Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Iran condemns terrorist attack in Pakistan, reaffirms need to fight terrorism across region – Press TV

Irans Foreign Ministry spokesman has strongly condemned a terrorist bomb attack in Pakistans eastern city of Lahore, reaffirming the need to continue the fight against terrorist groups across the region.

Saeed Khatibzadehs statements came after at least two people were killed and 22 wounded on Thursday during a bomb blast in a busy shopping district of the Pakistani megacity of Lahore.

A newly formed separatist group based in southwestern Balochistan province claimed responsibility in a text message sent to a Reuters reporter.

"This attack targeted bank employees. A detailed statement will be issued soon," a spokesman for the Baloch Nationalist Army said on Twitter.

"It was a bomb blast," a police spokesman, Arif Rana, told Reuters, adding that a time device rigged to a motorcycle exploded outside a shop in the market. He noted that a nine-year-old boy is among the three dead.

Pakistans Prime Minister Imran Khan expressed regret over the "loss of precious human lives," a spokesman for his office told reporters.

Such terrorist attacks once again highlight the necessity forfighting against terrorist groups in order to establish peace and calm in the region, Irans Foreign Ministry spokesman said.

Khatibzadeh also expressed sympathy with victims of the terrorist attack, their families, and the friendly government of Pakistan.

Separatists in Pakistans Balochistan province have previously claimed several attacks across the mineral-rich province, which borders Afghanistan and Iran and is the largest of Pakistan's four provinces.

Since December, Pakistan has seen a string of blasts and attacks against its police force after a truce between the government and Pakistan's Taliban expired.

Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a home-grown militant group, has claimed responsibility for most recent attacks.

The TTP said earlier this week that it was responsible for a deadly shootout in Islamabad on Monday night during which a police officer was killed and two others injured.

Police said both attackers were killed while Pakistan's interior minister warned of the potential for further violence.

Pakistan's government announced late last year that it had entered a month-long truce with the TTP, facilitated by Afghanistan's Taliban, but the truce expired on December 9 last year after peace talks failed to make progress.

The TTP has been blamed for hundreds of bomb attacks and kidnappings across the country.

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Iran condemns terrorist attack in Pakistan, reaffirms need to fight terrorism across region - Press TV

As Biden Relaxed Pressure, Iran Took Advantage – The Wall Street Journal

Jan. 16, 2022 5:44 pm ET

Jeremy Ben-Ami has been an opponent of pressure on the Islamic Republic of Iran and a supporter of the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement. That 2015 deal, with nuclear and missile restrictions that sunset between 2023 and 2031, gave Tehran patient pathways to nuclear weapons and the intercontinental missiles to deliver them. In his letter Diplomacy, Not War, With Iran (Jan. 14), Mr. Ben-Ami attacks us personally, but we all want a nuclear-free Iran so lets look, instead, at the facts.

His main argument is that Irans nuclear expansion occurred because President Trump withdrew from the 2015 nuclear agreement and imposed a campaign of maximum pressure. The problem is that the timelines dont support that belief. Mr. Trump withdrew from the agreement in May 2018 and imposed severe sanctions from November 2018 until he left office. While Tehran took preliminary steps to expand its nuclear program in May 2019, the most significant steps took place after President Bidens election in November 2020. These include enriching uranium first to 20% purity and then to 60% (a stones throw from weapons-grade), the production of uranium metal for nuclear warheads, the operation of more advanced centrifuges, and massively increasing stockpiles of enriched uranium.

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As Biden Relaxed Pressure, Iran Took Advantage - The Wall Street Journal

New Missiles, New Risks: The Escalatory Implications of Iran’s Precision-Strike Weapons – War on the Rocks

Since 2017, evidence of Irans new precision-strike weapons capability has been raining down across the Middle East. In the last five years, the Revolutionary Guard has used highly accurate ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and drones to hit range of targets including ISIL in Syria, Kurdish militias in Iraq, oil facilities in Saudi Arabia, a U.S. airbase in Iraq, and an Israeli-linked oil tanker off the Omani coast. Iranian forces also used surface-to-air missiles in the intentional downing of a U.S. reconnaissance drone and the accidental shootdown of Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 over Tehran.

Iran has expanded the types and deployments of precision-strike weapons across all of its military services. As a result, these weapons form a critical pillar of Irans military strategy for deterrence, for defense, and for supporting its Axis of Resistance partners. Whereas Western concerns once focused on Irans potential use of missiles as nuclear delivery systems, its missiles have now become a conventional threat in themselves.

