Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Senior US Senators meet Iran opposition leader in Albania – HuffPost

While August seems usually a passive time of the year in politics, it has been quite the opposite for Iran and the wide variety of developments around this controversial international dossier.

A senior delegation of United States Senators travelled to Tirana, the capital of Albania, today, August 12, 2017, to meet the Iranian opposition leader Maryam Rajavi, who heads the National Council of Resistance of Iran.

The delegation, Senators Roy Blunt, Vice President of the Republican Conference, and member of the Appropriation, Select Intelligence, Rules and Administration, and Commerce, Science, and Transportation committees; John Cornyn, the Majority Whip, and a member of the Judiciary, Select Intelligence, and Finance committees; and Thom Tillis, a member of the Armed Services, Judiciary, Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs and Veterans Affairs committees, also visited members of the Peoples Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) in the Albanian capital.

NCRI

The NCRI is a political coalition calling for regime change in Iran and considered the main threat to Tehrans mullahs. The MEK is the main member of this coalition of a variety of Iranian dissident groups and individuals.

Led by Senator Blunt, the delegation congratulated the safe and secure relocation of all Camp Liberty residents outside of Iraq and wished them success in their struggle for democracy and human rights in Iran, according to an NCRI statement.

Rajavi expressed her gratitude for the tireless efforts of the U.S. Senate, particularly Senator Blunt, regarding the protection of thousands of MEK members in Iraq, and their safe relocation to Albania.

Senator Blunt was among several American dignitaries, including senior former officials, who at a July 2014 Senate briefing strongly condemned Irans highly destructive role in Iraq. While describing Tehran as part of the problem plaguing Baghdad and the entire country, Senator Blunt joined the initiative in demanding the urgent transfer of PMOI/MEK members stationed in a former US military base known as Camp Liberty near the Iraqi capital.

Senator Blunt and his colleagues John McCain (R-AZ) and Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), and former Senator Carl Levin had urged former Secretary of State John Kerry to press for the protection of Camp Liberty and to expedite the resettlement of the Camp Residents to countries outside Iraq, including the United States.

NCRI

Earlier in April, Senator McCain, a long supporter of the Iranian opposition and a staunch critic of Tehrans policies, also visited the MEK in Albania and met with Rajavi. MEK members were able to depart Iraq after a long 4 year ordeal in Camp Liberty following a forced transfer from their 26-year home in Camp Ashraf, northeast of Baghdad. From 2009 following the transfer of their security from the US military to the Iraqi government, the MEK came under eight major ground and missile/rocket attacks staged by Iran-backed proxies against Ashraf and Liberty. This was parallel to a seven-year logistical and medical siege closing them off from the outside world. After losing over 160 of their colleagues to the attacks and blockade, MEK members were finally able to transfer out of Iraq to a variety of European countries, mainly Albania.

Saturdays high-profile visit by the senior U.S. Senators comes at a time when Washington has slapped major new sanctions against Iran for its ballistic missile drive, support for terrorism and human rights violations. Irans Revolutionary Guards is now subject to sanctions under Executive Order 13224, and Specially Designated Global Terrorists. Considering the Guards control over 40% of Irans economy, these new sanctions come as a heavy blow to Tehrans future ambitions. Analysts believe this visit sends a strong signal to Tehran over how the NCRI is gaining momentum through a growing consensus in Congress over the necessity of adopting a policy of regime change vis--vis Iran. This time last year Irans ruling clerics appeared determined on weakening or dismantling the PMOI/MEK. Only a year later, the tides have turned and it is the Iranian opposition that is now on the offensive. More such developments threatening the very pillars of Irans rule are most likely set to come in the near future.

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Harvard-educated, Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a world-renowned businessman, a leading Iranian-American political scientist, president of the International American Council on the Middle East, and best-selling author. He serves on the advisory board of Harvard International Review.

