Archive for February 2013

For third time in 2 years, ‘Iran fails to launch satellite’

February 27, 2013

For third time in 2 years, ‘Iran fails to launch satellite’ | The Times of Israel.

Report of latest setback comes a day after Israel successfully tests Arrow 3 missile interceptor

February 27, 2013, 1:09 am
Iranian rocket launch (photo credit: Channel 2 Screen Shot)

Iranian rocket launch (photo credit: Channel 2 Screen Shot)

For the third time in two years, Iran failed in an attempt to launch a satellite into space, western intelligence sources said Tuesday.

Iran was attempting to launch a home-produced satellite with photographic capabilities, but the rocket carrying it failed to perform as expected, and all contact with both the rocket and the satellite were lost after launch, according to the sources, quoted by Israel’s Channel 2.

Iran attempted the launch in secret about 10 days ago, and has been trying to cover up the failure, but the launch was registered by the western intelligence agencies, the report said.

News of the failed launch came on the day that Iran and the so-called P5+1 powers resumed negotiations over Iran’s controversial nuclear program, and the day after Israel successfully tested a new long-range missile interceptor in a joint drill with the US.

It also coincided with the first rocket fire into Israel from Gaza in three months — an upgraded Fajr-5 rocket which slammed into Ashkelon on Tuesday morning, causing no casualties. Some reports claimed Tuesday that Iranian experts are in Gaza helping Hamas and other Islamist terror groups improve their rocket and missile technology for use against Israel.

Monday’s trial of the Arrow 3 was described as a further improvement in Israel’s capacity to fend off an Iranian threat.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed the Israeli technical skill, and the partnership with the US, involved in the system, which he said enabled the Israeli government to better protect its citizens.

Uzi Rubin, who oversaw the development of the entire Arrow system, said the Arrow 3 represented “the most sophisticated system of its kind” in the world.

The primary advantage of the Arrow 3 over its predecessor, the Arrow 2, is its ability to intercept enemy missiles at higher altitudes and to target non-conventional weapons of mass destruction. This is seen as particularly relevant amid concerns over the progress of Iran’s nuclear program.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak said the test was an “important milestone in Israel’s multi-layered protection system.”

The Defense Ministry said the Arrow 3 “flew an exo-atmospheric trajectory through space, in accordance with the test plan.”

The rocket, still in early stages of development, was not given a target to intercept.

Arrow 3 joins Arrow 2, Iron Dome and Magic Wand (also known as David’s Sling) in Israel’s “umbrella” defense against rocket threats. The Arrow 3 is expected to be deployed in 2016.

Sketch describing how the Arrow 3 missile interceptor works (courtesy: Israeli Ministry of Defense)

Sketch describing how the Arrow 3 missile interceptor works (courtesy: Israeli Ministry of Defense)

The interceptor system is being developed by Israel Aerospace Industries in conjunction with Boeing.

Israel has seen success with anti-missile systems over the past year, especially the Iron Dome short-range rocket interceptor, which was deployed against Gazan rockets during Operation Pillar of Defense.

The system proved effective during the November mini-war, intercepting 84 percent of the rockets fired from the Gaza Strip at residential areas in Israel’s south and center.

3 rules to understanding Iran

February 27, 2013

3 rules to understanding Iran – Israel Opinion, Ynetnews.

Op-ed: UK’s ambassador to Israel says his country will work unwaveringly to prevent Iran from obtaining nukes

Matthew Gould

Published: 02.26.13, 20:15 / Israel Opinion

Today (Tuesday) in Almaty negotiators from the P5 +1 will sit down with Iranian negotiators to discuss Iran’s nuclear program. The facts are straightforward. Iran is flouting six United Nations resolutions and it continues to play games with the IAEA. The Iranian regime’s claims that its nuclear program is intended for purely civilian purposes are not credible given its ongoing efforts to expand its enrichment capacity. We, and our international partners, are clear that Iran cannot be allowed to get nuclear weapons.

The key question is how we stop Iran getting nuclear weapons. The UK believes that we need to carry on the current route – engaging with Iran and holding out the prospect of a better future if Iran takes the concrete steps needed to reassure the international community, and pressure through tough economic sanctions until Iran does so.

Ten years ago I was living in Iran, as Britain’s deputy ambassador. I dealt daily with the Iranian regime, travelled the country, and learned Persian history and culture. Iran is complicated and hard to understand. But I took away three lessons that are important now.

