US envoy: Mideast peace plan not finished, not very long 

Posted February 12, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: US envoy: Mideast peace plan not finished, not very long – Israel Hayom

Mideast envoy Jason Greenblatt slams Fox News report suggesting 175-page “Deal of the Century” has been shown to President Trump who is “happy with its parameters” • “Your sources gave you bad info,” he says. “We’ll continue to refine it until release.”

Yoni Hersch and Israel Hayom Staff // published on 12/02/2019
   
U.S. Special Representative for International Negotiations Jason Greenblatt

U.S. Special Representative for International Negotiations Jason Greenblatt shot down on  Monday a Fox News report claiming that the administration’s peace plan was complete and got the endorsement of the president.

“Sorry @FoxNews & @TreyYingst your sources gave you bad info,” Greenblatt tweeted on Monday. “While the plan is close to complete, we aren’t there yet & we’ll continue to refine it until release. 175 pages is also inaccurate. It’s a very detailed political/economic plan but not that long.”

According to the Fox News report, which is based on two senior administration officials, “fewer than five people have access to the complete document.”

According to one of the officials, “The plan is done. … [President Donald Trump] is happy with the parameters of the deal.” The officials said the plan would likely stay under wraps at least until the Israeli election on April 9.  “We are not going to do anything that threatens Israel’s security,” a senior administration official said.

The report said that Trump was “briefed by U.S. Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, Senior Adviser Jared Kushner and special envoy for Mideast peace Jason Greenblatt multiple times on the specifics of the deal.”

Greenblatt and Kushner are expected to visit the region later this month to discuss their peace initiative. The administration has repeatedly dismissed various reports on the supposed provisions of the peace plan, describing them as false and misleading.

 

Syrian reports: 2 Iranian officers killed in Quneitra strike

Posted February 12, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Syrian reports: 2 Iranian officers killed in Quneitra strike – Israel Hayom

Rebel-allied news agencies say two Iranian Revolutionary Guards officers were killed and six Iranian military personnel were wounded while preparing to fire at Israeli Golan Heights • Syrian state news says no injured • IDF declines to comment.

Reuters, Daniel Siryoti and Israel Hayom Staff // published on 12/02/2019
   
Smoke billows at the site of the strike in Quneitra in southern Syria on Monday 


Two officers from the Iranian Revolutionary Guards were killed by tank fire attributed to Israel near the city Quneitra in southern Syria Monday evening, news outlets identified with Syrian rebel groups reported Tuesday.

The reports claimed that two Iranian military personnel had been killed and another six wounded. The reports said that the Revolutionary Guards had been preparing to fire at the Israeli Golan Heights.

News outlets identified with the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad, whom Iran backs, said that none of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards had been wounded in the incident and that it had only resulted in property damage.

On Monday night, the state-run Syrian Arab News Agency reported that an Israeli drone had fired four missiles near a demolished hospital and an army observation post in Syria’s southern Quneitra province near the Israeli border.

An army source was quoted by SANA as saying that the “Israeli enemy” also hit several sites along border villages close to a 1974 demilitarized zone on the Golan Heights frontier, which with Russian support, the Syrian army regained control from rebels last year.

Asked about the reported Quneitra strikes, an IDF spokeswoman declined to comment.

State media earlier said the sites in Quneitra that were hit by Israel came from several tank artillery rounds. Social media reports at the time of the strike said that artillery fire had targeted

Residents familiar with the area said that the sites targeted fall within the strategic area known as the “Triangle of Death” connecting the southern Damascus countryside with Deraa and Quneitra provinces.

They say Shiite Hezbollah group has consolidated its new front in southern Syria and entrenched Iran’s influence since the defeat of Sunni rebels who were once backed by the U.S., Jordan and Gulf states.

Israel has mounted attacks in Syria as part of its effort to counter the influence carved out there by Iran, which has supported Assad in the war that erupted in 2011.

In January, IAF jets carried out a strike on an Iranian arms cache in Syria.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said Israel would ramp up its fight against Iranian-aligned forces in Syria following the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Syria.

 

Venezuela’s Guaidó seeks to renew diplomatic ties with Israel 

Posted February 12, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Venezuela’s Guaidó seeks to renew diplomatic ties with Israel – Israel Hayom

In interview with Israel Hayom, Juan Guaidó, recognized by some 50 countries, including Israel, as Venezuela’s interim leader, says, “I am very happy to announce that the process of stabilizing relations with Israel is in full swing.”

