Thursday, January 19, 2017

Eye on Iran: Iran's Revolutionary Guards Reaps Economic Rewards in Syria


   EYE ON IRAN
Facebook
Twitter
View our videos on YouTube
   




TOP STORIES

Iran's government and entities close to the elite Revolutionary Guards have signed major economic contracts with Syria, reaping what appear to be lucrative rewards for helping President Bashar al-Assad regain control of parts of his country from rebels. An opposition group condemned the telecommunications and mining deals signed with Iran, Damascus's main regional ally, as "looting" of the Syrian people and the country's wealth by the "Iranian extremist militias"... Five memorandums of understanding were signed during a visit by Syrian Prime Minister Emad Khamis to Tehran on Tuesday, including a licence for Iran to become a mobile phone service operator in Syria, and phosphate mining contracts... Analysts said the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), a military force that runs a powerful industrial empire in Iran, would benefit from the deals, especially on the mobile network contract. IRGC largely controls telecommunications in Iran. "Telecoms are a very sensitive industry. It will allow Iran to closely monitor Syrian communications," said Karim Sadjadpour, senior associate of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace's Middle East programme... "Iran increasingly treats Syria as one of its own provinces," Sadjadpour said. "They saved Assad from falling, and now seem to feel entitled to help themselves to the Syrian economy."

A historic high-rise in the heart of Tehran caught fire and collapsed Thursday in a giant cloud of smoke, killing dozens of firefighters who were battling the blaze, Iranian news media reported. At least 50 firefighters were killed in the collapse of the 17-story Plasco building, a symbol of modernity that was constructed in the early 1960s, the official IRNA news agency said... "This landmark of modernity is gone," said Siavash Ramesh, a tour guide who was working in the building Thursday morning... It also stood out for its builder: a Jewish plastics tycoon, Habib Elghanian, who was executed in the months after the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Iran's ruling mullahs accused Elghanian, the head of a prominent association of Jewish Iranians, of spying for Israel, which triggered an exodus of Jews from the country... Others saw deeper meaning in the building's collapse. Ramesh, the tour guide, recalled the story of how a political activist who opposed the ruling theocracy was allegedly dropped from the top of the building by security agents for refusing to disclose sensitive information. "The building took revenge from the people who misused it," Ramesh said.

Despite Iran's landmark purchases of new planes from Airbus SE and Boeing Co., some of the biggest aircraft-leasing companies remain leery about entering the country amid uncertainty over the incoming Trump administration's policy toward the Islamic Republic... big aircraft lessors still are reluctant to do business in Iran. "We will remain cautious," said John Plueger, chief executive of Air Lease Corp... Years of sanctions have left Iran with one of the world's oldest airline fleets in need of modernization. But full order books at Airbus and Boeing mean Iranian carriers can only slowly get new planes. Airbus is expected to hand over around nine planes this year, with the first jetliner from Boeing due next year, Iran Air's Chief Executive Farhad Parvaresh said last week. Airlines looking for popular planes more quickly often turn to plane lessors to introduce such aircraft. In other cases lessors become the financiers of new aircraft ordered by airlines through so called sale-leaseback transactions... Businesses are worried the U.S. may reimpose sanctions. "There is a substantial snap-back risk," said Olaf Sachau, chief executive of Intrepid Aviation.

IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL

The United Nations, the European Union and key players in the Iran nuclear agreement delivered a united message Wednesday aimed at U.S. President-elect Donald Trump: The deal is working and must be maintained to keep Tehran from developing a nuclear weapon. Speaker after speaker at a U.N. Security Council meeting on implementation of the 2015 deal stressed its historic nature and its success after its first year... While Trump was not mentioned by name, their messages were clearly intended for the new U.S. leader who will be inaugurated Friday and has strongly criticized the Iran deal, vowing at times during the presidential campaign either to walk away from it or to renegotiate it... EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini, who facilitated the agreement, praised the deal as "a major achievement" and said all participants have fulfilled their commitments, citing "a staggering 63 percent" rise in EU-Iran trade in the first three quarters of 2016 as one example of the results of lifting sanctions.

