MESOP MIDEAST WATCH MEMRI TV Clip No. 9997

IRGC Navy Commander Admiral Alireza Tangsiri: America Can’t Even Imagine The Missiles We Have, Our Missiles Can Reach The Stars; The Missiles We Display In Drills Are Not The Ones We Will Use In War 26-12-22

   

 

weiterlesen / click to continue

MESOP MIDEAST WATCH: Keine Exportgarantien mehr : Bund setzt Außenwirtschaftsförderung mit Iran vollständig aus

  • Aktualisiert am 23.12.2022-FAZ Blick auf das Gebäude der „Bank Melli Iran“ in Hamburg

Wegen der „sehr ernsten Lage“ im Iran stellt die Bundesregierung sämtliche Förderungen des Handels mit dem Staat ein. Schon zuvor hatte es aber lange keine Anträge mehr gegeben.

weiterlesen / click to continue

Iranian TV Report Describes Iran’s Response To Hypothetical Israeli Attack On Its Nuclear Facilities: Dimona Will Be Practically Destroyed, Tel Aviv Will Be Razed To The Ground

MESOP MIDEAST WATCH: MEMRI TV Clip No. 10010

On December 17, 2022, Channel 2 (Iran) aired a report about Iran’s plan of action in the event of an Israeli airstrike against its nuclear facilities. Younes Shadlou, an official from the state broadcasting agency (IRIB), said that if Israeli jets strike Iran, the base from which they took off would likely be destroyed before they make it back to Israel. He said that in the first phase of Iran’s response, the IRGC Aerospace Force’s tactical missiles Dezful and Khaybar Crusher missiles would target Israel’s “nuclear warhead production site” in Dimona, and that in the second phase, Iran’s Sejjil missiles would raze Tel Aviv to the ground. He also said that these plans are a response to a joint U.S.-Israel exercise simulating an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Younses Shadlou: “A few days ago, the Zionist regime conducted another joint exercise with the U.S. to simulate an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities, like the Natanz uranium enrichment site. Let’s assume that Israeli jets manage to reach the Natanz nuclear site in one piece, and let’s assume that they manage to bomb this site and damage it.

“Even if they manage to leave Iran’s sky safely, it will take them at least an hour to return to their main base in the occupied lands. The question is whether there would be any base left for them to land at.

“This is what the first few minutes of an Iranian response will look like. In less than seven minutes, the tactical missiles of the IRGC’s Aerospace Force – like the solid-fueled Dezful and the newest Khaybar Crusher missiles – will destroy their targets with great accuracy, if they are launched from a place like Natanz.

“One of their designated targets is located here: Israel’s nuclear warhead production site in Dimona. Obviously, this is a simulation of the [attack]. When the first wave of the attack reaches its target, the IRGC strategic missiles will be fueled in underground silos, and the missile bases will be ready for the second wave of the attack. These missiles, like the Sejjil, strike their targets at velocities greater than ten times the speed of sound, and they carry a one-ton payload.

“When, in the second wave, the Dimona nuclear site will be practically destroyed, Tel Aviv will be razed to the ground.”

Speaker: “But the Zionist regime is not big enough to be considered among the enemies of the Iranian people.”

Shadlou: “This is why the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces [Khamenei] warned this regime 11 years ago.”

Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei: “If they make even the slightest mistake, the Islamic Republic will raze Tel Aviv and Haifa to the ground.”

Shadlou: “Younes Shadlou, the Broadcast Authority’s news agency.”