Eldad Beck // published on 12/02/2019
   
Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó, whom many nations have recognized as the country’s rightful interim ruler 


Once bastions of support for President Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela’s shanty towns have in recent weeks grown increasingly fond of opposition leader Juan Guaidó. In fact, he is now so popular in Venezuela’s slums that he asks me to meet him in one such barrio north of the country’s capital of Caracas. When Guaidó learns that I am Israeli, his face lights up.

Some 50 foreign countries, including Israel, have recognized Guaidó as Venezuela’s interim president.

I asked Guaidó whether he would act to re-establish diplomatic ties between Venezuela and Israel, which were cut off by the country’s former leader Hugo Chávez following 2008’s Operation Cast Lead.

“I am very happy to announce that the process of stabilizing relations with Israel is in full swing,” Guaidó said, noting, “It is very important for us.” “We will renew ties, later we will announce the appointment of an ambassador to Israel, and we really hope an ambassador from Israel will come to us.”

Israel Hayom correspondent Eldad Beck, left, with Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó

In the past, the friendly relations between Venezuela and Israel were such that Caracas was one of the few capitals to establish its embassy in Israel in Jerusalem.

When asked whether Venezuela’s new embassy would be situated in Jerusalem, Guaidó replies that “that is one of the subjects we are talking about. I will declare the resumption of ties and the site of the embassy at the proper time,” he said.

Ever since the socialists have taken power in the country, many of Venezuela’s Jews have fled the country as a result of increasing anti-Semitism, some of them have immigrated to Israel. Venezuelan Jews in Israel have been very active in efforts to enlist support for Guaidó, so I asked him whether he had a message for the Venezuelan Jews now residing in Israel.

“There are many Venezuelans in Israel and many Jews in Venezuela,” he said. “This [Jewish] community is very active and prosperous, one which has contributed greatly to our society. I assume they are happy we are renewing ties with Israel.”

And as for the local Jewish community’s fears/concerns about standing publicly by his side, Guaidó said, “I have no doubt that the Jews are afraid. Many in the military forces are also scared to express their opinions. The regime has no respect for the most basic right: the right to live. Many Western countries have already committed to sending humanitarian aid to Venezuela. I am confident that Israel will also help us.”

 

Off Topic:  Venezuela’s Guaidó seeks to renew diplomatic ties with Israel 

Posted February 12, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Venezuela’s Guaidó seeks to renew diplomatic ties with Israel – Israel Hayom

In interview with Israel Hayom, Juan Guaidó, recognized by some 50 countries, including Israel, as Venezuela’s interim leader, says, “I am very happy to announce that the process of stabilizing relations with Israel is in full swing.”

Eldad Beck // published on 12/02/2019
   
Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó, whom many nations have recognized as the country’s rightful interim ruler 

Once bastions of support for President Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela’s shanty towns have in recent weeks grown increasingly fond of opposition leader Juan Guaidó. In fact, he is now so popular in Venezuela’s slums that he asks me to meet him in one such barrio north of the country’s capital of Caracas. When Guaidó learns that I am Israeli, his face lights up.

Some 50 foreign countries, including Israel, have recognized Guaidó as Venezuela’s interim president.

I asked Guaidó whether he would act to re-establish diplomatic ties between Venezuela and Israel, which were cut off by the country’s former leader Hugo Chávez following 2008’s Operation Cast Lead.

“I am very happy to announce that the process of stabilizing relations with Israel is in full swing,” Guaidó said, noting, “It is very important for us.” “We will renew ties, later we will announce the appointment of an ambassador to Israel, and we really hope an ambassador from Israel will come to us.”

Israel Hayom correspondent Eldad Beck, left, with Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó

In the past, the friendly relations between Venezuela and Israel were such that Caracas was one of the few capitals to establish its embassy in Israel in Jerusalem.

When asked whether Venezuela’s new embassy would be situated in Jerusalem, Guaidó replies that “that is one of the subjects we are talking about. I will declare the resumption of ties and the site of the embassy at the proper time,” he said.

Ever since the socialists have taken power in the country, many of Venezuela’s Jews have fled the country as a result of increasing anti-Semitism, some of them have immigrated to Israel. Venezuelan Jews in Israel have been very active in efforts to enlist support for Guaidó, so I asked him whether he had a message for the Venezuelan Jews now residing in Israel.