Iran's foreign minister said Thursday his country isn't worried and has options if U.S. President-elect Donald Trump ditches a nuclear agreement reached between Iran and six world powers. Despite "grievances" that Iran has over the pact made with the current U.S. government, Mohammad Javad Zarif said Iran still believes it should be honored. "Whatever he does to the nuclear deal, we are not worried because we have our own options. But we believe it's in the interest of everybody to stick to the deal. Most importantly it's an international agreement. It's not a bilateral agreement between Iran and the United States," he told reporters on the sidelines of a meeting in Kuala Lumpur... Asked what Iran will do If Trump's government walks away from the deal, Zarif said, "President Trump likes surprises and we will make him surprised." Pressed on what he meant, he laughed and said, "It won't be a surprise anymore if I tell you."

It would be better for the United States to carefully review the 2015 Iran nuclear deal rather than unilaterally withdraw from it, Nikki Haley, U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for ambassador to the United Nations, said on Wednesday. "I think what would be more beneficial at this point is that we look at all the details of the Iran deal, we see if they (the Iranians) are actually in compliance. If we find that there are violations that we act on those violations," Haley told lawmakers at her Senate confirmation hearing.

The United Nations Security Council needs to push Iran to abide by an arms embargo, outgoing U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power said on Wednesday amid U.N. concerns that Tehran has supplied weapons and missiles to Lebanese Shi'ite group Hezbollah. Most U.N. sanctions were lifted a year ago under a deal Iran made with Britain, France, Germany, China, Russia, the United States and the European Union to curb its nuclear program. But Iran is still subject to an arms embargo and other restrictions, which are not technically part of the nuclear agreement. In her last appearance at a public Security Council meeting before U.S. President Barack Obama's administration steps aside on Friday, Power said that recognizing "progress on Iran's nuclear issues should not distract this council from Iran's other actions that continue to destabilize the Middle East."Under a Security Council resolution enshrining the 2015 deal, the U.N. secretary-general is required to report every six months on any violations of sanctions still in place.

NUCLEAR & BALLISTIC MISSILE PROGRAM

Senior aide to the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) Asqar Zare'an announced that the country is preparing to inject gas into its latest generation of centrifuge machines, IR8, in the near future. "The mechanical tests of IR8 machine which has been made by Iranian experts and is fully indigenized have ended and we will inject uranium gas into a single machine within the framework of the nuclear deal in Natanz and under the supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in the very near future," Zare'an said on Wednesday. He stressed that the measure will increase the country's capability to enrich uranium, while it also sends a message to the world powers party to the 2015 nuclear deal that any violation of the agreement could convince Iran to revive its past nuclear operations with such a capability that it can replace the old centrifuge machines with advanced ones.

CONGRESSIONAL ACTION

As and Republicans are considering a bill that would require incoming president Donald Trump and his intelligence chiefs to investigate Tehran's use of its state-run civilian airline to ferry military parts and figures to its battleground in Syria. The bill is part of a larger effort by Rep. Peter Roskam (R-Illinois) to interrupt Iranian business with two of the world's largest aerospace companies, Boeing and Airbus. His new bill, titled the Terror-Free Skies Act, was introduced with Brad Sherman (D-California) and Lee Zeldin (R-New York). Iran argues that blocking or impeding its access to Boeing and Airbus products would violate a nuclear deal it brokered with world powers in 2015. That agreement, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, includes a provision which commits the US to "allow for the sale of commercial passenger aircraft and related parts and services" for "exclusively civil aviation end-use." But that last clause- "exclusively civil aviation end-use"- has some members of Congress convinced that Iran's airline deals can legally be halted, in full compliance with the JCPOA. That's because the US Treasury Department, State Department, and intelligence agencies all assess that Iran Air and its subsidiary, Mahan Air, are complicit in illicit arms transfers to Lebanon-based terrorist organization Hezbollah and in the assistance of Syria's embattled president, Bashar Assad.

