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Iranian Navy Deploys Warships in Atlantic Ocean

Navy

Habibollah Sayyari“For the first time, the 44th flotilla comprised of Alvand and Bushehr destroyers could sail around the African continent and enter the Atlantic Ocean,” Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari told reporters in Tehran on Monday.

“The two destroyers are now deployed in Durban Harbor (South Africa),” he added.

Noting that the deployment of the 44th flotilla of warships in the international waters indicates the Iranian Navy’s might and power, Admiral Sayyari said, “In addition to that, 5 fleets of warships have also been sent to other countries so far with a message of peace and friendship.”

Back in 2014, Admiral Sayyari had announced the country’s plans to deploy troops in the Atlantic Ocean.

“The Iranian Navy will definitely be present in the Atlantic Ocean in the near future,” Admiral Sayyari said at the time, Fars reported.

He noted that conducting reciprocal visits to other countries, including the littoral states of the Indian Ocean and African countries, and exchanging naval visits and voyages are among the Navy’s programs.

“We are ready to hold joint naval drills with the neighboring countries as well,” Admiral Sayyari said.

In recent years, Iran’s Navy has been increasing its presence in international waters to protect naval routes and provide security for trade vessels and tankers.

The Islamic Republic has repeatedly asserted that its overseas naval presence is meant to convey a message of peace and friendship to other countries.

US President Obama Seeks to Fortify Iran Deal before Leaving Office: Officials

obama

Senior Obama administration officials, speaking anonymously to The Wall Street Journal, said the planned measures included “steps to provide licenses for more American businesses to enter the Iranian market and the lifting of additional U.S. sanctions” against Iran, the Journal reported Sunday.

They said they also planned to make a strong argument to the incoming President Donald Trump’s team that the potential abdication of American commitments under the Iran deal would have “grim consequences” for the United States.

The deal, named the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), was reached between Iran on the one side and the US, the UK, France, Germany, Russia, and China on the other in July 2015.

During the raucous presidential campaign in the US, the then-nominee Trump exhibited anti-Iran rhetoric, including by saying that he would “tear up” the nuclear deal with Iran if elected.

Although he has not commented on Iran-related issues since winning the US presidential election on November 8, individuals whom Trump has named or whose names are being floated as possible recruits for high-level posts have been adopting a harsh tone about the deal, which took some 23 months to be negotiated between Iran and its international interlocutors, including the administration of President Obama.

US President Obama Seeks to Fortify Iran Deal before Leaving Office: Officials

The JCPOA received a United Nations Security Council mandate when it was endorsed in Resolution 2231 (2015) under the UN Charter’s Chapter VII. That has effectively turned the deal into international law.

Observers generally agree that if the administration of President-elect Trump, which will take over on January 20, 2017, harmed the deal, it would risk losing close partnership over the issue with the European and other sides to the deal.

The Obama administration officials said that prospect is what worries them.

“Our bet is when they look at this and analyze what the implications would be for tearing up the deal, they won’t do it,” a senior administration official said. “But as for what they’ll actually do? Who knows?”

 

One US official said that “‘it’s very hard to tear up the deal’ because U.S. allies and partners, including Russia and China, are committed to it.”

Other officials said they did not believe a Trump presidency would scrap the JCPOA altogether. “Their concern is more that it would fall apart due to attempts by the incoming administration to renegotiate pieces of it, expanding sanctions against Iran unrelated to its nuclear program, or neglect,” the report read.

 

Such concerns found reason to emerge last Wednesday, when the US House of Representatives passed a bill for a 10-year re-authorization of the Iran Sanctions Act (ISA), which had initially been adopted in 1996 on the unfounded grounds that Iran was pursuing a non-civilian nuclear program.

A day later, the House voted to bar the sale of American commercial Boeing airplanes to the Islamic Republic. The measures have to be approved by the Senate and then the US president to turn into law.

President Obama has threatened he would veto the legislation barring the sale of commercial airplanes to Iran if it ends up on his desk. He has been silent on the ISA. Even if they are passed by the Senate, there is a potential that neither of the bills will be in time for him to consider and that the next president, Trump, will have to decide about them.

The Obama administration officials said, however, that the measures meant to buttress the deal are not aimed “at boxing in Mr. Trump.”

Iran has said it is prepared for any possible scenario.

