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Khamenei Adviser Joins Warnings To Iraqi Kurds Over ‘Terrorist Groups’

Oct 7, 2021, 06:25 GMT+1Updated: 16:00 GMT+0
Major-General Yahya Rahim-Safavi, military advisor to Iran's Supreme Leader. FILE PHOTO
Major-General Yahya Rahim-Safavi, military advisor to Iran's Supreme Leader. FILE PHOTO

The military adviser to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei warned Wednesday that Iran would not accept “any bordering country” hosting "anti-Iran terrorist groups."

“We warn that we will deal with counter-revolutionary groups anywhere on the borders around our country, where governments host them and provide them with facilities and weapons,” Major-General Yahya Rahim-Safavi told Defa Press, news agency of the Iranian Armed Forces.

Rahim-Safavi, a former commander-in-chief of the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC), called in particular on the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in Iraq not to allow bases for such groups.

In recent days, Iran has also been warning neighboring Azerbaijan about what it alleges are foreign jihadist groups near its borders. The accusation goes back to last year's Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict when reports emerged of Arab Sunni militants fighting on the Azerbaijani side.

Several Iranian Kurdish parties committed to autonomy − including the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI), Komala and Pejak (the Free Life Party of Kurdistan) − have bases in northern Iraq with varying degrees of tolerance from the Iraqi Kurdish authorities and parties.

On Monday, Foreign Ministry Spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said Iran had lost “strategic patience,” and that both the KRG and the Baghdad government needed to shut down, in accordance with international law, bases where "armed grouplets train to attack Iran."

Other officials including Major-General Mohammad Bagheri (Baqeri), chairman of the Iranian Chiefs of Staff, and Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib have issued similar warnings to the KRG in recent weeks.

Iran's armed forces have for decades carried out cross-border attacks on Iranian Kurdish groups in northern Iraq, sometimes prompting the Iraqi Kurdish parties to restrict their activities. The Iranian Kurdish parties have carried out sporadic attacks while concentrating on maintaining a presence inside Iranian Kurdistan.

In June Iran and Turkey conducted joint operations against forces of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and its Iranian affiliate, Pejak, in Kurdish Iraq. Iran also bombarded the positions of other Kurdish groups, including the KDPI and Komala.

Iran used combat drones and artillery September 9-10 in repeating these attacks. This came three days after General Mohammad Pakpour, commander of IRGC Ground Forces, had complained to Erbil and Baghdad over the freedom of movement of Kurdish fighters near the border and warned civilians to keep away from the groups’ headquarters to avoid danger.

The Iraqi army chief of staff Abdul Amir Rashid Yarallah on September 21 called Iranian claims over the Kurdish groups “unjustified” and insisted Baghdad “strongly rejects the use of its territory for aggression against its neighbors.” Yarallah asked “everyone to adhere to the language of brotherhood and cooperation in joint relations.”

Iran has options for escalation. Three years ago it fired ballistic missiles at the KDPI headquarters in Koysanjak, northern Iraq, killing at least 16.

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Russian-Iranian Talks In Moscow Cover Regional, Nuclear Issues

Oct 6, 2021, 15:53 GMT+1

The Iranian and Russian foreign ministers held wide-ranging talks in Moscow, covering bilateral cooperation, regional tensions and Iran’s nuclear talks.

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said Iran and Russia should work towards improving their relationship.

"Our viewpoints are very common and close to each other. A major part of the time of our talks was spent on bilateral issues. We agreed on working up a comprehensive strategic document on the cooperation between the two countries in near future," Amir-Aabdollahian said at a press conference with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Moscow on Wednesday.

Russia has been Iran’s diplomatic supporter and a military ally in Syria where Russian air power and Iran-backed forces helped largely defeat opponents of Bashar al-Assad.

On Azerbaijan, he said Iran discussed its concerns with Lavrov. "We believe the region cannot tolerate new excessive demands," the Iranian foreign minister told reporters.

Tensions have risen between Iran and the Republic of Azerbaijan in recent weeks as Baku has hampered Iranian trucks traveling north in a small patch of territory it controls. Tehran has lashed back with military drills on the border and accusations that Baku has allowed Israel to establish a presence near its borders.

Amir-Abdollahian expressed concern over what he said was Israel’s presence and influence in neighboring Azerbaijan.

The two sides also discussed Iran’s talks with world powers over its nuclear program that Tehran has suspended since June. Lavrov echoing Western calls said that the nuclear negotiations in the "Vienna format" should be resumed "as soon as possible".

