city:tehran

  • U.N. finds conflicting signals at Iran’s nuclear facilities ahead of new talks

    Comment l’Iran se prépare aux négociations sur le nucléaire

    The Washington Post

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/un-finds-conflicting-signals-at-irans-nuclear-facilities-ahead-of-new-talks/2013/02/21/9808ae3e-7c62-11e2-a044-676856536b40_story.html

    Days before the start of crucial talks with world powers, Iran appears to be simultaneously hitting the gas and brake pedals on its nuclear program, speeding up production of enriched uranium while limiting its stockpile of the type of fuel that could be easily converted for use in atomic bombs, U.N. officials said in a new report.

    International inspectors who visited Iran’s nuclear facilities last month confirmed that Tehran has begun installing hundreds of second-generation centrifuges that could dramatically increase its capacity to produce enriched uranium, the International Atomic Energy Agency said in a report leaked to journalists Thursday.

  • U.N. finds conflicting signals at Iran’s nuclear facilities ahead of new talks

    Comment l’Iran se prépare aux négociations sur le nucléaire

    The Washington Post

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/un-finds-conflicting-signals-at-irans-nuclear-facilities-ahead-of-new-talks/2013/02/21/9808ae3e-7c62-11e2-a044-676856536b40_story.html

    Days before the start of crucial talks with world powers, Iran appears to be simultaneously hitting the gas and brake pedals on its nuclear program, speeding up production of enriched uranium while limiting its stockpile of the type of fuel that could be easily converted for use in atomic bombs, U.N. officials said in a new report.

    International inspectors who visited Iran’s nuclear facilities last month confirmed that Tehran has begun installing hundreds of second-generation centrifuges that could dramatically increase its capacity to produce enriched uranium, the International Atomic Energy Agency said in a report leaked to journalists Thursday.

  • L’étrange proposition d’un ministre iranien sur les négociations nucléaires

    Iran tries to link nuclear talks to Arab uprisings
    THE DAILY STAR
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Middle-East/2013/Feb-15/206561-iran-tries-to-link-nuclear-talks-to-arab-uprisings.ashx#axzz2Kx

    The semiofficial Iranian news agency Mehr said Tuesday Tehran had proposed including Syria – where an increasingly sectarian civil war is raging – and Bahrain – which is grappling with unrest by majority Shiites – in the talks with world powers.

    “The Islamic Republic of Iran has proposed as a suggestion to Western countries that the crisis in Syria and Bahrain be among the issues discussed in negotiations in Kazakhstan,” Mehr quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi as saying.

    Si cette proposition était confirmée, elle entérinerait l’idée que l’Iran cherche à travers le débat sur le nucléaire, à se voir reconnaître, y compris par les Etats-Unis, un statut de puissance régionale. Ce qui inquiète au plus haut point les monarchies du Golfe.

    • Ce qu’ Fateh Abdel Salam, dans Az-Zaman appelle le Saddam deal
      “The matters concerning the Iranian nuclear file have reached what can be dubbed “the Saddam phase” in reference to Saddam Hussein who always aspired for an all or nothing deal with the USA. His occupation of Kuwait in 1990 represented the beginning of his deal offers where he demanded that Syria withdraws from Lebanon, which is not something that Washington wanted...

  • De quoi je me mêle : Israel Angry Over Argentina-Iran Accord on 1994 Bombing Inquiry
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/30/world/middleeast/israel-angry-over-argentina-iran-accord-on-1994-bombing-inquiry.html?ref=to

    It added that Israel had “protested the unacceptable attitude of the Argentine government toward Israel since the beginning of contacts between Buenos Aires and Tehran,” saying that Argentina had not responded to Israel’s requests to be kept informed of the diplomatic moves with Iran, nor of how Argentina envisaged bringing the perpetrators to justice.

    Le NY Times consacre ce long article à la colère d’Israël, pour finalement signaler en passant qu’Israël n’est pas directement concerné par cette affaire :

    While Israel is not directly involved in the case…

  • Exécution pubique en Iran :
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/21/world/middleeast/iran-resorts-to-hangings-in-public-to-cut-crime.html

    Although every year hundreds of convicts are hanged in Iran, a public hanging in a central park in Tehran is a rare event. Most hangings take place inside prisons, according to Iranian judicial officials and international human rights organizations.

