Thursday, May 28, 2015

Eye on Iran: Iran, North Korea Forging Ballistic, Nuclear Ties






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Reuters: "An exiled Iranian opposition group said on Thursday a delegation of North Korean experts in nuclear warheads and ballistic missiles visited a military site near Tehran in April amid talks between world powers and Iran over its nuclear program. The dissident National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) exposed Iran's uranium enrichment plant at Natanz and a heavy water facility at Arak in 2002... Citing information from sources inside Iran, including within Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps, the Paris-based NCRI said the seven person North Korean Defence Ministry team were in Iran for the last week of April. It was the third time in 2015 that North Koreans had been to Iran and a nine person delegation was due to return in June, it said. 'The delegates included nuclear experts, nuclear warhead experts and experts in various elements of ballistic missiles including guidance systems,' NCRI said." http://t.uani.com/1BrbtJn

Politico: "For weeks, the Obama administration insisted it was winning the war against the Islamic State, telling reporters that its pinpoint airstrikes and military advice were rolling back the terrorist group's stunning territorial gains in Iraq. But now, Obama's foreign policy team finds itself relying on Iran-backed Shiite militias in a high-stakes bid to retake Ramadi, a provincial capital where dozens of American soldiers once died battling hordes of Sunni insurgents. For weeks, the Obama administration insisted it was winning the war against the Islamic State, telling reporters that its pinpoint airstrikes and military advice were rolling back the terrorist group's stunning territorial gains in Iraq. But now, Obama's foreign policy team finds itself relying on Iran-backed Shiite militias in a high-stakes bid to retake Ramadi, a provincial capital where dozens of American soldiers once died battling hordes of Sunni insurgents... Many are effectively proxies for Iran - some openly display images of the late Iranian leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomenei - and serve to extend Tehran's influence in Baghdad. There is also an emotional factor: Shiite fighters killed numerous Americans in the wake of the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, and the prospect of cooperating with them enrages many in the U.S. military." http://t.uani.com/1LLzG3p

Reuters: "Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on Thursday he hoped Tehran and world powers would reach a final nuclear deal 'within a reasonable period of time' but this would be hard if the other side stuck to what he called excessive demands... 'If the other side respects what has been agreed in Lausanne and tries to draft, based on mutual respect, a comprehensive agreement with Iran that is sustainable..., then we can meet any deadline,' Zarif said after meeting his Greek counterpart. 'If people insist on excessive demands, on renegotiation, then it will be difficult to envisage an agreement even without a deadline,' he said in Athens... 'I am hopeful we will reach a final conclusion within a reasonable period of time,' Zarif said. 'In order to do that people need to be realistic, people need to have their foot in reality, not in illusions.' He said Iran could not accept any solution that is 'less than respectful, less than dignified. We can only have agreements in which both sides can claim that they have achieved positive results. You need to either win together, or lose together. Iran, with millennia of history, will not be intimidated.'" http://t.uani.com/1GGtYzz

   
Nuclear Program & Negotiations

AFP: "On Tuesday, Yukiya Amano, the head of the UN's atomic watchdog, said Iran had agreed to implementing the Additional Protocol of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) that allows for snap inspections. 'When we find inconsistency or when we have doubts, we can request access to the undeclared location for example, and this could include military sites,' the Japanese diplomat told AFP. Zarif has said the April framework allows 'some access' but not inspections of military sites, in order to protect national 'military or economic secrets.'" http://t.uani.com/1cl1IWA

AP: "The top U.S. and Iranian diplomats plan to meet this weekend in Switzerland as efforts intensify to reach a comprehensive nuclear accord. Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif will hold talks Saturday in Geneva." http://t.uani.com/1AA5oze

Reuters: "The United States will not consider an extension to reach an agreement on curbing Iran's nuclear program, the State Department said on Wednesday, despite indications from France and Iran that talks may stretch into July. 'We're not contemplating any extension beyond June 30,' State Department spokesman Jeff Rathke said at a news briefing. Rathke said the United States believes the world powers working with Tehran can achieve their goal of reaching an agreement by the self-imposed deadline." http://t.uani.com/1AvYrj1

AFP: "Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Wednesday praised the work of his country's nuclear negotiators after they came under heavy criticism from the conservative camp in parliament. The negotiators, who resumed talks with world powers in Vienna on Tuesday, 'are working, making efforts, breaking sweat... to obtain what is in the interests of the country and the regime', he said in a meeting with members of parliament. The intervention from Khamenei, who has the final say on all matters of state in Iran, came after several deputies accused the negotiators of having betrayed the Islamic republic by making key concessions... In his bid to restore order on the home front, Khamenei called for 'mutual respect' -- without accusations and suspicions -- between parliament and the government. Members of parliament must maintain a 'respectful attitude towards ministers' and the government must avoid insulting deputies, he said." http://t.uani.com/1KAS4Op