U.S.policymakers andmilitary planners are working to counter Irans advances in precision-strike weapons. But Washington hasnt fully reckoned with the way in which this new capability has increased Irans strategic self-confidence and heightened the risk of rapid escalation in a crisis. Unless and until traditional efforts to constrain Irans new weapons prove effective or it is feasible to negotiate limits on them, the United States and its allies should take steps to enhance strategic stability and reduce the risk of inadvertent escalation.

Irans Increasing Reliance on Precision-Strike Weapons

The important role of precision-strike weapons in the arsenals of both the Revolutionary Guard and Irans conventional military, the Artesh, has increased in recent years, with both forces now deploying these weapons throughout their individual services. For years, the guards aerospace force has deployed ballistic missiles, land-attack cruise missiles, and drones while the Artesh air force has deployed air-launched anti-ship cruise missiles. The navies of the guard and Artesh have operated anti-ship cruise missiles and their air defense forces have both operated surface-to-air missiles. But things have expanded in recent years. In 2021, Iranian commanders highlighted the deployment of ballistic missiles, traditionally a monopoly of the guards aerospace force, by the Guard Corps ground force and navy. Moreover, the Artesh air force displayed a long-range land-attack cruise missile, another munition traditionally reserved for the guards aerospace force. The military services of both the Revolutionary Guard and Artesh now use armed and suicide drones, as shown by the Arteshs tests of long-range suicide drones last year as well as their deployment by the guards ground force. Finally, the ground forces of the guard and Artesh have incorporated guided rockets into their arsenals. In sum, all of the military services of the Revolutionary Guard and Artesh now bristle with strike weapons for offensive and defensive use.

This newfound emphasis on precision-strike missiles and drones can also be seen in Iranian military exercises. In November, the Artesh used cruise missiles, armed and suicide drones, and surface-to-air missiles to strike targets during its Zolfaghar 1400 exercise. In the Great Prophet 17 exercise in December, all three of the Revolutionary Guards forces aerospace, navy, and ground relied on strike weapons in their simulated offensive and defensive operations, including coordinated ballistic missile and drone strikes on a mockup of Israels Dimona nuclear facility. The research organizations of the Revolutionary Guard and Artesh have also stepped up their involvement in in the development of precision-strike weapons. This has expanded the countrys domestic research, development, and industrial base, which has traditionally been dominated by defense ministrys development and production organizations such as the Aerospace Industries Organization, Aviation Industries Organization, and Defense Industries Organization.

As a result of these efforts, Iranian precision-strike weapons are now critical to the countrys military strategy. Iran has used precision-strike weapons to respond to what it calls semi-hard (nimeh-sakht) threats such as terrorism and assassination and to address the hard (sakht) threat of armed conflict via deterrence and defense. These weapons are an important part of deterrence, the cornerstone of Irans military strategy. They support Irans stated active deterrence (bazdarandegi-e fael) strategy and its doctrine of defensive and offensive deterrence (bazdarandegi-e defai va tahajomi), which emphasizes the threat of decisive offensive and defense responses to deter Irans adversaries. Irans precision-strike weapons do so by providing the means to threaten retaliation and possibly preemption against enemy actions and to threaten high costs if adversaries attack or invade.

Statements by Iranian officials emphasize three main components of deterrence: capability, resolve, and vulnerability. Precision-strike weapons are central to all three. First, Iran is increasing its qualitative and quantitative capabilities in the full range of missile and drone strike weapons. Second, Iran has signaled its resolve to use these weapons overtly or covertly against its non-state and state adversaries. Third, it is attempting to decrease its own vulnerabilities by enhancing the survivability of its precision-strike weapons. Iran is also attempting to exploit the perceived vulnerabilities of its adversaries by threatening to strike Israeli cities and nuclear facilities as well as U.S. military bases and forces in the region.

In addition to deterrence, precision-strike weapons also play a critical role in Irans plans for defense and asymmetric warfare should deterrence fail. For example, Iran would rely heavily on these weapons if it ever followed through on its threats to close the Strait of Hormuz. They also play an important role in the military dimension of Irans strategy of resistance, including its support of its Axis of Resistance partners such as Lebanese Hizballah and the Yemeni Houthis.

