Saturday, June 27, 2015

We are strong enough against the Iranian fundamentalism




With about 19 months left in office, Barack Obama is turning his 
attention to the unfinished business of his presidency, The Hill reported on 21 June 2015.
Obama is rushing to complete a sweeping trans-Pacific trade deal, a nuclear agreement with
Iran and a plan to close the Guantanamo Bay military prison. John Kerry will seek to discover on Saturday whether Tehran’s “red lines” have sabotaged the chances of a final nuclear agreement when he meets his Iranian counterpart in Vienna.
The US secretary of state will begin a new round of talks with Mohammad Javad Zarif, the Iranian foreign minister, three days before a deadline for a comprehensive agreement to resolve the confrontationover Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.
The aim is to constrain Iran’s nuclear program – particularly the elements that could be used to make weapons – in return for easing sanctions. The outlines of such an accord were agreed on April 2 inLausanne, Switzerland, raising hopes of a final settlement. As he left Washington on Friday, Mr. Kerry said that he was “always hopeful”.
But  the Iranian Ayatollah  , made a crucial intervention on Tuesday, spelling out his terms for a deal - and appearing to renege on commitments that have already been made.
The Iranian regime has since released a summary of   seven “red lines in nuclear negotiations”. Two in particular will prove troublesome at the Vienna talks.
The Mullah wants “all economic, financial and banking sanctions – either by the United NationsSecurity Council, the US Congress or US Administration – to be lifted on the same day a deal is signed”.
But the "joint statement" agreed between Mullahs and six world powers in Lausanne says that EU and US sanctions will be lifted "simultaneously" with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) verifying that Iran has kept its "key nuclear commitments".
Although  chances of an agreement in Vienna are still “Under question” , regarding the Iran talks, Senator Corker said, “Congress had no role in this until we passed a bill recently because the president had the ability to go directly to the U.N. Security Council with national security waivers he was given. They are trying to cross these two remaining red lines…
 Congress is sharpening its knives with just one week to go before the June 30 deadline for a nuclear deal with Iran, but to solve the problem and to pass through this threat, US should step away from the table and make sure that the world community can end up with a deal to prove that they are strong enough against the Iranian fundamentalismhttp://www.ncr-iran.org/en/news/terrorism-fundamentalism. 

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

As Deadline nears France mistrusts Iranian Mullahs




"We need to be extremely firm, at the stage where we are now, things are still not clear," Fabius said in talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
France's Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on Sunday it was unclear whether an international deal could be reached on Iran's nuclear program by a June 30 deadline.
Fabius has said he would meet his Iranian counterpart on Monday to assess where Iran stands ahead of the final round of talks on its nuclear program, which begin later in the week.
Monday's bilateral meeting, on the sidelines of an EU foreign ministers' summit in Luxembourg, will be followed by a meeting between an Iranian agent and all the European parties negotiating with them.
In Luxembourg, the Iranian agent will also  meet   EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini and ministers from Britain and Germany   to discuss the nuclear talks, an EU source said, calling it "a political meeting in the framework of ongoing negotiations."
  The parties are aiming for a final agreement by June 30 under which Iran would restrict its nuclear program in exchange for relief from economic sanctions.
France is deemed to have been one of the toughest in pressing for limits to prevent Iran acquiring an atomic bomb capability, although Tehran denies seeking nuclear weapons.
 Nucleartalks between Iran and six world powers have virtually stalled and a deadline for a final deal may have to be postponed again, Russian news agency TASS quoted a diplomatic source as saying on Friday, June 12.
Iran and the powers -- the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany -- are trying to reach a settlement by June 30 under which Iran would curb its nuclear program in exchange for relief from economic sanctions.
The United States has said it stands by the end-June deadline for the deal, meant to assuage Western fears that Iran is working to develop a nuclear bomb.
But other officials have indicated the date might be missed as negotiations about technical details drag on.
The latest round of discussions in Vienna on Friday had made no significant progress, the source from one of the missions said, according to TASS.
'The process has virtually stalled, there is risk that deadline will have to be postponed again,' TASS said the source added.
Among the unresolved issues is the pace of easing Western sanctions imposed over the Iranian program and the monitoring and verification measures to ensure Iran could not pursue a clandestine nuclear weapons program.
once again the Mullahs in Iran demonstrates this reality that the clerical regime and the Rouhani’s government have no intention to give up the project to obtain atomic bomb and any hope for changes within this regime is but a mirage that buys time for the mullahs to obtain the nuclear bomb, and continue to carry out further aggressions and  warmongerings in the region.

