Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Newly unsealed indictments allege Iran’s pursuit of weapons of mass destruction – Stars and Stripes

South Korean air force F-5 fighter jets shown in 2005. The F-5 has been used by many militaries, including Iran's. The U.S. this week unsealed two previously secret indictments against a network of companies that it says illegally exported military technology to Iran, including a nose landing gear assembly for the F-5. (Seth Robson/Stars and Stripes)

The U.S. government unsealed two previously secret indictments this week against people that it says aided Irans pursuit of weapons of mass destruction by exporting nuclear, ballistic missile and aerial drone technology.

These defendants sought to obtain valuable U.S.-origin goods that could assist Irans military and WMD aspirations, and in some instances, they were successful, Matthew Graves, U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, said in a statement Wednesday.

The unsealing of the indictments comes in the same week that the Treasury Department levied sanctions on three of the people indicted. They were sanctioned for their role in separate schemes, which included shipment of aerial drone engines from Europe to Iran.

The two unsealed indictments are from 2011 and 2018. They accuse three Iranians, a Turk and a man from the United Arab Emirates of conspiring to illegally export U.S. technology between 2005 and 2013.

The Turkish man, Murat Bukey, was sentenced Monday to a little more than two years in prison after pleading guilty to conspiring to violate the Arms Export Control Act and the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

The other four men remain at large. They are Amanallah Paidar, Agshar Mahmoudi and Bahram Aran from Iran and Shahin Golshani from the UAE.

The U.S.s inability to capture the other four men since their indictments prompted prosecutors to petition to unseal the case Monday in the hope that the move will help lead to arrests, Graves wrote in a court document filed March 16.

Paidar is the commercial manager of an Iranian company called Defense Technology and Science Research Center, which is owned by Tehrans military, the Treasury Department said.

U.S. federal agents said Paidaris at the center of a procurement network established to export goods related to biological, chemical and nuclear technologies to Iran, a court filing from 2015 said.

The Justice Department says Paidar conspired with Bukey in efforts to ship a device associated with germ warfare used to detect biological pathogens through Turkey during 2012 and 2013.

Bukey at one point sold more than $1 million worth of aerial drone engines from Europe that likely ended up in Iran, the Treasury Department said.

Paidar also worked with Mahmoudi to procure thermal imaging cameras, computer systems and marine electronics, the Treasury Department said.

One of the unsealed indictments also accuses Mahmoudi of working with Aran and Golshani to illegally export advanced technology to Iran.

The exports included a high-speed camera that has known nuclear and ballistic missile testing applications, a nose landing gear assembly for an F-5 fighter jet and a meteorological sensor system.

A thermal imaging camera was tracked as it traveled from the U.S. to Canada to the UAE and finally to Iran, the indictment said.

The Iranian companies listed in Tuesdays sanctions are Defense Technology and Science Research Center, Farazan Industrial Engineering and Selin Technic. A defunct Turkish company, Ozone Aviation, also was blacklisted. The people added to the sanctions list were Paidar, Bukey, and Mahmoudi.

The listings mark another round of U.S. financial action against Irans drone program, after five Chinese companies selling parts to an Iranian drone firm were added to American blacklists in early March.

Sanctions impose financial penalties on companies or private citizens, as well as any bank that works with them.

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Newly unsealed indictments allege Iran's pursuit of weapons of mass destruction - Stars and Stripes

Saudi-Iran deal: After years of tension, a new chapter for the region begins – Middle East Eye

News of the normalisation of relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia came as a surprise to international observers. The enmity between the Middle East rivals has been among the most persistent and dangerous in the region.

This months agreement came after two years of negotiations between Riyadh and Tehran in Baghdad, and Chinese President Xi Jinping played an important role in concluding the deal in Beijing. As part of the ensuing trilateral statement, Saudi Arabia and Iran agreed to implement a 2001 security cooperation agreement and a 1998 deal bolstering economic, cultural and technological ties.

The upshot of these developments was a lose-lose for both Riyadh and Tehran

This is based on an agreement the two countries reached in the mid-1990sthat remained in effect until 2005. I negotiated the terms for then-President Hashemi Rafsanjani alongside then-Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud in Riyadh.

