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Iran Super Thread- Merged

The Ayatollah's usual firebrand rhetoric will probably make US watchers of Iran think twice about this current deal:

Reuters

Iran's supreme leader bans negotiations with the United States
Wed Oct 7, 2015 7:37am EDT

DUBAI (Reuters) - Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei on Wednesday banned any further negotiations between Iran and the United States, less than three months after Iran signed a nuclear deal with the West as a result of years of U.S.-led talks.

Khamenei has not publicly endorsed the deal reached with world powers in July, which was a political victory for the moderates led by President Hassan Rouhani. Hardliners inside Iran are still trying to put breaks on the agreement.

In an address to Revolutionary Guards Navy commanders, Khamenei said talks with the United States brought only disadvantages to Iran.

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Yet another reason why the US should re-think its deal on Iran:

Diplomat

Iran Test-Fires New Missile Capable of Hitting Israel
Tehran’s newest missile allegedly can hit targets “with high precision.”


By Franz-Stefan Gady
October 12, 2015

Iran has recently successfully test-fired a new precision-guided, long-range surface-to-surface missile, Iranian state TV reported on Sunday.

While details on the precise nature of the test remains murky, Iran’s Defense Minister Hossein Dehghan told Fars New Agency that the new missile, named Emad (Pillar), “is able to strike targets with a high level of precision and completely destroy them… This greatly increases Iran’s strategic deterrence capability.”

The precise timing of the test is unknown as is the exact induction date of Iran’s newest missile. Dehghan merely mentioned that the new long-range weapon will enter service in the “near future.”

The defense minister additionally noted that the Emad is “the country’ first long-range missile with navigation and strike controlling capability” and can hit targets “with high precision.”

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SMA:
Yet another reason why the US should re-think its deal on Iran:

Diplomat

Quote

    Iran Test-Fires New Missile Capable of Hitting Israel
    Tehran’s newest missile allegedly can hit targets “with high precision.”

Won't happen until 20 January 2017.
 
Only a matter of time before Israel sends an Osirak-style air strike against Iran?

Reuters

U.S. confirms Iran tested nuclear-capable ballistic missile
Fri Oct 16, 2015 3:48pm EDT

By Louis Charbonneau

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The United States has confirmed that Iran tested a medium-range missile capable of delivering a nuclear weapon, in "clear violation" of a United Nations Security Council ban on ballistic missile tests, a senior U.S. official said on Friday.

"The United States is deeply concerned about Iran's recent ballistic missile launch," the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, said in a statement.

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What's the power of the next US president in 2016 to counter this if they decide to to do so? If I can recall correctly, only Congress has the power to make treaties, though I'm not sure about the Executive Branch/POTUS's power when it comes to abrogating treaties.

Reuters

Iran deal closer to reality as U.S. prepares sanctions waivers
Sun Oct 18, 2015 8:14am EDT

By Louis Charbonneau

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The United States was set to issue conditional sanctions waivers for Iran on Sunday, though it cautioned they will not take effect until Tehran has curbed its nuclear program as required under a historic nuclear deal reached in Vienna on July 14.

Several senior U.S. officials, who spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity, said that despite Washington's move on Sunday, actual implementation of the deal was likely several months away. That means the sanctions relief Tehran is looking forward to is unlikely to come this year.

They said the timing of nuclear-related sanctions relief will depend on the speed at which Iran takes the steps needed to enable the U.N. nuclear watchdog to confirm Tehran's compliance.

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Israel, who continues to eye Iran with vigilance, warns the world not to be fooled by the rhetoric of Iran's diplomats and other forms of "soft power" :

Defense News

Israeli Defense Minister: Don't Be Fooled by Iran's 'Charm Offensive'
By Moshe Ya'alon 5:01 p.m. EST December 13, 2015

Sixty-seven years have passed since the founding of the State of Israel, 67 years of continuous security and diplomatic challenges stemming from a vehement opposition to our very existence by our neighboring Arab states and their supporting organizations. In the past, the flagbearers of this opposition fueled the conflict with nationalistic pan-Arab ideology (Nasserism, Ba'athism, pan-Arabism). Their use of conventional armed forces to attack Israel was defeated time and again, as the Israel Defense Forces increasingly gained a substantial military advantage based on advanced technology and professional abilities. This, in turn, led the Arabs to focus on achieving non-conventional capabilities — challenging Israel with rockets, missiles, guerilla warfare and terror.