    Sunday’s execution in Park-e Honarmandan (Artists Park), near the crime scene, was part of a heavy-handed offensive by Iranian authorities, who say they are trying to prevent rising crime rates from getting out of hand by setting harsh examples. In recent weeks, public executions have been stepped up, and in several large cities the police have been rounding up what they call thugs and hooligans.

  • Saudi Media and Clerical Elites Are Waging Proxy War Against the Regime in Tehran – Joseph Braude – Tablet Magazine
    http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-news-and-politics/116349/saudis-proxy-war-against-iran

    But activities in recent months prove that an equally important question is what Iran’s minorities and sympathetic neighboring countries are doing on their own. Extensive reporting from local sources in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states reveals that several countries surrounding Iran are beginning to back the country’s ethnic dissidents as a way of waging a proxy war against the mullahs. In Saudi Arabia, media and clerical elites recently mobilized to raise public awareness about the situation of Ahwazi Arabs, frame their cause as a national liberation struggle, and urge Arabs and Muslims to support them. Saudi donors are providing money and technological support to Ahwazi dissidents seeking to wage their own public information campaign, calling on Ahwazis to rise up against their rulers. The Saudi initiatives, in turn, join ongoing ventures by Azerbaijan and Iraq’s Kurdistan Regional Government to organize and train other dissident groups.

  • Iran slams Canada for delisting rebel group
    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2012/12/20121224104747241923.html

    Canada has come under fire from officials in Tehran for removing an exiled Iranian opposition group from its blacklist of “terror organisations”.

    Vic Toews, the Canadian minister of public safety, had announced the delisting of the People’s Mujahedin of Iran ["Mujahedeen-e-Khalq" (MEK)], following similar moves made by the European Union and the United States.

    Toews also announced the addition of the Quds Force, a unit of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, to the blacklist.

  • Azerbaijan eyes aiding Israel against Iran — War in Context

    http://warincontext.org/2012/09/30/azerbaijan-eyes-aiding-israel-against-iran

    September 30, 2012

    Signalé par Olivier Pironet au Diplo

    Israel’s “go-it-alone” option to attack Iran’s nuclear sites has set the Middle East on edge and unsettled its main ally at the height of a U.S. presidential election campaign.

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu exudes impatience, saying Tehran is barely a year from a “red line” for atomic capacity. Many fellow Israelis, however, fear a unilateral strike, lacking U.S. forces, would fail against such a large and distant enemy.

    But what if, even without Washington, Israel were not alone?

    Azerbaijan, the oil-rich ex-Soviet republic on Iran’s far northern border, has, say local sources with knowledge of its military policy, explored with Israel how Azeri air bases and spy drones might help Israeli jets pull off a long-range attack.

    #israel #iran #états-unis #azerbaidjan

  • Why Canada severed relations with Iran
    http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/story/2012/09/08/f-iran-canada-diplomatic-relations.html

    Devine points to the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) summit in Tehran last week. Iranian officials boasted about a successful summit, which involved most countries from Africa, Asia and Latin America.

    He says the summit “was not an overwhelming success for Iran but demonstrated they are not as isolated as the West would hope.”

    The West is trying to isolate Iran over the dispute about Iran’s nuclear program. In that context, Devine says, Canada may be trying to send “a symbolic message to Iran after the NAM meeting that they should not conclude that their isolation is over or that they can escape western pressure.”

  • Canada shuts Iran embassy, to kick out diplomats
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/canada-shuts-iran-embassy-kick-out-diplomats

    Canada has closed its embassy in Iran and will expel all remaining Iranian diplomats in Canada within five days, Foreign Minister John Baird said on Friday, denouncing Tehran as the biggest threat to global security.

    Baird cited Iran’s nuclear program, its hostility towards Israel and Iranian military assistance to the government of President Bashar al-Assad Syria, which is locked in civil war with rebels.

    “Canada views the government of Iran as the most significant threat to global peace and security in the world today,” Baird said in a statement, accusing Iran of showing blatant disregard for the safety of foreign diplomats.

