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Former Nuclear Chief Says US Should Acknowledge Iran As A World Power

Jan 31, 2022, 16:16 GMT+0
Fereydoun Abbasi, Iran's former nuclear chief and hardliner member of parliament.
Fereydoun Abbasi, Iran's former nuclear chief and hardliner member of parliament.

Iran's former nuclear chief Fereydoun Abbasi who is a hardliner member of parliament says it is not in Iran's interest to enter direct negotiations with US.

Abbasi’s comment comes as several lawmakers have lately supported the idea of holding direct talks with the United States,

Abbasi said in an interview with Asr Iran website, "holding direct talks with America is not in our interest as long as the United States has not acknowledged that Iran is a world power."

Critics mocked Abbasi for this statement on social media. Iranian Twitter user Mohammad Hossein Karimipour wrote in response: "A country whose military budget is less than 0.5% of the rest of the world and has no air force and a seaworthy naval force fit for the oceans, and a country that cannot have financial transactions with the world, cannot be a world power. This boastful gang suffering from delusions has taken the nation hostage!"

Other critics charged that true nature of individuals such as Abbasi will be revealed only if the Russian embassy in Tehran is seized, and secrets come out. This comment implicitly referred to the seizure of the US embassy in 1979 and documents discovered.

Another critic said "These individuals benefit from Iran’s current situation. They benefit from the lack of transparency and plunder taking place in the country."

Abbasi harshly criticizing the previous government said, "While the former nuclear negotiating team led by Foreign Minister Javad Zarif believed that I am an uneducated person, the current lead negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani usually comes to the parliament and speaks with me as an expert on the nuclear issue."

Abbasi also claimed that "in order to be able to get results in the nuclear negotiations, we first need to liberate the Golan heights at the Syrian-Israeli border."

Abbasi also claimed that the current negotiations in Vienna between Iran and world powers are not about the nuclear issue. All the negotiations have been already done and their outcome is the nuclear deal called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), he said. He added that Iran's previous government failed to have the sanctions lifted although it had promised that with JCPOA economic restrictions would be removed.

"The current negotiations are about lifting the sanctions. There is no discussion about the nuclear issue. The dossier of the nuclear talks has been closed and the other side should now fulfil their commitments under the nuclear deal," Abbasi said, adding that "No other matter including discussions about the region, our exit from the region or the issue of Iran's missile programs can be discussed as part of the Vienna negotiations."

Abbasi reiterated that Iran will enter direct talks with the United States only after Washington “treats us in the same way it deals with Russia and China,” but if Washington wants to talk with Iran from a position of power without acknowledging it as a world power, it will not be in our interest to talk with the US.

Asked if an agreement made in Vienna needs to be ratified by the Majles (parliament), Abbasi said the legislature has already approved the JCPOA. The current negotiations are not over a new agreement.

Abbasi's statement about Iran respecting its commitments under the nuclear deal is contrary to facts on the ground that indicate Iran has more centrifuges than allowed by the JCPOA and has boosted Uranium enrichment far beyond the level allowed by the nuclear deal.

Abbasi also insisted that the JCPOA's opponents have not changed their mind. This comes while some hardliner members of the parliament, particularly at the National Security and Foreign Relations Committee have recently expressed support for direct talks with the United States.

Peyman Shahbaz, a Twitter user said Abbasi was overwhelmed by his own delusion and added jokingly that "Let him be a world power for two minutes!"

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Iran Rejects Morocco’s Accusation Of Spreading Shiism In Africa

Jan 31, 2022, 15:28 GMT+0

Iran’s Foreign Ministry has rejected Morocco’s claims that the Islamic Republic wants to infiltrate Africa and expand Shiite ideology on the continent.

Speaking at his weekly press conference on Monday, foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said the remarks by the Moroccan Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita are baseless, describing them as “unfounded projections”.

Last week, Bourita said that the Islamic Republic is threatening “the spiritual security of Africa" and vowed to stop Iran’s attempts to spread its influence on the continent.