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Is this wise, considering how close Iran and Russia are?

Associated Press

Russian diplomat: Russia completes removal of low-enriched uranium from Iran under nuke deal
[The Canadian Press]
George Jahn, The Associated Press
December 28, 2015

VIENNA - Iran has met a key requirement of a nuclear deal with six world powers by allowing Moscow to transfer most of its enriched uranium to Russia, a senior Russian diplomat told The Associated Press Monday.

The diplomat demanded anonymity because he was not authorized to be identified by name.

Under the July 14 deal, Iran must ship out all except 300 kilograms (over 660 pounds) of the close to nine tons of low-enriched uranium it has stockpiled. Low-enriched uranium is suited to power generation but can be further enriched to arm nuclear warheads.

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Considering you don't need a lot of Uranium to make a fission bomb or trigger, leaving the Iranians with 300+kg of the stuff isn't much of an accomplishment at all.....
 
Iran's Revolutionary Guards really want hell to rain on them if they're coming this close...

NBC

EXCLUSIVE  NEWS  DEC 29 2015, 4:57 PM ET
U.S. Carrier Harry S. Truman Has Close Call With Iranian Rockets
by JIM MIKLASZEWSKI and COURTNEY KUBE
SHARE

The U.S. aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman came about 1,500 yards from an Iranian rocket in the Strait of Hormuz last week, two U.S. military officials told NBC News on Tuesday.

As the Truman was transiting the strait, which connects the Arabian Sea and the Persian Gulf, Iranian Revolutionary Guards conducted a live-fire exercise right near the U.S. carrier Saturday, officials said.

A U.S. military official said an Iranian navy fast and short attack craft began conducting a live-fire exercise at the same time the carrier was nearing the end of the strait, firing off several unguided rockets. A French frigate, the U.S. destroyer USS Buckley and other commercial traffic were also in the area.


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at 1500 yds Truman would not have had any time to take defensive action.  Blowing the go-fast out of the water would have been after=the=fact.  In that position the Truman is extremely vulnerable.  Kudos to the captain for not taking action which would probably have been justified.
 
Echoes of the storming of the US Embassy of Iran in 1979?

RT

Saudi Arabia cuts diplomatic ties with Iran over embassy storming
Published time: 3 Jan, 2016 20:20
Edited time: 3 Jan, 2016 21:19

Saudi Arabia has cut diplomatic ties with Iran over the storming of its embassy in Tehran on Saturday. The move comes while relations between the regional rivals are plunging over the execution of a top Shiite cleric.

Speaking at a press conference on Sunday, Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir demanded that the Iranian diplomatic mission and related entities leave the country within 48 hours.

He said Riyadh would not allow the Islamic Republic to undermine the Sunni kingdom’s security.

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The recent drama over the Iranian capture and release of those USN sailors may have more Americans questioning what kind of deal Obama got them into with the Ayatollahs again, which goes into effect today.

Diplomat

It's Official: Nuclear-Related Sanctions Are Lifted on Iran, Nuclear Deal Implemented

With the IAEA certifying Iran’s compliance with technical constraints on its nuclear program, the nuclear deal is implemented.

IMG_5979 (2)
By Ankit Panda
January 17, 2016

The Iran deal has officially been implemented.

Yukiya Amano, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), certified that Iran had complied with its obligations under last July’s Joint Comprehensive Plan for Action, an international deal in which Iran agrees to limit its nuclear program in exchange for considerable nuclear-related sanctions relief from the United States, European Union, and the United Nations. Amano’s statement triggers the Iran nuclear deal’s so-called “Implementation Day” milestone. “A lot of work has gone into getting us here, and implementation of this agreement will require a similar effort,” Amano said. “For our part, we are ready to get on with the job,” she added.

