Iran claims to seizes a ‘foreign’ fuel-smuggling ship

foreign' fuel-smuggling ship

Iranian naval forces seize a foreign-registered ship suspected of smuggling fuel in the Gulf. Seven crew members, who are foreign nationals, have been arrested and handed over to judicial authorities. Iran has one of the world’s lowest petrol prices, which could make fuel smuggling profitable. Iranian naval forces seized a foreign-registered ship suspected of smuggling … Read more

Iran sentences two LGBTQ rights advocates 

LGBTQ

Zahra Seddiqi Hamedani, 31, and Elham Choubdar, 24, were found guilty of “corruption on Earth”. Same-sex sexual activity is illegal in Iran, and offenders face penalties. The convictions were later upheld by Iran’s judiciary. In Iran, two LGBT activists have received death sentences, according to rights organisations. Zahra Seddiqi Hamedani, 31, and Elham Choubdar, 24, … Read more

US says new Iran reaction on atomic arrangement ‘not constructive’

Iran

US expressed reaction from Iran on restoring atomic arrangement was “not helpful”. Iran proposed changes to it to which US gave reaction through arbiters. EU set forward definite text to reestablish 2015 atomic accord. The United States said Thursday that another reaction from Iran on restoring a milestone atomic arrangement was “not valuable,” a day … Read more

Israeli attacks reducing Iranian aerial supply to Syria: Sources

Iranian aerial supply

Israel has increased its raids on Syrian airports in order to impede Tehran’s increasing use of aerial supply lines. Strikes on Wednesday night damaged Aleppo airport moments before the arrival of an Iranian plane. Syria’s foreign minister claims Israel is “playing with fire” and endangering regional security.   Israel has increased its raids on Syrian … Read more

Iran sent Russia a copy of the European “peace effort” on Ukraine

Iran

Hossein Amirabdollahian did not name the European leader behind the initiative. Iran has repeatedly stated that fighting must stop through dialogue and refuses to condemn Moscow. Tehran says NATO expansion is the root of the problem. A supposed “peace initiative” for ending the conflict in Ukraine, put up by a European leader, has been transmitted … Read more

Iranian President assures flood relief support to Pakistan

Iran president

ISLAMABAD: President of Iran Syed Ebrahim Raisi on Saturday called Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and conveyed solidarity with Pakistan and assured of all-out support in relief assistance. The prime minister thanked President Raisi for his sympathy on the flood situation. He stressed that Pakistan had been enduring severe monsoon weather since mid-June 2022, with many … Read more

Iran eases demands, revives 2015 nuclear deal

Iran

The US hopes to resurrect a 2015 nuclear agreement after Iran announced it would soften key conditions. Gaps exist, but if we return to the accord, Iran would have to cease its nuclear programme,” a Biden administration official said. Despite Iran’s diplomatic gains, the US official said Tehran “made important concessions. Iran withdrew ambitions to … Read more

Iran and it’s problems with Salman Rushdie and satanic verses

Salman Rushdie

The Satanic Verses is based on a hotly debated early Islamic legend. Iran’s current Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei reminds his supporters that the decision against Rushdie was “firm and irrevocable”. Ayatollah Ali Montazeri reportedly objected to the order and was put under house arrest. Salman Rushdie believed he had gained his freedom over ten years … Read more

Nuclear agreement is “closer” than ever Iranian advisor claims

Nuclear agreement

Iran has responded to a European Union proposal to resurrect the 2015 nuclear agreement. The nation’s top negotiator tweeted that an agreement was more imminent than ever but was not yet finalized. Iran has been breaking the deal’s terms more frequently since the US withdrew. Iran has responded to a European Union proposal to resurrect … Read more

Iran accuses Salman Rushdie and his supporters of stabbing

Iran

Iran has “categorically” denied any involvement with Salman Rushdie’s assailant and has placed the blame squarely on the author. During a performance in New York state, Mr. Rushdie, 75, was stabbed on stage and suffered serious injuries. The strike has received widespread commentary in Iranian media, which has dubbed it “divine punishment.  Iran has “categorically” … Read more