"Iran plans to enter West Africa and to spread the Shia doctrine in the region," he said.

He also accused the Islamic Republic of supporting Yemen’s Houthis who regularly target Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

"Morocco’s support for what the state of Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates has been subjected to is a clear message to denounce the abuses of the Houthis and the policy of Iran that stands behind them”, Bourita added.

Morocco severed diplomatic ties with Iran in 2018, saying the Tehran-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah was training Polisario Front separatist fighters against Morocco in Western Sahara.

Iran-backed Houthis have launched missile and drone attacks on three occasions against the UAE in January.

Many countries in the region accuse Iran of interference in the domestic affairs of its neighboring countries.

Iran Reportedly Sending Trade Delegation To UAE Amid Houthi Attacks

Jan 31, 2022, 15:15 GMT+0

Iran will send a trade delegation to the United Arab Emirates next week, the Tehran Times said on Monday, although other media in Iran have not reported it.

The reported visit would come against a backdrop of Yemen's Iran-backed Houthi movement launching attacks on the UAE, the latest also on Monday.

The UAE has long been one of Iran's main links to the outside world, but the reimposition of sanctions by former U.S. President Donald Trump in 2018 halved bilateral trade to $7 billion in 2019 according to World Bank data.

Iran's Minister of Industry will visit the UAE with the economic delegation from February 6, the English-language government newspaper reported.

"During the three-day visit, Reza Fatemi-Amin will also meet with the UAE government and private sector officials to discuss economic and trade relations," it added.

"The trip has been organized in line with the Iranian government's plans for developing economic and trade diplomacy with countries in the region, especially Iran's southern neighbours."

The UAE government did not immediately respond to Reuters' request for comment on the report.

Despite Iran's continued support to the Houthis, Tehran and Abu Dhabi have tried to abate tensions.

In December, Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed al-Nahyan, the UAE's senior national security adviser, visited Iran and expressed hopes of a "turning point" in Iranian-UAE relations.

Seven Teachers Arrested After Nationwide Protests In Iran

Jan 31, 2022, 12:28 GMT+0

Iranian teachers have taken to streets in more nationwide protests after a two-day strike at their schools, as security forces arrested at least 7 activists.

On Monday, teachers held demonstrations in many Iranian cities to follow up on their demands for higher pay and release of their colleagues arrested in previous rounds of protests.

The spokesman of teachers’ trade associations, which organizes the demonstrations, said at least seven people have been arrested since Saturday, including three in Shiraz and two in Tehran.

According to Mohammad Habibi, teachers in 300 cities, town, and villages took part in the sit-ins in the last two days.

Teachers' protest in Esfahan on Monday.

Also on Monday, the Karaj Revolutionary Court sentenced a member of the council, Jafar Ebrahimi, to four years and six months in prison.

As in the past, the teachers gathered in front of the parliament building in Tehran and the provincial offices of the education ministry.

Habibi said teachers will not be intimidated by the attempts to suppress the protests and will continue protests and strikes until their demands are met.

People from different walks of life, including teachers, nurses, firefighters, and even staff members of the judiciary department and prison guards, have held regular protest rallies or strikes to demand higher salaries.

Food prices have risen by more than 60 percent in recent months, on top of high inflation in the previous three years, while the government is unable to sufficiently boost wages as United States’ sanctions impede full capacity oil exports and international trade.

Iran Says Nuclear Issue Can Be Fast Resolved With 'Right Response'

Jan 31, 2022, 11:03 GMT+0

A “lasting” agreement on reviving the 2015 Iran nuclear deal is reachable as soon as negotiators return to Vienna, Iran’s foreign affairs spokesman said Monday.

With Iran’s talks with world powers in the Austrian capital paused Friday for political consultations in the various capitals, Saeed Khatibzadeh told reporters at his weekly press briefing that there would be “no need for forged deadlines if the right response is given to what are Iran's natural rights, the texts it has offered, and Iran's lawful demands.”

