Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

U.S. allows time to wind down deals hit by fresh Iran sanctions – Reuters

FILE PHOTO: Attendees hold flags from Iran and the United States as Iranian Americans from across California converge in Los Angeles to participate in the California Convention for a Free Iran and to express support for nationwide protests in Iran from Los Angeles, California, U.S., January 11, 2020. REUTERS/ Patrick T. Fallon/File Photo

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Treasury Department said on Thursday it will allow for a 90-day period to wind down transactions in certain sectors of Irans economy hit with fresh U.S. sanctions last week.

The period, good through April 9, allows transactions in the construction, mining, manufacturing or textiles sectors of Irans economy that could be targeted under last weeks action to be wound down without exposure to sanctions, the Treasury Department said in an update to its frequently asked questions, or FAQs, on Iran sanctions on its website.

Entering into new business that falls under the sanctions imposed on Friday, however, would not be considered winding down and could still be sanctionable, the FAQ said.

The United States imposed more sanctions on Iran on Friday in retaliation for its missile attack on U.S. forces in Iraq last week and vowed to tighten the economic screws if Tehran continued terrorist acts or pursued a nuclear bomb.

The targets of the sanctions included Irans manufacturing, mining and textile sectors as well as senior Iranian officials who Washington said were involved in the Jan. 8 attack on military bases housing U.S. troops.

Tensions between Washington and Tehran have spiked since Trump unilaterally withdrew in 2018 from the Iran nuclear deal struck by his predecessor, Barack Obama, and began reimposing sanctions that had been eased under the accord.

Those U.S. sanctions have driven down Iranian crude sales, the Islamic Republics main source of revenues, but so far have not brought Iran back to the negotiating table to discuss a new nuclear pact as sought by Trump.

Reporting by Daphne Psaledakis; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Jonathan Oatis

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U.S. allows time to wind down deals hit by fresh Iran sanctions - Reuters

A 13-Year-Old Gave An Emotional Speech About His Dad Who Died In The Iran Plane Crash – BuzzFeed News

Just over a week ago, 13-year-old Ryan Pourjam's father, Mansour Pourjam, died in a plane crash after Iran's government shot down the jet just outside Tehran. All 176 passengers were killed.

Iran initially blamed the Jan. 8 crash on engine failure but later admitted it was shot down in a "human error" amid heightened tensions with the US military.

On Wednesday, Ryan gave an emotional speech at a memorial service at Carleton University. His father earned his degree in biology there in 2001 and went on to become a dental technician in Ottawa, according to the Ottawa Citizen.

Ryan said his dad was an incredibly positive person who would have wanted his loved ones to remain optimistic through such a painful time.

"Hed always tell me to stay positive through the dark times and through the good, when we'd get stuck in traffic or when I couldn't get the coffee that I wanted," he said.

"I dont want to talk about the bad things," he continued. "Because I know that if my dad was alive and if someone else died in the crash and that he was right here giving a speech, he wouldn't talk about the bad stuff. I wont."

Ryan said he would describe his dad in one word as "strong."

"Hes been through tragedy after tragedy, wall after wall, wrong turn after wrong turn, and he stood strong," he said. "He was amazing, and we loved each other."

More than 200 people came to the Wednesday vigil, which was held jointly for Mansour Pourjam and another victim, Fareed Arasteh. Arasteh was a PhD student studying molecular genetics at the university, according to CBC.

Ryan said he was comforted by how many people came together to "celebrate Mansour and Fareeds amazing lives."

"I stand up here a week after this horrible tragedy, and I still cant believe it," Ryan said. "I feel like Im dreaming."

"But I know that if I was dreaming, and that if he woke me up, he'd tell me that it's going to be OK," he said. "And it will be."

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A 13-Year-Old Gave An Emotional Speech About His Dad Who Died In The Iran Plane Crash - BuzzFeed News

The U.S., Iran and a No-Win Game – The New York Times

After pulling back from the brink of war, leaders in the United States and Iran may well be evaluating what they have gained and what they have lost in a conflict that has been waged for 20 months.

Looking to de-escalate and mindful of political pressures at home, both sides are publicly declaring victory.

But objective assessments might not be sunny, analysts say.

Since President Trump withdrew from the Iran nuclear accord and imposed crushing sanctions on Irans economy in May 2018, kicking off a cycle of tit-for-tat escalation, both countries have suffered consequential losses in each major issue at stake in their rivalry.

And while each has also made gains, they have been modest in comparison, analysts say. Ostensible victories have mostly had the effect of harming the other side without bringing clear and concrete gains.

The result has been a clear lose-lose, said Dalia Dassa Kaye, who directs a Middle East policy center at RAND Corporation, a nonpartisan research group.

While the conflict appears far from over and its ramifications could take months or years to unfold, so far, she said, The tally is looking bad for both sides.

The United States has seen more setbacks than advances in its ambitions to increase limits on Irans nuclear program, end Irans use of armed proxies and, most sweeping of all, remake the Middle Eastern power balance to Irans detriment.

Iran fared little better with its goals of securing influence in the region, as well as salvaging the international diplomatic opening and the relief from economic sanctions that the nuclear deal had granted it until Mr. Trump withdrew.

