Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Iran’s influence is on full display in Gaza – Reaction

Along with the blood, a lot of ink has been spilled over this weeks tragic events in Israel and Palestine. But one word has been missing from much of the analysis Iran.

The thousands of missiles streaking out of Gaza and into Israeli cities were either made, or paid for, by Tehran. Iran hopes to break the recent dtente between Israel and some Arab states via the outrage across the Muslim world at the loss of Palestinian lives. As the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) official Ramez al-Halabi said on Iraqi TV this week, We buy our weapons with Iranian money. An important part of our activity is under the supervision of Iranian experts I am proud to say that the rockets that are used to pound Tel Aviv have an Iranian signature on them. Social media throughout the Arab world has seen a surge of praise for Iran this week as the only country prepared to stand up to the Zionist entity although criticism from Arab governments has been relatively muted.

Read the original:
Iran's influence is on full display in Gaza - Reaction

Opinion: Women in Iran can’t travel abroad without their husband’s permission. That’s got to change. – The San Diego Union-Tribune

The officer at the airport looked at me with menacing eyes. It dawned on me that I might not be allowed to embark on the plane. I was at Irans Imam Khomeini International Airport, prepared to get on my flight.

What do you think youre doing, leaving the country without a husband?

I told her I was single, held American citizenship and was going back to the U.S after three years abroad. She did not look satisfied with my explanation and appeared to want to pursue the matter further when her colleague took me aside. Taking a look at my American passport, and then my Iranian one, she handed them back to me and let me exit the terminal.

We provide this platform for community commentary free of charge. Thank you to all the Union-Tribune subscribers whose support makes our journalism possible. If you are not a subscriber, please consider becoming one today.

Close call? An exit procedure? Or a charade to make women have second thoughts before traveling?

It never occurred to Samira Zargari to think twice. As head coach of Irans female national ski team, she was accompanying her team to the Alpine world championships in Italy. It was only upon her arrival at the airport that she realized she could not leave. In Iran, married women need their husbands legal permission to obtain a passport or leave the country, and Ms. Zargaris husband refused to let her travel.

Hers is just the latest in a slew of cases of women in Iran being denied freedom to travel. In 2015, athlete Niloufar Ardalans husband refused consent to renew her passport so she could participate in the Asian Championships in futsal, a version of soccer. In 2017, Paralympic gold medalist Zahra Nematis husband barred her from traveling to participate in competitions. Irans authorities were pressured to intervene and issue a special travel permit for her.

Yet there was no intervention for Ms. Zargari, who had to stay behind and cheer on her team from afar. She has posted Instagram stories expressing her hopes that one day all women in her country will be free to travel, and she believes that in unity, they will make it possible.

Ziba Kalhor, a professional skier in Iran whose coach is Ms. Zargari, considers the ordeal a senseless travesty.

Were talking about someone who supervises two assistant coaches and leads a team of five skiers, she told me. A perfectly capable adult whom the law has rendered incapable of leaving the country.

Kalhor believes these laws will be removed one day for all women. But for now, she said, They should at least prioritize women who operate on an international level those whose absence affects the standing of their country on the world scene.

Hasan Sakettabar, a lawyer in Iran, acknowledges the discriminatory nature of the law but said throughout his decade-long career, only three women have come to him with travel issues. In this country, women are more affected by problems such as securing their rights to pursue a career outside the home without their husbands say in the matter, he told me.

He said it is only when a high-profile individual gets barred from leaving the country and the media become involved that womens travel restrictions suddenly become a cause for concern. For a long time now, Iranian society has dealt with an onslaught of sanctions, inflations and Muslim travel bans which relegate womens travel issues to a back-burner, he said.

To date, the only way women in Iran can circumvent travel restrictions is for a marriage contract to include an unlimited right to travel without a husbands consent. Some have opted for this solution; even so, a man still has to give his consent for his wife to travel without consent!

In the aftermath of Ms. Zargaris ordeal, an online petition demanding a revision to laws surrounding womens exit procedures from the country was created. The petition, addressed to Irans parliament, has so far garnered more than 50,000 signatures. Many Iranian women have shared the petition on their social media accounts, with the Persian language equivalent of a hashtag saying, womens right to travel.

The travel issues Iranian women face are at odds with the fact that Irans heritage sites and natural wonders attract visitors from all over the world.

Ive been traveling the world for as long as I can remember. The experiences gained on my travels have shaped who I am. I have studied and pursued career opportunities abroad, a privilege that is only acquired through the freedom to travel. No woman should have to face hindrances to such freedom, particularly when her career and livelihood are at stake.

I dream of the day when every woman can spread her wings and dare to overcome. As Ms. Zargari says, together and in unity, it will happen.