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Senior US Senators meet Iran opposition leader in Albania - HuffPost

Sweden plans to deport Christian actress to Iran! – WND.com

Sweden is violating a United Nations human-rights treaty in its attemptto deport a prominent Iranian actress who revealed her conversion from Islam to Christianity after arriving in the European nation, according to a charity that defends persecuted Christians worldwide.

Aideen Strandsson would face punishment and prison, possibly even rape and death, if returned to the mullah-led Islamic nation, arguesthe U.K.-basedBarnabas Fund.

The group citesthe 1951United Nations Refugee Convention, which statesa refugee should not be returned to a country where they face serious threats to their life or freedom.

In Strandssons case, the international Christian ministry said, she undoubtedly would face prison at a minimum for her conversion to Christianity.

In fact, Iranian prisons are a particularly dangerous environment for any woman, the organization said.

Rape has been widely used against female prisoners since the 1979 Islamic revolution on the pretext that women offenders must not be allowed to remain virgins, as this could result in them being admitted to paradise. Added to this, as both an apostate from Islam and a nationally known actress who has appeared in films and on TV, Miss Strandsson is likely to be viewed as a significant embarrassment to the Iranian government. As such, her life will be in serious danger, the Barnabas Fund said.

Persecuted: The Global Assault on Christians tells of the perseverance and courage of men and women who suffer because of their faith in Jesus Christ

The organization saidthe actress had a conversion experience after watching a video in Iran of a woman being stoned to death.

I decided at that moment I dont want to be a Muslim anymore, she said.

Strandsson said that shortly after that, she had a dramatic spiritual encounter.

I had a dream about Jesus. He was sitting near me and he took my hand, she said.

But she, like many others in Iran, kept her faith quiet, allowing word of it to come out only after she safely was in Sweden.

At that point, in 2014, she asked for a public baptism.

I want to have a baptism in public because I want to say I am not afraid anymore I am free, I am Christian. I want everyone to know about that, she explained, according to Barnabas.

Now, however, Swedish officials have told Aideen that becoming a Christian was her decision and now its her problem and not theirs.

At her asylum hearing, a Swedish migration official even told her it would not be as bad for her in Iran as she is expecting because it would only be six months in prison, Barnabas said.

The U.N. convention disallows sending a refugee back to a nation where they face serious threats to their life or freedom.

The planned deportation is part of Swedens attempt to tamp down the backlash to its admission of huge numbers of migrants from Muslim nations.

In a worrying new trend, which may affect Christians in other European countries which have recently allowed in large numbers of migrants, decisions on asylum appear to be influenced not just by human rights but also by government targets, with little or no recognition of the specific persecution faced by Christian minorities in countries such as Iran, Barnabas Fund said.

A lawyer working on her case, Gabriel Donner, told Barnabas Fund the government officials do not care about injuries they may create.

They have promised the public in Sweden that they will deport more people than before and so they have to fill the quota.

Donner saidmany Swedish officials are so ignorant ofreligion and Christianity they assume its simply a lifestyle choice.

A convert says, I converted because of the love I received from Jesus Christ, and they almost mockingly ask the convert, What do you mean by love? They dont understand the message in the Bible. Its just completely alien to them, he said.

Donnerestimated there are 8,000 asylum-seekers now hiding in Sweden to avoid deportation.

Persecuted: The Global Assault on Christians tells of the perseverance and courage of men and women who suffer because of their faith in Jesus Christ

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Sweden plans to deport Christian actress to Iran! - WND.com

After Iran bans two soccer players for playing against Israelis, fans rush to their defense – Los Angeles Times

Two soccer players have been barred for life from Irans national team after they appeared in a match against players from Israel, prompting anger among the sports many fans in the Islamic Republic.

Masoud Shojaei and Ehsan Haji Safi played last week in a European league match for the Greek team Panionios against Maccabi Tel Aviv, an Israeli club. That appeared to violate a longstanding rule prohibiting Iranian athletes from competing against opponents from Israel, a nation that the Iranian government doesnt recognize.