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Wiki Leaks reveals strong desire for regime change in Iran



Jun. 21، 2015 -  Diplomats talk about airing the grievances of disenchanted local youth using Facebook and Twitter. At the embassy in Khartoum، they reported anxiously on Iran`s military aid to Sudan and etc.
Meanwhile the Saudi mission in Geneva was stuck dealing with a multimillion dollar limo bill racked up by a Saudi princess and her entourage.Many of the scores of documents reviewed by AP appear aimed at keeping track of Iranian activity across the region or undermining Tehran`s interests.

 An undated memo apparently sent from the Saudi Embassy in Tehran made note of what it said was the "frustration of the Iranian citizen and his strong desire for regime change" and suggested ways to publicly expose Iran`s social grievances through "the Internet، social media like Facebook and Twitter." It also suggests "hosting opposition figures overseas، coordinating with them and encouraging them to use galleries to show pictures of torture carried by the Iranian regime against people."

Saudis also kept a watchful eye on Iran`s friends، real or perceived. One 2012 memo warned that Iran was getting "flirting American messages" suggesting that the U.S. had no objections to a peaceful Iranian nuclear program so long as it had guarantees، "possibly Russian ones."
Another memo، dated to 2012، accuses the United Arab Emirates of helping Russia and Iran circumvent international sanctions. A third memo — marked "top secret" — makes the startling claim that Iranian fighter jets bombed South Sudanese forces during a 2012 standoff over the oil-rich area of Heglig.
There are many such hard-to-confirm stories in the Saudi documents.Over the last several years, the Iranian opposition too many secret documents about the illegal Iranian regime's platforms in the Middle East but unfortunately has been ignored by the West. They have been dramatically ignored for two reasons: there is a strong and growing perception among the Iranian people that the Iranian dictatorship is a pariah in the international community; and the resulting international economic sanctions have created conditions that make the regime’s overthrow imperative.

'At precisely this moment in history, Barack Obama did incalculable damage by initiating these negotiations. By engaging this rogue state, President Obama has given it international recognition and legitimacy at just the moment when it had lost legitimacy in the eyes of its own people. Worse, by promising relief from economic sanctions, he has removed the most compelling reason the organized Iranian resistance had to justify the regime’s overthrow.

The main solution for a non-nuclear Iran, who does not meddle in other Arab countries' affairs, is In Maryam Rajavi's points of views, and By Toppling Fundamentalism & Terrorism in Tehran.
Maryam Rajavi has already explained about the solution in The Great Gathering of the Iranian Resistance in Paris – June 13, 2015 And those who are concerned about this global threat in the world  and in the Middle East should do their best by backing the Iranian opposition group, PMOI who try to change the regime in Iran


Saturday, June 20, 2015

Senator ted Cruz is furious of a bad deal with Iran And Bob Corker is worried



By Iran reporter
 June 18, 2015
Senator tedCruz and other senators petitioned
 the State Department to comply with federal law
compelling the report’s public release
That report was due by law on February 25,” Cruz told  in an interview. “The Obama State Department simply ignored the law. They refused to produce the report. Months have gone by and they continue to refuse to produce the report.”
Angered by this delay, Cruz is gearing up to file legislation this week that would fine the State Department 5 percent of its budget for every 30 days it postpones releasing the report, according to a copy of the bill viewed by Iran reporter.
It is a penalty for willfully violating federal law ” Cruz explained. he added also that “This is also a policy decision that is profoundly counterproductive
By the way, the influential chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Bob Corker, is worried that the US is ceding too much in its negotiations with Iran.
So worried that he's suggesting the US pull out of the deal if what he calls "the erosion" continues. He is particularly concerned about the inspections clauses in the deal. He says he's hearing (though when I pushed him he wouldn't say from whom) that the right to inspections of Iran's nuclear facilities anytime, anywhere, may be diluted.
He also points to red lines that have already been crossed, highlighting the fact that the deal has gone from being a 20-year agreement to a 10-year agreement, and that Iran's nuclear arrangements can be dismantled in country, not out of country.
Mr. Corker told that he still wants a deal, and sees that as the best option for America. But the man who guided the Senate to a bill that gave overwhelming support the negotiations now sounds more skeptical.
To save the region, the national community should cut the head of the serpent in Tehran
Some Senators and U.S. national security experts criticize Obamas policy on Iran as dangerous, for having failed to stop Tehran’s nuclear weapons program and its support for terrorism in the regionhttp://www.ncr-iran.org/en/ncri-statements/iran-resistance/243-maryam-rajavi-mullahs-are-main-losers-of-iraq-s-developments.
to put an end to Iranian terrorism. Obama's counterproductive policy should be stopped and the head of the serpent should be cut in Tehran.