Iran categorically denies any connection to the attacker says, Salman Rushdie

Iran

Iran has “categorically” denied any involvement in Salman Rushdie’s assailant but has placed the blame on the author. During a performance in New York State, Mr. Rushdie, 75, was stabbed on stage and suffered serious injuries. For his book The Satanic Verses, he has received death threats for many years. Iran has “categorically” denied any … Read more

Man accused of plotting murder of Trump’s advisor John Bolton

John Bolton

The US has charged an Iranian man with plotting to assassinate John Bolton. Shahram Poursafi, member of Iran’s IRG, wanted in connection with alleged plot. Allegedly seeking revenge for US strike that killed military commander Qasem Soleimani. The US has charged an Iranian man with plotting to assassinate former Trump National Security Adviser John Bolton. … Read more

US suspects Russians began training on drones in Iran

drones

The US thinks Russian officials have started drone training in Iran in recent weeks. A Russian group visited an airstrip in Iran at least twice since June to evaluate drones. Ukraine has asked with the US to deploy more powerful armed drones like the Gray Eagle. The US thinks Russian officials have started drone training … Read more

Hezbollah warns Israel against attacking Palestinians in Lebanon

hezbollah

Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah: “Any attack on any human being will not go unpunished or unanswered”. Israeli Defense Minister has hinted at possibility of targeting Islamic Jihad officials in Iran, Lebanon, and possibly even the US. He warned that Israel could do “preemptive strikes” abroad. Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of the formidable armed group Hezbollah … Read more

Police arrest Afghan suspect in stabbing deaths of 10 people in Iran

iran police

Iranian police arrested an Afghan man thought to have killed 10 other farm workers after a fight over land. Four Iranians and six Afghans were slain on Sunday, and one farm worker was injured and hospitalised. Iran’s protracted drought has led to a rise in disputes over water supplies. TEHRAN: Iranian state media reported on … Read more

Iran Guards backs Palestinians says ‘not alone’ after Gaza strikes

Iran

The leader of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards says Palestinians are “not alone” in fight against Israel. Iran is a big backer of the Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad. Israel launched a “pre-emptive” operation against Islamic Jihad on Friday, killing one of its commanders. The leader of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said Saturday that the Palestinians are “not … Read more

Iran Guards say that Israel will pay ‘heavy price’ for its Gaza attacks

gaza attacks

The leader of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards said Israel would pay a terrible price for its recent attacks on Gaza. Major General Hossein Salami was quoted as saying, in reference to Israeli air strikes on Gaza, that “the Israelis will pay yet another heavy price”. Iranian state TV said that the leader of Iran’s elite … Read more

IAEA hopes for transparency from Iran ‘Good words’ aren’t sufficient

Iran

IAEA Director Rafael Grossi says Iran must provide IAEA with access “commensurate to the extent” of its uranium enrichment program. Iran is enriching uranium to up to 60% fissile purity, considerably above the 3.67 percent limit established by the now-broken 2015 agreement. Uranium refined to 90% purity is acceptable for nuclear weapons. The director of … Read more

Iran slams ‘destructive’ US sanctions targeting oil trade

Iran slams' US sanctions
  • Iran slams “destructive” new US sanctions targeting its crucial energy sector.
  • US government blacklists six companies for helping Iran export petrochemicals to Asia.
  • Iranian foreign ministry vows an “immediate response” to the sanctions.

Iran on Tuesday slammed as “destructive” new US sanctions targeting its crucial energy sector and vowed a response, at a time when nuclear talks have stalled for months.

US President Joe Biden’s administration “is not stopping this unproductive and destructive action even at a time when efforts are underway to resume negotiations to revive the Iran nuclear deal,” said foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani.

Iran will “show a firm and immediate response” to the sanctions announced the previous day and “take all necessary measures to neutralise” their potential impacts on the country’s trade, Kanani vowed in a statement.