As I detailed in my recent book, A New Structure for Security, Peace, and Cooperation in the Persian Gulf, Rafsanjani and Abdullah agreed to revive relations. I was commissioned by Rafsanjani as his special envoy to discuss a deal with the crown prince. Over the course of four long nights in Abdullahs mansion in Jeddah, we debated and finally agreed on a plan of action.Then, Rafsanjanis son and I met King Fahd, and he approved the agreement.

After returning to Iran, the agreement was also approved by Rafsanjani and Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. It was implemented fully during former President Mohammed Khatamis term (1997-2005). I was told by a high-level Saudi official that Abdullah viewed Khatami as continuing Rafsanjanis policies. In 1997, Abdullah visited Tehran, and the cooperation and security agreements were subsequently signed.

In my negotiations with Abdullah, security issues were the primary concern. Riyadh was concerned about Tehran exporting Shiism and supporting Saudi Arabias Shiaminority, and about demonstrations by Iranian pilgrims threatening the security of the annual Hajj ceremony.

For its part, Tehran was concerned about SaudiArabia supporting the Sunni minority in Iran and spreading Wahhabi fundamentalism. The bilateral security pact greatly reduced anxieties in both governments over interference in each others internal affairs.

Unfortunately, the agreements collapsed after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad took office in August 2005. Iran restarted its nuclear enrichment programme, the UN Security Council adopted resolutions sanctioning Iran, and Abdullah - by now the king of Saudi Arabia - repeatedly exhorted the US to cut off the head of the snake by launching military strikes to destroy Irans nuclear programme.

Then, in January 2016, Saudi Arabia executed a prominent Shia cleric, Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, along with 46 other Shia dissidents. Nimrs execution triggered protests in front of Saudi Arabias embassy in Tehran.

The proxy war between Iran and Saudi Arabia escalated in Yemen, as the Houthis used drones and missiles to attack Saudi oil installations. In ever, and Iran supported Syrian President Bashar al-Assad against internal and external efforts to overthrow him. Assads efforts to normalise his regime have made considerable progress during the past year.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia welcomed former US President Donald Trumps decision to withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal, and supported reinstating economic sanctions on Iran - only to see it now enriching uranium to near weapons-grade levels.

Trumps maximum pressure and sanctions campaign against Iran has been devastating. Ordinary Iranians have been confronted with skyrocketing prices and a greatly devalued currency. Last autumn, a wave of anti-government protests swept the country after the death of Mahsa Amini in police custody.Irans government responded by strengthening its military and political alliance with Russia, as evidenced by Irans supply of drones to Russia amid its invasion of Ukraine.

The upshot of these developments was a lose-lose for both Riyadh and Tehran, demonstrating that their confrontation would have no winner.The recent agreement in Beijing shows that Irans conservative government, led by President Ebrahim Raisi, has restored relations with Saudi Arabia based on the two agreements formulated during the moderate government of Rafsanjani and implemented by the reformist government of Khatami.

The distrust between Tehran and Riyadh is both deep and serious. Both governments, however, have committed to observe the principles of the UN Charter, including respect for national sovereignty and non-interference in each others internal affairs. This is necessary, but not sufficient on its own. The agreement must be supplemented with additional commitments to ensure sustainable, friendly relations between Tehran and Riyadh.

Saudi-Iran reconciliation: Why Riyadh and Tehran felt the time was right

As the most powerful regional and Islamic states, they should commit to regarding each others security as an integral part of their own; put an end to illusions about regional hegemony and work to create a system of cooperation and collective security among the eight countries bordering the Gulf;and convert their unhealthy competition in crisis-ridden countries such as Yemen, Syria and Iraq into a constructive partnership.

In addition, they should join forces to foster effective regional and international cooperation against weapons of mass destruction, extremism and terrorism;treat the members of their religious minorities as full citizens;and work to de-escalate tensions between Washington and Tehran.

Finally, with Iran and Israel in a quasi-war situation, Beijing - which has strong diplomatic relations with both states - could potentially mediate a ceasefire.

Irans Supreme National Security Council secretary, Ali Shamkhani, just held talks with the crown prince of Abu Dhabi. Qatar and Oman have been actively mediating to revive the Iran nuclear deal and secure the exchange of prisoners between Iran and the US. Irans deputy foreign minister recently visited Oman, and China is planning to host an unprecedented summit later this year, attended by Iran and its six Arab neighbours in the Gulf Cooperation Council.