First, to understand Iran’s regime or attempt to predict how they will act, there is one cardinal rule. That in every decision the regime takes, they are focused on one overarching goal: To stay in power. One key reason they want nuclear capability is that they believe it will guarantee them their continuity in power.

Second, that the regime knows its economy is a huge vulnerability. It is inefficient, corrupt, badly managed and has millions of people paid directly or indirectly by the government. Without the regime’s oil income, it’s in trouble. That is why I believe that sanctions can work. We know that they are having a significant impact. The rial has collapsed in value. Unemployment is high. Inflation is rampant. The official inflation rate of 26% is an illusion; the true figure is double that. The cost of doing business with Iran has gone up dramatically. Iran’s ability to sell its own oil has been curtailed by British, US and European sanctions that make it almost impossible to conduct financial transactions with Iran.

Iran is not getting the technology it needs to sustain its own oil production, and production is down 45%, costing the Iranian exchequer over $40 billion a year. The reserves of the Iranian regime are shrinking. As David Cameron has said, the Iranian regime is under unprecedented pressure and faces an acute dilemma. They are leading their people to global isolation and an economic collapse. And they know it. And they also know that there is a simple way to bring sanctions to an end. By giving the international community the confidence it needs that Iran is not and will not develop a nuclear weapon.

Some people say that sanctions have failed, because Iran has not yet changed course on its nuclear program. It is certainly true that despite the effect of sanctions, Iranian centrifuges are still spinning. But it is more correct to say the sanctions have not yet succeeded. This is my third lesson I took away from Iran – you don’t know when they are going to change direction, until it happens. In 2003, when Iran last suspended its nuclear enrichment program, no one saw it coming. In 1989 when they decided to seek a ceasefire to end their war with Iraq, it was not signaled in advance. So the fact that Iran has not changed course in the face of sanctions so far does not mean it will not do so.

I am certain that for now, our best bet is to hold our nerve and continue down the path we are on. We continue to test Iranian willingness to negotiate in good faith. And until they take the concrete steps we need to see, we continue to implement ever tougher sanctions.

The UK remains firmly committed to reaching a diplomatic resolution to the nuclear issue with Iran. We do not advocate the use of military action, but Foreign Secretary William Hague has made clear that no option is off the table. A nuclear armed Iran is a threat to Israel, and a threat to the world, and the UK will work unwaveringly to prevent that from happening.

Matthew Gould is Britain’s ambassador to Israel

US Senate confirms Hagel as secretary of defense

February 27, 2013

US Senate confirms Hagel as secretary of defense – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Senators back Obama’s controversial nomination by 57-41 vote. Sen. Coats: He has an embarrassing lack of knowledge about our Iran policy

News agencies

Latest Update: 02.27.13, 00:27 / Israel News

The US Senate voted to confirm Chuck Hagel on Tuesday as President Barack Obama’s new secretary of defense.

Senators backed the nomination by a 58-41 vote, with only four Republicans joining Democrats in support of Hagel, a Republican former US senator from Nebraska.

Hagel needed only 51 votes to be confirmed as the new civilian leader at the Pentagon.

The vote ended a contentious fight over the president’s choice for his second-term national security team.

Republicans opposed the former 12-year Republican senator casting him as out of the mainstream and overly critical of Israel. But Democrats stood together for Hagel, a twice-wounded Vietnam combat veteran.

The vote came just hours after Republicans dropped their delay and allowed the nomination to move forward. The Senate vote to end the delaying maneuver known as a filibuster was 71-27. Eighteen Republicans joined 51 Democrats and two independents to move forward with the contentious nomination.

Hagel will succeed Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and join Obama’s retooled national security team of Secretary of State John Kerry and CIA Director-designate John Brennan.

Hagel’s nomination bitterly split the Senate.

The president got no points with the Republican Party for tapping the former two-term senator. Republican lawmakers turned on their former colleague, calling Hagel too critical of Israel and too compromising with Iran. They cast the Nebraskan as a radical far out of the mainstream.

Republicans argued that while Hagel served with distinction in Vietnam, his record on Israel, Iran and nuclear weapons disqualified him for the top Pentagon job. Last week, 15 Republican senators sent a letter to Obama asking him to withdraw the Hagel nomination.