The US government blacklisted six companies Monday that it said helped Iran export petrochemicals to East Asia in avoidance of sanctions over Tehran’s nuclear programme.

Three Hong Kong-based trading companies and one United Arab Emirates firm were hit with US Treasury sanctions for helping Iran’s Persian Gulf Petrochemical Industry Commercial Co. ship “millions of dollars worth” of petroleum and petrochemical products to unnamed East Asian buyers, the Treasury said.

In addition, the US State Department blacklisted two shipping firms, based in China and Singapore, for helping arrange the shipments.

The sanctions block any assets the entities own under US jurisdiction and ban US persons or entities from doing business with them, effectively constricting their access to the global financial system.

The move came as talks in Vienna between Iran and several major powers, including the United States, to revive the frayed 2015 international agreement on the Iranian nuclear programme have been at a standstill since March.

Last Tuesday, EU foreign policy chief and coordinator of the nuclear talks between Iran and world powers, Josep Borrell, submitted a new draft text and urged all sides to accept it or “risk a dangerous nuclear crisis”.

Kanani criticised the Biden administration for “continuing and even expanding” the “failed” policies of his predecessor Donald Trump, who unilaterally withdrew the United States from the nuclear deal in 2018.

Tehran, for its part, has been gradually backing away from its obligations.

Iran had expressed “optimism” on Monday that the nuclear talks would resume after Borrell’s draft compromise was reviewed.

 

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Iraqi cleric’s followers told to leave parliament

Iraqi parliament

Muqtada Al-Sadr instructed his followers to leave parliament within 72 hours. They were directed to protest outside the Green Zone, which houses Iraq’s government buildings and foreign embassies. His followers stormed parliament on Saturday to prevent the Iran-backed alliance from voting in a new government. BAGHDAD: Followers of an influential Shiite cleric who occupied the … Read more

Iran gains foothold in South America as Biden admin pursues nuclear deal

  • Iran has been attempting to expand its influence in South America while undermining American interests and security.
  • A mysterious Venezuelan-flagged plane landed in Argentina last month with a crew of 14 Venezuelans and five Iranians, one of whom was a senior Iranian official. The plane has since been seized and an investigation has been launched.
  • Moscow has made it a goal under President Vladimir Putin to erode US influence in South America. Iran’s Vice President for Economic Affairs attended Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega’s inauguration earlier this year.

Iran has been attempting to expand its influence in South America while undermining American interests and security, eliciting little response from the Biden administration, which is attempting to salvage the Obama-era nuclear agreement with the country.

According to James Phillips, senior research fellow for foreign policy at the Heritage Foundation, “the Iranian Revolutionary Guards are much more actively involved in subversive and assassination issues.”

Phillips cited a 2011 plot to assassinate Saudi Ambassador to the United States in Washington, D.C.’s Georgetown neighbourhood, noting that Iranian agents sought to collaborate with a Mexican drug cartel to carry out the plot on American soil.

“This was over ten years ago…. it’s been going on for a long time,” Phillips explained.

Iran’s outreach in Latin America appears to have resumed in recent years, most recently with the appearance last month of a mysterious Venezuelan-flagged plane in Argentina. The plane, which belonged to an Iranian operator sanctioned by the US, landed in Ezeiza with a crew of 14 Venezuelans and five Iranians, one of whom was a senior Iranian official.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the plane has since been seized and an investigation has been launched, but it is unclear why it was allowed to land in Argentina and what it was doing there.

Argentine federal police searched the plane and discovered material used for military cyber defence operations on board, while the captain was identified as Gholamreza Ghasemi, a board member and manager of Fars Air Qeshm, an Iranian airline sanctioned by the US.

Argentine President Alberto Fernández has insisted there was nothing suspicious about the plane, while the country’s security minister claimed the captain just happened to have the same name as Ghasemi, a claim contradicted by Paraguayan intelligence and called into question by Argentine members of Congress.