After years of bitter hostilities and escalating crises in the region, the era of diplomacy and wisdom has now arrived. It is time for Iran, Iraq and the Gulf states to embrace and cooperate, to collectively create a powerful region.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

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Saudi-Iran deal: After years of tension, a new chapter for the region begins - Middle East Eye

The Iran-Saudi deal: A bid to end endless war – The Cradle

The China-mediated Saudi-Iran peace agreement, inked on 10 March in Beijing, marks a significant geopolitical shift with far-reaching implications for the Persian Gulf and Irans neighboring countries. For decades, Saudi Arabia and Iran have been engaged in ideological and economic competition on the territories of their neighbors, causing regional tensions to escalate.

If the agreement is successful and relations between Riyadh and Tehran improve as envisioned, tensions will likely begin to significantly subside in the Persian Gulf, Levant, and further afield in neighboring Pakistan and Afghanistan. The former, long concerned about its security and energy supply vulnerabilities, will potentially benefit from improved relations between Saudi Arabia and Iran, which could help address its oil and gas crises.

Similarly, Afghanistan, whose Taliban-led government is still struggling to gain international recognition and is in dire need of reconstruction and investment initiatives, may also benefit from the kingdoms rapprochement with the Islamic Republic.

Persian Gulf States

An early litmus test for the Saudi-Iranian reconciliation will be its impact on Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, and Yemen, where a perceived proxy war has wreaked havoc on their respective economies and in their public spheres.

One of the most critical areas where the impact of the peace agreement will be tested is Yemen, where Iran and Saudi Arabia have backed opposing sides in the countrys eight-year war. The conflict has resulted in one of the worlds worst humanitarian crises aftera Saudi-UAE-led coalition in 2015 launched military attacks against Yemens pro-Iran Ansarallah movement, which had seized control of the capital, Sanaa.

Irans permanent mission to the UN said in a statement that the Iran-Saudi dealwill accelerate the ceasefire, help start a national dialogue, and form an inclusive national government in Yemen.

Meanwhile, in the Levant, Lebanon is deeply mired in an unprecedented economic crisis, exacerbated by the deterioration of ties between Riyadh and Beirut. This divide has been fueled by the expansion of Iran-backed Lebanese resistance group Hezbollahs power in Lebanon. The World Bank has reported that Lebanons economic crisis is among the worst globally in a century, and the situation continues to deteriorate as quickly as the countrys free-falling lira.

Tensions came to a head in 2017 when then-Prime Minister Saad Hariri, who had previously been Saudi Arabias closest ally in Lebanon, announced his resignation in a televised statement from Riyadh. Lebanese lawmakers charged that he was forced to step down after being detained and roughed up by his Saudi hosts.

The rivalry between Iran and Saudi Arabia has also impacted Iraq, which has suffered greatly since the illegal US-led invasion in 2003. Despite various domestic and foreign initiatives to stabilize matters and reach a consensus on vital issues of governance, the Iraq arena remains volatile, with ongoing violence and political instability.

The crisis in Syria is often viewed as a collection of proxy wars between regional and international powers. The 12-year conflict has been fueled by the involvement of various foreign actors, including the US, UK, Russia, Iran, Turkey, Qatar, France, and Saudi Arabia. These powers have politically and militarily backed different sides in the conflict and in the case of the west, imposed oppressive economic sanctions leading to a complex and ongoing crisis that has caused significant suffering for the Syrian people.

Relief for Pakistan?

Pakistans top policymakers are optimistic about the resumption of work on the Peace Gas Pipeline following the restoration of diplomatic ties between Iran and Saudi Arabia. A source in the Pakistani Foreign Office informs The Cradle that Riyadhs opposition was the main reason the project stalled.

Geopolitical analyst Andrew Korybko goes a step further, predicting that the reconciliation between Tehran and Riyadh will unlock the full potential of a Russia-Iran-India led trade route project the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) by connecting the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) to a series of promising Eurasian megaprojects. These projects will run through Pakistan and connect Russia and India by road, making it a significant development for the regions transportation infrastructure.

Authorities in Islamabad also believe that the Saudi-Iran agreement will help reduce the activities of Saudi-sponsored sectarian militant groups, such as Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and Sippa-e-Sahaba (later renamed Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat), as well as the Sunni militia Jundallah, based in Irans Sistan and Baluchistan province, which has claimed to have killed hundreds of Iranian security personnel. These organizations have been involved in terrorist activities in Pakistan, particularly targeting the Shia community.According to Korybko:

Inadvertently, the Baloch element of Pakistans security issues may worsen soon. After being cut off by Riyadh and losing their jobs, these militants may join other extremist groups like the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) or sub-nationalist groups like the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), unless Islamabad detains them or initiates their disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration.