A “lasting agreement" was possible, the spokesman insisted, "the day after" delegations returned to Vienna as long the right decisions were taken by world powers, especially the United States. Khatibzadeh reiterated that Iran should not be asked to agree to anything beyond the 2015 nuclear agreement, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

The required decisions, Khatibzadeh said, concerned the "considerable issues” remaining over lifting US sanctions and in reaching "acceptable progress” over Iran’s request for both verification over lifting sanctions and guarantees that Washington would not again renege on the JCPOA.

"We are past the stage of ideas,” Khatibzadeh said. “The Iranian delegation in the past three weeks constructively put everything down in writing. We are now awaiting the response of the other sides."

In a speech Sunday, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei quoted US State Department spokesman Ned Price to bolster his argument that Iran had beaten US sanctions, an “economic assault” that had harmed Iranians, he said. “But production did not buckle, and the spokesman of America’s foreign ministry a few days ago candidly and unequivocally announced that the maximum pressure policy has turned into a humiliating defeat for America.”

President Donald Trump introduced ‘maximum pressure’ sanctions in 2018 as he withdrew the US from the JCPOA while setting a range of demands including that Tehran end all uranium enrichment, stop its missile defense program, and break its regional alliance. In response after 2019, Iran extended its nuclear program beyond JCPOA limits.

In a telephone talk Saturday, President Ebrahim Raisi reiterated Tehran’s position that removal of sanctions, verification, and credible guarantees were basic requirements for agreement in Vienna.

A senior US official last week argued that the other five world powers − China, France, Germany, Russia, and the United Kingdom − had joined the US in rejecting proposals made by new Iranian negotiators appointed by Raisi, who took office in August, and that talks had returned to the stage reached in June. Iran's delegation met with the Chinese and Russian delegations just before the break in talks announced Friday.

But whatever technical issues remain, US, Iranian and other representatives last weekall stressed the need for political decisions. The Russian envoy to the talks, Mikhail Ulyanov, said the talks had reached an advanced stage requiring political choices.

Ulyanov said the break would not be very long. The eighth round of talks in Vienna, which began on December 27, are to resume sometime this week.

Talk of an ‘interim deal’, steps towards reviving the JCPOA, has subsided at least in public. The idea floated around for months that the US might ‘allow’ the ‘unfreezing’ of Iranian assets held in Asian banks in return for caps on Iran’s nuclear program short of the JCPOA limits.

In his Monday briefing, Khatibzadeh criticized officials in South Korea, which reportedly holds $7 billion of Iranian funds, owed mainly for past oil purchases. “Unfortunately, we don't have a good experience of what Korean officials say,” the spokesman noted.

CEO OF Quasi-Public Firm In Iran Pocketed 230k Euros For Business Trips

Jan 31, 2022, 10:41 GMT+0

Reports have revealed that a manager in one of Iran’s semi-public companies has pocketed €230,000 for his business travels abroad.

The head of Iran’s Mahab Qods Consulting Company, which operates in dam and hydropower industry under the Energy Ministry, has been paid €500 per day during his work trips to other countries.

The quasi-governmental engineering company -- one of Iran’s biggest -- was founded to build embankment and gravity dams in Iran but has changed its focus to small projects overseas for more profit.

According to Mehr news agency, the CEO of the firm, Nasser Tarkeshdouz, has been on domestic business trips for three days in the last five years, but spent 576 days in foreign countries during 117 trips, for which he received €233,200 euros.

The astronomical payment by Iranian standards is apart from his own salary that is most probably much higher than salaries ordinary Iranians receive.

According to data published in December, there is a vast difference between minimum and maximum salaries in Iran.

While the minimum wage across the government is fixed at about $120 a month, the highest earning personnel can get up to $10,000.

The high paid employees are usually well-connected individuals who have access to extra legitimate or illicit incomes if they are part of the financial corruption network in the country.