    “Under the circumstances, Canada can no longer maintain a diplomatic presence in Iran ... Diplomatic relations between Canada and Iran have been suspended,” he said.

  • Asia Times Online :: Morsi delivers his calling card
    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/NH31Ak03.html

    By Pepe Escobar / Aug 31, 2012

    (...) With just one stroke, Morsi cut off the head of a fake snake being sold to Washington for years by the Jordanian King Playstation and the House of Saud; that of an “evil” Shi’ite crescent from Iran to Lebanon via Iraq and Syria undermining the “stability” of the Middle East.

    What Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah and Jordan’s younger Abdullah II in fact fear is the unrest and rage of their own populations, not to mention the mere idea of democracy; it’s easy to blame rampant Shi’ism for everything because Washington is gullible - or expedient - enough to buy it.

    The “Shi’ite crescent” myth can be debunked in a number of ways. Here’s just one - that I have witnessed in person, on the spot, for quite a while during the mid-2000s. Tehran knows that the majority of Iraq’s powerful clergy are totally adverse to the Khomeinist concept of the Islamic Republic. No wonder Tehran is very much worried about the renaissance of Najaf in Iraq as the premier holy city in Shi’ite Islam, to the detriment of Qom in Iran.

    Washington buys this propaganda because it’s right at the heart of the New Great Game. Whatever the administration in place, from Bush to Obama and beyond, a key Washington obsession is to neutralize what is seen as a Shi’ite axis from Lebanon, via Syria and Iraq, across Iran and all the way to Afghanistan.

    A mere look at the map tells us this axis is at center of the humongous US military deployment in Asia - facing China and Russia. Obviously the best intel in Beijing and Moscow has identified it for years.

    The Russians and the Chinese see how the Pentagon “manages” - indirectly - a great deal of the region’s oil reserves, including the Shi’ite northeast of Saudi Arabia. And they see how Iran - as the gravity center of the whole region - cannot but be Washington’s ultimate obsession. The nuclear row is just a pretext - the only one in the market, actually. Ultimately, it’s not a matter of destroying Iran, but of subjugating it to the condition of a docile ally.

    Into this hardcore power play steps in Brother Morsi, reshuffling a deck of cards as lightning quick as a Sheldon Adelson-employed Macau croupier. What might have taken months and perhaps years - the sidelining of the old SCAF leadership, Qatar being privileged to the detriment of Saudi Arabia, a presidential visit to Tehran, Egypt stepping up as a leader of the Arab world - was accomplished in barely two months. (...)

    Pour Morsi le changement c’est maintenant.

  • ’Egyptian leader heads to China, Iran to find non-Western cash flow’ — RT
    http://rt.com/news/egypt-china-iran-relations-699

    _ RT : President Morsi and his Chinese counterpart are expected to hold talks on boosting bilateral relations and attracting more investment. How will this impact Cairo’s geopolitical interests with the country still dependent on Washington’s aid?_

    Lawrence Davidson : I think what the Egyptians are trying to do is diversify their source of assistance, particularly economic assistance and so if they can find financial and other sources of resources outside the United States or the World Bank, then they’re going to do it. So that causes a sort of leaning not only towards China, but also maybe Russia and Saudi Arabia and the Gulf. So Morsi is catering to that area because of financial need. And we saw that just recently with Egypt’s refusal to let a Bahraini activist into the country. So I think that Egyptian policies and actions are going to essentially align to their economic needs.

    *RT* : President Morsi then heads to Iran, which is seen as an unprecedented move, given the tensions over Tehran’s controversial nuclear program. Is it possible that his visit will bolster Iran’s standing?

    LD: I think so, particularly in the Arab world. If the Egyptians and Iranians are seen to put forth common interests, common goals and boost trade or something like that, I think that that’s going to bode very well for the Iranians. Ironically, the Saudis are probably not going to like that. But I have a feeling that Morsi will then go and say nice things to the Saudis to keep the money flowing from the Gulf.