More here:
Opinion: Women in Iran can't travel abroad without their husband's permission. That's got to change. - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Eli Lake: Why the Saudis are reaching out to Iran – TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

Late last month, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman offered an olive branch to his countrys main adversary. Speaking on Saudi television, the kingdoms de facto ruler said he seeks to have good relations with Iran.

That represents at least a rhetorical retreat for the Saudis, who are fighting a vicious and destructive war against Irans Houthi proxies in Yemen and were public supporters of former President Donald Trumps economic warfare against Iran. It was only three years ago that Prince Mohammed said that Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei makes Hitler look good.

Now President Joe Biden has made clear he will not give the Saudis a blank check. He has pursued a path for the U.S. to rejoin the 2015 Iran nuclear deal that would release billions of frozen revenues to Irans cash-strapped government.

So one explanation for the Saudis attempt at rapprochement with Iran is that Americas regional allies are adjusting to a new president with a new foreign policy. They are reading the tea leaves, said David Schenker, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy who served as assistant secretary of state under Trump. The Saudis dont want to be left isolated or without U.S. support.

Yet this explanation goes only so far. U.S. diplomats tell me that the Saudis began their quiet outreach to Iran in late 2019, after a devastating missile attack on their oil infrastructure in September. The crown prince pleaded with Trump to respond to Irans escalation, but Trump declined. As a result, lower-level talks between the Saudis and Iranians began. The only difference between 2019 and 2021 is that there is a new U.S. administration and Prince Mohammed has publicly acknowledged this diplomacy.

After the Iranian missile attack, according to my sources, the State Department urged the Saudis to hold tight. In January 2020, a U.S. drone strike killed Iranian General Qassem Soleimani, and afterward Trump sent more U.S. forces to the region in a show of deterrence.

By contrast, the Biden administration has encouraged the kingdoms outreach to Iran. Schenker told me that it reminds him of the Arab outreach to Syrian dictator Bashar Assad in the late 2000s. After the U.S. hosted a regional Arab-Israeli peace conference in 2007, several Arab states, including Saudi Arabia, dropped their policy of isolation toward Syria as punishment for its role in the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri. The Arab states went back to isolating Syria in 2011, after the regime launched a war against its own citizens that rages on to this day.

Then as now, the policy of the U.S. president influenced the relationships among its Arab allies. Whats different this time is that Americas Arab allies are now preparing for a Middle East where their most powerful friend is no longer around.

This explains why a country like the United Arab Emirates, the first Arab state to join the Abraham Accords with Israel, is also quietly pursuing a diplomatic dialogue with Iran. If the Biden administration follows through with its promise to begin Americas disentanglements in the Middle East, then Arab states will need as many friends and as few enemies as possible.

It will take a great deal of diplomatic skill for the UAE to balance a new friendship with Israel and a budding relationship with a regime committed to Israels destruction. Just last week, Irans Khamenei gave a speech making clear that Iran still would like to destroy the worlds only Jewish state.

Khamenei also had a message for the Arab states that have recognized Israel. Will the Jewish states normalization of relations with a few weak, pitiful countries be able to help that regime?! he asked on his English-language Twitter account.

For now, its clear that the Abraham Accords have helped Israel. Their lasting impact, however, depends on Israels new Arab friends coming around to the realization that feeding an Iranian crocodile only whets its appetite.

Read the original:
Eli Lake: Why the Saudis are reaching out to Iran - TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

Iran’s election competition for who is most sycophant – expert – The Jerusalem Post

The criteria has become so strict by the Guardian Council to qualify as candidates, that it is actually adding to the illegitimacy of the elections, said Iran Observer owner and IDC lecturer Meir Javedanfar. It is really undermining the legitimacy of the elections. It is really making it look like a competition between who is the most sycophant of the system, instead of who is the most qualified to address the peoples problems and the Iranian peoples challenges.

Though the president still must defer to Khamenei, the position often carries significant day-to-day power regarding Irans economic affairs, and sometimes control over its diplomatic positions.

Iran expert Dr. Raz Zimmt, a fellow at INSS and an editor at the Meir Amit Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center, agreed with Javedanfar that predictions at this point were difficult, but was willing to give some very initial estimates.

Zimmt said that there is no clear leader between the reformist or pragmatist camps, which gives the hard-line camp its biggest advantage in years.

Though there could be competition within the hard-line camp, especially with a variety of former Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps officials vying for the presidency, Zimmt said the initial front-runner could be Judiciary Chief Ebrahim Raisi.

cnxps.cmd.push(function () { cnxps({ playerId: '36af7c51-0caf-4741-9824-2c941fc6c17b' }).render('4c4d856e0e6f4e3d808bbc1715e132f6'); });

Raisi was defeated by current President Hassan Rouhani in 2017, but garnered almost 16 million votes, close to 40% of the total vote, and Rouhani cannot run again having finished his second term.

