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Every Country Iran Touches Becomes A Failed State, Says Israel's Ex-PM

Iran International Newsroom
Apr 20, 2023, 16:41 GMT+1Updated: 17:36 GMT+1
Former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett during an interview with Iran International’s Arash Alaei
Former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett during an interview with Iran International’s Arash Alaei

Former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett compared Iran to a failed state which has infected every country it touches in the region with its dysfunction.

Bennett was speaking in an exclusive interview with Iran International’s Arash Alaei in Washington DC, just hours after the ex-PM had met officials from the Biden administration and been reassured that the US would not tolerate a nuclear Iran.

He said: “Islamic Republic’s biggest export is failed states.

“Every state that the regime touches fails. It touches Lebanon, Lebanon fails; it touches Syria, Syria fails; it touches Yemen, Yemen fails.”

In the wide-ranging interview, Bennett spoke about Iran’s proxy war with Israel, and the historic bilateral ties that according to the Bible began when Persian King Cyrus the Great liberated the Jews from the Babylonian captivity to resettle and rebuild Jerusalem.

He underlined that the Islamic Republic spends tens of billions of dollars every year to support terror groups such as Hezbollah and Islamic Jihad instead of its own people, noting that such a substantial amount should be invested in Iran’s clean water and air issues.

“If I take all of the operations, meaning what they do in Lebanon, what they do in Yemen, what they do in Syria, what they do around the world and the salaries of the Qods forces (IRGC’s extraterritorial division) -- which are the external export of the revolution -- we're talking about a ballpark of $20 to $30 billion a year,” Bennett said.

“Unfortunately, the Islamic Republic simply does not care about its people.”

According to Bennett’s estimates, the Islamic Republic can pay at least two months of minimum wage to each and every one of its 88 million population per year with the money spent on its proxy war.

He also referred to the ‘Women, Life, Liberty’ protests, sparked by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini following his arrest for “improper hijab” in September 2022, and the regime's bloody crackdown on the voices of dissent via heavy sentences and restricting access to internet.

A scene of Iranians’ protests in the capital Tehran  (November 2022)
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A scene of Iranians’ protests in the capital Tehran

Bennett said that young boys and girls should be able to pursue their dreams, be free to roam social media, and say whatever they want wherever they want, boasting that in Israel “no one will ever stop them on the street and tell them what to do, what to wear and what not to wear." “Every child in Iran should have the ability to pursue happiness and pursue their dreams,” he added.

About the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers, Bennett said that the value of the JCPOA has eroded because most of the critical provisions are fading, noting that “both America and Israel are fully coordinated on preventing the Islamic Republic from acquiring nuclear weapons.”

Differentiating between Iran’s intentions of making a nuclear bomb and its technical capabilities, he said, “It's not that simple to produce a bomb. We don't want them to acquire a nuclear bomb and we don't want to depend on the intentions that are in the head of one person, Khamenei. Therefore, we don't want that capability to exist in the Islamic Republic... because that would prolong the terrorist nature of the Islamic Republic.”

He also touched on the issue of keeping the Revolutionary Guards in the US list of terrorist groups and called on other countries to follow suit. “President Biden himself committed to me directly when I was prime minister just a few months ago that he would keep the IRGC on the terror list permanently because the IRGC is the world's largest terror group,” he said, adding: “I see across the world that more and more countries are going down that route, be it Australia, the UK, etc.

“The IRGC not only is a huge terror group, it's also one of the biggest violators of human rights on Earth. It's killing its own people. This is crazy. Imagine in America if you had its own Armed Forces killing Americans, that would be crazy.”

On Wednesday, the current Israeli premier, Benjamin Netanyahu, spoke to CNBC in a wide-ranging interview similar to that of Bennett, also warning countries against bolstering ties with the Islamic Republic.

In reaction to Riyadh’s China-brokered deal with its arch-rival Tehran, Netanyahu said, “Those who partner with Iran partner with misery. Look at Lebanon, look at Yemen, look at Syria, look at Iraq.” He added that “95% of the problems in the Middle East emanate from Iran.”

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US Denies Claims Iran Forced Submarine To Surface In Strait Of Hormuz

Apr 20, 2023, 15:20 GMT+1

The US has denied claims by Iran that it forced an American submarine to surface as it entered the Strait of Hormuz.

Iranian Navy Commander Shahram Irani said on Thursday that the vessel was underwater as it approached the Strait when it was spotted by an Iranian 'Fateh' submarine which forced it to come to the surface.