Washington pulled out of the deal unilaterally in 2018 under US President Donald Trump, but successor Joe Biden has indicated that the US would be willing to rejoin.

But there are complications. Iran has been steadily violating the restrictions of the deal, like the amount of enriched uranium it can stockpile and the purity to which it can enrich it. Lavrov also urged closer cooperation between Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency.

On the settlement in the Caucasian region, Lavrov said Moscow was discussing the so-called 3+3 format.

"We discussed an initiative to create the format 3+3: three Transcaucasian countries and three big neighbors - Russia, Iran and Turkey. Iranian friends have a positive view regarding this initiative, and we can see the same feeling in Azerbaijan and Turkey," Lavrov said.

"We work with our Armenian colleagues. We believe that Georgia, despite all the problems it faces, will be interested in such a mechanism of consultations," Lavrov added.

Russia brokered a peace deal between Armenian and Azerbaijan last November, ending last year's six-week war with Azerbaijan.

The deal ceded large swathes of territory in Azerbaijan that had been controlled by Armenian forces since 1994 and was a severe blow to Armenian nationalists' pride.

Iran, Saudi Arabia Reportedly Get Ready To Re-Open Embassies

Oct 6, 2021, 13:42 GMT+1
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Maryam Sinaiee

Arabic Post claims Saudi Arabia and Iran are well into preparations for the mutual reopening of embassies and consulates, which have been closed since 2016.

The London-based news site cited an “Iraqi diplomatic source” and “Iranian sources.” The latter, said Arabic Post, claimed Saudi Arabia had sent a team to Iran to renovate and update security and technical systems in its Tehran embassy and Mashhad consulate, and that Iran had sent a security delegation to prepare its Riyadh embassy and Jeddah consulate to for re-opening.

Arabic Post also claimed its Iranian sources had confirmed that managing talks with Saudi Arabia had been transferred from the foreign ministry to the Supreme National Security Council and its secretary, Ali Shamkhani.

Riyadh closed its embassy and cut diplomatic ties with Iran in 2016 after protestors stormed the Saudi embassy in Tehran in protest at the Saudis executing 47 dissidents including leading Shi'ite cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr.

Foreign Ministry Spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh declined to confirm Monday that a Saudi delegation would be visiting Tehran to prepare the embassy.

4th round of talks

Saudi Arabia announced Sunday it had held September 21 its direct talks with the new government of President Ebrahim Raisi (Raeesi). This was the fourth round of Iraqi-brokered talks that began in Baghdad in April as Iran also opened talks with world powers in Vienna over reviving its 2015 nuclear deal, the JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) from which the US withdrew in 2018.

In a press conference in Riyadh with European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell October, Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan al-Saud said discussions were at an exploratory stage: “We hope they will provide a basis to address unresolved issues between the two sides and we will strive and work to realize that.”

Prince Faisal reiterated Saudi concerns over Iran’s "transgressions" in its nuclear program. Iran in turn called for Riyadh to open its nuclear sites to full inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

Iran has not commented specifically on the latest round of meetings, although the spokesman Khatibzadeh described talks with Saudi Arabia as "optimal" Monday and said neither side had set preconditions.

Raisi priority

Raisi and his foreign policy team have several times emphasized a priority in improving relations with regional countries. The challenge with Saudi Arabia lies in overcoming rivalries in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen, where Riyadh and Tehran are allied with rival or warring parties. Official of both countries have recently cautiously expressed optimism over normalizing diplomatic relations.

Several world powers have welcomed Saudi-Iran talks. Riyadh this year became a dialogue partner of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which Tehran is now joining as a full member. While allied with Iran in supporting Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, Russia has recently reached a military agreement with Saudi Arabia, while China is a major oil customer of both Iran and Saudi Arabia.

The US Special Envoy for Iran Robert Malley tweeted Monday welcoming Saudi Arabia’s “announcement of direct talks” with Iran, expressing hope that dialogue would “contribute to de-escalation of tensions & address long-standing regional concerns,” and suggesting “full, mutual return [of Iran and the US] to JCPOA would support these regional efforts.”

The British Ambassador to Iraq, Mark Bryson, in a meeting with Iraqi National Security Adviser Qassem al-Araji Tuesday said London welcomed the dialogue and expressed hope it would expand to include all regional countries.