Republican Sen. Dan Coats cited Hagel’s at-times halting testimony at his confirmation hearing and his misstatement that the US has a policy of containment toward Iran rather than thwarting Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.

“He has an embarrassing lack of knowledge about our policy toward Iran,” Coats said.

In the course of the rancorous, seven-week nomination fight, Republicans have insinuated that Hagel has a cozy relationship with Iran and received payments for speeches from extreme or radical groups. Those comments have drawn a rebuke from Democrats and some Republicans.
הייגל בשימוע. שעות של הטחת האשמות (צילום: EPA)

Hagel (center) during confirmation hearing (Photo: EPA)

Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, a Democrat, dismissed the “unfair innuendoes” against Hagel and called him an “outstanding American patriot” whose background as an enlisted soldier would send a positive message to the nation’s servicemen and women.

Republican Sen. John McCain clashed with his onetime friend over his opposition to President George W. Bush’s decision to send an extra 30,000 troops to Iraq in 2007 at a point when the war seemed in danger of being lost. Hagel, who voted to authorize military force in Iraq, later opposed the conflict, comparing it to Vietnam and arguing that it shifted the focus from Afghanistan.

McCain called Hagel unqualified for the Pentagon job even though he once described him as fit for a Cabinet post.

Republicans also challenged Hagel about a May 2012 study that he co-authored for the advocacy group Global Zero, which called for an 80 percent reduction of US nuclear weapons and the eventual elimination of all the world’s nuclear arms.

The group argued that with the Cold War over, the United States could reduce its total nuclear arsenal to 900 without sacrificing security. Currently, the US and Russia have about 5,000 warheads each, either deployed or in reserve. Both countries are on track to reduce their deployed strategic warheads to 1,550 by 2018, the number set in the New START treaty that the Senate ratified in December 2010.

In an echo of the 2012 presidential campaign, Hagel faced an onslaught of criticism by well-funded, Republican-leaning outside groups that labeled the former senator “anti-Israel” and pressured senators to oppose the nomination. The groups ran television and print ads criticizing Hagel.

Opponents were particularly incensed by Hagel’s use of the term “Jewish lobby” to refer to pro-Israel groups. He apologized, saying he should have used another term and should not have said those groups have intimidated members of the Senate into favoring actions contrary to US interests.

The nominee spent weeks reaching out to members of the Senate, meeting individually with lawmakers to address their concerns and seeking to reassure them about his policies.

Hagel’s inconsistent performance during some eight hours of testimony at this confirmation hearing last month undercut his cause, but it wasn’t a fatal blow.

On Feb. 12, a divided Senate Armed Services Committee approved the nomination on a party-line vote of 14-11.

Two days later, a Democratic move to vote on the nomination fell a few votes short as Republicans insisted they needed more time to consider the Hagel pick. The nomination also became entangled in Republican demands for more information about the deadly assault on the US diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya last September.

Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans were killed in that attack.

Reuters, AP contributed to the report

President Peres: We won’t abide rocket fire – Israel News, Ynetnews

February 26, 2013

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President Peres: We won’t abide rocket fire

Published: 02.26.13, 10:58 / Israel News

President Shimon Peres commented on Tuesday morning’s Grad fire at Israel and said that “The government will not abide rocket fire.”

The president added that “Hamas knows that if it fires, it will be punished and therefore it refrains from doing so. These are singular incidents, but even singular incidents must be dealt with.” (Ilana Curiel)

via President Peres: We won’t abide rocket fire – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Liberman: Skeptical of Iran’s int… JPost – Diplomacy & Politics

February 26, 2013

Liberman: Skeptical of Iran’s intentions at talks

By LAHAV HARKOV

02/26/2013 14:18

Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee Chairman calls powers to take action on Iran beyond sanctions; defends “Prisoner X” case.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Photo: REUTERS/Stringer

As world powers gathered in Kazakhstan for the latest round of negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program, Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee chairman Avigdor Liberman said he wished the P5+1 luck, but chose to remain skeptical over the outcome.

“We have no illusions about Iran’s intentions to drag out the process and waste time,” said Liberman, as he called for the six powers – the UK, US, Russia, China, France and Germany – to take “more practical steps” to stop Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.