Afghanistan

For years, Riyadh went head-to-head with Iran to shape Afghanistans internal governance and politics and limit Tehrans influence in its bordering state. Following the 1979 Soviet occupation of Afghanistan and the establishment of a communist government under the six-year leadership of Babrak Karmal, the Saudis used Afghan ethnic and religious groups to spread their Salafist, jihadi ideology.

Meanwhile, Iran supported several Shia groups that took over parts of Hazarajat in central Afghanistan near the western periphery of the Hindu Kush range, leading to the formation of Hezb-e Wahdat after Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeinis death in 1989.

The US, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan formed a Pashtun jihadi fighter or mujahidin resistance force to fight the Soviet troops, with groups such as Gulbuddin Hikmatyars Hizb-i Islami and Abdul Rasul Sayyafs Ittihad-i Islami joining the US-backed war against the communist Afghan government.

Saudi Arabias rivalry with Iran led to the funding of an Islamic complex in Kabul in 2012, with the intention of competing against Irans Khatam al-Nabyeen mosque and Islamic University, built in 2006.

With diplomatic relations set to resume between Iran and Saudi Arabia in two months, it remains to be seen whether Afghanistan will benefit from this detente. While some experts are skeptical that Afghanistan will see any immediate relief from this rivalry, they note that the country is likely to benefit from the progress made in Irans Chabahar Port co-developed with India which is expected to accelerate in the near future.

Nonetheless, the Talibans international and especially regional recognition will likely be a key factor in determining whether Afghanistan can benefit from the resumption of diplomatic ties between Iran and Saudi Arabia.

The Asian Century

On 17 March, Pakistan announced that it facilitated communication between Saudi Arabia and Iran during the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) meeting in Islamabad in March last year. During a recent weekly briefing, a Foreign Office spokesperson stated: We applaud this advancement. Together with various other countries and supporters of both Iran and Saudi Arabia, Pakistan encouraged the talks.

Mushahid Hussain Syed, Chairman of Pakistans Senate Defense Standing Committee, tellsThe Cradle that the Iran-Saudi peace deal is a clear setback for the US and Israel, noting that there is little they can now do about the trend of declining US influence in West Asia and the concurrent rise of China in what is now being termed the Asian Century.

The world has rejected the notion of a new cold war, which some hawkish elements in the west are peddling. The time has come when Asian hands must shape the Asian future, a process on which the region has already embarked, emphasizes Syed.

He also adds that for Islamabad, this is excellent news, as China, Saudi Arabia, and Iran are close friends and partners.

China, Syed says, has achieved a major diplomatic victory in midwifing this agreement, which is a major step forward toward peace, stability, and harmony in the Muslim world and could bring proxy wars to an end in the volatile region.

China-led security paradigms

What motivated Beijing to take on the role of mediator in the Iran-Saudi peace talks and engage directly in Persian Gulf security matters?

In recent years, Chinas foreign policy has become more assertive, particularly since Xi Jinping became president in 2012. Analysts believe that Beijings decision to broker peace talks between Iran and Saudi Arabia is in line with its growing involvement in West Asia, which today extends beyond satisfying its energy needs, and includes conflict resolution, regional security, and domestic politics.

Another factor is Chinas substantial investments in its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) projects across the region, with agreements and understandings signed by twenty Arab states.

Xi Jinpings Global Security Initiative (GSI) and the Middle Eastern security architecture have driven China to become more deeply involved in Persian Gulf politics and address the regions security concerns. At the Communist Partys annual congress in Hong Kong in 2022, President Xi stated that the GSIs security parameters could effectively handle geopolitical conflicts, the food crisis, and the COVID-19 epidemic.

Tuvia Gering, a nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Councils Global China Hub, explains to The Cradle that as China strives towards national rejuvenation and grows its vested interests in the Global South, top Chinese experts are debating whether to increase their involvement in political and security issues in West Asia and North Africa.

Yang Cheng, a former diplomat and expert on Sino-Russian relations, thinks that China might eventually be able to work with [West Asian] countries on security issues and may become a major provider of security-related public goods, Gering says, adding that the majority of Chinas intelligentsia is in favor of getting more involved in regional issues.