“There are many Venezuelans in Israel and many Jews in Venezuela,” he said. “This [Jewish] community is very active and prosperous, one which has contributed greatly to our society. I assume they are happy we are renewing ties with Israel.”

And as for the local Jewish community’s fears/concerns about standing publicly by his side, Guaidó said, “I have no doubt that the Jews are afraid. Many in the military forces are also scared to express their opinions. The regime has no respect for the most basic right: the right to live. Many Western countries have already committed to sending humanitarian aid to Venezuela. I am confident that Israel will also help us.”

 

PM dismisses Iranian threat on Tel Aviv: I am not intimidated 

Posted February 12, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: PM dismisses Iranian threat on Tel Aviv: I am not intimidated – Israel Hayom

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards: U.S. lacks courage to fire a single bullet but if they attack us, “we will raze Tel Aviv and Haifa to the ground” • “I do not ignore the threats of the Iranian regime but neither am I intimidated by them,” Netanyahu says.
Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff // published on 12/02/2019
   
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu 


Iran would demolish cities in Israel if the United States attacked, an official representative of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards threatened, Monday.

“The United States does not have the courage to fire a single bullet at us despite all its defensive and military assets. But if they attack us, we will raze Tel Aviv and Haifa to the ground,” Yadollah Javani, the Iranian Revolutionary Guards’ deputy head for political affairs, told the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency.

Video: Reuters

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dismissed the threat in a statement, Monday.

“I do not ignore the threats of the Iranian regime but neither am I intimidated by them,” he said.

“If this regime makes the awful mistake of trying to destroy Tel Aviv and Haifa, it will not succeed. However, this would be the last anniversary of the revolution that they celebrate. They should take this into account.”

Hundreds of thousands of Iranians marched and some burned U.S. flags to mark the revolution’s 40th anniversary on Monday, as Tehran showed off ballistic missiles in defiance of U.S. efforts to curb its military power.

Soldiers, students, clerics and black-clad women holding small children thronged streets across Iran, many with portraits of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the Shiite cleric who led an Islamic uprising that toppled the Shah.

State television showed crowds carrying Iranian flags, shouting, “Death to Israel, Death to America” – trademark chants of the revolution.

The Islamic republic has vowed to increase its military strength despite mounting pressure from Western countries to curtail its ballistic missile program.

Those capabilities were on display during the march, including the Qadr F, a ground-to-ground missile with a 1,950-kilometer (1,210-mile) range, Tasnim news agency said.

“We have not asked and will not ask for permission to develop different types of … missiles and will continue our path and our military power,” President Hassan Rouhani said in a speech at Tehran’s Azadi Square.

Today, the United States, its Arab allies and Israel are trying to counter Tehran’s growing influence in the Middle East, where it has proxies in Syria, Lebanon and Yemen.

U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted on Monday that the Iranian government had let its people down.

“Forty years of corruption. Forty years of repression. Forty years of terror. The regime in Iran has produced only #40YearsofFailure. The long-suffering Iranian people deserve a much brighter future,” he posted in both English and Farsi.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif also responded on Twitter. “#40YearsofFailure to accept that Iranians will never return to submission. #40YearsofFailure to adjust US policy to reality. #40YearsofFailure to destabilize Iran through blood & treasure. After forty years of wrong choices, time for @realDonaldTrump to rethink failed US policy,” he wrote.

Iranians face mounting economic hardships many blame on the country’s clerical leaders, and pictures on social media showed some people also demonstrating against corruption, unemployment and high prices.

“Our presence in the 40th anniversary of the revolution is to show our support for the Islamic republic,” said one sign held by a protester. “But it does not mean we support corruption of some officials and their betrayal of the oppressed people.”

Reuters could not independently verify the pictures.

Last year, Iran cracked down on protests over poor living standards that posed the most serious challenge to its clerical elite since a 2009 uprising over disputed elections.

Prices of basic foodstuffs have soared since Trump withdrew Washington from the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran last year and reimposed sanctions on Tehran.

In January, Rouhani said Iran was dealing with its worst economic crisis since the Shah was toppled.

But he remained defiant on Monday as Iranians recalled the end of a monarch who catered to the rich. “The Iranian people have and will have some economic difficulties, but we will overcome the problems by helping each other,” he said.