Though Iran has a long history of cooperation with Venezuela, a country that has a history of undermining American interests, Iranian cooperation with democratic Argentina would be a more concerning development for the US in the region.

Both Iran and Argentina applied for membership in the BRICS group, which includes Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, a week before the plane landed in Ezeiza. The group, which has held an annual summit since 2009, wields considerable power in global affairs, positioning itself as an alternative to US-dominated Western alliances.

According to an Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson, membership in BRICS would result in added value for both sides “while Russia boasted that the US was failing to reduce its international influence in the midst of its ongoing conflict in Ukraine.

Iranian influence in South America would benefit Russia, which has made it a goal under President Vladimir Putin to erode US influence in the region.

“As part of a long-term strategy to establish a permanent presence in the region, Moscow has been deepening ties with fellow authoritarian regimes in Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua,” Rebekah Koffler, president of Doctrine & Strategy Consulting, former DIA intelligence officer, and author of “According to Fox News, Putin’s Playbook: Russia’s Secret Plan to Defeat America.

During their meeting in Tehran, Iran, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, centre, and Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, greet each other as Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi stands at right.

Russia’s goals, according to Koffler, are not only to gain access to new markets and resources as the rest of the world attempts to isolate the country, but also to show the US that it can operate militarily in America’s backyard.

“Ultimately, Russia wants to build a formidable force posture on America’s doorstep as a deterrent, which Moscow could activate if Washington intervenes in Putin’s plans to re-establish control over Russia’s former Soviet states, such as Ukraine,” Koffler said.

The mysterious plane in Argentina is not the only indication that Iran is attempting to increase its influence in Latin America. Mohsen Rezaee, Iran’s Vice President for Economic Affairs, attended Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega’s inaugural ceremony earlier this year. Rezaee, a former member of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, is wanted in Argentina for allegedly masterminding the 1994 bombing of Buenos Aires’ Jewish community centre.

Ortega has long been a divisive leader, with international observers accusing him of authoritarian policies. During his tenure, Nicaragua has been subjected to a number of US sanctions, while the State Department has criticised his support for “radical regimes” in Cuba and Iran, as well as repeated attempts to undermine capitalism and US interests.

There is also evidence that Iran’s influence has spread as far north as Mexico. Hezbollah, a terrorist organisation designated by the United States and the European Union that receives military training, weapons, and financial support from Iran, has been gaining a foothold in Latin America for much of the last decade and has recently made inroads with Mexican drug cartels.

The Justice Department announced last month that Adalberto Fructuoso Comparan-Rodriguez, a former mayor of Aguililla, Mexico, and alleged leader of the United Cartels in Michoacán, Mexico, had been extradited to the United States on drug trafficking charges.

According to the allegations, Comparan-Rodriguez met with a drug trafficker believed to be affiliated with Hezbollah in Cali, Colombia. Comparan-Rodriguez and an associate informed the trafficker that they could supply hundreds of kilogrammes of methamphetamine, eventually agreeing to transport 500 kilogrammes of methamphetamine from Mexico to Texas, where it was then transported to Miami.

After Comparan-Rodriguez was apprehended by Guatemalan authorities, law enforcement was able to seize the drugs before they hit the streets, but the case demonstrated Hezbollah’s growing influence in Latin America.

Hezbollah has a long history of operating in the tri-border region of Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay, and the organisation has recently expanded its reach into Venezuela. Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo stated in 2019 that the terrorist organisation now has “active cells” in Venezuela, posing a security risk to the United States.

“People don’t realise Hezbollah has active cells – the Iranians are affecting Venezuelans and South Americans,” he said at the time. “We have an obligation to reduce that risk for the sake of America.”

The current administration, on the other hand, has taken a different approach to the threat posed by Iran, abandoning the Trump administration’s policy of maximum pressure in favour of attempting to rekindle the Obama-era Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, also known as the Iran nuclear deal.

Phillips called the new approach a mistake, claiming that the Biden administration has become complacent on Iran in order to salvage some of former President Obama’s legacy.