The normalization of relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia clearly has the potential to greatly impact West Asia and the wider region as a whole. By reducing political and sectarian rivalry, the deal could effectively neuter the tendency toward proxy wars and the spread of extremist ideologies.

Importantly, the rapid advancement of economic cooperation between the two countries and their regional neighbors could provide an excellent testing ground for Xis grand vision of replacing western-sponsored endless war with his peaceful modernization alternative for the Global South. While it is still too early to determine the extent of the deals impact, it is clear that this Iran-Saudi rapprochement is a positive step towards stability in West Asia.

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The Iran-Saudi deal: A bid to end endless war - The Cradle

‘Irrationality is subjective’: fears rise of conflict between Iran and … – OC Media

Long-simmering tensions between Azerbaijan and Iran have risen to a boil in recent months, with military drills on the border and escalating accusations. In the wake of an attack on Azerbaijans embassy in Tehran, some worry that those words could precede actions.

On the morning of 27January, a man ran into Azerbaijans embassy in Tehran armed with a Kalashnikov assault rifle and opened fire. He killed the embassys head of security and injured two others before a member of staff wrestled control of the gun from him, allowing the attacker to be arrested by the police.

Both Iran and Azerbaijans state-aligned media swiftly reported the story, but the two took notably different angles.

While Irans police chief and media described the incident as a rogue escalation of a family conflict, Azerbaijani outlets immediately disputed those accounts. They alleged that Iran was deliberately distorting the nature of the incident, with some even claiming that Irans special services were behind the attack.

Azerbaijani state officials soon followed suit, declaring that all embassy employees would shortly be evacuated, as Iran had failed in its duty to protect the embassy.

Azerbaijani writer and political analyst Samad Shikhi describes the embassy attack as the peak of Iran and Azerbaijans tensions.

Not even a day after the incident, Ilham Aliyev referred to the incident as an act of terror. For an event to be classed as terrorism, it must have an ideological, political, or religious basis. But [Aliyev] was announcing his position by describing the incident in such a way without investigating its cause, says Shikhi.

While the Azerbaijani response might appear disproportionate to what could have been an isolated, if tragic incident, it was the latest escalation in a diplomatic conflict that has grown increasingly heated since late 2022.

Iran and Azerbaijan have long been at odds. Azerbaijans tight alliance with Turkey and Israel has been a long-running source of friction, while Irans cosy relations with Armenia, particularly since Azerbaijans victory in the 2020 war, have been poorly received by Baku.

Both countries also have factions who lay historic and present-day claims to the territory of the other.

While some groups in both Azerbaijan and northern Iran have expressed a desire to unite southern Azerbaijan with Azerbaijan proper, Iranian members of parliament have pointedly noted that the country was historically a part of the Iranian Safavid Empire, and suggested that Iran annex Azerbaijans autonomous exclave of Nakhchivan.

Since the settlement that ended the 2020 Second Nagorno-Karabakh War was agreed, discussions of either a road or corridor that would connect western Azerbaijan to Nakhchivan have added fuel to the fire.

If Azerbaijan got its way, the route could run along Armenias southern border with Iran. This would both potentially block direct Iranian access to Armenia, forcing it to access the Caucasus through Azerbaijan, and mean that Azerbaijan would no longer be forced to access Turkey and Nakhchivan through Iran.

In late 2022, these underlying tensions turned into action.

After Tehran blamed an Azerbaijani citizen for an attack on a mosque in Shiraz in October, Azerbaijans State Security Service announced that it had intercepted a network of spies working for Iran in Azerbaijan, with both countries going on to launch military drills near their shared border.

This escalation was matched by a rhetorical shift. Speaking after Iran ran military exercises in the north of the country, Azerbaijans President Ilham Aliyev stated in November 2022 that Azerbaijan had organised their own military drills near the Iranian border to demonstrate that we are not afraid of them.

Speaking at a conference of Turkic states, Aliyev announced that Azerbaijan would do everything to protect the rights, freedoms, and security of Azerbaijanis living abroad, including Azerbaijanis in Iran. He added that he was determined to ensure that they remain loyal to the ideas of Azerbaijanism, and never cut ties with their historical homeland.

They are part of our nation, said Aliyev.

Azerbaijans president also indicated that relations were particularly challenging with the Raisi government.