Iran also has vast clout in Iraq, where Maj. Gen. Qassem Soleimani, commander of the Quds Force, the overseas arm of the Revolutionary Guards, was frequently photographed guiding Shiite militias in the war against Sunni Islamic State terrorists.

 

An anti-Iranian show of force 

Posted February 12, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: An anti-Iranian show of force – Israel Hayom

Oded Granot

The U.S.-led summit in Warsaw that will start on Wednesday may very well be a strategic turning point in the Trump presidency.

After several unilateral moves – such as the withdrawal from the nuclear deal with Iran and the start of the pullout from Syria –  the U.S. is now about to forge a wide coalition against the Iranian menace.

In other words, the White House is now asking all those who feel threatened by Iran – be it because of its nuclear ambitions or its ballistic missiles – to join hands and counter the threat, not just behind closed doors and in secret talks but through a public show of force.

The summit will focus on the various means to check Iran, not just sanctions.

For Israel, which is taking part in the summit, this will be a rare moment where it would able to talk with Arab leaders in an international forum that does not deal with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. This is important in and of itself.

The summit will allow Israel not only to coordinate moves with the power brokers of the Sunni Arab world but also to test the waters and see whether they are willing to upgrade the secret ties Gulf states reportedly have with Israel and make them public.

This will also be an excellent opportunity for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who will head the Israeli delegation, to hold side talks with the Sunni leaders to gauge their position on the “Deal of the Century” being drafted at the White House.

Will they support the deal? Will they use their leverage on Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas? Will they try to change its provisions?

According to a Fox News report from Monday, which has been shot down by the White House, the plan is complete and will be unveiled after the April 9 Knesset election. Regardless, it won’t take center stage in Warsaw.

Senior adviser Jared Kushner and Special Representative for International Negotiations Jason Greenblatt, who are tasked with drafting the plan, will attend the conference to check whether they can get Arab backing for their peace initiative.

Various states and entities will send representatives to the gathering. Russia has already announced it will not participate because the summit focuses on Iran.

Iran, which was not invited, tried to derail the summit by threatening Poland, and on Monday it once again threatened Israel and vowed to continue developing ballistic missiles.

EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini, who is trying salvage to the nuclear deal with Iran, probably won’t attend. The Palestinian Authority was invited but declined the invitation, fearing it would be pressured to accept the Deal of the Century.

The first measure of success for the summit is the degree of participation and the level of representation of the dozens of countries that were invited.  The second measure of success is whether the summit will produce a consensus on the need to check Iran.

And the real test is the degree to which the participants will be willing to take on Iran with concrete steps.

Bahrain said to have informed Israel two years ago it wanted to normalize ties

Posted February 11, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Bahrain said to have informed Israel two years ago it wanted to normalize ties | The Times of Israel

Gulf Kingdom’s FM passed the message via former counterpart Tzipi Livni during a meeting in Germany, Channel 13 reports

Bahraini Foreign Minister Khalid bin Ahmed al-Khalifa, attends the Arab Economic and Social Development Summit, in Beirut, Lebanon, Sunday, Jan. 20, 2019. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

Bahrain informed Israel more than two years ago that it was interested in normalizing relations, an Israeli TV station claimed Sunday, amid persistent reports that Israel has been close to establishing ties with an Arab state.

According to a report on Israel’s Channel 13 news, Bahrain’s Foreign Minister Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa held a clandestine meeting with former foreign minister Tzipi Livni on the sidelines of the 2017 Munich Security Conference.

During the meeting, Khalid reportedly told Livni that the king of Bahrain, Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, had decided to move toward normalized relations with Israel and asked her to convey the message to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, which she did.

The report quoted unnamed senior Israeli officials. Livni refused to comment, Channel 13 said. The report did not specify why the breakthrough had not occurred.

Opposition Leader Tzipi Livni gives a statement to the media in the Knesset in Jerusalem on January 1, 2019. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

The report comes as Israel pushes to expand its ties with Arab and Muslim nations. Last month Netanyahu traveled to the Muslim African nation of Chad to announce the restoration of relations.

While there, Netanyahu said that the move had the support of several unnamed Arab nations.

