Thursday, May 31, 2012

Iran Israel : Crippling Sanctions On Iran Good Enough For Israel ?

The main advocate of a military strike on Iran seems to have shifted ground to try and annihilate the country with crippling sanctions instead. Israeli Ynet reports that the majority of Israel’s defense chiefs are against a military solution.

­Israeli Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz is among those seven members of Benjamin Netanyahu's special nine-minister security forum who oppose the idea of an immediate attack on Iran.

“Without Gantz's support the chances of mounting a strike are slim,” a political source told Ynet.

Gantz, together with Deputy Prime Minister Moshe Yaalon, Kadima Chairman Shaul Mofaz and Ministers Dan Meridor, Benny Begin, Eli Yishai and Yuval Steinitz, is advocating the idea of “reducing the Iranian economy to rubble,” the report says.

“Israel has to push the international community to impose further sanctions on the Iranian economy,” the same source said. “That's what's important right now.”

 
Israel’s official stance on the Iranian issue is that “all options” are still on the table. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak have repeatedly stressed that a nuclear Iran poses an existential threat to Israel. They believe the problem should be dealt with as soon as possible, as all the sanctions seem to fail to stop Iran from continuing its uranium enrichment program.

Although the US and EU have almost total economic embargo imposed on Iran, they are still far from destroying the Islamic Republic’s economy. Current sanctions affect foreign trade, financial services, energy sectors and export of technologies to Iran.

 
In January 2012, the EU also agreed to put a ban on oil trade with Iran, which will affect about a quarter of OPEC’s second-biggest oil producer’s profits. In response, Iran stopped oil sales to Greece, Spain and Germany and halted supplies to Britain and France earlier this year without waiting for an embargo to come into full effect in July.

The Islamic Republic’s biggest buyers – China, India and South Korea – are still purchasing Iranian crude, though thought facing a piling pressure from the US to reduce their imports. Turkey, Japan, South Korea have already reduced their imports from Iran.

The EU also banned the provision of insurance to Iranian-owned companies by insurers in member states, which caused fears that major tanker companies would stop loading Iranian oil.

The hardest blow to Iran’s oil-dependent economy was a cutoff of Iranian banks, including the central bank, from SWIFT in March 2012. The idea was to force Iranian economy collapse as a result of not being able to accept wire payments in US dollars. The Iranians however, have managed to circumvent payment problems, at least partially, by accepting payments in cash, gold and regional national currencies.

The possible use of force against Iran to stop it from enriching uranium has been discussed by Israel and its Western allies for months. On May 27, US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta stated that the US is ready to do everything it can to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon, while the American envoy to Israel earlier said that the military option is “fully available.” 

Meanwhile, negotiations between the P5+1 group and Iran failed to produce a result as both sides refused to budge on the nuclear issue. While Iran claims it has an undeniable right to enrich uranium for its civilian purposes, the West seems to only accept an outcome where Iran drops all enrichment and imports nuclear material instead.


http://www.rt.com/news/iran-israel-sanctions-attack-702/

Iran: China - Iran has cancelled a $2 billion contract for a Chinese firm to help build a hydroelectric dam.

Iran has cancelled a $2 billion contract for a Chinese firm to help build a hydroelectric dam in the country, Chinese state media said on Thursday, a move that risks upsetting Beijing, one of Tehran's most important economic and political allies.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is due to visit China next week for a security summit, where he is expected to hold talks with his Chinese counterpart, Hu Jintao, on Iran's disputed nuclear programme.

In March 2011, Iran's official IRNA news agency said China's Sinohydro Corp. had signed a contract with Iranian hydro firm Farab to build the dam, described as the world's tallest, in Iran's western province of Lorestan. It was designed to support a 1,500-megawatt power station.

The Global Times, a popular tabloid owned by Chinese Communist Party mouthpiece the People's Daily, said the Iranian government had decided to cancel the contract. The report did not cite sources or give a reason for the cancellation.

But it quoted Iranian media reports as saying Iran's central bank was "dissatisfied" with financing options offered by China.

Sinohydro was not immediately available for comment.