After the match, a Farsi-language Twitter account maintained by the Israeli foreign ministry posted a message: Well done to Masoud Shojaei and Ehsan Haji Safi who broke the taboo of not playing in matches against Israeli athletes.

On Wednesday, Irans deputy sports minister, Mohammad Reza Davarzani, said in an interview with Mizan news agency, the mouthpiece of Irans judiciary, that the players would no longer be allowed on the national soccer team.

It is certain that Masoud Shojaei and Ehsan Haji Safi will never be invited to join the national football team because they violated the red line, state television quoted Davarzani as saying.

The comments set off vigorous discussion on social media in Iran, where soccer is the most popular sport. Irans soccer federation, the sports governing body, did not immediately confirm the players suspensions, but Davarzani said his ministry had the authority to make the decision.

For many years, Iranian athletes on the international stage have hewed to an unwritten rule that they not play against Israelis, with many feigning illness or using other ruses to avoid head-to-head competitions.

Shojaei and Safi, both of whom are under contract to play for the Greek club, appeared to observe part of the custom when they sat out a match last month against Maccabi, played in Israel.

But both played the full 90 minutes in the Aug. 4 match in Greece, which their team lost, 1-0.

Many soccer fans defended the players for honoring their contract and accused Davarzani of politicizing a sport in which Iran, which has qualified for the 2018 World Cup, struggles to compete on an international level. Its soccer ambitions have been hampered by official mismanagement and international economic sanctions.

Iranian footballers need to be internationalized and play in [Europe] to bring hard currency and new techniques and experience to help domestic football, said Ali Samienia, a 64-year-old coach in a youth soccer league in Tehran.

What is the fuss? Its not a big deal. Iranian politicians are pushing politics into sport, especially football.

Iranian hard-liners have been asserting themselves in recent months following the re-election victory of President Hassan Rouhani, a relative moderate.

Rouhani, who campaigned on expanding personal freedoms and improving relations with the West, has frustrated supporters by failing to appoint any women to his Cabinet an apparent show of deference to the conservative clerics who are the custodians of the countrys theocracy.

Soccer fans said the players suspensions could affect Irans World Cup hopes especially the loss of Shojaei, the captain of the national team who played 70 minutes in a victory over Uzbekistan in June that clinched Irans spot in the quadrennial tournament. Safi did not play in the match.

Shojaeis absence will have a negative impact on Irans matches in the World Cup, said Reza Agharahimi, a 30-year-old soccer fan in Tehran. It would be better to think of the infrastructure of Iranian football rather than pay attention to minor, unimportant issues which are politics and have nothing to do with sport.

Special correspondent Mostaghim reported from Tehran and Times staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India.

shashank.bengali@latimes.com

Follow @SBengali on Twitter

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After Iran bans two soccer players for playing against Israelis, fans rush to their defense - Los Angeles Times

For Netanyahu and the Saudis, Opposing Diplomacy With Iran Was Never About Enrichment – The Intercept

This was never about enrichment. The academics and officials in the room were taken aback. For a former senior Israeli official to deny the importance of the nuclear issue was unusual, to say the least. The conversations, attended by American civilian and military officials and other Western representatives, as well as Iranian diplomats and Tehrans then-nuclear negotiators, were shockingly honest.

Enrichment is not important, the ex-Israeli official continued. What Israel needs to see from Iran is a sweeping attitude change. The veteran Israeli decision-maker himself a vocal opponent of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu explained that Israel could not accept the U.S. coming to terms with Iran without demanding that Iran come to terms with Israel. Israel is not party to the deal, so it wont be bound by the deal, he warned. If Iran is not willing to accept Israels existence, then Israel will stand in the way of the U.S. reaching a deal with Iran, the Israeli message read. The Iranians in the room listened attentively, but showed no reaction. In a breakout session later that afternoon, they indicated that they could recognize Israel only if Israel joined the Non-Proliferation Treaty as a non-weapons country that is, once Israel gave up its nuclear weapons and opened its nuclear program to international inspectors.

It was April 2012. Tensions between Israel and the Obama administration were rising. President Barack Obama was pushing back against Israeli pressure for military attacks against Iran, while at the same time continuing the P5+1 diplomacy with Iran, an internationalized process involving the permanent U.N. Security Council members, as well as Germany and the European Union. There were also only a few months left before the 2012 U.S. presidential election. Many Israelis worried that Netanyahus aggressive style would further damage his relationship with Obama and undermine Israels influence over American calculations regarding Iran. It was becoming a growing worry for the Israelis as Obama showcased unprecedented dedication to diplomacy, which they suspected would only grow more firm in his second term.

The closed meeting, organized by a prominent U.S. university and held in a small Western European country, revealed dynamics driving the conflict that are rarely discussed in public: The Israeli fear that Irans rise in the region would be accepted by the U.S., and that it would regard Tehran as a legitimate player in the new regional order without Tehran accepting Israels existence. The most potent instrument for ensuring that Washington wouldnt come to terms with Iran was the nuclear issue, which before the breakthrough in November 2013, was viewed as a hopelessly intractable conflict. As long as the deadlock held, Iran would remain at least a permanently sanctioned pariah, former Israeli official Daniel Levy wrote. For the years when the U.S. pursued Irans all-out containment, Israel enjoyed a degree of unchallenged regional hegemony, freedom of military action, and diplomatic cover that it is understandably reluctant to concede or even recalibrate. Israels position was directly linked to the U.S. upholding Pax Americana in the Middle East; its status was underwritten by U.S. preeminence in the region, Levy argued.

Herein lies the tragedy of Netanyahus miscalculation. By aggressively defining the Iranian nuclear program as an existential threat to Israel, depicting the Iranians as irrational and suicidal, and threatening to bomb Iran, Netanyahu hoped to force Obama to take military action and recommit Washington to Pax Americana. Instead, Netanyahus strategy eliminated the status quo option of containing the nuclear program while neither resolving the issue nor acquiescing to Irans nuclear demands. Then, once that option was rejected, Obama did something Netanyahu had discounted: He opted for diplomacy, a measure that by definition could open the door to ending the U.S.s efforts to isolate Iran.

Not only did Obama doubt the efficiency of military action, it also went against his principles and promises to pursue war only after all other options were exhausted. In never considering acceptance of enrichment on Iranian soil, the U.S. had not tested all diplomatic solutions. War also contradicted Obamas larger geopolitical objectives to reduce the U.S.s footprint in the Middle East and shift its focus east toward Asia and China. Although the Obama administration has insisted that the nuclear deal was solely about nonproliferation, its commitment to the deal in spite of the overwhelming domestic political risks Congress seemed implacably opposed to diplomacy can best be understood in the larger geopolitical context of the nuclear talks. The real challenge to the U.S. was the emergence of a peer-competitor with capacity and ambition to be a global superpower. No state in the Middle East has the capacity or the potential capacity to challenge the U.S. on a global scale. China, on the other hand, does.

From Obamas perspective, the war in Iraq and the U.S.s over-commitment in the Middle East had served only to weaken the country and undermine its ability to meet the challenge of prospective peer-competitors. With the Middle East losing strategic significance as a result of a variety of factors including reduced U.S. dependence on oil and with the cost of U.S. hegemony drastically increasing, the cost-benefit calculation for the U.S. had decisively shifted. To Obama, the Middle East was unsalvageable, and the more the U.S. got involved, the worse things would get and the more the U.S. would be blamed for the regions woes. If Libya showed Obama that the region was best avoided, the rise of the Islamic State proved to him that the region could not be fixed. Contrast that with Southeast Asia, which still has huge problems enormous poverty, corruption but is filled with striving, ambitious, energetic people who are every single day scratching and clawing to build businesses and get education and find jobs and build infrastructure, Obama told The Atlantic. If were not talking to them, he continued, referring to young people in Asia and elsewhere, because the only thing were doing is figuring out how to destroy or cordon off or control the malicious, nihilistic, violent parts of humanity, then were missing the boat.

Activists take part in a rally to commemorate the nuclear deal with Iran in front of the White House, on July 14, 2017 in Washington.

Photo: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

Obamas critics contended that his lack of involvement was the cause of many of the problems in the Middle East, which in turn had weakened the U.S. On the contrary, Obama believed that the U.S.s overextension in the region had and would continue to harm its strength and global standing. Overextension in the Middle East will ultimately harm our economy, harm our ability to look for other opportunities and to deal with other challenges, and, most important, endanger the lives of American service members for reasons that are not in the direct American national-security interest, Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes explained.

In addition, Obama harbored a growing conviction that Irans prolonged isolation was neither possible nor necessarily helpful. This was particularly true if Irans reaction to its containment was to further challenge Western interests in the region. Iran is too large a player, too important a player in this region, to simply leave in isolation, the United Kingdoms then-Foreign Secretary Phil Hammond said. This sentiment was widely held in Europe. No one believes Iran can perpetually be put in a straightjacket, Germanys Ambassador to the U.S. Peter Wittig told me.

Obama believed giving Iran a seat at the table could help stabilize the region, particularly in Syria and Iraq, where the West and Iran shared an interest in defeating ISIS. Theres no way to resolve Syria without Iran being involved, Obama said a few weeks after the Iran deal, known formally as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, had been reached. Syria had been discussed on the sidelines of the nuclear talks, but it was only after the deal had been finalized that real deliberations could take place. I really believe that, for instance, what we have now on Syria talks bringing together all the different actors, and we have it now and not last year because we had the deal, EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini told me. Meanwhile, the United States and Iran indirectly coordinated their efforts against ISIS in Iraq, prompting Obamas Secretary of State Kerry to tell an American audience that Iran had been helpful. Neither that collaboration nor the public acknowledgment of Irans help would have occurred had it not been for the nuclear deal.

Obamas interaction with Iran convinced him that the leaders in Tehran were rational, self-interested, and pragmatic. What weve seen, at least since 1979, Obama said in August 2015, is Iran making constant, calculated decisions that allow it to preserve the regime, to expand their influence where they can, to be opportunistic, to create what they view as hedges against potential Israeli attack, in the form of Hezbollah and other proxies in the region. Reducing tensions with Tehran was particularly attractive in view of both the negative role some of the U.S.s key Middle East allies played and their insistence that Washington fight their battles. American frustration with Saudi Arabia was particularly noteworthy. Obama had a strained relationship with the Saudi royal family, often finding himself aggrieved with the Saudis and with the idea that the United States had to treat Riyadh as an ally at all. His understanding of Saudi Arabias role in exporting extreme Wahhabist Islam may go well beyond that of any previous and future presidents. During his youth in Indonesia, according to The Atlantic, Obama observed firsthand how Saudi-funded Wahhabists gradually moved the country closer to their own vision of Islam. The U.S.s problems with Iran ran deep but, in the presidents mind, it was not in American interests to always unquestionably side with Saudi Arabia.

Ultimately, the United States sought to reduce its tensions with Iran and pave the way for a pivot to Asia. By contrast, it seemed that Saudi Arabia sought a return to the pre-2003 order and an intensification of Irans isolation and exclusion from regional affairs. It was fundamentally clear that Riyadh and Washington were on a collision course, a former Saudi official said. The official, Nawaf Obaid, defined Iran as the root of regional chaos, whereas Obama viewed the rivalry between Saudi Arabia and Iran as a source of instability for the region. Yet from the Saudi point of view, American neutrality was tantamount to betrayal. To Riyadh, Obama was abandoning the entire Arab world and acting on behalf of Tehran by pursuing a policy that declared support for a more powerful Iran, Obaid wrote. The Saudis saw proof of this view when they refused to attend the Syrian crisis talks since Iran would partake for the first time, and Obama personally intervened. According to Foreign Policy, he called the Saudi king to convince him to participate in the negotiations and drop the request for Iran to be shut out. Obama appealed to Saudi Arabia to find a way to share the region with Iran. His reasoning that the problem was not Irans alleged aspiration for hegemony, but rather Riyadhs refusal to accept Irans inclusion into the region was patently absurd, according to Obaid.

From the American perspective, however, the nuclear deal prevented both war with Iran and a nuclear-armed Iran while holding out a promise of improved relations. At the same time, the U.S. could exercise tougher love with Israel and a more conditional friendship with Saudi Arabia. We need to re-examine all of the relationships we enjoy in the region, relationships primarily with Sunni-dominated nations, Gen. Mike Mullen wrote in support of the nuclear deal as Congress debated it. Detente with Iran might better balance our efforts across the sectarian divide. The U.S. was frozen in a pattern of regional relations that were no longer productive and could force it into unnecessary wars. To pivot to Asia, these patterns needed to be broken, starting with a new relationship with Iran. Conversely, to prevent the U.S. reorienting itself, the nuclear deal needed to be killed hence Saudi Arabia and Israels staunch opposition to it.

While U.S. and Saudi interests were diverging, Riyadh found itself viewing the region in an increasingly similar light as the Israelis. Once clearly taboo, collaboration with Israel was increasingly discussed in the Saudi kingdom. For both countries, Obamas deal largely resolved the immediate matter of the nuclear question. However, it did so by undermining their mutual core interest in excluding Iran from the regional order. The JCPOA addressed the pretext for Israel and Saudis tensions with Iran, but not the roots of their conflict. By framing the nuclear issue as an existential threat, Netanyahu enabled the sidestepping of broader worries that both Arabs and Israelis have about Iran, Brookings Institute analyst Shibley Telhami wrote in 2015. After all, an existential threat supersedes all other issues; all else became secondary at best. In fact, the Saudis and their allies asked the U.S. not to discuss their top regional concerns with the Iranians in the U.S.s bilateral meetings with Iran. Israel did the same, securing a promise from the United States and the European Union that that a total separation will be enforced between the nuclear file and other issues such as ISIS, the Israeli government minister responsible for the Iran file at the time, Yuval Steinitz, said. Later, both Saudi Arabia and Israel pointed to this division as a weakness of the JCPOA.

The most important implication of the Iran deal, according to Israel, was that it condoned, as Harvard researcher Daniel Sobelman put it, Irans drive to obtain recognition as a legitimate regional power to be reckoned with. Moreover, rather than downgrading Iran, the deal upgraded it to a de-facto threshold nuclear power, according to Netanyahus former defense minister, Ehud Barak. With the nuclear issue resolved, the U.S. would lose interest in countering Irans destabilizing activities in the region, leaving Israel and the Arabs to manage their rivalry with Iran on their own. Israels singular focus on keeping Iran isolated and constrained also caused tensions with the United States over the struggle against ISIS. To Israel, ISIS was a distraction. ISIL is a five-year problem, Steinitz, the Israeli minister, said, while the struggle against Iran would continue for another generation. Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon publicly rejected that ISIS constituted a threat to Israel, and stated that he preferred ISIS to Iran. The head of a well-connected Israeli think tank even went so far as to write that destroying ISIS would be a strategic mistake because the group can be a useful tool in undermining Tehrans ambitious plan for domination of the Middle East. The argument underscored the depth of the divergence of interest and perspective between the U.S. and Israel.