“It’s a joint effort to break the wall of opposition in the Arab and Muslim world,” he said. “First you penetrate the Arab world, and that helps you to penetrate the Muslim countries. The big difference is that you have a clear process of normalization with the Arab world, though it is not complete and not formal, and with that you go to the [non-Arab] Muslim world.”

In November, Bahrain denied reports that Netanyahu was scheduled to visit the Gulf state.

“There is no plan for a visit of Israel’s prime minister,” Khalid told the London-based daily A-Sharq Al-Awsat. “There are no communications regarding [a visit]. The reality is nothing has happened.”

The Bahraini official’s comment came days after Hebrew-language news sites reported that Israel was working to normalize ties with Bahrain, citing an unnamed senior official.

At least one site also recently reported that officials in Jerusalem assessed that Bahrain would be the next Arab country without formal diplomatic ties with Israel to host Netanyahu.

In October, the prime minister made a surprise visit to Oman and met Omani leader Sultan Qaboos bin Said in Muscat.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (SL), accompanied by his wife Sara, is greeted by Sultan Qaboos bin Said in Oman on October 26, 2018 (Courtesy)

Despite his denial of an imminent breakthrough, the top Bahraini diplomat said that if a visit for Netanyahu were planned, the Gulf country would “not hesitate to announce it.”

Israel and Bahrain do not have diplomatic relations, but are said to have solid clandestine ties. Both countries see in Iran — Hezbollah’s key sponsor — a strategic threat.

In December, in a rare instance of public support for Israel, Khalid expressed support for Israel’s operation to expose and destroy Hezbollah’s cross-border tunnels.

“Is Terrorist Hezbollah’s digging of the tunnels under Lebanon’s border not a flagrant threat to Lebanon’s stability, which it shares responsibility for? Who bears responsibility when neighboring countries take upon themselves to eliminate the threat they face?” he wrote on his Twitter account, in Arabic.

In 2016, Bahrain and several other Gulf countries blacklisted Hezbollah as a terror group.

The Israeli military drills into the soil south of the Lebanese border in an effort to locate and destroy Hezbollah attack tunnels that it says entered Israeli territory, on December 5, 2018. (Israel Defense Forces)

Last May, the Bahraini foreign minister appeared to defend Israeli airstrikes on Iranian targets in Syria.

“As long as Iran continues the current status quo of its forces and rockets operating in the region, any country — including Israel — has the right to defend itself by eliminating the source of danger,” Khalid posted on his Twitter account at the time, hours after Israel hit Iranian assets in Syria.

Arab officials rarely offer a public defense of Israel.

Economy Minister Eli Cohen has said he had received an invitation to attend a technology-related conference in Bahrain later in the year.

More than two decades ago, then-environmental protection minister Yossi Sarid visited Bahrain, where he met Bahraini foreign minister Mohammed bin Mubarak al-Khalifa and participated in regional talks on environmental issues.

 

Russian official: Israeli airstrikes on Syria ‘unlawful,’ cannot be justified

Posted February 11, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Russian official: Israeli airstrikes on Syria ‘unlawful,’ cannot be justified | The Times of Israel

Deputy foreign minister says Israel’s security is of ‘paramount importance,’ but that doesn’t make attacks legitimate

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov at the State Department in Washington, July 17, 2017 (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov at the State Department in Washington, July 17, 2017 (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said Monday that Israeli airstrikes on Syria are unlawful and cannot be justified, while also stressing that Moscow was taking into consideration the defense needs of the Jewish state.

“For us, the security of Israel is of paramount importance,” Ryabkov told reporters, according to Russian media.

“Having said this, I don’t say that Israel’s unlawful attacks on targets in Syria, including targets that are in one way or another connected with Iran, that these attacks are legitimate and can be justified,” he said.

“No, we condemn them, they are illegitimate,” he added. “But this does not mean, again, that we should not care about the security of Israel.”

His remarks echoed comments he made during an interview with CNN at the end of January in which he said, “We in no way underestimate the importance of measures that would ensure very strong security of the State of Israel.”

Last week Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he would fly to Russia on February 21 for talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin focused on Iranian efforts to establish a military presence in Syria.

Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) shakes hands with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during their meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow on July 11, 2018. (AFP/Pool/Yuri Kadobnov)

Israel’s relations with Russia have seen some tensions lately over Jerusalem’s ongoing campaign of airstrikes on Syria. In recent years, Israel has conducted hundreds of attacks in Syria against targets it says are linked to Iran, which, alongside its proxy military groups and Russia, is fighting on behalf of the regime of President Bashar Assad. Israel has said Tehran is seeking to establish a permanent presence along its northern border, an effort it vows to thwart.