Related:

‘Iran will never shut down Fordow nuclear plant’

‘West to offer Iran sanctions relief at nuke talks’

“The international community must rely on its experience with North Korea and understand that sanctions alone are not enough,” Liberman said.

On the subject of the “Prisoner X” affair, the former foreign minister said that the Israeli authorities had done nothing wrong. Citing an investigation by a Foreign Affairs and Defense subcommittee on Intelligence and Secret Services, which began last week, into the suicide in prison of the alleged Mossad agent and Australian national Ben Zygier, Liberman said that “no fault was found with those involved.”

“Whether it was the rights given to the prisoner by law, before he committed suicide or anything else connected to the arrest of Ben Zygier – in every step of the way all of the relevant parts of the legal system at the most senior level were involved,” Liberman stated at the start of a committee meeting Tuesday. “I can say unequivocally that people do not disappear in Israel. No one has his own form of justice.”

Liberman also congratulated the IDF on successfully testing the Arrow 3 missile defense system.

“We proved once again that we have the ability to use our great human resources and our technological superiority,” he said, adding that the successful test will significantly improve Israel’s “active defense capabilities” and freedom to act in times of war.”

via Liberman: Skeptical of Iran’s int… JPost – Diplomacy & Politics.

Iran says ready to make concessions in nuke talks – PanARMENIAN.Net

February 26, 2013

Iran says ready to make concessions in nuke talks

Iran says ready to make concessions in nuke talks

February 26, 2013 – 17:18 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Iran said it was prepared to make an offer to major powers in talks on its nuclear program in Kazakhstan on Tuesday, February 26 after the United States proposed limited sanctions relief in return for a halt to the most controversial work, Reuters reported.

The first meeting in eight months between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany – the “P5+1” – aims to resolve a dispute that threatens to trigger another war in the Middle East.

The negotiations in the city of Almaty – which follow inconclusive meetings last year in Istanbul, Baghdad and Moscow – were expected to run through Tuesday and Wednesday.

But with the Islamic Republic’s political elite preoccupied with worsening infighting before a presidential election in June, few believe the meeting will yield a quick breakthrough.

A U.S. official said on Monday that the powers’ updated offer to Iran – a modified version of one rejected by Iran last year – would take into account its recent nuclear advances, but also take “some steps in the sanctions arena”.

This would address some of Iran’s concerns but not meet its demand that all sanctions be lifted, the official said.

In Almaty, a source close to the Iranian negotiating team said on Tuesday that Iran would put up a counterproposal.

via Iran says ready to make concessions in nuke talks – PanARMENIAN.Net.

Exclusive – Iran said to deploy ageing foreign tankers, avoiding sanctions – Yahoo! News UK

February 26, 2013

Exclusive – Iran said to deploy ageing foreign tankers, avoiding sanctions – Yahoo! News UK.

 

Exclusive – Iran said to deploy ageing foreign tankers, avoiding sanctions

LONDON (Reuters) – Iran is using old tankers, saved from the scrapyard by foreign middlemen, to ship out oil to China in ways that avoid Western sanctions, say officials involved with sanctions who showed Reuters corroborating documents.

The officials, from states involved in imposing sanctions to pressure Iran to curb its nuclear programme, said the tankers – worth little more than scrap value – were a new way for Iran to keep its oil exports flowing by exploiting the legal limitations on Western powers’ ability to make sanctions stick worldwide.

Officials showed Reuters shipping documents to support their allegation that eight ships, each of which can carry close to a day’s worth of Iran’s pre-sanctions exports, have loaded Iranian oil at sea. Publicly available tracking and other data are consistent with those documents and allegations.

“The tankers have been used for Iranian crude,” one official said. “They are part of Iran’s sanctions-busting strategy.”

Dimitris Cambis, the Greek businessman who last year bought the ships – eight very large crude carriers, or VLCCs – to carry Middle East crude to Asia, flatly denied doing any business with Tehran or running clandestine shipments of its oil to China.

Cambis said he had not been involved in shipping before but had bought the tankers as part of a new venture he runs from the United Arab Emirates. He denied trading with Iran – though he has contacts there from his previous work in the oil industry.

He denied his vessels have loaded oil from Iran while at anchor in the Gulf. Known as ship-to-ship transfers, or STS, such movements are hard to track as crews can switch off tracking beacons or not update their recorded positions for periods to conceal that one vessel has come alongside another.

