial, and economic achievements.

The signatories, who called themselves the Muslim Thinkers of Iran, said they are willing to transfer all the expertise and knowledge they have to the Egyptian government and people.

They urged Mursi to form a religious state and not to pay attention to “international goals and pressures” or “trends that call for separating religion from politics, culture, and economy.”