SANCTIONS RELIEF

Iran and China will sign a $3 billion contract next month to upgrade Iran's oil refining capacity, according to Iran's Mehr News agency. Iran's deputy oil minister Abbas Kazemi said in Tehran on Tuesday that the deal will focus on upgrading the Abadan oil refinery, Mehr said. "Last week, China officially opened the financing for the plan to fix and improve the quality of the Abadan refinery," Mehr quoted Kazemi as saying. Iran's refineries are in a state of disrepair after years of sanctions which prevented access to parts and new technology. The deal is expected to be signed when a delegation of Chinese oil officials visit Tehran next month, Kazemi said, according to Mehr News.

Iran says it has signed a deal with Germany to cooperate over production of 50 diesel locomotives which will be used in the Iranian rail network. Iran's Minister of Roads and Urban Development Abbas Akhoundi said the deal was signed during a visit to Tehran by Germany's Minister of Transport and Digital Infrastructure, Alexander Dobrindt. Akhoundi was quoted as saying by IRNA news agency that the locomotives will be jointly produced by Germany's engineering giant Siemens and Iran Power Projects Management Company (MAPNA)... The remarks by Akhoundi and Dobrindt followed the signing of a memorandum of understanding between Iran and Germany to promote cooperation in various areas of the transportation industry.

Iran Airports and Air Navigation Company signed an MOU with Fraport AG, Munich Airport, and Dornier Consulting International GmbH in Tehran on Tuesday to boost airport and aviation ties with Germany. According to IRNA, the MOU was penned between Chairman of the Executive Board of Fraport AG Stefan Schulte, Business Director of Dornier Company Michael Holzschneider, President and Chief Executive Officer of Munich Airport Michael Kerkloh, and CEO of Iran Airports and Air Navigation Company Rahmatollah Mah-Abadi.

SYRIA CONFLICT

Iran is looking to Syria peace talks next week as a chance to build on its regional clout, experts say, as Tehran, Moscow and Ankara all stake out claims for influence. The Syrian army's victory in recapturing the rebel stronghold of east Aleppo last month has thrust Tehran to the centre of the diplomatic game playing out over the country's future. The win was achieved with crucial assistance from Iranian military advisors and thousands of "volunteer" fighters. President Hassan Rouhani said this week that the co-sponsors of the peace talks opening in Astana on Monday -- Iran, Russia and Turkey -- were the only powers with the influence to turn the fragile ceasefire between the Syrian government and rebels into a lasting settlement.

REGIONAL DESTABILIZATION

A Kuwaiti parliamentarian committee has protested against Iran's "antagonistic and provocative" practices, saying that they hampered any form of cooperation or attempt to improve relations. The parliament's Foreign Relations Committee said during a discussion with Foreign Affairs Minister Shaikh Sabah Al Khalid Al Sabah of the latest regional and international developments that Iran's hostile practices against Kuwait and Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries and that included smuggling in weapons and explosives and espionage networks as well as constant harassment in the Iranian media, threatened security. "Such a situation hampers cooperation and the development of our relations since it does not achieve the purpose of cooperation between neighbouring or Islamic countries," Head of the committee, MP Ali Al Deqbasi, said at a press conference following the meeting.

HUMAN RIGHTS

An Iranian bodybuilder has been arrested after publishing selfie of her muscles on social media which were deemed to be 'nude'. The woman, who is accused of breaking the Islamic Republic's strict rules on nudity, has been locked up in prison because she was unable to post bail of two million rials (£50), according to the Mizanonline news agency. She has not been identified but it is thought she may be Shirin Nobahari, one of two women who took part in an international competition and were reported in September to have been warned about selfies which they posted afterwards. Ms Nobahari's Instagram account, which users the moniker Shirin Muscleking, contains a number of photographs and videos of her showing off her biceps and lifting weights.