View The Clip www.mesop.de

weiterlesen / click to continue

MESOP MIDEAST WATCH: IRAN ESCALATES CRACKDOWN IN LATEST ATTEMPT TO QUELL UPRISING

Bottom Line Up Front: 19-12-22 THE SOUFAN CENTER USA
  • Iranian leaders are considering the possibility of offering concessions while simultaneously escalating their crackdown against protesters in an effort to quell the three-month-old uprising.
  • Hardliners in the regime believe that executing protesters will cause the woman-led unrest to subside.
  • Regime moderates have criticized the executions and seek to end enforcement of some of the restrictions that triggered the uprising.
  • Iran’s escalating crackdown is increasing the government’s international isolation, exemplified by its December expulsion from a United Nations Commission on the Status of Women.
Suggesting the existence of significant divisions within Iran’s regime, Iranian officials are altering their responses to try to quell a three-month long uprising that began with the mid-September death of a 22-year-old woman, Mahsa Amini, while in the custody of Iran’s morality police. The unit enforces the country’s strict public dress code for women. The uprising is still led by women demanding greater freedoms, but since September it has expanded to encompass many additional segments of Iranian society, clamoring for an outright end to the Islamic Republic. By all accounts, regime leaders have become increasingly frustrated that the standard “playbook” used in past uprisings – deployment of security forces, incarceration of protesters, and interruption of social media channels – has failed to quell the unrest.  Far from subsiding, the protests now feature, in addition to widespread demonstrations, extensive strikes among workers in several economic sectors, including the all-important bazaar (merchant community). The death toll among protesters exceeds 450 as of mid-December, and at least 14,000 have been arrested.

The uprising has brought to the fore longstanding cleavages among regime elites – divisions that have appeared in national elections and policy disputes. Hardliners in the regime reject offering concessions to protester demands, and instead advocate escalating the crackdown. According to this view, imposing stricter punishments will deter Iranians from joining protests. Bowing to hardline pressure, in December the Iranian judiciary executed two protestors convicted of separate attacks on members of the Basij, an internal security force controlled by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). They were convicted by Iran’s Revolutionary Courts of committing “enmity against God.” Yet, the executions appear to have only fueled, rather than suppressed, further protests, while at the same time triggering a backlash among key institutions who question the execution tactics. A coalition of scholars and senior Shia clerics from the theological schools in the city of Qom criticized the legitimacy of the trials that resulted in the convictions of those executed. Still, judicial officials indicate that additional death sentences against protesters will be carried out.

Sensing that the hardliners are on the defensive over the unrest, regime moderates – long in eclipse, particularly since the 2021 election of hardline President Ebrahim Raisi – have become more vocal. Some have criticized the extensive use of force against protesters and advocate addressing the demands of demonstrators. Former reformist president Mohammad Khatami, largely silenced by the hardliners since he left office in 2005, has appealed for a public referendum to address the unrest. His Reform Front political faction has demanded “immediate, courageous and innovative changes” to launch a national dialogue with “disappointed, dissatisfied and angry citizens.” In October, former Speaker of Parliament Ali Larijani – who often took hardline positions on major issues – warned that the use of extreme measures to end the protests would only generate additional backlash. Several members of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s family have denounced the regime for excessive use of force. Some security force members have questioned orders to use live ammunition and brute force against demonstrators, particularly against women.

Reflecting the view that some concessions to protester demands are warranted, in early December, a key justice official, Attorney General Mohammad Javad Montazeri, stated that the morality police “was abolished by the same authorities who installed it.” However, subsequent comments by other government leaders suggested that decisions to abolish the morality police or repeal female dress code laws had not been finalized but remained under review. Prominent women and other opposition activists dismiss government statements about possible relaxation of dress code enforcement, asserting that the regime seeks only to quiet protests without implementing meaningful changes. One activist explained that disbanding the morality police would not bring significant change because “[the requirement that women cover their hair] is still compulsory and enforced by other means such as expulsion from university or school.” On the other hand, some experts note that the demonstrations have achieved significant results insofar as many Iranian women, particularly in Tehran and other major cities, have stopped abiding by the dress code.