“Today marks the moment that the Iran nuclear agreement transitions from promises on paper to measurable progress,” Secretary of State John F. Kerry said, speaking in Vienna. “United States’ friends and allies in the Middle East and the entire world are safer, because the threat of nuclear weapons has been reduced,” he added.

For Iran, the IAEA’s confirmation of it having met its obligations, which included the dismantling of IR-1 centrifuges, shipping over 10,000 kg of low-enriched uranium out of the country, and redesigning a heavy-water reactor facility at Arak, means will gain access to over $100 billion of frozen foreign assets, most of which will go toward servicing the country’s existing debts. Iran will allow for the continuous inspection of its nuclear facilities by the IAEA. For the Iranian government, led by President Hassan Rouhani, attaining sanctions relief under the Iran deal fulfills a major campaign promise that helped usher him into power back in 2013. With an Iranian parliamentary election around the corner in late February, the implementation of the Iran deal could prove politically useful for Rouhani and like-minded moderates.

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A timeline of the negotiations for the release of the US persons held by Iran.

Path To U.S.-Iran Deal, Prisoner Swap Began Years Ago

http://www.npr.org/2016/01/17/463379696/path-to-u-s-iran-deal-prisoner-swap-began-years-ago

Iran is open for business again as ten years of punishing international sanctions are lifted.

President Hassan Rouhani declared the nuclear deal a "golden page" in Iran's history as he presented a new budget to parliament on Sunday. Economists call it the biggest windfall in history, with as much as an estimated $150 billion of Iran's frozen assets being unlocked from banks across the globe.

"Implementation Day" was declared in Vienna on Saturday. The U.N.'s nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, certified Iran had fulfilled its obligations under a nuclear agreement with six world powers.

"This will turn Iran from the most sanctioned state to the country with the most monitored nuclear program in the world," says Ali Vaez, a senior Iran analyst with the International Crisis Group.

It's the "Big Bang," he says. The agreement opens a way for Iran to transform its economy and reconnect its 80 million people to the global economy. "After more than a decade, the race of sanctions against centrifuges, has finally ended," he says.

Saturday's prisoner swap

The new era began with signals that the nuclear deal represents a change in relations between Tehran, the international community, and the United States.

Especially striking - a prisoner swap that came hours before the main event in Vienna. Five Americans were released, including Washington Post journalist Jason Rezaian, held for more than a year on charges of spying. The U.S. granted clemency and released seven Iranians accused of violating U.S. sanction laws.

"This is a major victory for diplomacy, a victory for people who want to talk to Iran," says Mohsen Milani, who heads the Center for Strategic Studies at the University of South Florida.

Iran's end of the bargain

While nuclear negotiations are also an example of "talking to Iran," it is an extremely technical agreement between diplomats and experts.

"Iranians put cement in a nuclear reactor," says Milani, about a crucial step in the nuclear agreement when the core of the Arak heavy water nuclear reactor was removed and disabled.

"Ordinary Americans and Iranians don't understand what that means," he says.

In December, Iran shipped out 25,000 pounds of low-enriched uranium and dismantled more than 12,000 centrifuges, also part of the deal.

"Iran has undertaken significant steps that many people – and I do mean many – doubted would ever come to pass," Secretary of State John Kerry said in remarks in Vienna.

But it was the release of five Americans held in Iran that captured American attention and overshadowed the landmark conclusions of the nuclear agreement. This was a tangible example of the new era, coupled with the quick release of captured U.S. sailors in the Persian Gulf last week.

"You are talking about actual people, not centrifuges," says Milani about the emotional reactions. It also demonstrated a change in Iran.

"For me, it shows there are reasonable forces who don't want to go back to the bad old days," he says.