OPINION & ANALYSIS

The death last week of Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, one of the Islamic Republic of Iran's founding fathers, represents not just the loss of an elder statesman. It's a political blow to the fortunes of reformists and moderates in Iran for three main reasons: Rafsanjani's revolutionary street cred; his absence from the Assembly of Experts -- the body that selects the next supreme leader; and his promotion of republicanism within Iran. Rafsanjani's power stemmed not from his resume -- Friday prayer imam, Iran-Iraq War commander, parliament speaker, president -- but from his relationship with the leader of Iran's Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. He was one of the few members of Khomeini's inner circle still active on the political scene in Tehran. In fact, Iran's current supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, owes his political career to Rafsanjani. In 1978, when Khomeini announced the formation of an Islamic Revolutionary Council from Paris, it was Rafsanjani who suggested Khamenei join -- Khamenei was a mid-ranking cleric living at the time in Mashhad. In 1989, when Khomeini died, it was Rafsanjani yet again who invoked his special relationship as one of Khomeini's key lieutenants to push for the elevation of Khamenei as supreme leader, disclosing that Khomeini revealed his choice of Khamenei on his deathbed. This was Rafsanjani's power in action -- the ability to speak authentically and authoritatively as a disciple of Khomeini and in the process, serving as political kingmaker.

Western leaders have displayed astonishing unwillingness to acknowledge the evidence of their own intelligence agencies and militaries concerning Iranian interference in Yemen and the region. During Gen. James Mattis' Senate hearings for his appointment as defense secretary last week, it emerged the degree to which Barack Obama's administration had closed its ears to Mattis' weekly warnings about Iran's destabilizing role in Yemen, Bahrain, Iraq and elsewhere during his tenure as America's top military commander in the Middle East. Eventually Obama's team, preoccupied with engaging Iran, had enough of being told what it did not want to hear, and the general was replaced.

One year ago this week, the European Union, China, France, Germany, Russia, the UK, the US and Iran began to implement the joint comprehensive plan of action on Iran's nuclear programme. This agreement was the result of brave choices, political leadership, collective determination and hard work. A year on, we can clearly say that the Iran deal is working and we need to maintain it. To those critics who have raised concerns, both about the terms of the agreement or about the very idea of having an agreement at all with Iran, I say: take a close look at the facts. The agreement has already paid off by addressing a highly contentious and longstanding dispute in a peaceful manner. In its absence, today we might be facing one more military conflict, in a region that is already far too destabilised. The deal, one year after its implementation, is delivering on its main purpose: ensuring the purely peaceful, civilian nature of Iran's nuclear programme... The deal is also working for Iran. Major companies are investing in the country: the oil sector, the automotive industry, commercial aircraft, just to give a few examples, are areas where significant contracts have been concluded. The International Monetary Fund has forecast real GDP growth in Iran to rebound to 6.6% in 2016-17.

Just before the one-year anniversary of Jason Rezaian's freedom from an Iranian prison, Iran announced plans that will sabotage its own economy to spite the West. Last week, Al-Arabiya news reported that  Iran's judiciary decided to revoke the Iranian citizenship of anyone holding dual citizenship with another country . The finality of this proposal is unclear due to conflicting media reports. This could target men and women like Rezaian, a Washington Post reporter, and Siamak Namazi, an American businessman who is currently in a notorious Tehran prison. While the action may satisfy the paranoid and power-hungry Revolutionary Guard that is responsible for the arrest and imprisonment of dozens of dual nationals - mostly American and British citizens - it would seriously hamper Iran's ability to attract the foreign investment and engage its economy needs. Dual nationals, many raised abroad, often have a cultural and linguistic fluency with Iran that non-Iranians lack, no matter their language training or cultural emersion. Moreover, since the Islamic Revolution, Americans who also held Iranian passports have travelled there more easily. Once in Iran, though, they have often faced harassment and recently imprisonment, as Rezaian did. Since the 1979 Revolution, dual nationals, some born abroad, have regularly returned to visit family, study and engage in business as natural conduits between cultures and economies.






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@uani.com.

United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) is a non-partisan, broad-based coalition that is united in a commitment to prevent Iran from fulfilling its ambition to become a regional super-power possessing nuclear weapons.  UANI is an issue-based coalition in which each coalition member will have its own interests as well as the collective goal of advancing an Iran free of nuclear weapons.

No comments:

Post a Comment