Israel’s airstrikes have routinely been coordinated with Russia. However, the number of airstrikes in Syria attributed to Israel has dropped in recent months after a Russian military plane was downed by Syrian air defenses. That plane was hit during an Israeli attack on Latakia last September, killing all 15 servicemen aboard.

Russia blamed the Israeli military for that incident — a charge rejected by Jerusalem — and in response supplied Syria with the advanced S-300 air defense system. The systems were delivered to Syria late last year, but they are not yet believed to be in use, as the Syrian air defense teams still need to be trained to operate them.

Israel has repeatedly said it will not allow Iran, or its Shiite proxies, to establish a permanent presence in post-war Syria.

An explosion, reportedly during Israeli airstrikes near Damascus, Syria, on January 21, 2019. (screen capture: YouTube)

On January 27 Israel conducted a rare daylight missile attack on Iranian targets in Syria. In response, Iran fired a surface-to-surface missile at the northern Golan Heights, which was intercepted by the Iron Dome missile defense system over the Mount Hermon ski resort, according to the Israel Defense Forces. The IDF said that Iranian troops in Syria launched the missile at the Golan in a “premeditated” attack aimed at deterring Israel from conducting further airstrikes against Iranian military targets there.

Hours later, in the predawn hours of the following day, the Israeli Air Force launched major retaliatory strikes on Iranian targets near Damascus and on the Syrian air defense batteries that fired upon the attacking Israeli fighter jets, the army said.

Twenty-one people were killed in the Israeli raids in Syria, 12 of them Iranian fighters, a Britain-based Syrian war monitor said.

Moscow’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said at the time that Israel should stop its “arbitrary” strikes in Syrian territory, which she warned could “provoke a new round of chaos in the Middle East.”

 

Iran slams US as huge crowds mark 40 years since revolution 

Posted February 11, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Iran slams US as huge crowds mark 40 years since revolution | The Times of Israel

Iranians pose for a picture as they assemble with others during a ceremony celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution held in the capital Tehran's Azadi (Freedom) square, February 11, 2019. (ATTA KENARE/AFP)

Iranians pose for a picture as they assemble with others during a ceremony celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution held in the capital Tehran’s Azadi (Freedom) square, February 11, 2019. (ATTA KENARE/AFP)

TEHRAN, Iran (AFP) — Iran’s president on Monday blasted a US “conspiracy” against the country as vast crowds marked 40 years since the Islamic Revolution at a time of heightened tensions with Washington.

“The presence of people today on the streets all over Islamic Iran… means that the enemy will never reach its evil objectives,” President Hassan Rouhani told those thronging Tehran’s Azadi (Freedom) square.

Chador-clad women, militia members in camouflage fatigues and ordinary citizens marched through the capital in freezing rain to mark the day in February 1979 that Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini ended millennia of royal rule.

Life-size replicas of Iranian-made cruise and ballistic missiles lined the route in a statement of defiance after Washington last year reimposed sanctions after pulling out of a deal on Tehran’s nuclear program.

A prepared resolution was read out that proclaimed “unquestioning obedience to the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei” and called US President Donald Trump an “idiot.”

The event Monday was the culmination of official celebrations called the “10 Day Dawn” that mark the period between February 1 and February 11, 1979, when Shiite cleric Khomeini returned from exile and ousted the shah’s last government.

The state has played up this year’s anniversary as 40 is symbolic of maturity in the Islamic tradition and the age at which Prophet Mohammed received revelations from God.

But despite the official festivities today’s Islamic Republic faces acute economic challenges as it struggles with a mix of domestic hardships and US sanctions.

‘Support the revolution’

State television offered blanket coverage of the commemorations, showing marchers in cities ranging from Abadan in southwestern Iran to Mashad in the northeast.

Banners held by marchers or hung along the streets bore slogans including “Death to America,” “Death to Israel,” “we will trample on America,” “forty years of challenge, forty years of US defeats.”