Irani said: "The US submarine was approaching while submerged, but the Iranian submarine Fateh detected it and carried out... maneuvers to force it to surface as it went through the Strait (of Hormuz).

“It had also entered into our territorial waters but ... it corrected its course after being warned.”

The Iranian commander claimed: "This submarine was doing its best, using all its capacities, to pass in total silence and without being detected.

"We will certainly reflect to international bodies the fact that it had violated our border."

However, the Fifth Fleet of the US Navy denied such report as Iranian "disinformation". Commander Timothy Hawkins told Reuters that no US submarine has transited the Strait of Hormuz “today or recently”.

He added: "The claim represents more Iranian disinformation that does not contribute to regional maritime security and stability."

Earlier this month, the US Navy confirmed that its nuclear-powered, guided-missile submarine Florida was in the Middle East supporting its Fifth Fleet.

Several confrontations have occurred between Iranian and US forces in the past. Iran's navy said in early April that a US reconnaissance plane had been identified and warned off outside the mouth of the Persian Gulf. Iran shot down a US drone it said was flying over southern Iran in 2019.

Iranian Writers’ Association Vows To Strive For Freedom Of Expression

Apr 20, 2023, 14:14 GMT+1

The Iranian Writers’ Association has marked its 55th anniversary by renewing its commitment to freedom of expression in the Islamic Republic.

In a statement, the association said, "Freedom of expression is the gateway to other freedoms, and hope for change does not fit within the framework of tyranny.

"We are celebrating the 55th anniversary of the establishment of the Iranian Writers' Association in a situation that the regime has spilled the blood of countless freedom-seekers and protesters, executed some, and jailed many in prisons."

The association recalled how last year, hours after the murder of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in police custody, it openly expressed solidarity with the freedom movement of the Iranian people.

The public stance in defiance of the authoritarian regime’s crackdown and crimes has led to the widespread suppression of the Iranian Writers Association, reads the statement.

But the association vowed that the brutal repression will not stop their quest for freedom.

The Iranian regime increased the number of arrests of prominent writers and other artists after popular antigovernment protests broke out in September 2022.

According to PEN America’s 2021 Freedom to Write Index, Iran jailed the fourth-highest number of writers and public intellectuals in the world. In 2022, arrests of writers and other artists have spiked dramatically.

A prominent member of the Writers Association, Reza Khandan Mahabadi, was released in February after months of detention.

He wrote on his Facebook page after his release that the Iranian regime’s suppression of protests added to people's grief, but “it could not put the genie back into the bottle.”

Saudi Arabia More Popular Than Iran In Muslim Countries - Gallup

Apr 20, 2023, 13:29 GMT+1

Saudi Arabia has far greater approval ratings than Iran in other Muslim countries across the region, analysis by Gallup reveals.

According to the research conducted in 2022 across 13 Muslim-majority countries by the US-based pollsters, Saudi Arabia's leadership received the approval of 39% of those surveyed, against just 14% for Iran.

The Kingdom showed sharply higher support still both in Kuwait, where a 47%-point approval difference illustrates close ties between Gulf Cooperation Council countries and OPEC partners, and also Libya, where Saudi Arabia enjoys a 41-point advantage in popularity.

Saudi Arabia has greater popularity in all countries polled, stretching from Morocco to Pakistan. The difference is most muted in Turkey, where the advantage is just three points.

Iran-Saudi Arabia-Gallup
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There is a relatively small approval gap in the Palestinian Territories of 12 points, but still Saudi Arabia is more popular there despite Iran’s all-out support for the resistance groups.

Most countries where Iran has had the greatest influence give Tehran low marks, including Iraq (86% disapproval), Yemen (80%) and Lebanon (73%).

Iran-Saudi-Gallup
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After the 1979 revolution, the theocratic government of Iran quickly formed enemies throughout the Middle East when it demanded overthrow of Gulf monarchies and secular Arab governments. The Islamic Republic’s support for Shia minorities in Sunni-majority countries placed it at odds with the countries in the Middle East.

After seven years of hostility that fueled conflicts across the Middle East, Tehran and Riyadh agreed to end their diplomatic rift and reopen their diplomatic missions in March.

Gallup-Iran-Saudi Arabia
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Argument Ensues Between Iran Factions Over Issue Of US Compensation

Apr 20, 2023, 12:43 GMT+1
•
Maryam Sinaiee

Former President Hassan Rouhani says Iran’s current nuclear negotiators unsuccessfully demanded compensation from the United States to claim an “achievement.”

The claim was made in an article published on Rouhani’s personal website Monday which also refuted that he had opposed seeking damages as a result of Donald Trump’s sanctions.

