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Erbil airport in Iraqi Kurdistan hit by drone attacks

The internal security service for Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region, of which Erbil is the capital, initially said three rockets had hit near the airport.

A second statement by the Kurdish counterterrorism force added the attack had been carried out by explosive-laden drones.

“There are no victims in the attack carried out by two armed drones,” the statement read.

There were no immediate reports of casualties. Witnesses stated they heard at least six explosions in the area.

Lawk Ghafuri, head of foreign media relations for the Kurdistan Regional Government, said on Twitter that Kurdish security forces were investigating the incident.

“The drone was carrying explosive devices, and exploded away from Erbil International Airport’s terminals and territories. No casualties are reported,” Ghafuri added.

The airport, which also serves as the base for United States-led coalition forces, suffered no damage, according to its director Ahmed Hochiar.

The US-led coalition in Iraq confirmed on Sunday that its forces in Erbil were attacked by two drones on September 11, claiming there are no injuries.

The airport in Erbil has come under attack several times in the past year, including by drones carrying explosives.

Source: Al-Jazeera

IAEA inspectors allowed overhauling cameras at Iran nuclear sites

The agreement came after a meeting between the IAEA chief Rafael Grossi and the head of the Atomic Ednergy Organization of Iran, Mohammad Eslami in Tehran on Sunday.

In a joint statement, Grossi and Eslami reaffirmed the spirit of cooperation and mutual trust and the importance of its continuation, as well as the need to address differences in a constructive and exclusively technical manner.

Within the framework of existing interactions and cooperation, the two sides also decided to continue reciprocal meetings at relevant levels.

In this regard, the Vice President and the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran will meet with the IAEA chief on the sidelines of the agency’s general meeting and the Director General will also travel to Tehran in the near future for high-level consultations aimed at strengthening cooperation between Iran and the IAEA in various fields.

Grossi described his meeting with Eslami as positive and stressed the need to expand cooperation between Iran and the IAEA. He also confirmed that he would return to Tehran for high-level talks with Iranian officials in the near future.

He had earlier told member states of the Agency’s board of governors there had been no progress in talks with Tehran on two central issues: “Explaining uranium traces found at several old, undeclared sites and getting urgent access to some monitoring equipment so the agency can continue to keep track of parts of Iran’s nuclear program as provided for by the 2015 deal”.

The IAEA chief arrived in Iran early on Sunday.

Iran’s Yazd City: World’s Largest Adobe Town

Rock bricks were used to restore ancient monuments in Yazd until a few years ago, but now we have returned to the era when sun-dried mud bricks were used.

Deprived of natural blessings such as water and fertile land, Yazd residents had to be innovative and work hard to get water. Hence, they innovated subterranean aqueducts known as Qanats.

That innovation brought water to the desert town of Yazd where residents now had water in addition to earth.

People in Yazd used this very water and earth to construct all buildings, ramparts and bastions, prayer sites, military structures and water structures such as cisterns.

The first structures built in Yazd date back to the pre-Islam era when most buildings were made of adobe in the form of layered structures.

The dimensions of the sun-dried mud bricks made in early ears were so big as they thought they would be able to erect buildings in a shorter time if bigger bricks were used.

Mud bricks are usually made outdoors, so that they can get dry in the sun. The largest amount of adobe was used in the construction of structures such as the Qala Maybod Castle, the Yazd Bastion and the Abarabad Castle. And now, adobe is used again like in the past to restore historical monuments.

Workshops making mud bricks are mushrooming in different parts of Yazd province, so much so that upwards of 1 million mud bricks are produced annually at restoration workshops of the provincial cultural heritage department.

Russia says has evidence showing US electoral intervention

She stated that Russia has presented this evidence to US officials.

“We laid out the situation using specific facts showing that internet platforms located on US territory and which are owned and moderated by American internet monopolies that there are obvious, documented acts of intervention in our internal processes – political processes, electoral processes,” Zakharova added.

According to the spokeswoman, the US has yet to comment or react to the accusations presented by Moscow.

On Friday, the foreign ministry summoned US Ambassador John Sullivan, informing him that America’s efforts to interfere in Russia’s upcoming elections were “categorically inadmissable”. The US side issued its own account of the meeting with Russian officials, claiming that Sullivan had met with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov to discuss President Joe Biden’s approach to stabilising bilateral relations.

Commenting on the conflicting accounts of the meeting between Sullivan and Russian officials, Zakharova suggested that “the press release given by the United States Embassy following the summons of Ambassador Sullivan…was the biggest proof that they understand everything perfectly. The fact is that they did not mention at all why the ambassador was summoned to the foreign ministry”.