The nearly two-year episode is a lesson in the limits of zero-sum theories of conflict, which hold that one adversarys loss is invariably the others gain. In this case, an accounting of the major gains and losses on each side, compiled below, suggests that at nearly every turn, escalations by the United States and Iran have ultimately left each side worse off.

Much of the conflict has played out amid American efforts to curtail Irans use of proxy forces and to turn back the countrys growing regional influence.

Concrete American gains in this area are difficult to identify.

American actions have not yet altered Irans use of proxy forces or persuaded it to step back from the wider region. Rather, Iranian proxy activity has increased. The threats may have hardened Tehrans belief that its fight with the United States is existential, compelling it to fight all the harder.

And despite the staggering significance of Washingtons decision to kill Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, Irans top military leader, this has yet to demonstrably change Iranian behavior or the regional power balance.

Assassinations on their own do not remove long-term strategic and political threats or dilemmas, Dahlia Scheindlin, an Israeli analyst, wrote in a policy brief for the Century Foundation, a think tank.

There is no substitute for a political solution, she said.

American losses in the region, on the other hand, have been clearer.

Killing General Suleimani on Iraqi soil led Iraqs Parliament to pass a bill demanding that American troops leave the country. While it remains unclear whether the Americans will ultimately leave, Washingtons relationship with the country seems grievously damaged.

The turmoil has also left American-led efforts against the Islamic State in doubt.

And Persian Gulf allies such as Saudi Arabia, apparently fearful of being pulled into a wider conflict, have sought to de-escalate with Tehran. This has left the United States with fewer partners in isolating Iranian influence.

Iranian gains in the region, however likely, remain mostly theoretical.

Tehran could ultimately fill the void left by any American withdrawal or diplomatic rift between Washington and Baghdad, but that has not yet happened.

Street-level Iraqi anger at Iranian influence was already high before the recent weeks of conflict. And Irans retaliation for the killing of General Suleimani firing missiles at military bases in Iraq that housed American soldiers was hardly a show of respect for Iraqi sovereignty.

General Suleimanis death led to an outpouring of nationalist sentiment within Iran. Still, with Irans economy in shambles, this will probably prove temporary, Ms. Kaye said. The domestic pressures and potential for unrest remain, she said.

Iranian losses center on the death of General Suleimani, who was a major figure in Irans campaigns to reshape Middle Eastern conflicts and politics in its favor.

While his killing will certainly damage some of his key projects, Ms. Scheindlin wrote, there is little reason to believe that Iran will change its behavior. The countrys vast military and intelligence services are considered too large and sophisticated for one persons death to bring drastic policy change.

All told, the broad contours of Middle Eastern power politics appear to be holding. The United States and Iran have both been somewhat weakened, and neither has come obviously nearer to its major goals.

Mr. Trump withdrew from the 2015 nuclear accord on claims contradicted by international inspectors and by his own military and intelligence leaders that Iran was seeking to acquire a nuclear weapon. He pledged to stop this and to impose tighter restrictions than those in the initial agreement.

Since then, Irans focus has been on reinstating the economic and diplomatic relief that the 2015 agreement was supposed to offer.

American gains on the nuclear issue have not yet materialized. Iran remains no closer to submitting to nuclear restrictions beyond those in the 2015 accord.

But American losses have been growing.

Iran has at times responded to American escalations by announcing it will no longer comply with certain nuclear restrictions. While Iran has so far taken few actual steps toward greater nuclear development, it will face weaker limitations should it ever choose to do so.

The international coalition that negotiated the agreement with Iran, and was meant to police it, has fragmented, leaving Washington to seek and enforce a new status quo all on its own something that took the combined work of the worlds major powers last time around.

And Mr. Trumps decision to withdraw from the accord could leave Tehran and other American adversaries skeptical of making nuclear concessions in the future.

Its just not clear what credibility the U.S. has to make a nonproliferation agreement with an enemy anymore, said Elizabeth N. Saunders, a Georgetown University political scientist. She asked, Would anyone ever enter a deal like the Iran deal with us ever again?

Still, Iranian gains are more modest than they might seem.

Its true that Iran has exploited international outrage at American brinkmanship to withdraw from some nuclear restrictions without provoking a crisis.

But Tehrans statements and actions strongly suggest that its primary goal is not acquiring a nuclear weapon but rather reinstating the economic and diplomatic benefits afforded by the deal. While Iran may have hoped that turning up the pressure would push the international community to bring this about, it has not come any obviously closer to that goal.

Iranian losses appear larger. Its economy has suffered under sanctions, exacerbating domestic unrest.

And Iranian threats and proxy attacks have alienated it from the European powers it had hoped might pressure the Americans to back down. A French-led effort last fall to hand Iran $15 billion in credit, in exchange for the country returning to the terms of the nuclear agreement, collapsed under American opposition.

Im not sure how much international sympathy it really has, Ms. Kaye said of Iran, though the U.S. has alienated a lot of international partners too, so that may be a wash.

Both the United States and Iran are left, as a result, much further from the aspects of the 2015 nuclear agreement that appealed to each of them.