NYT: "President Obama's chief negotiator with Iran, Wendy R. Sherman, said on Wednesday that she planned to leave the administration shortly after the June 30 deadline for a final deal on limiting the country's nuclear program. 'It's been two long years,' Ms. Sherman, the under secretary of state for policy, said in her office on Wednesday. With her departure, all the top officials who have negotiated with Iran over those two years will have left the administration, leaving questions about who will coordinate the complex process of carrying out a deal if one is struck by the deadline... Her work is hardly done: Ms. Sherman left for Austria and Switzerland on Wednesday, shortly after telling her staff about her plans, on her 30th trip as lead negotiator. Over the next five weeks, her task will be to see if the final differences with Tehran - on issues like the timing of the dismantlement of much of its nuclear infrastructure and the details of inspections of military and other sites - can be bridged." http://t.uani.com/1LMeBoD

Syria Conflict

AFP: "Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said Wednesday that Iran and Russia would never give up their support for his regime in the face of a four-year-old armed revolt. 'I assure you that the relationship between Syria, the Russian Federation, and the Islamic Republic of Iran is much deeper than some people think,' Muallem said at a press conference with his visiting Armenian counterpart Edward Nalbandian. He said Tehran and Moscow 'have not and will not delay in providing aid to help us persevere,' while armed rebels had 'clear support from conspirators' and were infiltrating from Turkey... Muallem said Damascus looked forward to 'a better and bigger Iranian role in the international arena' after the end of Tehran's negotiations with world powers on a nuclear accord." http://t.uani.com/1FF4n83

Yemen Crisis

FT: "The Shahed's voyage follows months of suspicious shipping activity between Iran and Yemen amid mounting claims from regional western diplomats and intelligence officials of Tehran's complicity in the Yemeni civil war. Maritime data obtained by the Financial Times show that at least four large cargo ships, with a combined capacity of more than 15,000 tonnes, made a series of highly unusual and undeclared trips between Iran and Yemeni ports controlled by the Houthis in the first few months of this year. All four undertook voyages to transport cargo from the port of Bandar Abbas in Iran to Yemen's Houthi-controlled port of Hodeida - a route none had plied before - after the Houthi capture of Sana'a in January. The ships changed their ensigns, turned off their tracking devices at key points during their voyages, registered false information in international shipping logs and met unidentified craft mid-ocean." http://t.uani.com/1Ks7jWL

Human Rights

AP: "A letter a detained Washington Post journalist wrote to U.S. President Barack Obama and a trip he made to the U.S. Consulate in Dubai have become major topics of his espionage trial in Iran. Jason Rezaian, the Post's 39-year-old bureau chief in Tehran, is being tried in a Revolutionary Court on allegations of 'espionage for the hostile government of the United States' and propaganda against the Islamic Republic, Iran's official IRNA news agency has reported. The Post has said he faces 10 to 20 years in prison if convicted... Rezaian, his wife Yeganeh Salehi and two photojournalists were detained on July 22 in Tehran. All were later released except Rezaian... Last week, Rezaian's lawyer said Salehi, who is a reporter for The National newspaper in the United Arab Emirates capital of Abu Dhabi, and a freelance photographer who worked for foreign media, also will stand trial." http://t.uani.com/1FczpRr

AFP: "Iran hit back Thursday at US charges that the trial of Washington Post journalist Jason Rezaian on spying charges lacked transparency, with Tehran insisting its judiciary is independent. Washington has called for the release of Rezaian, who went on trial behind closed doors on Tuesday, with National Security Council spokeswoman Bernadette Meehan condemning a 'complete lack of transparency' in the case... Foreign affairs spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham said it was up to a judge to decide the journalist's fate. 'In any country, questions of justice, judicial process and inquiry have their own procedures,' Afkham was quoted as saying on her ministry's website. 'There is no room for premature judgement and speculation.'" http://t.uani.com/1QcGtUb

RFE/RL: "Iranian authorities have sent a celebrated journalist Ahmad Zeidabadi into internal exile after nearly six years in prison, dashing the hopes of his family and displaying continued intolerance for freedom of speech in the Islamic republic. Zeidabadi, widely respected and seen as upholding the honor of Iran's journalists and intellectuals, was arrested in the 2009 state crackdown that followed the disputed reelection of Mahmud Ahmadinejad as president in June of that year. Zeidabadi and scores of other intellectuals and political activists were tried on charges that included plotting to overthrow the Islamic establishment. Zeidabadi, a former student leader, was sentenced to six years in prison, five years in exile in the northeastern city of Gonabad, and a lifetime ban from journalistic, political, and social activity." http://t.uani.com/1SE6DDj