The spokeswoman pointed specifically to the IP addresses associated with the app Smart Voting, which Russian internet watchdog Roskomnadzor has said come mainly from the United States.

“The developers of the Smart Voting app…are not just associated with the United States, they are associated with the Pentagon,” Zakharova alleged.

Formally, the “Smart Voting” app is designed to help voters where the opposition has a strong chance of displacing the ruling party candidate to consolidate resources and vote for a united opposition candidate. Roskomnadzor recently restricted access to the resource in Russia over its alleged association with opposition vlogger Alexei Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Fund, classified by Russian authorities as a foreign agent and extremist organisation.

Russians will head to the polls on September 17-19 for federal legislative elections. Recent opinion polling by Russian sociological firms shows that the ruling party United Russia has between 26 and 30 percent support, with the opposition Communist Party, Liberal Democratic Party, and Just Russia polling in second, third, and fourth, with 14.9-22 percent, 7-9.6 percent and 5-6.3 percent, respectively. In addition to federal parliamentary elections, the vote will include elections to pick the heads of nine constituent entities of Russia, and 39 regional parliaments.

Source: RIA Novosti

Source: No access to camera footage at Iran sites, despite Grossi’s visit

“During Grossi’s visit to Tehran, there will be no change in the IAEA’s access to the data at [Iran’s] nuclear facilities, and the agency will still have no access to the surveillance cameras’ footage,” the source added.

The source explained that Grossi’s visit has nothing to do with the restrictions imposed by Iran on the IAEA concerning its access to the camera footage at Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Rejecting claims made by certain Western media outlets, in particular The Wall Street Journal, the source made it clear that there is no possibility of reconsidering the IAEA’s lack of access to its surveillance cameras’ footage.

“The talks during the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s visit to Tehran will only be about servicing some of the agency’s monitoring equipment and there is no other issue on the agenda,” the source stated.

Earlier on Saturday, The Wall Street Journal claimed in a report that Grossi’s visit comes after an understanding between Iran and the IAEA, negotiated over last couple of days under watch of the P5+1.

The report, citing sources, claimed that Iran had agreed to give the IAEA access to re-set the monitoring equipment at nuclear-related sites in the country.

The understanding also includes a commitment to resume safeguards discussions with the Agency, the report said, citing the sources, and claimed that in exchange, the UK, France, Germany and the US will shelve their resolution against Iran at the upcoming meeting of IAEA’s Board of Governors which will start on Monday.

The one-day visit by Grossi would be his first since Iranian President Ebrahim Raeisi assumed office in August.

Kazem Gharibabadi, Iran’s representative to the international organizations in Vienna, noted on Saturday that Grossi will hold talks with the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) Mohammad Eslami, and afterward, the two sides will issue a joint statement.

Probe shows US drone attack in Kabul killed civilians, not Daesh element

The Pentagon’s official version said that the August 29 drone strike targeted a white Toyota belonging to Daesh that took credit for the killing of 13 American troops and nearly 200 Afghan civilians at the Kabul airport several days prior. Multiple officials claimed that “secondary explosions” proved the car was rigged with explosives. 

A New York Times visual investigation published Friday, however, found no traces of secondary explosions, only the fragments of a Hellfire missile that killed Zemari Ahmadi and seven children.

The outlet conducted interviews with survivors on the ground, checked security camera footage and satellite imagery, and put everything together in a 10-minute video. Every step of the way, it shows that the official version of events simply doesn’t hold water.

Ahmadi had worked for 14 years at Nutrition & Education International, an American NGO that set up soy factories and distributed food to malnourished Afghans. He was having a normal day on August 29, picking up colleagues on the way to breakfast and the NGO office in the Karte Seh neighborhood of Kabul.

What the US military interpreted as a series of suspicious movements was a typical day in Ahmadi’s life, according to five men who were in the car with him, interviewed by a Times reporter. The “suspicious packages” he was loading into the car were containers Ahmadi filled with water at the office, because his neighborhood was dealing with a water shortage.

When Ahmadi drove home, the car was surrounded by neighborhood children. Yet the drone strike team claimed they had only seen one adult male present. An MQ-9 Reaper drone then fired one 20-pound Hellfire missile at the car.

The US military claimed large secondary explosions proved the car was in fact a bomb intended to kill Americans at the airport. One of the people who said so is Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark Milley.

“At this point, we think that the procedures were correctly followed, and it was a righteous strike,” Milley told reporters on September 1, after the US airlift from Kabul ended.

The Times, however, reports its reporter showed photos and videos of the scene to three experts who all agreed the damage was consistent with a single Hellfire strike.