I have worked with three presidents of Iran Khatami, Ahmadinejad, and Rouhani. In all these years, a situation similar to todays has never arisen, said Aliyev. Never has Iran held two military exercises on our border within a few months. Never has it been so full of hatred and threats against Azerbaijan.

A few weeks later, Azerbaijan conducted a large-scale joint military exercise in cooperation with Turkey on the countrys southern border with Iran.

The hostility has continued apace this year, with a series of detentions of alleged Iranian spies in Azerbaijan, and a month later, another conflict erupting after an Iranian military plane trailed the countries border.

Shujaat Ahmadzada, a Baku-based political analyst and conflict expert, told OCMedia that Azerbaijans national identity was a threat to Iran on two fronts: firstly, he says, it provokes the idea that Iranian Turks could have a nation-state, in contrary to Irans strategy of national unification and assimilation.

Azerbaijans secularity also provides an alternative to the theocratic lifestyle promoted by the Islamic regime, claims Ahmadzada, and so threatens the pillars of political control.

It is for these reasons, he says, that anti-Azerbaijani discourse in Iran focuses on denying Azerbaijani identity, statehood, and history.

For example, responding to Aliyevs comments in late 2022, Iranian MP Seyed Alborz Hosseini implied that Azerbaijan would still be a part of Iran were it not for the Treaty of Gulistan, signed between Iran and the Russian Empire in 1813 and ceding control of Azerbaijan and other regions of the Caucasus to Russia.

At the same session of parliament, another MP, Mohammad Reza Mirtajuddin, called for Iran to annexe Azerbaijans autonomous exclave of Nakhchivan.

The MP also called for President Aliyev to note that Azerbaijan separated from Iran, not the other way around.

While Azerbaijani nationalists in Azerbaijan and Iran have called for the unification of northern Iran with Azerbaijan, officials have steered clear of the issue, instead focusing their criticism on Irans tight ties with Armenia.

[Iran] pumps gas, builds roads, sells weapons, and sends soldiers to Armenia, said Jeyhun Mammadov, of the ruling New Azerbaijan Party, in Azerbaijans parliament in December 2022.

Mammadov went on to accuse Iran of disruptive activities within Azerbaijan, suggesting that the country was filling peoples brains with poisonous ideas and ideologies.

Similarly, member of parliament Sabir Rustamkhanli stated that Iran was denying tens of millions of Azerbaijani Iranians the right to their mother tongue [] while 100,000150,000 Armenians [in Iran] have schools, press, and churches.

He added that Iran had supported Armenia in occupying territory previously under Azerbaijani control, and participated in the territories destruction.

The transportation of weapons to Armenia through Iran during the second Karabakh war is not a secret to anyone, said Rustamkhanli. The Iranian regime brings its own end without any outside intervention.

Azerbaijani writer and political analyst Samad Shikhi believes that Azerbaijan has been deliberately building Iran into an enemy as a scapegoat.

Azerbaijan wants to present Iran as a new enemy. In fact, however, the country is not a new enemy, but a carefully maintained one, Shikhi told OCMedia.

He says that while in previous years, the idea that Iran was an enemy and opponent of Azerbaijan was expressed tacitly, in the last half year the idea has been expressed officially, by members of parliament and even Azerbaijans president.

Discussing the issue in words is not enough for them, says Shikhi, their agenda is also apparent in their actions.

He cites examples of anti-Iranian propaganda on television, the arrest of Azerbaijanis who had studied religion in Iran, and protests held in front of the Iranian embassy in Baku.

Shikhi says that the uses of Iran as an enemy for Azerbaijan are evident: one example is in Azerbaijans land borders, which have remained closed for three years now, allegedly to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

They are able to keep the land borders closed and use propaganda to convince people that this is because of the threat from Iran and Russias war with Ukraine, says Shikhi.

He also notes that Azerbaijans ties with Israel have played a significant role in raising tensions.

Israel is known to have supplied Azerbaijan with weapons during the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, and, in February 2023, Azerbaijan appointed its first ambassador to Israel.

Shikhi cites Azerbaijani MP Fazil Mustafa, who said in parliament that Azerbaijan should ask Israel not to hit Tabriz, a city in northern Iran with a majority ethnic-Azerbaijani population, because we need it to prosper.

Regarding the threat that the conflict might break out beyond the bounds that it has occupied so far, Ahmadzada is ambivalent.

