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Opinion
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Thursday, 03 May 2007 |
By: Mohammad Amin
In the eve of the Sharm El-Sheikh conference in Egypt, the Iranian
mullahs have raised their voice about the recognition of their
hegemonic role in Iraq.
Keyhan newspaper (the only paper in Iran whose director is the official
representative of the supreme leader and one who forms regime's
political strategy) in its editorial of April 22nd states: "Not only
Americans have had no impact on limiting our operations in Iraq but the
Iranian and Iraqi governments have strengthened their ideological, and
political-security pacts."
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Thursday, 03 May 2007 |
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By: Reza Shafa On April 25, Ahmadinejad appointed Hosseinian as his new political and security adviser. Who is Ruhollah Hosseinian?
- He was born in 1955 in the southern city of Shiraz. He began his theological studies at Valiasr School of Theology and later he went to Theological Hagani School which is an influential religious school in Qom where most Iranian regime's officials were trained. The infamous former Minister of Intelligence and Security (MOIS), Ali Fallahian, is among the school graduates. The current Interior Minister, Mostafa Pour-Mohammadi and MOIS's current chief, Gholam Hossein Mohseni-Ejei are all among Hosseinian's former classmates. |
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Thursday, 03 May 2007 |
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Hedayat Mostowfi Global Politition - Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Tehran mullah regime's president, on Monday, April 16, 2007, vowed that the world powers would not be able to stop Iran's nuclear drive and that the Islamic Republic would defend its atomic program "to the end". Iranian made bombs, used by terrorists trained in Iran, explode daily in Iraq and kill innocent people. Yet there are still a few overly optimistic individuals that think if the Iranian mullahs and American officials sit around one table at the Iraq security summit beginning on Thursday, May 3rd in Sharm el-Sheikh, Iran will cease its nuclear weapons program and abandon terrorism after 30 years! The chances of such are less than nil. |
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Wednesday, 02 May 2007 |
By Mousa Afshar
NCRI - On May 3-4 a conference on stabilizing Iraq will take place in Sharm El-Sheikh. On Thursday May 3 the meeting is titled the 'Initiative for International Treaty on Iraq', in which Secretary General of the United Nations, Ban Ki-Moon, and 80 other member countries will take apart.
The Initiative will encompass ideas to meet the Iraqi needs for the next decade. The initiative will partly address the Iraqi debts. Saudi Arabia alone has agreed to forgive 80% of its owed 15 billion Dollars in the frame work of this initiative.
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Saturday, 28 April 2007 |
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By: Reza Shafa Despite the mullahs' jubilations over last month's trip by former Deputy Commander of Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Brig. Gen. Mohammad-Baqer Zolqadr who is also Deputy Interior Minister for Security Affairs to Moscow, the Kremlin officials tried to play down the trip. Zolqadr is one of 15 Iranians listed for involvement in nuclear or ballistic missile activities in the March 24 UN Security Council Resolution 1747. The resolution was adopted to punish Iran for failing to stop enrichment of uranium - a process that can produce the material for nuclear bombs. |
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Saturday, 28 April 2007 |
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Dr. Sanabargh Zahedi Iran's theocratic regime, due to its backward nature, always tries to misuse opportunities that rise from other people's misfortune while at the same time it tries to keep an innocent face. This is the strategy that this regime has been able to carry out so far. Take Iraq for instance. Although the mullah's officially opposed the U.S. invasion of Iraq, but after the collapse of Iraqi former government, they propelled full force to overtake that country. And so far, you can say that the mullahs are the prime beneficiary of Iraq war. |
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Tuesday, 24 April 2007 |
BY: Mousa Afshar
A successful administration of Iraq's security plan is the last hope
for the coalition forces to get the Iraqi government out of the
political impasse it is currently in.
Since its inception, the security plan has been challenged by the
"strategic security card", played by the Iranian regime in Iraq.
On one hand, survival of the Maleki's government is tied to the success of this security plan. On the other hand, for the security plan to succeed, Iranian regime's tentacles must be severed in Iraq, a development which means termination of the Maliki government.
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Tuesday, 24 April 2007 |
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By: Dr. Sanabargh Zahedi "I will release water into Sivand Dam personally," announced Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran's hard-line president, on April 17. Two days later, on April 19, with his orders the process began.
Although it may seem that this is a simple routine to start filling a dam with water, the announcement was actually the end of a quarrel that had lasted many years. This was a subject that has been one of the main headlines in Iran's media during the past few months. |
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Sunday, 22 April 2007 |
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By: Reza Shafa "Learn from ten years of hostage taking and leave the Islamic Republic [of Iran] alone," headlined Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) weekly Sobh-e Sadegh.
Shocked by the UN Security Council Resolution 1747 and capture by U.S. forces of five of its Quds Force members in Irbil, the top military commanders in IRGC headquarters in Tehran sat down to draw new strategy to cope with the crisis in hand, according to the Resistance sources in Iran.
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