China and Iran have close energy and trade ties, and Beijing has repeatedly resisted U.S.-led demands to impose tougher economic sanctions on Iran to curb its nuclear ambitions.
However, differences have arisen between China and Iran in the development of Iran's oil and gas resources.

State-owned China National Petroleum Corporation was given a month's deadline by Iranian Oil minister Rostam Ghasemi in April to make a serious start on the giant South Pars gas field after 32 months of delay.

In September last year, Reuters reported China's reluctance to progress with oil and gas investments in Iran.

Many foreign companies have been forced to pull out of the Iranian energy sector due to the fear of sanctions, but state-owned Asian firms are less susceptible to Western pressure to stay away from the Iranian market. (Reporting by Sui-Lee Wee; Additional reporting by Jim Bai; Editing by Mark Bendeich)

SOURCE: UNRELIABLE. Reuters Exposed For Publishing Lies To Incite Nato Strikes On Syria. So is the Iran 'story' true or not ? only Reuters can tell you that.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/05/31/china-iran-dam-idUSL4E8GV1TL20120531

Monday, May 28, 2012

Iran Pakistan 'Peace Pipeline' Deal Signed 2010. India Pulled Out Of the Deal After Intense Pressure From The U.S.



Iran and Pakistan have signed a $7.5bn deal to build a pipeline that will transport massive quantities of natural gas between the two countries.

Dubbed the "peace pipeline", the deal is expected to significantly improve ties between the countries.

Al Jazeera spoke to Reza Amanat, a energy markets reporter, about the deal and how it will affect relations between Pakistan and Iran.

[March 9, 2010]

IRAN : USA Collude With Israel In The BIG Lie.

Iran: Petrochemical Projects - Iran set to inaugurate two major petrochemical projects



A senior official at the National Iranian Petrochemical Company (NIPC) says Iran is set to inaugurate two major petrochemical projects in the country’s Pars Special Economic Energy Zone (Assaluyeh).
The Kaviyan Petrochemical Complex (Olefin 11), as the world’s largest ethylene producer, as well as the West Ethylene Pipeline will come on stream in the near future, Ahmad Reza Heidarnia, the projects director for the NIPC said.
Heidarnia added that the West Ethylene Pipeline, which will transfer ethylene from Assaluyeh in the southern Iranian province of Bushehr to the petrochemical complexes in Iran’s western provinces, has a final capacity of 2.5 million tons per annum.
The project is expected to reduce the concentration of petrochemical industries in the southern parts of the country and shift it to western parts.
The Iranian official further said that the Kavian Petrochemical Complex will produce one million tons of ethylene by the end of the first half of the current Iranian year (started March 19, 2012).
In addition to supplying the West Ethylene Pipeline with needed feedstock, the Kaviyan Petrochemical Complex is projected to add 2.18 million tons to the country’s annual petrochemical production capacity.
With the launch of the West Ethylene Pipeline and the construction of 11 petrochemical complexes along the pipeline, the country’s petrochemical production capacity is anticipated to see an increase of 3.5 million tons per annum.
On Monday, Iran inaugurated three important petrochemical projects in the country’s Mahshahr Petrochemical Special Economic Zone.
Iran has expanded the range and volume of its petrochemical products significantly over the past few years, and the NIPC has become the second largest producer and exporter of petrochemicals in the Middle East after Saudi Arabia.
The Islamic Republic exported a total of 18.2 million tons of petrochemical and polymer products, worth about USD 14.2 billion, to more than 60 countries in the last Iranian calendar year (ended March 19, 2012).
(Source: PressTV)
http://tehrantimes.com/economy-and-business/98240-iran-set-to-inaugurate-two-major-petrochemical-projects-

Iran:Israel USA - Ready to Stop Iran from Creating Nuke Weapons OVERLOOKING The Fact Iran Does Not Want Them .

by Beth Reinhard


U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta on Sunday indirectly confirmed recent remarks by the Ambassador to Israel that the U.S. is “ready from a military perspective’’ to stop Iran from making a nuclear weapon if international pressure fails.