    _*RT: The Muslim Brotherhood, Morsi’s former party, has called this upcoming visit to Tehran a demonstration of Egypt’s newly elected leader’s independence from the US. What kind of message does this trip convey to Washington?_

    *LD: I don’t think it’s going to upset the Americans that much. Actually, I think the American government really doesn’t want to jack up the tension in Iran and that region. They really want to calm things. And so they’re not going to get upset about these sorts of maneuvers. The real tensions that are pushing the Americans towards conflict with Iran are centered domestically. And so, to the extent that Obama feels that he’s got a real good shot at re-election, I think we are going to see a more independent kind of behavior on the part of the US government vis-à-vis Iran.

    • Mohamed Morsi prône une diplomatie d’équilibre pour l’Egypte
      http://fr.news.yahoo.com/mohamed-morsi-pr%C3%B4ne-une-diplomatie-d%C3%A9quilibre-pour-legypte-

      Premier chef de l’Etat issu d’élections libres en Egypte, Mohamed Morsi, issu des rangs des Frères musulmans, garantit à Israël le respect du traité de paix entre les deux pays, esquisse une nouvelle approche à l’égard de l’Iran et prône la mise à l’écart du président syrien Bachar al Assad.

      « L’Egypte est désormais un pays civilisé (...) doté d’un Etat national, démocratique, constitutionnel et moderne », a-t-il dit lundi à Reuters dans sa première interview avec un média international depuis son investiture.

      « Les relations internationales entre tous les pays sont ouvertes et elles doivent se fonder sur la notion d’équilibre. Nous ne sommes hostiles à personne mais nous sommes pour la défense de nos intérêts », a-t-il ajouté.

      “““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““
      Hollande brandit la menace d’une "intervention directe" en Syrie
      http://www.france24.com/fr/20120827-syrie-diplomatie-france-francois-hollande-menace-intervention-dir

      Dans les pas d’Obama

      François Hollande a ainsi longuement énuméré les lignes d’action de la France dans ce dossier, en reprenant notamment à son compte la menace récemment proférée par le président américain Barack Obama, à savoir que l’emploi d’armes chimiques par le régime syrien serait « une cause légitime d’intervention directe » de la communauté internationale.

  • Iran opens nonaligned summit with calls for nuclear arms ban

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/iran-opens-nonaligned-summit-with-calls-for-nuclear-arms-ban/2012/08/26/4c363ec2-ef63-11e1-b74c-84ed55e0300b_print.html

    By Associated Press, Published: August 26

    TEHRAN, Iran — Iran opened a world gathering of self-described nonaligned nations Sunday with a slap at the U.N. Security Council and an appeal to rid the world of nuclear weapons, even as Tehran faces Western suspicions that it is seeking its own atomic bombs.

    Iran seeks to use the weeklong gathering — capped by a two-day summit of Non-Aligned Movement leaders — as a showcase of its global ties and efforts to challenge the influence of the West and its allies. Among those expected to attend include U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the prime minister of India, Manmohan Singh, whose nation remains an important Iranian oil customer as Tehran battles Western sanctions over its nuclear program.

    #iran #nucléaire #a&rmement

  • Hezbollah leadership divided over Syrian crisis
    http://dailystar.com.lb/News/Politics/2012/Aug-27/185780-hezbollah-leadership-divided-over-syrian-crisis.ashx#axzz24gfPR
    (selon une source diplomatique française)

    There is a significant division in Hezbollah’s leadership over the decision, says the source. Some believe that the party should stand by Tehran and Damascus even if it means taking part in full-on regional conflict and forcing its terms on its rivals in Lebanon through violence.

    Other leaders, including party chief Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah, see that partnership with the Lebanese is important and should not be overlooked and believe that National Dialogue would serve the party best. These leaders contend that Hezbollah’s demands will only be fulfilled through the dialogue and that without it, the party would risk losing a decade of the resistance’s achievements.