The international community has progressively sharpened its responses to Iran’s crackdown on protesters, hoping to empower the demonstrators and discredit regime hardliners. In September, the United States imposed sanctions on the morality police, and U.S. officials have also sanctioned several Iranian law enforcement entities and commanders for their role in the crackdown. In late November, the U.N. Human Rights Council voted overwhelmingly to set up a fact-finding investigation into human rights abuses in Iran. On December 14, the U.N. Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) adopted a resolution to remove Iran from the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) for the remainder of its four-year term ending in 2026. The 45-member CSW meets annually and aims to promote gender equality and the empowerment of women. Although some regime insiders are sensitive to multilateral and U.N. action against Iran’s crackdown, there are no clear indications, to date, that Iran’s hardliner-dominated senior leadership is ready to abandon the harsh tactics that have helped them contain past episodes of unrest.

 

 

MESOP MIDEAST WATCH DANGER AHEAD! : Iranian atomic official says uranium enrichment capacity hits record highs

UN nuclear watchdog representatives to visit Iran Sunday to try to resolve deadlock after traces of radioactive material found at undeclared sites

By TIMES OF ISRAEL – 17 December 2022, TEHRAN — Iran said Saturday that its uranium enrichment capacity has increased to record levels, a day before UN nuclear monitors are set to visit the country.

weiterlesen / click to continue

MESOP MIDEAST WATCH: Auch Prominente betroffen : Eine Verhaftungswelle erstickt die Proteste in Iran

  • Von Rainer Hermann FAZ 18.12.2022-Drei Monate nach Beginn der Proteste gewinnt das Regime in Iran die Oberhand zurück. Wegen des Absturzes der Wirtschaft drohen allerdings bald neue Unruhen.

weiterlesen / click to continue

MESOP MIDEAST WATCH INTEL BY MEIR AMIT CENTER / ISRAEL- Iran im Blickpunkt

  1. Dezember 2022 – 15. Dezember 2022Herausgeber: Dr. Raz Zimmti 4. Dezember)
ÜBerblick
  • Der saudische Sender al-Arabiya berichtete, dass die iranische Fluggesellschaft Meraj, die mit dem Korps der Islamischen Revolutionsgarden (IRGC) verbunden ist, regelmäßige Direktflüge vom internationalen Flughafen Beirut aus Teheran aus anbietet. In dem Bericht heißt es, Israel sei besorgt, dass diese Flüge genutzt würden, um Waffen aus dem Iran an die libanesische Hisbollah zu schmuggeln. Unterdessen hielten die Frachtflüge aus dem Iran nach Syrien in der ersten Dezemberhälfte 2022 an.

 

weiterlesen / click to continue

MESOP MIDEAST WATCH: Israelischer Geheimdienst sieht echte, dauerhafte Veränderungen im Iran

Laut israelischen Sicherheitsquellen hindert die unverblümte Verletzung der Menschenrechte im Iran die Weltmächte daran, ein Atomabkommen abzuschließen.

Ben Caspit AL MONITOR –13. Dezember 2022 – Israels Geheimdienste haben in den letzten zwei Jahrzehnten den größten Teil ihrer Anstrengungen, Budgets und Energie darauf verwendet, die Entwicklungen im Iran zu überwachen.

weiterlesen / click to continue

MESOP MIDEAST WATCH: Exekution eines Demonstranten : Iranische Geistliche kritisieren Hinrichtung

  • Von Rainer Hermann FAZ t am 12.12.2022-Hält das Todesurteil für nicht gerechtfertigt: Ajatollah Morteza Moghtadai, früher Präsident des iranischen Gerichtshofs

Das iranische Regime begründet die Exekution eines zweiten Demonstranten mit dem Straftatbestand „Krieg gegen Gott und gegen die islamische Ordnung“. Prominente schiitische Gelehrte widersprechen.

weiterlesen / click to continue

MESOP MIDEAST WATCH: Revolutionary Youth Groups In Iran Publish Manifesto For Future

Author: Maryam Sinaee

Iran PoliticsIran Protests  12-12.22

An alliance of 30 youth groups organizing protests and strikes in various Iranian cities since mid- October through social media, has published its manifesto.

weiterlesen / click to continue

« neuere Artikel / next articles   ältere Artikel / previous articles »