Cambis also explained a stop in Iran by one of his tankers – recorded in publicly available tracking data – as having been only for an emergency repair, not to load an oil cargo.

“There is no Iranian vessel that has done any STS with us,” Cambis told Reuters in Athens in response to the officials’ allegations of taking oil from Iranian tankers owned by Tehran shipping group NITC. “We have nothing to do with NITC.”

The officials involved with sanctions dispute his account and showed documents detailing several ship-to-ship loadings. They said all eight of the tankers were involved in Iran trade.

In one instance in early December, according to the shipping documents shown to Reuters by the officials, an NITC tanker named Marigold loaded Iranian crude onto the Leycothea, one of Cambis’s eight ships, while both were at anchor off the UAE emirate of Sharjah. Public tracking showed Cambis’s tanker made a call about a month later to Zhanjiang oil terminal in China.

Loading at sea lets vessels pick up a cargo without visiting the country of origin of the crude. Officials allege the tankers are also used as offshore storage for Iranian oil which can then be transferred onward to other ships, concealing its origins.

Officials in Iran, which rejects Western allegations it is seeking nuclear weapons [ID:nL6N0BQ26D], did not respond to requests for comment.

MUDDYING WATERS

Experts on sanctions law said that by operating outside the European Union, shipowners had no clear obligation to observe rules barring EU companies from buying Iranian oil, though banks and insurers with EU or U.S. business ties are giving a wide berth to firms they suspect of dealing with Iran, given U.S. and EU efforts to penalise such firms within their own jurisdiction.

“Such ships would be used to delete traces of a trade taking place,” a London-based ship broker said.

While Iran has its own substantial tanker fleet, capable of carrying over 72 million barrels, the 2 million barrels that each of the eight tankers can move would be a useful addition to its capacity, analysts said – particularly as their foreign ownership and management could help conceal the Iranian origin of the oil, making it easier to obtain insurance, finance and other ship services that are affected by EU and U.S. sanctions.

Cambis said that between August and November he bought the eight ships: Leycothea, Glaros, Nereyda, Ocean Nymph, Seagull, Zap, Ocean Performer and Ulysses I. The first five are now managed by his firm, Sambouk Shipping, in Sharjah and he is in the process of transferring management of the remaining three.

In other movements indicated by the shipping documents, the Nereyda was also involved in a separate ship-to-ship transfer with NITC’s Rainbow in the Gulf in November, while the Glaros took an offshore transfer from the Marigold there in December.

The Nereyda was later recorded arriving at a terminal in China in December. The Glaros appears to have remained in the Gulf since that December transfer, according to tracking data.

Asked about publicly available ship tracking data showing that the Glaros stopped at Iran’s Larak Island oil terminal on October 20 last year, Cambis provided what he said was an affidavit by the ship’s master describing an emergency repair carried out by Iranian divers when the tanker was headed to Saudi Arabia.

The master, named as I. Bonoutas, could not be reached for comment. Cambis denied loading any oil in Iran. After its stop at Larak, Glaros’s next recorded visits, according to ship tracking data, were at Chinese ports between November 24 to December 1.

The eight tankers, built up to 20 years ago, can carry about 16 million barrels of oil among them, shipping databases show.

Iranian crude exports declined to an average of 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2012, down about 1 million bpd from 2011 levels, data from the International Energy Agency showed.

NITC BLACKLISTED

The eight tankers were bought last year for a total of about $204 million, ship trading sources said – reflecting prices only 3-4 percent above their worth as raw metal. The purchases have been the object of considerable discussion among ship brokers – not least because they would more typically have been broken up.

A ship dealer based in London said, however: “They can carry on trading for as long as people are willing to employ them.

“There’s really not much that any authorities can do.”

NITC has been blacklisted by the West and the EU has imposed an outright ban on providing ship insurance that would benefit Iran. The exit from Iran of top providers of ship certification, vital for port access, and the removal of Iranian vessels from international registries have added to operational challenges.

While NITC has expanded its fleet in recent months, experts say access to additional foreign tankers would give Tehran more flexibility in maintaining exports.

“The key word for the Iranians is resistance as in the Supreme Leader’s declaration of a resistance economy,” said Scott Lucas, a specialist on Iran at Birmingham University.

“This is not an economy which is going to produce growth but it is one which is going to try and avoid a domestic collapse.”