    #Syrie
    #Hezbollah
    #Iran
    #Liban
    #Tripoli

    • Un autre éclairage par Scarlett Haddad sur l’évolution de la position du Hezbollah

      le Hezbollah a compris que l’on cherchait soit à l’entraîner dans une action interne pour le discréditer, soit à profiter de son inertie pour pousser petit à petit le Liban vers le camp de l’opposition syrienne et de ceux qui l’appuient. Il a donc réagi là où on l’attendait le moins. Il a décidé de ne plus retenir la rue chiite et de la laisser agir de son propre chef. Le message à l’adresse des forces politiques libanaises était ainsi clair : vous voulez nous pousser à bout, voilà donc ce qui se passe si le Hezbollah et Amal se retirent de la scène. Ce fut donc le fameux mercredi 15 août avec la frénésie des enlèvements et l’instabilité routière. Un chaos auquel personne ne comprenait plus grand-chose et où il n’y avait aucun interlocuteur crédible pour tenter d’y voir clair et circonscrire le désordre. Cette journée de folie a d’ailleurs constitué une sorte d’électrochoc, le gouvernement ayant compris le message et décidé de reprendre en main – autant que possible – la situation. Il a, d’une part, entamé une nouvelle série de négociations avec la Turquie pour obtenir la libération des Libanais enlevés en Syrie et il a donné, d’autre part, un nouveau feu vert à l’armée. Selon les proches du Hezbollah, celui-ci considère que le message du 15 août a été bien reçu... jusqu’au nouvel incident.

      http://www.lorientlejour.com/category/%C3%80+La+Une/article/775048/_Les_derniers_evenements%2C__un_test_pour_le_Hezbollah.html

    • Comme tu le dis : « selon une source diplomatique ». L’article du Daily Star est une compilation d’éléments hétéroclites, de sources non identifiées (mais toutes partie prenante), plus ou moins présentées sous la forme de vérités (alors que l’ensemble est invérifiable) et ne semble pas avoir besoin de citer expliciter aucun responsable du Hezbollah directement.

      Regarde ce paragraphe, qui adopte tous les travers de l’argument d’autorité et de l’expertise, mais qui ressemble à n’importe quelle élucubration généraliste du WINEP (à partir de ce paragraphe, qui est justement le début de la partie directement consacrée au Hezbollah, tout est à l’avenant) :

      Diplomatic sources who have closely followed Hezbollah’s recent statements say that the party is cautiously studying developments in the region before moving forward. The sources say that the party is in a precarious position since a major part of the Shiite axis that stretched from Tehran to Baghdad to Beirut is being hit by developments in Syria.

  • Asia Times Online

    Middle East News, Iraq, Iran current affairs
    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/NH22Ak07.html
    By Pepe Escobar / Aug 22, 2012

    Ali Akbar Asadi, from the International Relations Dept at the University of Allameh Tabatabaei, expands on the key event of the next few weeks: the renewed diplomatic relationship between Iran and Egypt - which is drawing Washington’s unmitigated wrath; the State Department, in a childish move, is even saying that Iran “does not deserve” to host the summit of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) in Tehran, which will be attended by Egypt’s President Mohamed Morsi. [8]

    Asadi goes to the jugular - the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) petro-monarchies are terrified that “Egypt may renew relations with the Islamic Republic of Iran or even enter into strategic relations with Turkey, thus working to undermine the influence and clout of the GCC in the new balance of regional power.”

    Egypt thumbs the nose at US
    By M K Bhadrakumar / Aug 21, 2012

    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/NH21Ak02.html

    In sum, Morsi’s decision to open a line to Beijing and Tehran needs to be weighed against a big backdrop. The Brothers apprehend a US-Israeli plan to destabilize Morsi’s government if it doesn’t fall in line with Washington’s diktat. Therefore, they are looking for ways and means to whittle down the current level of Egypt’s over-dependence on the US and its Persian-Gulf allies by diversifying the country’s external relationships and adding countervailing partnerships that would help enhance the country’s strategic autonomy.

    Next week promises to be a defining moment in Middle Eastern politics and inter-Arab alignments when Morsi travels to Beijing and Tehran. With Egypt drifting away, the US’ regional strategies are in great disarray. The immediate question will be what is gained, after all, by conquering Damascus with such mindless brutal violence and bestiality if Cairo and Baghdad have already been lost.