Cyprus Extends Custody For Suspect Israel Says Was Iranian 'Hit Man'

Oct 6, 2021, 13:25 GMT+1

A court in Cyprus on Wednesday extended the detention of a man that Israel alleges was a would-be assassin recruited by Iran to attack Israeli businesspeople.

The man was arrested in the Cypriot capital Nicosia on Sept. 27. Police say that when he was intercepted a pistol with a silencer were found in his rental vehicle.

Israel said it was a "terrorist incident directed by Iran" against Israelis on the island, a charge dismissed as "baseless" by the Iranian embassy in Nicosia.

Police have been tight-lipped about the incident. The suspect was taken to a district court in Nicosia on Wednesday, where the order remanding him in custody was extended until Monday.

The suspect has not been charged and officials have not identified him, beyond describing him as an ethnic Azeri with a Russian passport.

"Investigations are proceeding at a rapid pace," police spokesman Christos Andreou told state TV. He declined to comment on the Israeli claims, citing the ongoing investigation.

Cyprus's authoritative Phileleftheros daily said the suspect, thought to have arrived in Cyprus 20 days prior to his arrest, was not cooperating with police.

On Tuesday the suspect indicated to police where he had rented two cars, from the resort town of Ayia Napa in the south-east of the island.

Police have not traced where the suspect was staying prior to his arrest, the newspaper said. Authorities believe he may have been staying in the Turkish-held north of the ethnically split island, it said.

Report by Reuters

Azerbaijan Says It Will Use Armenian Airspace After Iran Bans 'Military Flights'

Oct 6, 2021, 12:47 GMT+1

Azerbaijan has announced that it will use Armenia’s airspace for flights to its Nakhichevan enclave after Iran on Tuesday closed its airspace to these flights.

Armenia and Azerbaijan are technically at war with an agreed ceasefire in place along their border. The Armenian civil aviation committee has so far been silent about the news. Without Armenia’s permission, Azerbaijani overflights can become a new source of tensions.

The Azerbaijani national carrier AZAL said in a statement on Wednesday, “From now on, AZAL can use all available air corridors, including those passing through the territories of Armenia and Iran, in carrying out this flight.”

Tensions between Iran and the Republic of Azerbaijan have spiked in recent weeks, as Baku arrested two Iranian truck drivers travelling to Armenia in a segment of territory under its control. Iran announced Tuesday that it will not allow Azerbaijani flights carrying military provisions to use its airspace to reach Nakhchevan. The enclave is surrounded by Iran and Armenia.

It is not clear why the civilian airliner wants to divert all its flights.

Land transit from Azerbaijan Republic through Iran to Nachchevan has not been restricted.

Iran Appoints Financial Functionary As Central Bank Chief

Oct 6, 2021, 11:51 GMT+1

The government of President Ebrahim Raisi on Wednesday approved the appointment of a 43-year-old economic functionary as Chairman of Central Bank of Iran (CBI).

Ali Salehababdi is now another younger member of Raisi’s team. He was during the revolution in Iran, which overthrew the monarchy and established the Islamic Republic.

Although Iran’s central bank does not have the independence that many other central banks around the world enjoy, its chairman can still have an input in economic decisions such as the extent of the money supply and interest rates.

Salehabadi, who was appointed as the first chairman of Iran’s securities and exchange commission when he was 28, has a PhD from Tehran University in “financial management” according to local media. He also held other positions in the quasi-governmental financial system, such as chairman of the state-owned Export Development Bank of Iran (EBDI) since 2014.

The bank was sanctioned by the United States in 2008, for violating United Nations sanctions in “providing or attempting to provide financial services to Iran's Ministry of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics (MODAFL).”

Salehabadi is yet another member of president Raisi’s team, along with several others, who have been either sanctioned in person or associated with sanctioned entities. Raisi, himself, has been sanctioned by the Trump administration.

Local media in Tehran said there are expectations that Salehabadi would lower interest rates and boost the Tehran stock market, which has a checkered history of government manipulation. In 2020, the market index grew to 2 million units encouraged by the government and then fell by 50 percent, wiping out the savings of many small investors, who had flocked to the exchange to protect their capitals from depreciation of the local currency against the dollar.

Iran has been printing money to finance government operations since the United States imposed sanctions in 2018, banning crude oil exports. This led to a huge growth in liquidity and a 50-percent inflation rate.

The only economic salvation for Iran would be an agreement with the United States over its nuclear program and other issues and lifting of economic sanctions.