IranWire: "Activists have called for the immediate release of Narges Mohammadi, the jailed deputy director and spokesperson for the Center for the Defenders of Human Rights. Gathering outside Mohammadi's house on May 20, protesters celebrated Mohammadi's commitment to human rights, and insisted that her continued imprisonment not only violated human rights but also went against Islamic and family values. Security forces arrested Mohammadi on May 5. Supporters of the Women Citizenship Center (WCC) and other groups, including anti-death penalty campaign group Karzar Legam, attended the rally, along with journalist and filmmaker Mohammad Nourizad and Gohar Eshghi, the mother of Sattar Beheshti, the blogger who died while in jail in 2013. Eshghi and Nourizad were both present at the time of Mohammadi's arrest." http://t.uani.com/1RqABcy

Opinion & Analysis

Eric Edelman, Robert Joseph & Ray Takeyh in Politico: "The Obama administration says that any nuclear agreement it negotiates between the United States and Iran will be binding on the president's successors, while nearly every Republican presidential contender has insisted on re-evaluating the agreement, if not jettisoning it all together. Secretary of State John Kerry has rejected such claims, maintaining that future presidents are unlikely to 'turn around and just nullify it.' Yet the history of arms control demonstrates that controversial agreements are usually reviewed by incoming administrations. On at least three recent occasions, a new president ultimately annulled a landmark agreement that he determined was not serving the interests of the United States or was being violated by an adversary it was meant to restrain. The cornerstone of arms control in the 1970s was the SALT II accord. Building on the earlier negotiations of the Nixon/Ford administration, Jimmy Carter finally concluded the treaty on June 18, 1979 and submitted it to Senate for ratification. However, once the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, Carter withdrew the treaty from further consideration. Nonetheless, both the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to comply with its terms. The Reagan Administration's review concluded that the agreement was 'fatally flawed' but provisionally decided to abide by the unratified treaty. Ultimately, in light of indications of Soviet non-compliance and more importantly the need to move forward with a major strategic modernization program, it was set aside. In May 1986, the administration announced that 'in the future, the United States must base decisions regarding its strategic force structure on the nature and magnitude of the threat posed by the Soviet strategic forces and not on standards contained in SALT structure.' Reagan determined that the wisest course was to abandon SALT II despite the fact that the agreement was long-standing and had been negotiated by both his Republican and Democratic predecessors. In December 2001, another key element of the Cold War arms control architecture collapsed when President George W. Bush announced the U.S. intention to withdraw from the 1972 ABM Treaty-after making support for missile defense a pillar of his campaign. The reason for this action was clearly stated: given the emergence of new missile and nuclear threats from rogue states, the United States had to defend itself against attacks from countries like North Korea...  Upon assuming office, President George W. Bush's review of the 1994 Agreed Framework with North Korea concluded that the agreement had essentially rewarded bad North Korean behavior, but that the U.S. would continue to abide by it so long as North Korea continued to fulfill its commitments. The U.S. ended its participation in December 2002 after Pyongyang was assessed to have undertaken a large-scale uranium enrichment program. In testimony to Congress, Clinton administration officials had earlier stated that any enrichment would be considered a material breach of the agreement. When confronted with evidence of its illicit procurement activities, North Korea initially denied, but then soon acknowledged the existence of the program-a program that made sense only in the context of producing fissile material for nuclear weapons. Following Pyongyang's confirmation that it was pursuing uranium enrichment, and after consulting with regional allies, President Bush stopped the delivery of heavy fuel oil to North Korea, leading to the demise of the agreement. Most presidents prefer to adhere to the commitments negotiated by their predecessors. However, at times, the deficiencies of an agreement are so great that presidents reconsidered their patrimony. The emerging deal with Iran is likely to be one of the most unusual and contentious accords in the history of arms control. It will likely be embraced by the U.N. Security Council while greeted with skepticism, if not outright rejection, by Congress. It will be will be applauded by America's rivals and adversaries, such as Russia and China, yet disclaimed by its closest allies such as Israel and the Gulf Arab states. Given the absence of domestic consensus on the deal and given that it is transacted with a profoundly unsavory regime, it is likely to be debated and its value questioned by many officeholders. This is particularly the case if the verification and monitoring provisions are considered inadequate in light of Iran's record of denial, deception and cheating. Successor administrations may take a more questioning view about Iran's adherence as the examples above suggest. As the Obama administration concludes its negotiations with Iran, it would be wise to insist on stringent terms and clear consequences for cheating. After all, the longevity of the agreement will be determined less by the approbation of the UN than by future presidents who must judge whether it serves America's interests." http://t.uani.com/1BrfWvy