    • Ajout : dernier article en date de Pepe Escobar dans Asia Times sur la Syrie, et plus précisément sur l’avertissement comminatoire d’Obama sur les armes chimiques syriennes et les réponses russe et chinoise :
      http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/NH24Ak03.html
      En voici la conclusion :

      All the key players here - the US, Russia and China - know Damascus won’t commit the folly of using (or “moving”) chemical weapons. So no wonder Moscow and Beijing are extremely suspicious this “red line” gambit may be yet another Obama deception maneuver, as in “leading from behind” in Libya (this is nonsense; in fact the attack on Libya started with Africom and then was transferred to NATO).

      As Asia Times Online has been reporting for over a year, once again the big picture is clear; this is a titanic battle between NATO-GCC and BRICS members Russia and China. At stake is nothing less than the rule of international law, which has been steadily going down the drain since at least Agent Orange being sprayed all over Vietnam, through Dubya’s invasion of Iraq in 2003, and with the Libyan “humanitarian bombing” reaching an abysmal low. Not to mention Israel daily threatening to bomb Iran - as if this was a trip to a kosher deli.

  • Danny, toujours aussi timbré: Deputy FM calls on world to ground Iranians from air travel
    http://www.timesofisrael.com/deputy-fm-calls-on-world-to-ensure-no-iranian-will-be-able-to-travel-

    “It is extremely important that the international community denounce and isolate Iran so no Iranian will be able to travel the world,” Ayalon said Thursday, a day after a terrorist attack killed seven and wounded dozens in Burgas, Bulgaria. Israeli officials blame Tehran for the blast, which claimed the lives of six Israeli tourists.

  • Misreading Feminism & Women’s Rights in Tehran : Beyond Chadors, Ninjabis, & Secular Fantasies « Ajam Media Collective
    http://ajammc.wordpress.com/2012/06/30/misreading-feminism-in-tehran-beyond-chadors-ninjabis-secular-fant

    Des hommes blancs libérant les femmes bronzées des hommes bronzés, c’est ainsi que l’orientalisme a souvent essayé de justifier un temps le colonialisme, un autre les interventions dites humanitaires. On trouvera dans ce texte une réfutation brillante de ces concepts à propos des femmes iraniennes et d’une information sur les femmes ninjas et la manière dont les médias occidentaux en ont rendu compte

    #Iran #orientalisme #féminisme

  • Attention : l’Associated Press est en train de battre le record mondial du foutage de gueule :
    http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-05-13-Iran-Nuclear/id-d63351aab2d847a581aa188e4be508cf

    A drawing based on information from inside an Iranian military site shows an explosives containment chamber of the type needed for nuclear arms-related tests that U.N. inspectors suspect Tehran has conducted there. Iran denies such testing and has neither confirmed nor denied the existence of such a chamber.

    The computer-generated drawing was provided to The Associated Press by an official of a country tracking Iran’s nuclear program who said it proves the structure exists, despite Tehran’s refusal to acknowledge it.

    C’est donc un « dessin », « généré par ordinateur » fourni par « un officiel anonyme » d’un « pays qu’on sait pas lequel c’est » (mais dont il est parfaitement évidemment que son nom commence par « Is- » et se termine par « -raël »), qui « prouve » que la structure décrite existe. Malgré le « refus » de Téhéran à l’admettre (Téhéran ne dit pas que c’est un trucage totalement bidon : Téhéran « refuse d’admettre » cette preuve).

    Attends, attends, moi j’ai des photos de la base secrète iranienne en Antarctique :

    • Mais non, trop simple, c’est une photo prise pendant le tournage du film « Das Boot ». En plus les croix gammés sont clairement visibles, on aurait pu les remplacer par des symboles islamiques. Pour se rendre le travail plus simple fallait prendre une photo dans le stock « Morgenrot », l’autre film allemand notoire sur les sous-marins. En plus c’ést en noir et blanc, moins compliqué avec photoshop.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morgenrot_%28film%29
      #U-Boot #Goebbels

  • Israel and Azerbaijan sign weapons deal | Al Akhbar English
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israel-and-azerbaijan-sign-weapons-deal

    Israel has signed a $1.6 billion deal to sell drones, anti-aircraft weapons, and missile defense systems to Azerbaijan, risking further conflict with Iran.

    The deal will provide further evidence to Tehran that Baku is becoming a key ally for Israel in the region.

    Israel has repeatedly threatened to attack Iran in recent weeks claiming it is seeking nuclear weapons, a claim Tehran has denied.