(Additional reporting by Renee Maltezou in Athens; Editing by Alastair Macdonald)

Iran Enters Nuclear Talks in a Defiant Mood – NYTimes.com

February 26, 2013

Iran Enters Nuclear Talks in a Freshly Defiant Mood

By THOMAS ERDBRINK

Published: February 25, 2013

 

TEHRAN — When Iran’s nuclear negotiating team sits down with its Western counterparts in Almaty, Kazakhstan, on Tuesday, it will offer no new plans or suggestions, people familiar with the views of the Iranian leadership say. More likely, they say, the Iranian negotiators will sit with arms crossed, demanding a Western change of heart.

Related

Skepticism Abounds as Six World Powers Resume Nuclear Talks With Iran (February 26, 2013)

Iran Says It Has Found New Deposits of Uranium (February 24, 2013)

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Iran’s leaders believe that the effects of Western sanctions have been manageable, and Iran continues to make progress on what it says is a peaceful nuclear energy program. And Iran’s leaders see that North Korea, which openly admits that it wants nuclear weapons, has performed three nuclear tests without suffering any real penalties.

As a result, Iran’s leaders feel that they, not the West, hold the upper hand in negotiations. “The West has no option but stopping to threaten Iran and reduce sanctions,” said Kazem Anbarloui, the editor in chief of the state newspaper Resalat, who was appointed by Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. “But it seems they just want to talk for the sake of talks.”

Further signaling that they expect a grand gesture, Iranian officials last week turned down a Western proposal to gradually lift sanctions on trading in gold in return for the closing of a mountain bunker enrichment facility called Fordo. They said the site, which is under an inspection regime by the United Nations nuclear watchdog, would never be shut down, because it afforded protection against attacks, particularly from Israel.

“Such a proposal would only help the Zionist regime to threaten our facilities,” an influential lawmaker, Ala’edin Borujerdi, told reporters. “They would never dare to attack us, but why would we tempt them?”

In recent days, dozens of Iranian politicians have made defiant statements, urging the United States and other nations to accept Iranian nuclear “realities,” which means unconditional acceptance of Iran’s nuclear energy program.

“If they want constructive negotiations, it’s better this time they come with a new strategy and credible proposals,” the top nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, told reporters before he left for Kazakhstan.

As a sign of their resistance to Western pressures, Iranian officials on Saturday announced the mass installment of higher-yielding enrichment centrifuges, said they had discovered new uranium mines and designated new sites for future nuclear projects.

“You should raise the level of your tolerance,” Fereydoon Abbasi-Davani, the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, said on Saturday. “Try to find ways for cooperation with a country that is moving towards technological progress.”

On Sunday, Iranian lawmakers signed a petition urging their negotiating team to defend national interests in Almaty. “The West must learn that Iran’s nuclear train, which moves on the rails of peaceful goals, will never stop,” the petition read, according to the semiofficial Fars news agency.

At the same time, a former top nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, who is currently the speaker of the Iranian Parliament, stressed that reports by the United Nations watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, had no effect on the “will and determination of the Iranian nation.”

Iranian officials do not deny that the sanctions have had an impact — Iran’s oil sales have fallen by more than half because of sanctions, and the national currency lost about half its value in 2012, amid the international isolation of its central bank. But they say they are confident that the country can withstand any hardships the West imposes.

“The U.S. government is imposing all its power to impose pressure on us; they tell other countries not to trade with us,” President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Saturday. “We will pass this situation.”

Ayatollah Khamenei gave much the same message in two addresses this month. “If the Iranian people had wanted to surrender to the Americans, they would not have carried out a revolution,” he said in a meeting at his home, which was broadcast by the Iranian news media. “The people, particularly the underprivileged classes, truly feel the hardships. But they do not separate themselves from the Islamic Republic, because they know that the Islamic Republic and the dear Islam are the powerful hands which can solve the problems.”

In elevators, in private taxis and at family parties in the Iranian capital, many hope that the talks in Almaty will bring an end to the decade-long nuclear standoff. But few expect much. “Both the U.S. and our leaders will never give in,” said one judge who did not want his name mentioned because of the nature of his work. “There can only be one winner and one loser; no compromise.”

via Iran Enters Nuclear Talks in a Defiant Mood – NYTimes.com.

