Tag Archives: Tehran

TEHRAN, Iran (CNN) — Iran has test fired nine missiles in response to what it says are threats from Israel and the United States, according to state-run Iranian media and a U.S. military source.

The new version of the Shahab-3 missile is capable of reaching its main regional enemy Israel, Iran says.

The Islamic Republic News Agency and Press TV reported that the naval forces of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Wednesday test-fired a Shahab-3 missile during war games in the Persian Gulf.

The exercise comes a month after Israel conducted a military drill in the eastern Mediterranean involving dozens of warplanes, and the latest Iranian activities prompted concern from Israel and condemnation from the United States.

Iran occasionally tests missiles, but this firing comes amid international tensions over its nuclear aspirations.

“The war game was aimed at improving the combat readiness of Iran’s armed forces. The 2,000-kilometers-range Shahab-3 missiles were tested to demonstrate Iran’s capability in hitting its enemies accurately at the early stages of their probable attacks against the Islamic Republic.

“Domestic and foreign political and military analysts believe that Shahab-3 is able to reach targets in the occupied lands in case of the Zionist regime’s probable attacks against Iran’s nuclear sites,” the Islamic Republic News Agency said.

Iran’s Press TV said the Iranian forces “successfully test-fired new long and mid-range missiles.” It mentioned the Shahab 3, “which can hit any target within a range of 2,000km.” It said the Shahab 3 “is equipped with a one-ton conventional warhead.”

“Nine highly advanced missiles with improved accuracy were simultaneously tested including the Zelzal and Fateh missiles with ranges of 400km and 170km respectively.”

Press TV said ground forces were also involved in the maneuvers in the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz areas.

A U.S. military official with knowledge of the latest information on the testing counted the firing of seven missiles, one Shahab-3 and six shorter-range ballistic missiles. The testing took place over land, the official said.

The official, who noted that these kinds of tests have occurred before and that they were not unexpected, said the tests were tracked by U.S. intelligence.

World powers, who suspect Iran is intent on building nuclear weapons, have offered economic and other incentives in exchange for the suspension of its enrichment program.

Iran, which says its nuclear program is strictly to produce energy, defends its right to proceed with enrichment.

There are worldwide worries that Israel, which is concerned Iran wants to attack, is pondering a unilateral strike against the Islamic Republic.

Israel’s aerial military exercise over the eastern Mediterranean Sea in June was in part an effort to send a message that it has the capability to attack Iran’s nuclear program.

The exercise involved dozens of Israeli warplanes, including F-15s, F-16s and refueling aircraft, an official said.

The distance involved in the exercise was roughly the same as would be involved in a possible strike on the Iranian nuclear fuel plant at Natanz, a U.S. military official said.

In 1981, Israel attacked a nuclear facility in Iraq. Israel also struck a site in Syria that some say was a nuclear reactor under construction.

One Israeli Cabinet member, Shaul Mofaz, recently said it “will attack” Iran if the nuclear program was not halted.

Last week, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps commander, Gen. Mohammed Ali-Jaafari, said any strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities would be regarded a the beginning of war.

At the same time, Iranian leaders are discounting the possibility of war. Ahmadinejad, in Malaysia this week for a conference, told reporters Iran is trying to prevent but not foment confrontation.

“We are making all-out efforts to expand peace and security in the world. You should not be concerned about a new war,” he said on Tuesday.

Mark Regev, spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, said it did not want conflict with Iran.

“But the Iranian nuclear program and the Iranian ballistic missile program must be of concern for the entire International community.”

The White House reacted strongly to the Iranian test-firing.

“Iran’s development of ballistic missiles is a violation of United Nations Security Council resolutions and completely inconsistent with Iran’s obligations to the world,” said National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe.

Johndroe mentioned that the United States, Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany “are committed to a diplomatic path, and have offered Iran a generous package of incentives if they will suspend their uranium enrichment activities.”

“They should also refrain from further missile tests if they truly seek to gain the trust of the world. The Iranians should stop the development of ballistic missiles, which could be used as a delivery vehicle for a potential nuclear weapon, immediately.”

U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the Republican presidential candidate, said the tests “demonstrate again the dangers it [Iran] poses to its neighbors and to the wider region, especially Israel.”

“Ballistic missile testing coupled with Iran’s continued refusal to cease its nuclear activities should unite the international community in efforts to counter Iran’s dangerous ambitions.”