The U.S. and members of the United Nations Security Council recently met in Baghdad for talks about Iran’s suspected nuclear weapon program. Iran denies it has military intentions but has called for the destruction of Israel.


“We have plans to be able to implement any contingency we have to in order to defend ourselves,’’ Panetta said on ABC’s This Week. Earlier, Panetta said, “The fundamental premise is that neither the United States or the international community is going to allow Iran to develop a nuclear weapon.’’

Panetta defended the U.S. military’s use of drones to kill terrorists, resulting in some civilian casualties, calling them “one of the most precise weapons that we have in our arsenal.’’
He also insisted that the administration did not share any “inappropriate’’ details with filmmakers making a movie about Osama bin Laden, despite criticism from members of Congress.

Panetta also condemned Pakistan for sentencing a doctor to prison for helping the U.S. hunt down terrorist leader Osama bin Laden.

(PICTURES: Abbottabad: One Year Later)

Shakil Afridi was convicted last week of high treason and sentenced to 33 years, sparking outrage in Washington. Some lawmakers suggested cutting U.S. aid to Pakistan.

“It is so difficult to understand and it’s so disturbing that they would sentence this doctor to 33 years for helping in the search for the most notorious terrorist in our times,” Panetta said.
"This doctor was not working against Pakistan. He was working against al-Qaida.''

   

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Iran: Rothschilds Want Irans Banks!

Israel : "The Lavon Affair" follows the career of a young Israeli terrorist Yitzak Shamir from the bombing of the King David hotel to the infamous "Lavon Affair" in Cairo.

Iran: Will Israel Assassinate Obama ?

#Iran: Panetta Says U.S. Now Ready To Attack Iran

On Sunday U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta said the United States is “ready from a military perspective’’ to attack Iran under the guise of preventing it from obtaining nuclear weapons.

Panetta’s comments arrive after the U.S. and members of the United Nations Security Council held talks in Baghdad on Iran’s supposed nuclear threat.

“I think it was a complete failure, in terms of content,” an Iranian diplomat told McClatchy on Friday. “The more they talk, the worse it gets.”

Despite Iran’s willingness to negotiate, a senior U.S. official has stated that harsher sanctions will be imposed on the Islamic Republic. The U.S. and Israel believe Iran is engaging in the talks – a third one will be held in Moscow next month – in order to buy time for its nuclear program.

“We are doubtful it is possible to reach an agreement with Iran, but we must exhaust the diplomatic path — because the alternative, whether its a nuclear Iran or a regional war, is very serious,” Israeli Army Radio quoted the official as saying.

“Unfortunately, the newly built trust between Iran and the 5+1 powers is in danger of collapse because of the unreasonable insistence by hawkish politicians and pundits in the West who echo Tel Aviv’s demands that Iran halt all enrichment activities and shut down the underground Fordo facility, even though the I.A.E.A. inspects it regularly,” a New York Times op-ed said prior to the meeting in Baghdad.

Inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency found traces of uranium enriched up to 27 percent at the Fordo enrichment facility in February. Diplomats said Iran’s technicians may have miscalibrated cascades of centrifuges before adjusting them down to the 20 percent level, according to McClatchy.

Over 90 percent enrichment is required to make an atomic weapon.

Israeli prime minister Netanyahu said that the talks will be successful only if Iran agrees to halt all uranium enrichment, ship its current stockpile of enriched uranium out of the country and dismantle an underground enrichment facility near the city of Qom, the Associated Press reported on May 9.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak has said Iran will soon enter an “immunity zone” that will result in military action.

“We have plans to be able to implement any contingency we have to in order to defend ourselves,’’ Panetta told ABC’s This Week. “The fundamental premise is that neither the United States or the international community is going to allow Iran to develop a nuclear weapon.’’

Panetta is apparently basing his comment on speculation made by an Israeli deputy defense minister who said in February that Iran is working on a missile with a range of 10,000 kilometers and would be capable of striking the United States.

Moshe Yaalon said the missile was designed to hit the “Great Satan,” the Iranian name for the United States. “It was aimed at America, not at us.”


http://www.infowars.com/panetta-says-u-s-now-ready-to-attack-iran/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter