Monday, May 25, 2015

Quds force of Iran Bankrupt


By Iran Reporter

Head of the terrorist Quds force of Iran's  (IRGC), QassemSoleimani told parliament on Sunday the armed forces need a bigger budget to confront the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group whose influence is growing in neighboring countries.General Ahmad-Reza Pourdastan who commands Iran’s ground forces told parliament: "We have to face a new threat in the region. Terrorist groups are close to our borders,” media reported.
Iran’s army forces must be strengthened to be able “to buy tanks, transport vehicles and to overhaul our helicopters,” he was quoted as saying.
The Iranian general, who warned that “the battle is on the ground,” did not say by how much the defense budget should be increased!!
For the fiscal year ending in March 2016, the defense budget was increased by more than 30% to reach some $10 billion dollars. In addition, the armed forces receive $1.2 billion from sovereign funds.
Pourdastan told parliament that when ISIS launched its offensive in Iraq in June last year jihadists advanced to Jalula, just 40 kilometers from the Iranian border.“In less than three days, we sent five brigades to the borders and our reconnaissance helicopters penetrated 40 kilometers into Iraq,” Pourdastan added.
Meanwhile, Iran has reportedly sent troops to Iraq to join Shiite militants, U.S. defense officials said, according to AP. The Islamic Republic, which sent small troops to allow Iraqi forces retake the major oil refinery of Beiji, also sent heavy weapons for Iraqi ground forces, one of the officials said.
U.S. President Barack Obama said his country does not oppose the intervention of Iran in the Iraqi conflict as long as it operates under the control of Iraq’s government. However, he did not mention Iran’s role on the Beiji operation.
Shiite regional power Iran has military advisers in Iraq and Syria and provides financial and military support to the governments of both countries in their fight against the Sunnis.
But there has been a big question non-responded during the four past decades, "Why Iranian Ayatollahs need to export their so-called revolution to Iraq as well as Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and even to the horn of Africa while they severely suffer from the international sanctions including their bankrupt economy?  
According to Mujahidin-e-Khalg the main Iranian opposition group in exile, the ruling Ayatollahs in Iran need to export their internal explosive crisis to other countries as a doctrine of Khomeini since the establishment of their medieval regime in 1978. 
The Iranian opposition group who is led by Maryam Rajavi and her political branch in Paris in the name of National council of resistance (NCRI) has named the ruling mullahs in Iran as the God father of terrorism. They think that Arab countries such as Iraq and Syria and Lebanon and … should follow their path. . Their terrorist militias such as Hezbollah of Lebanon and Houthis of Yemen feed and have been fed  by Ayatollahs by Iranian people expenses while there are 15  million Iranian people under the poverty line, therefore , millions of Iranians welcome the heavy storm led by Saudi Arabia  and  his 12 allies . This fundamental regime does not represent Iranian people and should be kept far from Yemen talks, Syria and Gulf on the first step and to be swept from Iran in the near future

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