Yaroslav Trofimov in WSJ: "Reformers and hard-liners in the Iranian regime have been jockeying for influence for decades. As the Islamic Republic now nears a landmark nuclear agreement with the U.S. and other world powers, the Middle East's future depends on which force emerges as the deal's main beneficiary. Will the accord empower the more pragmatic factions interested in normalizing Iran's relations with the West, even as the regime maintains repression at home? Or, as some of Iran's neighbors fear, will the financial windfall from the lifting of sanctions enable the hard-liners to step up the export of Iran's Islamic revolution throughout the region?Relative moderates such as President Hasan Rouhani and Foreign Minister Javad Zarif have invested much political capital to bring Iran to the cusp of a nuclear deal. Their domestic supporters have raised expectations that the accord, which is due to be completed by June 30, will usher in a new era of regional cooperation. 'The nuclear issue would be the first step for testing whether the engagement policy is successful. If the U.S. continues the policy of engagement rather than confrontation, you would find Iran much more flexible and much more ready to cooperate on regional issues,' said Seyed Hossein Mousavian, who headed the foreign relations committee at Iran's National Security Council until 2005 and is now a visiting scholar at Princeton University. 'But if the West and the regional powers push for more coercion policies against Iran, this would strengthen radicalism in Iran. The equation is clear.' As momentum for a nuclear deal gathered in recent years, Iran's involvement in regional conflicts from Syria and Iraq to Yemen also expanded, led by the Revolutionary Guards and other hard-line elements of the regime. Many of Iran's Arab neighbors, along with their European allies such as France, are concerned these elements will be further energized by a completed nuclear deal, which is expected to unfreeze Iran's access to as much as $150 billion in overseas assets. Hoping the nuclear agreement will curtail Iran's forays abroad is as naive as arguing in 2013 that the deal to remove chemical weapons from Syria would ease the brutality of Bashar al-Assad's regime, said Jean-Pierre Filiu, a professor of Middle East studies at Sciences Po university in Paris and a former diplomatic adviser to the French prime minister. 'What I see is, since the preliminary deal [in April], things have become worse in Syria, worse in Yemen, and worse in Iraq,' he said. Aiming to whip up a nationalist backlash, hard-liners in Iran have sought to undermine Messrs. Rouhani and Zarif by focusing on the price that Tehran might pay for a nuclear accord, including international inspections of its military facilities, a blow to the country's cherished sovereignty. 'The reformers may be blamed for giving too much away,' said Vali Nasr, dean of the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University and a former senior State Department adviser. 'It is possible the deal would benefit the conservatives-they would get both the benefits of the deal and the political capital. This is clearly the conservatives' game plan. They are not objecting to the principles of the negotiations but to what has been negotiated.'" http://t.uani.com/1GGv9it

Jennifer Rubin in WashPost: "Lawmakers need to stop spectating and congratulating one another on the Corker-Menendez bill, which was supposed to be the start and not the end of congressional involvement in the Iran process. Congress should get going now to prepare for the June 30 deadline. First, Congress should immediately begin oversight hearings to understand the concessions and the rationale behind them; to review purported instances of cheating; and to review the accelerated international aggression and domestic repression. Second, with regard to Iran's aggression in Yemen, its support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and its domestic human rights abuses (including, but not limited to, the imprisonment of Americans and the trial of Post reporter Jason Rezaian), Congress should pass additional sanctions legislation now. The president has said these issues are separate and apart from nuclear negotiations, but he has taken no meaningful action to address them. Congress should therefore act. If Senate Democrats want to filibuster sanctions against Iran for terrorism, aggression and human rights atrocities, that is their prerogative. Third, Congress should begin floor debate no later than June 30 on the Menendez-Kirk sanctions bill. Considering the content of the framework released after the bill cleared committee, it is appropriate to amend the bill to clarify that sanctions are not subject to executive waiver and can be repealed only upon a congressional finding that a final deal has dismantled Iran's nuclear weapons infrastructure (including the closure of Fordow) and shipped out of the country its fissile material; has put in place anywhere/anytime inspections; and has required Iran to disclose past military dimensions of its program - in other words has agreed to the terms the administration originally set out to obtain. Finally, Congress should require the administration to provide a strategic plan for checking Iran's regional aggression. Plainly, we don't have one now. That plan should include an explanation as to how the administration intends to work with regional allies to check Iran's advance and how to prevent Iranian domination of Iraq. We are about a month away from another deadline. Congress should not let another diplomatic failure go to waste. It's time to ramp up the pressure on Iran and prevent the president from making an awful deal." http://t.uani.com/1d1uVXg
         

Eye on Iran is a periodic news summary from United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) a program of the American Coalition Against Nuclear Iran, Inc., a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Eye on Iran is not intended as a comprehensive media clips summary but rather a selection of media elements with discreet analysis in a PDA friendly format. For more information please email Press@UnitedAgainstNuclearIran.com

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