Rouhani’s hardliner opponents charged in March that the former president opposed demanding compensation from the US during talks to revive the 2015 nuclear deal, officially known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

Rouhani’s website alleged that the administration of President Ebrahim Raisi included the issue of compensation on the agenda of the talks in Vienna “as a new demand" or “possibly to claim [an extra] achievement for itself,” if it was accepted.

“The claim that Dr. Rouhani opposed seeking compensation from the US was made by the negotiating team’s media advisor [Mohammad Marandi] after the failure to include the topic in [the agenda of] talks or in the draft of the agreement,” the article said.

In late March in a video interview with London-based pro-regime activist Ali Alizadeh, Marandi claimed that Rouhani’s foreign minister, Mohammad-Javad Zarif,

Iranian-American politician Mohammad Marandi (undated)
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Iranian-American politician Mohammad Marandi

had suggested to Rouhani that Iran should seek compensation but Rouhani opposed the suggestion and Zarif was offended.

“I personally, and others, told Dr. Zarif that we must ask the US for compensation. This does not mean the US would [actually] pay compensation. You say you should pay compensation so that you can score points elsewhere. Zarif did that but Mr. Rouhani said in a cabinet meeting that this was not required,” Marandi said, adding that Zarif told him his hands were tied because Rouhani was opposed to it.

A few days later, the reformist Jamaran News claimed that a “former member of the negotiation team” has denied any discussion of the payment of compensation between Zarif and Marandi.

“The former member of the negotiation team said seeking compensation from the US for withdrawing from the JCPOA was a failed plan by the current team which they are trying to blame the previous administration for,” Jamaran wrote.

“We don’t currently intend to speak about the damages we have incurred. Authorities of the country will follow up on that at its appropriate time,” Rouhani’s website quoted him as saying at a cabinet meeting on March 24 2021.

Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi (left), Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei (2nd left), former president Hassan Rouhani (3rd left), and former parliament speaker Ali Larijani (undated)
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Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi (left), Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei (2nd left), former president Hassan Rouhani (3rd left), and former parliament speaker Ali Larijani

It also pointed out that this was “a repetition” of Khamenei’s own remarks in a speech on January 9, 2021 in which he said the United States’ return to the deal would only be meaningful if sanctions were lifted. “Albeit there is the issue of compensation which is among our demands and will be followed up in later stages,” Khamenei said in the same speech.

Rouhani’s website also quoted Zarif’s speech at the Mediterranean Dialogues Conference in July 2020 in which he mentioned the issue of compensation and again in February 2021 when he said in an interview with CNN’s Farid Zakaria that payment of compensation had never been a precondition for the talks but would be discussed after the restoration of the deal and the return of the US to it.

“The said stances prove that what Rouhani said in March 2021 corresponded to the stance of the Supreme Leader of the Revolution … Compensation meant seeking payment from the US for damages [incurred by Iran] following Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the JCPOA. [It was] not a precondition for negotiations with the 5+1 (France, Britain, Russia, China, the United States and Germany) or a plan devised by the negotiating team,” Rouhani’s website wrote.

Official Says All Iranian Teachers Must Be Members Of IRGC’s Basij

Apr 20, 2023, 11:08 GMT+1

All teachers in Iran should be forced to join the Basij, a leading government official has urged.

The feared militia has launched violent attacks on women and schoolgirls for not wearing hijab.

But speaking on Thursday, Ahmad Mohammadizadeh, the Governor of Bushehr Province in the south, said that there should not be a single teacher in his province who is not in the Basij because the only successful teacher is the one who works with the mindset of the paramilitary force.

The Basij is mostly made up of young volunteers. Its members usually go through limited training to serve as an auxiliary force in local security and enforcing state control over society through suppressing demonstrations and gathering intelligence.

Last year, Iran's Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) announced plans to set up Basij bases in about 11,000 neighborhoods across the country by 2023.

The head of the Basij Organization, under the command of the IRGC, said that there are 50,000 neighborhoods in the country, therefore when the plan – dubbed Islamic neighborhoods – is implemented, Basij will have active presence in about one-fifth of the neighborhoods all over Iran.

In February, Basij plainclothes agents raided a language school detaining two teenage girls who had removed the hijab.

Violence against women, especially teenage girls, due to what the regime calls "improper hijab" has been going on for over four decades. During the uprising of the Iranian people in recent months the violence has intensified with the increase of women's civil disobedience against the mandatory hijab.

The Islamic Republic confronts such civil disobedience with heavy punishment for what it calls "removing hijab".