Iranians hold up signs showing portraits of the country’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, left, and his predecessor and Islamic Revolution founder Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini as they assemble during a ceremony celebrating the 40th anniversary of Islamic Revolution in the capital Tehran, February 11, 2019. (ATTA KENARE/AFP)

An anchor on state television warned of hostile foreign media trying to downplay the participation of Iranians in the march but expressed confidence that “they would be confounded by the unprecedented level of attendance.”

Those who took to the streets were bullish despite the economic problems in the country, made worse by Washington’s punitive measures.

Former public servant Saaghi insisted that it remained paramount for Iranians to stick by the revolution.

“We are here to support the revolution,” the 57-year-old pensioner, who refused to give his first name, told AFP at the event in Tehran.

He compared the US sanctions and economic hardships to “riding a bicycle when someone puts a stick in the wheels” but pointed to advances in other fields as more than making up for them.

“At the revolution’s 40 anniversary we are on top of scientific achievements like nanotechnology or accurate missiles,” he said.

Extensive fireworks displays were held across Tehran on Sunday night.

Before the fireworks, supporters of the revolution shouted chants of “Allahu Akbar” (God is greatest) from rooftops, recalling the protests that swept Khomeini to power four decades earlier.

Current supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is set to publish “a detailed statement explaining the ‘second step’ of the progress of the Islamic revolution,” his official website said.

 

Iran’s Rouhani vows to expand military, ballistic missile program

Posted February 11, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Iran’s Rouhani vows to expand military, ballistic missile program | The Times of Israel

Crowds chant ‘Death to America’ as Tehran marks 40th anniversary of Islamic Revolution

An Iranian military truck with a picture of President Hassan Rouhan carries a rocket and displays a banner reading "Death to Israel" during a parade marking the country's National Army Day, in Tehran, April 18, 2017. (AFP/Atta Kenare)

An Iranian military truck with a picture of President Hassan Rouhan carries a rocket and displays a banner reading “Death to Israel” during a parade marking the country’s National Army Day, in Tehran, April 18, 2017. (AFP/Atta Kenare)

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said Monday that Iran would continue to build up its military and push ballistic missile development, despite mounting international pressure to restrain its military expansion.

“We have not asked and will not ask for permission to develop different types of … missiles and will continue our path and our military power,” Rouhani said in a speech at a rally marking the 40th anniversary of the Islamic revolution, Reuters reported.

Tens of thousands of Iranians gathered in the capital Tehran to mark the 1979 overthrown of the Iranian monarchy in a revolution that put Islamic fundamentalists in power.

Life-size replicas of Iranian-made cruise and ballistic missiles lined the route in a statement of defiance at a time of heightened tensions with the United States.

Hoveizeh, Iran’s new cruise missile, is seen during an exhibition in the capital Tehran on February 2, 2019. Israel is well with the missile’s reported range of more than 1,350 kilometers (840 miles). (Atta Kenare/AFP)

Earlier this month the US vowed to pressure Iran to deter its missile program after the Islamic Republic unveiled a new ballistic missile with a range of 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) and tested a new cruise missile, both capable of reaching targets in Israel.

“The United States will continue to be relentless in building support around the world to confront the Iranian regime’s reckless ballistic missile activity,” State Department deputy spokesman Robert Palladino said ina  statement.

“Iran’s blatant disregard for international norms must be addressed,” he said.

On Monday, crowds streamed from a dozen of the capital’s far-flung neighborhoods to mass in central Tehran and Tehran Azadi, or Freedom Square, waving Iranian flags and chanting “Death to America” — a chant that has been standard fare at anti-US rallies across Iran.

This year’s anniversary comes as tensions are rising with the US and Iran is grappling with the aftermath of President Donald Trump’s pullout last May from the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers and tough US economic sanctions re-imposed in November on Tehran.

Israel’s port city of Haifa is a target in this Iranian game that simulates a missile attack on Israel.

Along with the chants “Death to America,” Monday’s marches were also a backdrop to the military’s display of Iranian-made missiles, which authorities showcase every year during the anniversary celebrations.

Last week, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei defended the “Death to America” chants but said they are aimed at America’s leaders and not its people. It is the first time in 40 years of the same chants that an Iranian leader has bothered to make the distinction.

The Iranian people “will not stop saying ‘Death to America’ as long as the US acts malicious” toward Iran, Khamenei said, referring to Trump’s State of the Union address, in which the American president, among other things, said: “We will not avert our eyes from a regime that chants, ‘Death to America.’”