Diplomacy and dialogue

Secret negotiations over Americans held in Iran began more than "14 months ago and accelerated after the conclusion of the nuclear deal," according to senior officials who briefed reporters after the swap was announced on Saturday. As the names reverberated on social media and TV news channels on Saturday, the swap was widely applauded in the U.S. despite charges by Republican presidential hopefuls that it showed the latest American "weakness."

"In terms of optics, it's more powerful than 'Implementation Day,'" says Milani, in what appears to be a historic shift that has "opened the door of communications," after more than three decades of enmity.

For the Obama administration, the prisoner swap and Iran's swift compliance with the deal's difficult measures is the triumph of diplomacy and dialogue over confrontation and public threats. Still, the opening to Iran is a gamble that historians will debate for years, citing key moments and motivations that led to successful negotiations.

The deal took two years of formal negotiations between Iran and six powers, but the Obama administration reportedly reached out much earlier. The Wall Street Journal reported discreet exchanges that go back to 2009.

President Obama sent another signal the same year. He was the first U.S. president to call the country "The Islamic Republic of Iran" in a Persian New Year's message to the Iranian people.

Soon after, the U.S. and Iran opened secret back-channel communications facilitated by the tiny Gulf state of Oman.

"A convergence of factors explains it," says Emile Hokayem, a senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. Based in the Gulf, he says the Obama administration saw Iran as a potential breakthrough as the aftermath of the Arab Spring convulsed the Arab world.

"With Iran, there was an opportunity for a deal. Iran looked cohesive, it has institutions," even though Iran's regional policies were often at odds with U.S. goals, he says. "Iran was bad, but it was good at being bad. Iran is a competent actor."

Rouhani's election sparked change

When President Hassan Rouhani took office in 2013, the White House called his election "an opportunity" for Tehran to resolve international concerns over its nuclear program. During his campaign, the moderate cleric pledged to open a new chapter with the West. More important for his country's crippled economy, Rouhani promised to reintegrate Iran into the international economic system after decades of isolation. It was a high stakes gamble, linking the success of his presidency to success in complex nuclear talks with world powers.

Both presidents faced domestic pressure to scuttle the deal. For the Obama administration, the opening to Iran was met with deep suspicion by congressional Republicans. Republican presidential hopefuls pledged to scrap it on the first day in office.

America's key allies in the Middle East, Israel and Saudi Arabia, are adamant that Iran is a destabilizing force likely to grow bolder with a huge injection of cash as sanctions are lifted. The objections are likely to grow louder as implementation gets underway, says Hokayem. "Iran remains a very concerning actor, very confrontational. There is a long list of U.S. interests where Iran cannot be a net contributor."

In a sign of the tumult of the new era, on Sunday, the U.S. Treasury announced new sanctions against 11 entities and individuals involved in procurement on behalf of Iran's ballistic missile program.

"There will be ups and downs in relations," says Milani. "You cannot change years of animosity and political war between two countries overnight."
 
Iranian UAV and sub have US carrier in their crosshairs:

Source: Aviationist

Tehran releases footage of Iranian navy submarine allegedly aiming at a U.S. aircraft carrier
Jan 29 2016 - 7 Comments
By David Cenciotti
The Iranian Navy has spied on a U.S. aircraft carrier in the Strait of Hormuz with drones and subs.

Iranian Tasmin News media outlet has aired a short video, allegedly filmed by a Ghadir-class submarine during a maritime exercise in the Strait of Hormuz.

The footage (click here) shows the submarine or a warship (the image above seems to be taken from a certain height from above the sea level…) somehow aiming or at least pointing its sensors at the American warship. According to the reports from the Iranian media, a drone took part in the surveillance operation as well, taking pictures of the American flattop from above.


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Wouldn't an "unarmed" drone be a dangerous projectile itself if its operator made it dive straight for the carrier?

Canadian Press

Iran flies unarmed military drone over US aircraft carrier
[The Canadian Press]
Nasser Karimi And Jon Gambrell, The Associated Press

January 29, 2016

TEHRAN, Iran - Iran flew a surveillance drone over a U.S. aircraft carrier and published video of the encounter Friday, the latest in a series of edgy naval incidents between the two countries in the Persian Gulf after the recent nuclear deal.