Just days before his death, Ahmadi had applied for a special visa to emigrate to the US with his family. Instead, they were killed in a drone strike the Pentagon triumphantly announced as the killing of a Daesh “facilitator”.

Local media and the Taliban immediately stated that the strike had killed civilians. The final death toll was three adults and seven children.

Iranian president officially welcomes Iraqi PM in Tehran

Heading a high-ranking delegation including six cabinet ministers, the Iraqi premier is on a one-day trip.

Raeisi and al-Kadhimi are expected to hold a news conference after their talks.

An Iraqi government source has said that security, energy and relations between Saudi Arabia and Iran will be high on the agenda of al-Kadhimi’s meetings in Tehran.

The Iraqi government has been brokering negotiations between Riyadh and Tehran over the past months on mending relations which were cut in 2016.

Iran’s ambassador to Baghdad, Iraj Masjedi has said that Iraq has hosted three rounds of such negotiations since April.

Al-Kadhimi is the first head of a state to visit Iran since President Raisi took office last August.

Iranian Flotilla Accomplished Mission amid Enemy Campaigns: Top Cmdr.

Major General Abdorrahim Mousavi said the mission was conducted in the worst climatic conditions and amid the enemy’s political and psychological campaigns.

“The strategic mission of the 75th Flotilla of the Navy generated strategic confusion among hegemonic powers,” said the top commander in a ceremony where the flotilla was welcomed home by senior military officials in the southern Iranian port city of Bandar Abbas.

“Everybody knows that the commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces [Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei] approved of the idea of venturing into the Atlantic Ocean back in 2011, and he stressed that issue once again in 2016,” he added.

The top commander said he was pleased to see the Iranian Navy has fulfilled the leader’s instruction and carried out a mission in the Atlantic Ocean.

“This historic mission was conducted in full independence and thanks to the Islamic Revolution and the Islamic Republic’s Establishment as well as the prudent guidelines of the commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces coupled with the prudence, vigilance, knowledge, resistance, bravery and untiring efforts of the Navy, and amounts to a key step towards the realization of the objectives of the second phase of the Revolution,” general Mousavi added.

Leader of Iran’s Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei had already hailed the flotilla, too, on the accomplishment of its mission.

Why is MBS worried about Afghanistan developments?

Mubarak reportedly made the comment at a time when he was in his dying days in power and he was confident the US would pull the rug from under his feet in due course. 

Reactions across West Asia to the stunning Taliban victory in Afghanistan have focused mostly on what their takeover of the country says about the United States. 

For many, it shows how America’s clout is declining. For others, it’s proof of the United States’ betrayal of allies like fugitive former Afghan president Asharf Ghani and leaving behind those who believed its promises. 

The similarity between Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia in terms of their leaders being puppets of the US has made Saudi Crown Prince Mohamamd bin Salman. 

Bin Salman has spent hundreds of billions of dollars to win the US’s support to sweep him to the throne after his father but the developments in Afghanistan are nightmarish as far as he’s concerned. Bin Salman’s worries have prompted him to turn to Russia for survival. He has sent deputy defense chief Khalid bin Salman to Russia to sign a military cooperation deal with Moscow. This, Khaled did without Washington’s consent. Analysts say the agreement with Russia was meant to send a message to the US that the Saudis are not pleased with the White House’s approach these days when American officials are giving Riyadh the cold shoulder. The reason why the Saudis are worried are the similarities with Afghanistan including: 

1-Armies of Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan’s former government not indigenous in spite of being equipped with state of the art weaponry; 2-US having a history of withdrawing support from allies under special circumstances; and 3-Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan’s former government facing legitimacy crisis. Analysts also say with the US’s global clout on the wane worldwide and its possible withdrawal from the Middle East, China and Russia are ready to fill the gap.

Iran Plans to Import 130mn Doses of Covid Shots

“As planned, 10 to 15 million doses of the vaccines will enter the country by September 22,” said Alireza Raisi, the spokesman for the taskforce.

Raisi also noted that vaccination is now underway with a greater speed thanks to the cooperation of all executive bodies and the medial sector.

He said there is a capacity to vaccinate an average 1.8 million people in the country every day, adding that vaccination is now underway for all people aged 18 and older in the rural areas.

The spokesman also said officials are also overcoming problems raised by the black fungus disease, which is associated with long coronavirus hospitalizations.

“The shortage of medicine for black fungus has been tackled and the coronavirus disease is on the decline in the country.”

President Seyyed Ebrahim Raisi said on Saturday that the government is trying to accelerate the coronavirus vaccination campaign to inoculate over 2,000,000 people each day.

The Iranian government was until recently under fire for the slow pace of import of Covid vaccines.