He says that Azerbaijan is in a more powerful position than before, in light of the new balance of power that emerged after the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War and closer ties between Azerbaijan and Turkey.

Nonetheless, Iran remains significantly larger and more militarily capable than Azerbaijan, which attempts to maintain balance by strengthening cooperation with states that are traditionally enemies of Iran: Turkey, Israel, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan.

The substantial power differential between the two countries means that Irans Turkic population, and not Azerbaijan, is the key actor in this situation, Ahmadzada says.

He adds that, while he believes that Iran is more likely to initiate conflict than Azerbaijan is, it would be irrational for either side to choose to go to war.

First of all, if armed violence is used, there is a strong likelihood that the conflict would intensify, spread to other regions, and possibly even become global.

He cites Azerbaijans alliances with Turkey and Israel, the former having demonstrated its willingness to intervene on behalf of Azerbaijan in the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, the latter having frequently indicated it is prepared to undertake military action against Iran.

He adds that an attack on Azerbaijan could cause domestic issues for Iran, due to the 25million40million Azerbaijani-Iranians living in the country; 3045% of the countrys population, and greater than the total population of Azerbaijan.

For the Iranian side to initiate military action would be an entirely irrational action. However, it should be noted that irrationality is rather subjective and that states occasionally commit irrational actions on purpose.

How relations play out in the weeks and months to come remains to be seen.

Ahmadzada notes that, regardless of specifics, any resolution is unlikely to be swift.

The origin of the crisis in Azerbaijan and Irans relations is systemic, he says.

In such systemic conflict situations, it is sometimes possible to act fast and in a modest, declarative way to get out of a difficult position, but you must realise that unless the systemic roots of the dispute are addressed, the conflict will persist in some way.

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'Irrationality is subjective': fears rise of conflict between Iran and ... - OC Media

Iran Has Only Itself to Blame for Its ‘Water Bankruptcy,’ Some Experts … – PassBlue

Lake Urmia in northern Iran was once the largest such saltwater body on earth, but it has shrunk to a 10th of its former size, experts say, because of damming of the rivers flowing into it and groundwater pumping from the surrounding region for development. The lake is protected as part of Unescos biosphere reserves. Overall, Iranian mismanagement, global warming and decreased rainfall has left the country with a chronic, menacing water crisis. CREATIVE COMMONS

Billed as the first of its kind in a generation, the United Nations is holding a heavily attended water conference in New York City this week, drawing attention to countries needs for sustainable water resources and sanitation facilities, especially in places where the worlds most important asset is shrinking from increasing consumption and pollution as well as global warming.

Iran, a country surrounded by three strategic waterways in West Asia, is an example of how a blend of climate change, declining rainfall and impaired environmental policies can produce a chronic, menacing water crisis, depriving thousands of people of drinking water while putting precious biospheres at serious risk of disappearance.

The first UN water conference took place in March 1977, in Mar del Plata, Argentina, and the General Assembly passed a resolution in 2018 to convene a conference in March 2023 to review how well the International Decade for Action Water for Sustainable Development was going. The years 2018-2028 were proclaimed by the UN as the decade for action on water. This months conference, led by the Netherlands and Tajikistan, runs from March 22-24. Results of the scores of meetings with the 6,000 or so participants of member states, world leaders, civil society and others will be summarized informally through a Water Action Agenda, keeping the gathering as apolitical as possible.

This is more than a conference on water, said Secretary-General Antnio Guterres in his opening remarks. It is a conference on todays world seen from the perspective of its most important resource.

The conference, Guterres added, must represent a quantum leap in the capacity of Member States and the international community to recognize and act upon the vital importance of water to our worlds sustainability and as a tool to foster peace and international co-operation.

A quarter of the worlds population, two billion people, use unsafe drinking water. According to Unicef, more than 1,000 children die from diseases associated with unsafe water, sanitation and hygiene every day. Rural communities suffer a disproportionate toll from water inequality, and it is estimated that 8 out of 10 people without access to basic drinking water live in those areas. The global water crisis is particularly impinging on women, most acutely in the poorest countries, where they are doubly vulnerable to water stress and competition over access to resources.

Iran is a stark example of a country suffering from an ingrained water crisis. Situated among three major bodies of water, the country has long reeled from a chronic water problem that experts ascribe to poor environmental management and the failure of the government to enact consistent policies for the optimal consumption and distribution of natural resources. Iran borders the Caspian Sea, Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman, and has an edge over some of its landlocked neighbors, such as Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan. But Irans inefficient environmental planning has plunged the country into what a leading academic has called water bankruptcy.