    […]

    A report in The Times of London two weeks ago claimed that Baku was a key base for Israeli Mossad intelligence agents looking to spy on Iran.

  • US Republican rivals unite against Iran, Syria
    http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetails.aspx?ID=367934

    Three of the four remaining in the race spoke out in favor of making clear the military threat to Tehran should it continue to develop technology which Washington fears will result in the Islamic state having a nuclear weapon.

    À nouveau, remarquer ce subtil changement d’exigence : auparavant on menaçait l’Iran au motif que le pays développait des armes nucléaires. Désormais l’Iran devrait être attaqué parce qu’il développerait des technologies dont on craint qu’elles pourraient être utilisées pour développer des armes nucléaires.

  • Nathan Gonzalez: Why Israel Should Intervene in Syria
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/nathan-gonzalez/why-israel-should-intervene-syria_b_1280236.html

    There is much talk in the news about Israel weighing its military options against Iranian nuclear facilities. Yet if for a moment Israel stops focusing on the region’s military balance, and starts thinking of its long-term security as a Jewish state in the post-Arab Spring Middle East, it will realize that its warplanes would be of greater use flying over Damascus than over Tehran. In coalition with other nations, Israel can and should intervene to stop the current humanitarian catastrophe in Syria for the sake of its own long-term security.

    En voilà une idée qu’elle est bonne.

  • Énorme : Saudi Arabia Gives Israel Clear Skies To Attack Iranian Nuke Sites
    http://www.foxnews.com/world/2010/06/12/saudi-arabia-gives-israel-clear-skies-attack-iranian-nuke-sites/http://www.foxnews.com/world/2010/06/12/saudi-arabia-gives-israel-clear-skies-attack-iranian-nuke-sites

    Saudi Arabia has conducted tests to stand down its air defenses to enable Israeli jets to make a bombing raid on Iran’s nuclear facilities, The Times of London reported Saturday.

    In the week that the U.N. Security Council imposed a new round of sanctions on Tehran, defense sources in the Gulf say that Riyadh has agreed to allow Israel to use a narrow corridor of its airspace in the north of the country to shorten the distance for a bombing run on Iran. To ensure the Israeli bombers pass without hindrance, Riyadh has carried out tests to make certain its own jets are not scrambled and missile defense systems not activated. Once the Israelis are through, the kingdom’s air defenses will return to full alert.

    L’article du Times est derrière le paywall :
    http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/world/middleeast/article2552397.ece
    Il semble que ceci est soit une copie :
    http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread582536/pg1

  • Ça c’est l’affaire grotesque du moment au Liban : grotesque, mais très caractéristique. Les médias séoudiens ont inventé une déclaration iranienne selon laquelle le Sud du Liban vivrait sous les ordres de l’Iran. Évidemment, c’est une pure invention (totalement grotesque, évidemment, personne n’imagine pourquoi, si c’était vrai, les iraniens iraient s’en vanter). Ce qui n’empêche pas, depuis, les 14 Mars de faire énormément de bruit autour de cette déclaration qu’ils ont eux-mêmes inventée :
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Politics/2012/Jan-23/160776-mp-calls-for-cutting-iran-ties-over-generals-remarks.ashx

    Beirut Future MP Nuhad Mashnouq called Sunday on Prime Minister Najib Mikati to break off diplomatic relations with Tehran to protest remarks made by the commander of Iran’s elite Al-Quds Force of the Revolutionary Guards Corp, Qassem Suleimani, who was quoted as saying that south Lebanon fell under Iran’s influence.

    Mashnouq urged Mikati “to cut diplomatic relations with Iran in order to make the commander of the Revolutionary Guards understand that Lebanon is not the appropriate place to announce his statement.”

    Suleimani, said: “In reality, in south Lebanon and Iraq, the people are under the effect of the Islamic Republic’s way of practice and thinking.”

    But Suleimani’s remarks were mistranslated by Arabic media and interpreted by March 14 politicians to mean that south Lebanon was under Iran’s influence.

    Suleimani’s remarks have drawn harsh criticisms from some March 14 politicians who demanded that Hezbollah clarify its statement.