However, like most candidates, Raisi has not yet officially declared his intentions. Multiple potential candidates, including Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, Irans parliamentary speaker and a former mayor of Tehran, have said they would drop out if Raisi runs, said Zimmt.

Raisi is much less committed to the 2015 nuclear deal with the world powers and may work to indirectly undermine it.

Raisi, whose constituency is the hard-line clerical class, is allied with the Revolutionary Guard Corps, and may even be in line as successor to Khamenei.

Regarding the so-called pragmatist camp that accepts most of the foundations of clerical rule in Iran but is more open to negotiating certain issues with the West, Zimmt said the potential candidates are weaker than in the past.

Foreign Minister Javad Zarif has repeatedly said he will not run, though Zimmt thought that if he was running he might have had a real chance, and been able to press for some improvements in running the country.

Zarif though is hard to pin down, and could always make a last-minute change.

Zimmt said that another possible pragmatist candidate could be Iranian First Vice President Eshaq Jahangiri, though Jahangiri is weaker now as a candidate than he might have been four years ago because he is associated with Rouhani, who himself has been blamed by many Iranians for the poor economic situation.

Even if he runs, he is not seen as someone who could achieve any great changes, said Zimmt.

Besides those potential candidates, Zimmt said that former parliamentary speaker Ali Larijani might have a chance as a candidate bridging the hard-line and pragmatist camps.

He would have his work cut out for him to convince the pragmatist and reformist camps to support him as the lesser of all evils.

Larijani is much more conservative even compared with Rouhani, said Zimmt, so it is not clear that he could garner pragmatist and reformist support, and doubtful that he could compete with Raisi for a majority in the hard-liner camp.

Zimmt was skeptical of reports that the IRGC, or former IRGC officials, would succeed at taking the presidency.

Many reports have talked about former IRGC official Saeed Mohammad, who at 53 is much younger than other top candidates.

But Zimmt said he might be disqualified by the Guardian Council as not having spent a sufficient cooling-off period since retiring from the IRGC, and for not having reached a sufficiently senior IRGC rank.

Mohammad was a top IRGC economic official, which might not be as easy to translate into political currency as it would be if he were a military commander.

Regarding other former IRGC officials who might compete, Zimmt said they would not necessarily foreshadow a greater IRGC takeover, as most of them have been out of the organization for 15-20 years.

Muhammad Ahmadinejad has also declared his candidacy, but Zimmt expected him to be disqualified as he was in 2017. Ahmadinejad fell out of favor with Khamenei in 2011 in the last couple of years of his presidency.

The Guardian Council will rule in late May on who can run.

Read more:
Iran's election competition for who is most sycophant - expert - The Jerusalem Post

Increase of Hamas and pro-Iran regime members in Berlin – German intel – The Jerusalem Post

The intelligence agency for the city-state Berlin registered an increase in the number of Hamas, pro-Iranian regime and Muslim Brotherhood individuals, in its new report released on Tuesday.

According to the 136-page German-language document reviewed by The Jerusalem Post, the intelligence agency reported an increase of Hamas members from 70 in 2019 to 80 in 2020.

The State Office for the Protection of the Constitution report covers the year 2020. The United States and the European Union both classify the jihadi movement Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip, a terrorist entity.

The Islamic threat to Berlin numbered 2,170 people.

The Iranian regime-sponsored Hezbollah movement had 250 members in Berlin in 2020. The Lebanese Shiite terrorist organization also had 250 members in 2019. Germanys Interior Ministry in 2020 banned all Hezbollah activities within the federal republic. The so-called military wing was already considered a terrorist organization.

The number of Muslim Brotherhood supporters rose from 100 in 2019 to 150 in 2020, according to the intelligence report.

cnxps.cmd.push(function () { cnxps({ playerId: '36af7c51-0caf-4741-9824-2c941fc6c17b' }).render('4c4d856e0e6f4e3d808bbc1715e132f6'); });

The agency to protect the constitution documents serious threats to Berlins democratic order. The intelligence agency is the rough equivalent to the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency).

There are 450 documented violent Salafists in Berlin from a sector of 1,100 radical Sunnis.

The report noted that Irans regime, along with Russia and China, is active in cyber espionage.

Iranian cyber actors are also trying to gain access to protected information in Germany, the intelligence agency stated. A major cyberattack campaign was recently discovered in which employees of German companies received fake job offers by means of spear phishing emails.

On the Iranian cyberattack, the intelligence report said: When executing the corresponding applications, malware could be loaded onto the computer unnoticed. One reason for the increase in Iranian cyber operations in Germany is likely to be the political tensions in the Persian Gulf region.

The report added that Iran has a fundamental interest in obtaining political and economic information and to circumvent existing sanctions against the Tehran regime.

Originally posted here:
Increase of Hamas and pro-Iran regime members in Berlin - German intel - The Jerusalem Post