Iran nuclear talks: Both sides table new offers

February 26, 2013

Iran nuclear talks: Both sides t… JPost – Iranian Threat – News.

By JPOST.COM STAFF
02/26/2013 12:33
West to ease sanctions in return for halt to some nuclear work, while Iran TV touts ‘comprehensive package of proposals’.

Catherine Ashton and Iranian nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalali at talks in Khazakstan, Feb 26, 2013.

Catherine Ashton and Iranian nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalali at talks in Khazakstan, Feb 26, 2013. Photo: Reuters
Iran and officials from the major world powers met Tuesday, as both sides prepared to present new offers in a fresh attempt to resolve a dispute that has threatened stability in the Middle East for years.

The West is expected to offer Iran limited sanctions relief if it agrees to halt its most sensitive nuclear work, while Iran’s state-run Press TV reported Tuesday that Tehran is to offer a “comprehensive package of proposals” during the talks.

Press TV said the proposals may change depending on offers from the P5+1 (the five permanent members of the Security Council – the UK, US, France, China and Russia –plus Germany) group. The report gave no details of the proposals.

The talks are the first meeting on the issue in eight months – time that Iran has used to expand atomic activity that the West suspects is aimed at developing a bomb capability – the powers hope Iran will engage in serious negotiations on finding a diplomatic solution.

The negotiations formally got under way in the Kazakh city of Almaty – which follows three inconclusive meetings last year in Istanbul, Baghdad and Moscow – at around 1:30 p.m local time (0730 GMT).

But with the Islamic Republic’s political elite pre-occupied with worsening internal infighting ahead of a June presidential election, few believe the meeting Tuesday and Wednesday will yield an immediate breakthrough.

At best, diplomats and analysts say, Iran will take the joint offer from the P5+1 seriously and agree to hold further talks soon on how to implement practical steps to ease the tension.

The powers would like to see “a recognition by our Iranian colleagues that our offer is a serious one … but it is not the final act in the play,” said one diplomat participating in the talks. “I wouldn’t predict a decisive breakthrough.”

A spokesman for the European Union’s foreign policy chief also cautioned Tuesday that world powers do not expect a breakthrough agreement at the talks.

“It is clear that nobody expects to come from Almaty with a fully-done deal,” Michael Mann told a news conference shortly after negotiations started.  The EU’s Catherine Ashton oversees contacts with Iran on behalf of the six powers.

Iran is showing no sign of backing down over a nuclear program it says is for entirely peaceful energy purposes. The program has drawn tough Western sanctions that have greatly reduced its oil exports, an economic lifeline.

A United Nations nuclear watchdog report last week said Iran was for the first time installing advanced centrifuges that would allow it to significantly speed up its enrichment of uranium, which can have both civilian and military purposes.

Tightening Western sanctions on Iran over the last 14 months are hurting Iran’s economy, slashing oil revenue and driving the currency down, which in turn has pushed up inflation.

But they are not close to having the crippling effect envisaged by Washington, analysts say, and – so far at least – have not prompted a change in nuclear course by Tehran.

Western officials say the powers’ offer – an updated version of one rejected by Iran in the last meeting in June – would include an easing of sanctions of trade in gold and other precious metals if Tehran closes its underground Fordow enrichment plant.

The stakes are high. Israel has hinted strongly at possible military action to prevent its foe from obtaining such arms. Iran has threatened to retaliate hard if attacked.

The fact that the meeting takes place in Kazakhstan – which gave up its nuclear arsenal after the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s – has symbolic resonance.

A US official said the Central Asian state could serve as a “good role model” for the benefits of making “certain choices”, in clear reference to Iran’s atomic ambitions.

Western officials acknowledge an easing of U.S. and European sanctions on trade in gold represents a relatively modest step. But it could be used as part of barter transactions that might allow Iran to circumvent tight financial sanctions.

Iran so far appears to be showing little interest. Its Foreign Ministry spokesman last week dismissed the reported incentive as insufficient and a senior Iranian lawmaker has ruled out closing Fordow, located close to the holy city of Qom.

Iran says it enriches uranium to a fissile concentration of 20 percent to make fuel for a medical research reactor in the capital Tehran. But it also represents most of the work required to reach weapons-grade material of 90 percent.

A US official said the powers hoped that the Almaty meeting would lead to follow-up talks, either at a political or technical level, before Iran’s New Year celebrations in March.