If a country is in water bankruptcy mode, its water consumption exceeds its renewable water supply, so essentially what that nation consumes is more than what the nature is allocating to it, said Kaveh Madani, a prominent Iranian environmental scientist, former politician and director of the UN Universitys Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH), based in Ontario, Canada.

Then you would see declining groundwater levels, shrinking lakes, wetlands and rivers, desertification, deforestation, dust storms, polluted water, wildfires and so on. Are we seeing these things in Iran? Absolutely, he told PassBlue.

Iran has endured protracted periods of drought, and the reverberations of climate change are compounding its water problem. The Washington-based World Resources Institute ranks Iran as the 13th-most water-stressed nation in the world, even surpassing its landlocked neighbors Afghanistan and Turkmenistan. At the same time, the governments meager investment in extending the water pipeline network to its far-flung areas has left many regions of the country pauperized.

As reported by the government, 17.6 percent of the population in Irans rural areas still dont have access to potable water.

The Iran Meteorological Organization says 97 percent of the country is living through drought to varying degrees, and with decreasing precipitation, experts warn that a water war has erupted in the country, pitting people against each other in a battle over securing access to what is available. From Sept. 23, 2021 to a year later, rainfall dropped 24 percent, compared with the long-term average, and the World Bank ranks Iran as one of the 20 countries globally with the least annual precipitation.

The government has issued far too many permits for individuals and landowners to extract water as it stimulates agriculture, experts say. But since the use of groundwater is contingent on land ownership, a lot of illicit activity has been spurred as well, with proprietors digging wells to use the water in their personal villas and gardens. There are reportedly 350,000 illegal wells across the country and up to 14,000 illegal wells are sealed every year, rapidly depleting the aquifers. In recent decades, inadequate oversight and flawed management have resulted in up to 150 billion cubic meters of static water sources vanishing in Iran.

What has made a bad situation worse is the governments relentless construction of dams to generate reserves for household and industrial use and to push industrial development. It is believed that Iran has constructed nearly 600 dams since the 1979 revolution, making it the third-largest dam builder, after China and Japan. Additionally, 190 more dams may be built. But the lavish projects have often been commissioned by inexperienced contractors, and their defective construction has spawned increased water evaporation, reduced irrigation potential and dampened hydroelectricity production, report local media.

Another major environmental crisis of national proportions has been the desiccation of Lake Urmia, or Lake Oromeeh, in northwestern Iran. Once the largest saltwater lake in the Middle East, the lake used to be a key wildlife habitat and is now a Unesco biosphere reserve. More than 50 dams have been constructed in the wetlands basin, and coupled with endemic drought and lingering neglect, nearly 95 percent of its water has dried up over the last 40 years.

Because of its policies of stringent self-sufficiency, the perception of Iran is that it has refused to attract international cooperation to reverse its environmental woes. Some observers say the absence of such partnerships is the result of sanctions that have long isolated the country from the wider international community. But Madani believes it is the governments own shortcoming in weighting sound environmental management that has triggered the water crisis.

I dont think the problems at home can be really blamed on the lack of relationship with intergovernmental agencies, he said. No foreign entity or foreign government can rescue Iran from water bankruptcy if Iran doesnt decide to prioritize its water and environmental problems.

Still, the UN water conference could be an opportunity for Iran to draw attention to its water crisis and initiate partnerships that can help the country overcome its nearly pariah status that is chipping away at its environmental resilience. The Chinese-brokered rapprochement between Iran and Saudi Arabia may be a first step to easing Irans unfavorable status quo. Hurt by years of chronic isolation, Iran could use the UN forum to help pull off sustainable change, if it wished, observers say. Yet the website of the Iran mission to the UN lists no information on its participation in the conference.

Guterres said that water, humanitys lifeblood, is in deep trouble.

We are draining humanitys lifeblood through vampiric overconsumption and unsustainable use, and evaporating it through global heating, he said, emphasizing four key areas of action: closing the water management gap, massive investment in water and sanitation systems, redoubling efforts to focus on resilience and treating climate action and the future of sustainable water as two sides of the same coin.

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Iran Has Only Itself to Blame for Its 'Water Bankruptcy,' Some Experts ... - PassBlue