The Risk of Rapid Escalation

Irans reliance on precision-strike weapons to support its military strategy and national security goals will likely continue to grow. Not surprisingly, Western countries, in particular the United States and Israel, have become increasingly concerned, and reportedly now view Irans conventional strike capabilities as a more immediate danger than Irans nuclear program. U.S. Central Command has highlighted its concerns about Irans achievement of overmatch in the region and stressed the measures that it has taken in response, including enhancing deterrence, improving active and passive defenses, and redeploying forces.

Unfortunately, the United States and its allies still face serious challenges in responding, whether by seeking to constrain Irans advances in precision-strike weapons or to deter Irans use of them. Western countries will almost certainly continue their traditional measures aimed at constraining Irans development of strike weapons, such as national and multilateral export controls, sanctions, diplomatic pressure, and interdictions. However, these measures have shown little impact thus far on Irans capability to develop, deploy, and transfer weapons.

Negotiations to limit Irans precision-strike weapon programs, capabilities, or transfers will likely not be feasible for some time, based on the high level of political tensions, the critical role that these weapons play in Irans military strategy, and the clear advantages they provide to Iran. Tehrans consistent position remains that negotiations on these weapons are a red line. This means that any efforts to constrain Irans capabilities or decouple Iranian precision-strike weapons from the central role they play in Irans military strategy will most likely prove impractical for at least the near future.

Western countries also face a tough challenge in deterring Irans threat and use of precision-strike weapons so long as Iran believes it holds the advantage in the overall balance of deterrence. Although Iranian officials likely do not doubt U.S. and Israeli capabilities to strike Iran, statements by Iranian military officials suggest they question Western resolve in using military force against Iran and also believe Israeli targets and U.S. bases in the region are highly vulnerable to Iranian missile and drone strikes. Indeed, Iranian military officials assert that Iran has passed the deterrence phase (marhaleh-ye bazdarandegi) and reached the point where the onus now lies with Irans adversaries to deter it, not the other way around.

These dynamics all intensify the risk of rapid escalation during a crisis or conflict with Iran. Irans self-confidence and perception of advantage may not be justified but they nonetheless create the risk of Iranian misperception during a crisis. Additionally, Irans reliance on precision-strike weapons to conduct quick, decisive, and offensive responses to enemy actions could easily drive a fast, escalatory cycle of tit-for-tat attacks with Iran using increasing numbers of these weapons in each step. This would only be intensified by the use or lose pressures on Iranian commanders to launch strikes before their own arsenals are destroyed.

The United States and its allies should continue to seek military and diplomatic ways to blunt the threat of Iranian precision-strike weapons. Until these efforts succeed, however, they should seek ways to strengthen strategic stability and reduce the risk of inadvertent escalation in the case of a crisis. Such measures could include direct communication hotlines between military commanders, streamlined diplomatic channels using a pre-arranged third party, advanced notification of military exercises, and agreements to reduce the chances of naval or air incidents.

Jim Lamson is a senior research associate at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey. Prior to that, Jim worked for 23 years as an analyst with the Central Intelligence Agency.

Image: Islamic Republic News Agency

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New Missiles, New Risks: The Escalatory Implications of Iran's Precision-Strike Weapons - War on the Rocks

Aras Amiri Has Returned to the U.K. After Being Jailed in Iran – The New York Times

LONDON A British cultural organization said on Wednesday that one of its employees from Iran had been acquitted of espionage charges by that countrys Supreme Court and was back in Britain after spending more than three years in prison.

While visiting her grandmother in Iran, the woman, Aras Amiri, was arrested in March 2018 along with other Iranians with British connections, in what was thought to be an attempt by the authorities to gain leverage in an old dispute with Britain over more than $400 million in undelivered weaponry.

Ms. Amiri, an art student employed for five years by the British Council to facilitate greater appreciation of Iranian culture in the U.K., is an Iranian citizen who had lived in Britain for about 10 years before she was detained. Irans Supreme Court acquitted her in August, the council said, and she returned to Britain this week after the travel ban associated with her original detention was lifted.

She had been sentenced to 10 years in prison in April 2019, a punishment announced on state TV before she or her lawyer had been informed, according to a letter Ms. Amiri wrote in June 2019 from prison, which her cousin, Mohsen Omrani, sent to the Center for Human Rights in Iran, a New York-based advocacy group.

According to the letter, which was addressed to Ebrahim Raisi, then the judiciary chief and now president, Ms. Amiri said that she had been imprisoned because of her association with the British Council and that she had turned down an explicit invitation to spy for Irans Intelligence Ministry.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Ms. Amiris lawyer, Hojjat Kermani, said that Irans Supreme Court had determined that her earlier espionage conviction was against Shariah, or Islamic law.