Austin Bay: Time to Confront Tehran’s International Terrorism

February 26, 2013

Austin Bay: Time to Confront Tehran’s International Terrorism – San Antonio Express-News.

A terrorist bomb killed five Israeli tourists, their Bulgarian bus driver and the terrorist bomb-carrier on July 18, 2012. A report on the attack was released this month. Photo: Associated Press

A terrorist bomb killed five Israeli tourists, their Bulgarian bus driver and the terrorist bomb-carrier on July 18, 2012. A report on the attack was released this month.

Photo: Associated Press

February 2013 has been a very bad month for Iranian-sponsored terrorism.

On Feb. 5, the government of Bulgaria struck the clerical regime a hard blow with the truth stick when it released its long-awaited official report on the July 18, 2012, terror attack in the Bulgarian Black Sea resort town of Burgas. In that attack, a terrorist bomb killed five Israeli tourists, their Bulgarian bus driver and the terrorist bomb-carrier, as well. The bomb injured another 32 people. The Bulgarian government called the attack a suicide bombing.

The Israeli government quickly blamed Lebanese Hezbollah for the murders and said Iran was behind the attack. Iran denied the Israeli accusation.

In the intervening seven months, Bulgarian investigators carefully collected and analyzed crime-scene evidence and accessed surveillance data collected by several foreign intelligence and police agencies. The Bulgarians coolly solicited expert advice from several foreign police agencies. EUROPOL, the European Union‘s police coordination agency for cross-border investigations and criminal intelligence, reviewed the Bulgarian analysis. EUROPOL’s director praised the report’s thoroughness and professionalism.

The bottom line: The Bulgarian investigation supports the Israeli government’s conclusion that Lebanese Hezbollah operatives conducted the attack.

After Bulgaria released the report, an indignant Iran withdrew its ambassador from Sofia. Why? When it comes to mayhem, murder and war, everyone knows Lebanese Hezbollah functions as an arm of Iranian intelligence and the Revolutionary Guards’ Al Quds special operations force. Iran finances, trains, supplies and, yes, operationally directs Lebanese Hezbollah’s terror operations, guerrilla and militia operations, and episodic rocket war with Israel.

The report linked the dead bomber to two men who investigators concluded coordinated the operation. Both of the coordinators are members of Hezbollah’s militant wing. Investigators discovered substantial evidence that Hezbollah financed the terror operation. They also found evidence that the explosive device was rigged for remote-controlled detonation and may have been accidentally detonated by the bomber after he planted it on the bus. In other words, the evidence indicated that the attack was not a suicide bombing. There is a more cynical interpretation: One of the two still-living members of the terror cell detonated the bomb and sacrificed his own operative.

The bomber, who used the nom de guerre Jacque Felipe Martin, had a Michigan driver’s license, which the report concluded Hezbollah fabricated in Lebanon. The coordinators carried Canadian and Australian passports and also had forged Michigan licenses.

A sophisticated operation? Yes, and the report shines a harsh light on Iran’s insidiously sophisticated global terror war. For years, the EU has resisted U.S. efforts to have Hezbollah declared a terrorist organization. That needs to change.

On Feb. 11, the world got another look at Iran’s dirty war machine when one of the Quds force’s most senior officers, Brig. Gen. Hassan Shateri, was slain by Syrian rebels inside Syria. He was in a vehicle heading for southern Lebanon, otherwise known as Hezbollah land.

Shateri directed Iranian covert operations in Lebanon and possibly Syria, as well. According to Middle Eastern analyst Amir Taheri, Shateri had entered Syria to advise Assad dictatorship security personnel. He was Iran’s chief Hezbollah go-between for weapons and money. Taheri reported that Shateri channeled $200 million a year (in weapons and aid) to Hezbollah after the 2006 Hezbollah-Israel War.

Shateri’s presence in Syria adds weight to the numerous reports that Iran provides the Assad dictatorship with personnel as well as money, weapons and military supplies.

The Iranian government’s hard-core clerics imprison and torture their domestic critics. They wage proxy war on Israel and subjugate Lebanon. We now have indisputable evidence they conduct terror attacks in Europe and keep the Assad dictatorship in power. It is high time for responsible U.S., Canadian and European leaders to hold Tehran’s ayatollahs accountable for their premeditated crimes against humanity.