While the U.S. Navy stressed it knew the drone was unarmed and the flyover didn't interrupt U.S. operations in the war against the Islamic State group, the incident underlined the continued tension over control of waterways crucial to global oil supplies. It follows a rocket test last month by the Islamic Republic near coalition warships and commercial traffic, as well as Iran's brief capture of American sailors who strayed into its territorial waters.

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Iran looking not just to buy the Su30, but produce it under license?

National Interest

The Middle East's Nightmare: Iran is Buying Russia's Lethal Su-30
Dave Majumdar

February 15, 2016
Iran looks set to sign a deal to purchase Russian-made Sukhoi Su-30 Flanker fighters as it upgrades its military forces following the nuclear deal, which cleared the way for sanctions to be lifted on Tehran. Iranian defense minister Brig. Gen. Hossein Dehghan is set to visit Moscow on February 16 to discuss the potential fighter buy, as well as to discuss deliveries of the Almaz-Antey S-300 air and missile defense system.

“Minister Dehgan will also discuss the delivery of Su-30 airplanes because the Defense Ministry believes the Iranian Air Force needs this type of plane. We’ve moved far in these discussions of purchases and I think that during the upcoming visit a contract will be signed,” an Iranian defense ministry source told the Russian state-run media outlet Sputnik.

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Presumably Iran would want one of the advanced variants similar to the aircraft operated by India, Malaysia, Algeria and Russia itself. However, it is also possible that Iran could opt for a variant of the more basic Su-30M2, which is also in service with the Russian Air Force. That variant is somewhat less expensive, which might make more sense considering Iran’s economic situation. Perhaps of note, Iran does not seem content with merely buying the Su-30; Tehran seems intent on license production of the aircraft.

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Perhaps they could stage a demonstration of Iron Dome against Scuds or other missiles to show its power?

Defense News

Experts: Israel Lacks Leverage Against Iranian Missile Tests
Barbara Opall-Rome, Defense News 12:18 p.m. EDT March 14, 2016

TEL AVIV — Beyond protests and vacuous statements of concern, Israeli experts concede Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his backers in the Western world lack leverage to penalize Iran for its steadily advancing ballistic missile program.

That’s because there’s nothing in the nuclear deal negotiated between world powers and Iran to prevent the types of launches that took place last week, less than two months after the so-called Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) took effect, experts said.

“There’s nothing in the JCPOA with regard to ballistic missiles because the P5+1 conceded on that point as soon as the negotiations began,” Emily Landau, senior research fellow at Tel Aviv’s Institute for National Security Studies, said of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany, which negotiated the landmark Iranian nuclear deal.

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Iron Dome isn't for these kinds of ballistic missiles, but Arrow and Patriot are....
 
So Trudeau wants Canada to re-establish relations with these madmen?  :(

Associated Press

Iran says missile program is not negotiable

The Associated Press
The Canadian Press
April 10, 2016

TEHRAN, Iran - Iran's foreign minister said Sunday the country's missile program is not up for negotiation with the United States.

The missile program and "defence capabilities of the Islamic Republic of Iran are not negotiable," said Mohammad Javad Zarif after meeting with his Estonian counterpart, Marina Kaljurand.

He added that if Washington was serious about defensive issues in the Middle East, it should stop supplying arms to Saudi Arabia and Israel.

A Saudi-led coalition has been conducting airstrikes and battling the Iran-backed Shiite rebels in Yemen since March 2015. Iran also supports anti-Israeli militant groups.

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Cannon fodder for western tanks? It's merely a mash up of US and Chinese designs.

Business Insider

Iran unveils new tank made from US and Chinese designs from the 60s

Earlier this month, Iran unveiled a new main battle tank, the Tiam, ]that appears to be a mashup of Chinese and US tanks from the1960s, The Diplomat reports.

The tank appears to have the main hull and engine of the US' M47M Patton, a variation of the M47 Patton made in the early 1960s, and the turret of China's type 59/69 tank, first produced in 1958.


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