Instead, they are barreling toward a scenario that would combine each sides worst nightmares: severe sanctions and international isolation for Iran, but weak or nonexistent restraints on its nuclear program.

That risk underscores that months of conflict have, across every major issue, raised the stakes for both sides, all while making it harder for either to back down.

All the conditions that got us to this point are still in place, and now were facing the new reality that the U.S. and Iran have engaged in direct and open conflict, Ms. Kaye said.

She takes a skeptical view of the declarations of victory coming from Washington and Tehran.

This is not the time for victory laps, she said.

Amanda Taub contributed reporting.

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The U.S., Iran and a No-Win Game - The New York Times

Senate Has Votes to Pass Limits on Trumps Iran War Power, Likely Drawing a Veto – The New York Times

In conversations with Republican colleagues, especially after the briefing last week, they were discouraged that the attitude that was being communicated to us was that Congress was an annoyance, Mr. Kaine said. After that, they came to me and we have been able to make some amendments.

The resolution, which would give Mr. Trump a 30-day deadline to come to Congress for authorization for military action in Iran, would still need to be passed by the House. And it would be unlikely to overcome a veto from the president.

Mr. Kaine introduced the measure, which invokes the War Powers Act of 1973, as a privileged joint resolution, which allows him to force a vote on the measure and win over the support of a simple majority of senators. With 45 Democrats in the Senate and two independents who routinely vote with them, Mr. Kaine needed just four Republicans to sign on.

The vote could come as early as next week, though it is unclear if the timing will be affected by the impeachment trial, which Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, announced would begin next Tuesday. Democratic leaders will also need to corral senators running for president back to the Capitol to ensure passage.

The House passed similar legislation last week, though that measure was viewed as largely symbolic without the force of law.

But even Mr. Kaines legislation, considered to be the stronger of the two measures, has its limitations. The War Powers Resolution restricts actions only by the United States military, so it would not stop Mr. Trump from carrying out targeted attacks on Iranian military leaders or other discrete operations, as long as he carried them out covertly under the authority of the C.I.A.

Congress has rarely passed legislation invoking the War Powers Act in an attempt to restrain a presidents war-making authority. Last year, it sent to Mr. Trump just such a measure in a bid to cut off American military support of the Saudi-led campaign in Yemen, an intervention that has created the worlds greatest humanitarian disaster. While Mr. Trump vetoed that legislation, supporters of the legislation hoped it would create a new model for curtailing presidential war powers.

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Senate Has Votes to Pass Limits on Trumps Iran War Power, Likely Drawing a Veto - The New York Times

NYTs Haberman Comparing Trumps Treatment of the Press to Irans Weakens Her Argument – National Review

President Trump answers questions about impeachment and Iran during an event at the White House in Washington, D.C., January 9, 2020. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)

On Sunday, New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman suggested that it was hypocritical of President Trump to criticize the Iranian governments treatment of journalists, given the way that he himself talks about the American press.

Earlier that day, Trump tweeted:

Haberman then replied, saying: Let reporters roam free says the president, who routinely refers to the US press as enemy of the people, to Iranian leaders, according to Fox News.

In other words: In Habermans mind, it is absurd for Trump to criticize the Iranian governments treatment of journalists which includes, you know, jailing, torturing, and sometimes even killing them when he himself speaks negatively of the American press.

Anyone with a functioning brain, of course, could quite clearly see that her comparison is whats absurd; saying bad things about a group of people is hardly the same as murdering them.

Now, I am certainly not saying that I agree with the way that Trump has treated the press throughout his time in politics. Far from it. In fact, I myself have criticized him on this; its been the subject of more than one of my columns. For example: In October of 2017, I slammed Trump when he called for television programs to give equal time to positive coverage of him and his viewpoints, calling it unsettling for him to suggest that the government has anything to say about our medias coverage of it, pointing how our press having the freedom to criticize the people in power over us without any constraints serves as an important check on that power becoming unbridled.

Later that month after Trump stated that he thought it was frankly disgusting the way the press is able to write whatever they want to write I became so frustrated with supposedly small-government conservatives neglecting or refusing to condemn the way that the president speaks about the media, in a column titled: Conservatives, Get Real with Yourselves and Denounce Trumps Attacks on the Press.

Heres the thing, though: Its exactly comments like Habermans that make it more likely, not less, that Trumps supporters will continue to fail to see anything wrong with the way that the president speaks about the press in this country. After all, when you say something as objectively outlandish as she did, all youre doing is making it far less likely that people will be willing to take any of your legitimate criticisms seriously.

This is a trap that we see people on the Left fall into fairly often their penchant for comparing Trump to Hitler, for example, is one that immediately comes to mind. Unfortunately for them, however, this doesnt do them any favors. I understand that they hate Trump; I understand that they believe he is a total, irredeemable disaster for the country, and that they want him out of office. The thing is, though, if your goal is to change peoples minds about Trump, you should do your best to avoid weakening your own credibility by stooping to objectively ridiculous arguments.

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NYTs Haberman Comparing Trumps Treatment of the Press to Irans Weakens Her Argument - National Review