McCain supports working with Europe and regional allies to deal with Iran, not “unilateral concessions.”

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Iran says Israel’s recent military maneuvers were meant as a ‘big stick policy’ towards Iran prior to talks between Tehran and the G5+1.

Majlis (Parliament) Speaker Ali Larijani said that Israel’s ‘propaganda campaign’ to prepare for possible attacks on Iran shows Israel’s ‘destitution’ and takes place at a time when Iran’s Supreme National Security Council and Parliament are still reviewing a package of proposals from the G5+1 over Tehran’s nuclear program.

“The negotiations should take place in a calm atmosphere,” IRIB quoted Larijani as saying. “They (Israel) should know that they cannot make Iranians confused through their propaganda campaigns.”

Larijani, who until a few months ago was Iran’s top nuclear negotiator, added that the members of Iran’s nuclear negotiating team pay no attention to Israeli propaganda.

Iran is ‘fully prepared’ to confront any foreign threat, said Iran’s Parliament Speaker, adding that this was not the first time Iran faced such a malign campaign.

HSH/MR/GM

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A senior Iranian commander says the armed forces are prepared to deliver an ‘awe-inspiring’ response to any attack against the country.

During a Tuesday speech at the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps headquarters, Major General Mohammad-Ali Jafari said no ’strategic mistake’ by Israel or the US would be overlooked by Iran.

Washington and Tel Aviv’s inability to face Iran’s defensive capabilities has caused them to resort to psychological warfare, the IRGC commander suggested.

“The enemy knows that the IRGC is prepared to defend the country and the Islamic Revolution. This is why no one is able to launch any attack against Iran,” he added.

Maj. Gen. Jafari made the remarks following a New York Times report quoted Pentagon officials as saying that Israel recently carried out a large-scale military maneuver, which appeared to be a rehearsal for an attack on Iran.

According to the report, over 100 Israeli F-16s and F-15s flew more than 900 miles off the southern Mediterranean island of Crete, roughly the distance from Israeli airfields to Iranian nuclear enrichment facilities.

Israel accuses Iran of ‘producing bomb-grade uranium’ and has repeatedly threatened to wage war on the country if Tehran continues with its nuclear plans.

Iran, which according to the most recent UN nuclear watchdog report has conducted a civilian program, insists nuclear weapons have no place in its defensive doctrine.

MD/HGH/DT

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Western sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program could hinder Tehran’s campaign against drug traffickers, the UN warns.

Western nations have told Iran that they could cut off any new help to Iran’s anti-drug units unless Tehran halts its uranium enrichment activities but the EU has not yet decided on whether to trim its aid to Iran’s anti-drug fight, AP reported on Tuesday.

A “heroin tsunami” could hit Europe if the drug interdiction by Iran is weakened, warned Antonio Maria Costa, the director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime. “ We should definitely assist Iran in this respect.”

Roberto Arbitrio, head of the UN drugs and crime office in Iran, said the war on drugs should be viewed as “a non-political area of mutual interest.”

Overall opium production in Afghanistan has more than doubled in the last four years and smuggling the drug into Iran is the first step toward reaching Western markets.

Afghanistan produced 93 percent of the world’s opium last year, and about 50 percent of the drugs leaving the country flowed towards Iran, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime says.

“Cooperating with Iran in Afghanistan on this and other issues is not a favor we do for Iran but something we need to do in our own interest,” said Barnett Rubin, an expert on Afghanistan at New York University.

MGH/PA

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Soltaniyeh

The US and allies seek to force Iran to suspend enrichment activities but Tehran will never give in to the pressures, Iran’s IAEA envoy says.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran will never yield to the illegal US pressures to pull out of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and freeze its uranium enrichment activities completely.” Iran’s Ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Ali-Asghar Soltaniyeh said addressing the Third International Conference on a Middle East Free from Weapons of Mass Destruction in London.

He added, Iran has informed the IAEA about its nuclear activities and remained committed to its international undertakings.

The Iranian official also noted, the IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei, in his recent report, explicitly announced that all ambiguities about Iran’s nuclear program had been removed but the US, in a bullying way still insists on the necessity for Iran’s further explanations.

Elsewhere in his remarks, Soltaniyeh said that the Israeli regime prevented the establishment of a Middle East free from weapons of mass destruction and has been the source of instability and insecurity in the region during the past six decades.