“With regard to Iran sanctions, the Biden administration has painted itself into a corner,” Phillips said. “It greatly underestimated the leverage it would need to extract another nuclear deal from Iran…it took its foot off the pedal on the Trump administration’s maximum pressure sanction strategy.”

The lack of leverage has only emboldened Iran, which has accelerated its efforts to obtain nuclear weapons in addition to its activities in Latin America.

“Iran is on the verge of developing a nuclear weapon,” Phillips said. “They already have enough enriched uranium to make a nuclear bomb in a matter of weeks.”

Phillips believes that sanctions alone will not deter Iran’s growing ambitions, and that the administration must demonstrate a credible threat of military force.

“Sanctions alone will not stop Iran’s nuclear programme any more than sanctions alone stopped North Korea’s,” he said. “A credible threat of effective use of force would deter Iran.”

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United States wants to stop Iran from selling petrochemicals to Asia

United States

The US puts six companies on a list of those that can’t do business with them. They helped Iran get petrochemicals to East Asia while avoiding sanctions over Tehran’s nuclear programme. The sanctions freeze their assets in the US and limit their ability to use the global financial system. On Monday, the United States government … Read more

Iran’s atomic energy chief says country could build a bomb but has no plan to

Iran
  • Iranian atomic energy chief says country has capability to build nuclear weapon.
  • Mohammad Eslami’s comments likely to exacerbate concerns about the nature of Iran’s nuclear programme.
  • Comments are similar to those made recently by a senior adviser to Iran’s supreme leader, Kamal Kharrazi.

According to an Iranian news agency, Iran’s atomic energy chief says the country has the capability to build a nuclear weapon but has no plans to do so.

Mohammad Eslami’s remarks are similar to those made recently by a senior adviser to Iran’s supreme leader.

Such public statements by top officials are unusual, and they are likely to exacerbate concerns about the nature of Iran’s nuclear programme.

It has increased its nuclear activities since a deal to limit them fell through.

When the United States withdrew from the 2015 agreement, crippling economic sanctions were reinstated.

Iran has repeatedly claimed that its nuclear programme is solely for peaceful purposes, but Western powers and the global nuclear watchdog are sceptical.

Western officials have warned that time is running out to restore the deal before Iran’s programme becomes irreversible.

How much uranium is required to make a bomb?
Mr Eslami reiterated comments made by the senior adviser, Kamal Kharrazi, in remarks reported on Monday by the semi-official Fars news agency.

“As Mr Kharrazi mentioned, Iran has the technical capability to build an atomic bomb,” Mr Eslami said.

Mr Kharrazi stated to Al Jazeera on July 17th, “Iran has the technical means to produce a nuclear bomb, but there has been no decision by Iran to build one.”

Concerns have grown over the so-called breakout time, or the amount of time it will take Iran to accumulate enough highly enriched uranium to build a nuclear weapon.

Rafael Grossi, the head of the global atomic energy agency, stated in June that Iran could obtain such a quantity in a matter of weeks. During the period when the nuclear deal was in place, the US estimated that the breakout time was about a year.

Mr Grossi, on the other hand, stated that just because Iran has enough material does not mean it can build a nuclear bomb.

The IAEA reported in May that Iran had 43.1kg (95lb) of uranium enriched to 60% purity. A nuclear weapon requires approximately 25kg of uranium enriched to 90% purity.

Iran’s claims that it has the technical know-how to develop a nuclear weapon come at a time when Iran and world powers are at odds over reviving the 2015 deal.

Months of on-again, off-again talks in Vienna have stalled, and rare indirect talks between the US and Iran on the issue in Qatar in June ended without agreement.

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Iran is capable of making nuclear bomb-atomic energy chief

nuclear

Iranian atomic energy chief claims country has capability to construct a nuclear weapon. Mohammad Eslami’s remarks are similar to those made recently by a key adviser to Iran’s supreme leader. Western governments and the global nuclear watchdog remain skeptical. According to an Iranian news outlet, Iran’s atomic energy chief claims the country has the capability … Read more