We have always refuted the original charges made against Aras, the British Council said in a statement on Wednesday. We are very proud of her work in our London office as an arts program officer.

Ms. Amiri was incarcerated in Evin Prison, north of Tehran. Before her acquittal and return to Britain, Ms. Amiri had been released on furlough in April 2020 over concerns about the spread of coronavirus.

The case underscored the Iranian authorities targeting of dual citizens and Iranian citizens with Western connections as bargaining chips in geopolitical disputes.

A British-Iranian national, Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a project manager with the Thomson Reuters Foundation, was sentenced to five years in prison in 2016 after she was accused of plotting to overthrow the government in Tehran. She was issued another one-year sentence and travel ban in April, under new charges of conducting propaganda activities against the Iranian government.

Several foreign and dual nationals are held in Iranian prisons, including Nahid Taghavi, a German-Iranian architect; Siamak Namazi, a businessman, and his father, Baquer Namazi, a former official with Unicef, both Iranian Americans; Dr. Ahmad Reza Jalali, a Swedish-Iranian physician and researcher; Morad Tahbaz, an Iranian-American environmentalist; and Emad Shargi, an Iranian-American who was working for an Iranian venture-capital fund.

Farnaz Fassihi contributed reporting.

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Aras Amiri Has Returned to the U.K. After Being Jailed in Iran - The New York Times

U.S.-Iranian citizen accused of sending U.S. technology to Iran – Boston.com

Local

A man with ties to Massachusetts has been charged with conspiring to illegally export U.S. goods, technology, and services to end-users in Iran,including the government of Iran, in violation of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, according to a statement from federal officials.

Kambiz Attar Kashani, 44, a dual citizen of the United States and Iran, was arrested Thursday in Chicago, Illinois, according to the statement.

The arrest was announced by Breon Peace, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York, Matthew G. Olsen, assistant attorney general of the Justice Departments National Security Division, and Joseph R. Bonavolanta, special agent-in-charge of the FBIs Boston field office.

Kashanis arrest underscores the unrelenting resolve of this office and theDepartment of Justice to prosecute those who seek to profit by compromising our national security,Peace said.

Peace alleged that Kashani orchestrated an elaborate scheme to evade federal export laws and use the U.S. financial system in procuring U.S. electronic equipment and technology for the Central Bank of Iran, which has been designated by the federal government as acting for or on behalf of terrorist organizations, according to the statement.

According to officials, Kashani allegedly used two United Arab Emirates companies as fronts to procure items from multiple U.S.technology companies, including a company in Massachusetts.

We believe Mr. Kashani profited financially by strengthening the economy of one of the worlds most infamous state sponsors of terrorism, while circumventing critical U.S. lawsdesigned to protect our national security interests, Bonavolonta said.

As set forth in the complaint, according to the statement, Kashani conspired to illegally export goods and technology to the Central Bank of Iran.

The Department of the Treasurys Office of Foreign Assets Control has classified CBI as a SpeciallyDesignated National (SDN) signifying that CBI is acting for or on behalf of a terrorist organization, according to officials.

According to the U.S. government, CBI has materially assisted, sponsored, and provided financial, material, or technological support, goods, or services to LebaneseHizballah, a terrorist organization, and to the Qods Force of Irans Islamic RevolutionaryGuards Corps (IRGC).

The IRGC is a branch of the Iranian armed forces and represents the primary means of the government of Iran to direct and implement its global terrorism campaign, according to the statement.

Kashani allegedly perpetrated the illegal transshipping scheme through two separate United Arab Emirates (UAE) front companies for which he acts as principal, officials said.

From around February 2019 through June 2021, Kashani and his co-conspirators used the two UAE companies to procure electronic goods and technology from multiple U.S. technology companies for end-users in Iran, including CBI, without obtaining the required export licenses, according to the statement.

Officials allege that Kashani and his co-conspirators intentionally concealed from the U.S. companies that they intended to send the items to Iran, falsely claiming that the UAE front companies would be the ultimate end users.

The governments case is being handled by the Offices National Security and Cybercrime Section.

Assistant United States Attorneys Alexander A. Solomon andMeredith A. Arfa are in charge of the prosecution, with assistance provided by TrialAttorney S. Derek Shugert of the Justice Departments Counterintelligence and Export Control Section and Assistant United States Attorney Shawn McCarthy of the Northern District of Illinois.

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