The senior diplomat referred to the positive role of the IAEA and its successful performance but said, “The agency’s failure to show a strong reaction to the nuclear arsenals of the Israeli regime due to the influence of the US and its allies, is the only point of weakness of the agency.”

He said that Iran had been a victim of chemical weapons. Tens of thousands of Iranian forces and civilians were martyred and wounded by the troops of the former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988) before the indifferent eyes of the international circles. “It was a black spot in the history of the United Nations,” he commented.

“Israel is the biggest source of danger in the region,” he further stressed.

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Mottaki-Solana

Iran’s Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki says Tehran will give a ‘rational’ response to the package proposed by the six world powers.

“We are waiting for the specific views of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany (Group 5+1). The Iranian government and nation are determined to always defend their inalienable rights and are ready to hold talks about various issues,” Mottaki said in Tehran Saturday after the EU Foreign Policy Chief Javier Solana handed a new package of incentives to him.

The package is said to offer Iran a set of economic and trade incentives in exchange for the country to suspend its uranium enrichment activities.

Mottaki added that Iran’s proposed package, which had been submitted earlier to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, a number of international organizations and countries, provides solutions to a range of political, security, economic and nuclear issues as well as promoting regional and international cooperation.

He noted that the realistic views expressed in its package would prepare the ground for constructive talks in all areas.

“In its proposed package, Iran presents a broad and comprehensive view of issues of mutual interest, including terrorism, narcotics, organized crime and illegal immigration, which threaten all parties concerned. We should look for ways to fight them through collective cooperation,” he said.

“It is expected that the proposed packages will be discussed by the two sides based on a wise and constructive approach, mutual respect, justice and collective commitment to paving the way for fruitful negotiations with the aim of addressing leading regional and global challenges and problems,” he said.

Solana called on Tehran to review the Group 5+1 package carefully and said that the EU and the six powers recognize Iran’s right to peaceful nuclear technology.

He added that they found common points in the two packages which could serve as a good start for talks.

SF/JG/GM

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Jimmy Carter

Former US president Jimmy Carter broke his decades-long silence on Israeli nuclear arsenal as he urged Washington to launch direct talks with Tehran over nuclear program
The London Times quoted former US president Jimmy Carter on Sunday as saying Israel has 150 nuclear weapons in its arsenal. Carter also described Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip as “one of the greatest human rights crimes now existing on Earth.”
 
In a speech at a literary festival in Hay-on-Wye, in Wales, the 83-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner said: “There is no reason to treat these people this way,” referring to the blockade, in place since Hamas seized Gaza in June 2007.
 
Carter called the failure of the European Union to support the Palestinian cause was “embarrassing.” He said European countries should be “encouraging the formation of a unity government,” including Hamas and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah movement, which is the officially recognized ruling party of the Palestinian Authority.
 
“They should be encouraging Hamas to have a ceasefire in Gaza alone, as a first step,” he told the invited guests. “They should be encouraging Israel and Hamas to reach an agreement in prisoner exchange and, as a second step, Israel should agree to a ceasefire in the West Bank, which is Palestinian territory.”
 
Carter also said the United States had to begin holding direct talks with Iran over the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program, which the West believes is aimed at developing a nuclear bomb, despite Tehran’s denials. “We need to talk to Iran now, and continue our discussions with Iran, to let Iran know the benefits, and the detrimental side, of continuing with their nuclear program,” he said.

Source: www.insight-info.com

Iran and Syria

The top Iranian IRGC commander Jafari says the expansion of Iran-Syria cooperation will have great impact on strengthening regional unity.

“Cooperation between Iran and Syria and their mutual efforts to establish unity have borne fruit,” Commander of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC), Major General Mohammad-Ali Jafari, said in a meeting with the visiting Syrian Defense Minister, Hassan Ali Turkmani, in Tehran on Sunday.

He stressed the importance of promoting bilateral cooperation and praised the significant level of unity and solidarity between the two countries.

Turkmani, for his part, praised Iran’s efforts aimed at preparing the ground for ever greater bilateral cooperation and said that mutual ties would produce important results.

Syria is aware of the IRGC’s great capabilities in various fields of science and military and technology, he added.

SF/GM/BGH

Source: www.insight-info.com