While some have suggested that the nuclear deal caused a rift in U.S.-Israeli relations, in reality the geopolitical interests of the two nations had already been diverging for some time. Rather than causing this rift, the deal reflected a preexisting, growing gap between them. Theres no doubt that theres a divergence of interest between the United States and Israel, a senior administration official told me, asking for anonymity. Differences over the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, the Arab Spring, including Iran in the regional order, and the U.S.s military footprint in the Middle East were all coming to a head. While Israel wanted the U.S. to retain a strong military presence in the region, Americas global responsibilities prevented the Middle East from occupying such a large share of its resources. While the U.S. continues to have an interest in keeping Israel safe and democratic, it is concerned that the biggest threats to Israeli democracy come from inside the country itself specifically, its ongoing occupation of Palestinian territory. Even senior members of the Israeli security establishment agree that the real existential threat to Israel comes from the inside, and not from Iran. There is no outside existential threat to Israel, the only real existential threat is the internal division, former Mossad chief Tamir Pardo said. Internal division can lead us to civil war we are already on a path towards that.

Israels security establishment repeatedly entered into Iran debates as Netanyahus biggest critics. Some of the security officials expressed alarm at the damage to U.S.-Israeli relations his vendetta with Obama and his opposition to the Iran deal was causing. Instead of fighting Iran, hes fighting the U.S. Instead of Israel working with its closest ally, hes turned them into an enemy. Does that seem logical to you? former Mossad chief Meir Dagan remarked to prominent Israeli journalist Ilana Dayan. Netanyahu had the choice of shifting his position on negotiations with Iran once Obama had made clear that the U.S. would not look at any other options until it had first exhausted diplomacy. By supporting diplomacy, Israel would arguably have had a greater ability to impact the talks and shape the outcome. Instead, Netanyahu chose to declare war on diplomacy and go after Obama. Once the negotiations had started, Israel should have put itself in a position that would have enabled it to have a continuous dialogue [with Obama] on the positions of the United States in the negotiations, retired Israeli official Shlomo Brom complained.

The great irony is that there was a much easier way for Netanyahu to kill the nuclear deal than by taking on the president of the U.S. Negotiations could have been seriously harmed had he embraced the deal and argued that Iran had been defeated through it. The Iranians had no problems handling Netanyahus opposition to the nuclear talks on the contrary, they welcomed it. But it would have been very challenging for them politically, particularly for the nuclear negotiators, if Netanyahu had gone on a victory lap and declared the deal a defeat for Iran. Irans Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, admitted as much to me: That would have been enough to kill the deal.

Adapted from the new book by Trita Parsi, Losing an Enemy: Obama, Iran and the Triumph of Diplomacy.

Top photo: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu heads to a weekly cabinet meeting at his Jerusalem office on March 13, 2016.

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For Netanyahu and the Saudis, Opposing Diplomacy With Iran Was Never About Enrichment - The Intercept

Iran asked to explain dropping players who faced Israeli team – Reuters

ZURICH (Reuters) - Iran has been asked to provide further information to global soccer body FIFA over a decision to drop two players from the national team after they turned out against an Israeli side for their Greek club.

Masoud Shojaie and Ehsan Hajsafi played for Panionios against Israel's Maccabi Tel Aviv a week ago in a Europa League match.

Iran's Football Federation last week strongly condemned their participation, but prominent football players and many ordinary Iranians have backed the two on social media, saying they had no choice but to take part in the game.

FIFA's statutes ban political interference in its affiliated national associations, which can be suspended if the rule is breached.

"We are currently monitoring the matter and will request additional information from the Iran Football Federation," said a FIFA spokesperson in an emailed statement to Reuters. "We have no further comment for the time being."

If a country's FA is suspended, it means both the national team and its clubs are barred from international competition.

Iran have already qualified for next year's World Cup, making it an especially delicate matter for FIFA.

FIFA statutes state that "each member association shall manage its affairs independently and without undue influence from third parties".

The decision to suspend Shojaie and Hajsafi had been announced by Iran's deputy sports minister Mohammad Reza Davarzani on state TV.

"Hajsafi and Shojaie have no place in Irans national football team anymore ... they crossed Iran's red line," he said.

The two played in the home leg of the fixture but refused to play in the away leg in Israel, despite facing "pressure" and "financial fines" from their club, the sports ministry said.

Writing by Brian Homewood; Editing by Andrew Bolton

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Iran asked to explain dropping players who faced Israeli team - Reuters