80 ISIS Elements in Europe Preparing for Attacks: Dutch Expert

ISIS

According to a report covered by Keyhan newspaper, the ISIS operatives are reportedly focusing on preparing for conducting attacks in the continent than returning to Syria and Iraq, as per instructions from the leadership.

ISIS is currently under attack by Iraqi forces in Mosul, where the leader of the terrorist group Abu Bakr-al Baghdadi is also holed up. He reportedly sleeps with his suicide bomber vest on and stays in tunnels that run under the city in Iraq. His growing paranoia has been reported by a source within Mosul to the Iraq intelligence agency recently.

Schoof said that the number of “foreign terrorist fighters” in Europe has not grown in the last six months. However, that “does not mean that the potential threat of those who would have travelled is diminished.”

With continuous attacks on Mosul and other ISIS strongholds like Aleppo, operatives can find it difficult to return to defend its frontlines. The terror group also believes in conducting lone-wolf attacks to wreck chaos and paranoia among people than major coordinated attacks. However, the Paris and Brussels terror attacks have been among the major attacks in recent past by the group.

Schoof added that the military offensive against the group was scattering the fighters. It is also likely that with the central command under attack coordination with fighters outside has become difficult for the group.

He further added that the counter-terror operations in Syria and Iraq could increase the number of refugees travelling to Europe, IB Times reported.

While Netherlands has not been attacked so far, attacks like those in France and Belgium means “the chance of an attack in the Netherlands is real”, he said.

“We have seen 294 terrorist fighters go overseas in Iraq and Syria and there are still 190 over there,” he said. “And what happened in France and Brussels and Germany could happen to us,” he said.

Kurds in Turkey Will Resort to Violence in Near Future: Expert

Javad Salehi

Tension in Turkey has escalated following growing suppression of Kurdish policy makers. The arrest of two of the leaders of the Peoples’ Democratic Party, the pro-Kurdish party in Turkish parliament and ten more members of the parliament, have sparked harsh reactions.

One of the deputy leaders of the Peoples’ Democratic Party has accused Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan that Turkey is on verge of civil war. Turkey’s security forces arrested Figen Yuksekdag and Selahattin Demirtas, two leaders of the Peoples’ Democratic Party, and thus the political future of the party is in a halo of ambiguity.

Here’s IFP’s translation of excerpts from Khabar Online’s interview with Javad Salehi, a researcher at the Middle East Strategic Studies and Scientific Research Centre and an expert in Turkey’s affairs regarding the future of Turkey.

 

How do you assess Turkey’s domestic developments under such conditions? It seems the arrest of the leaders of the Democratic Party was in reaction to Belgian judicial system, which issued a scandalous ruling that Turkey’s clashes have something to do with the PKK within the framework of the armed campaign and it should not be treated through the law of terrorism.

It seems the conditions of the Kurds in Turkey can be investigated from several standpoints: First of all, Kurds’ resolve for identity is the topic on the table. It has been in effect for several decades following developments in Turkey. It started from militia standpoint to civil aspect. Changes in the international system’s atmosphere and internal developments in Turkey served as a ground for Kurds to feel that they will more easily and safely achieve their demands from civil points of view. After the capture of the PKK leader and his imprisonment, the civil front is more firmly promoted among Kurdish strata. Such a change in the identity-seeking cause results from several issues:

First of all, the highly difficult and heavy approach of the military towards them, which supports harsh approach in deal with Kurds. Secondly, a lack of balance between the cost and benefit exposed to them in the course of these developments. Thirdly, the changes and developments inside Turkey. The Justice and Development Party has prepared the ground for consolidation of the idea among a vast portion of Kurdish strata in Turkey.

However, what happened after the coup has been in a different direction. Kurds felt that they can extensively widen the scope of their justice-seeking side and deepen it in various sectors. Perhaps they can put the government under pressure, thus gaining more incentives. To this end, we have been witnessing visits to foreign countries of Kurdish leaders, including Moscow. This has not been welcomed in Turkey and a number of hardliners and nationalists take it as a betrayal.

The post-coup atmosphere in fact prepared the ground for settlement with a movement initiated by Kurds and Mr. Erdogan used it. The current atmosphere in Turkey should be interpreted as the sign of Kurds’ approach and harsh and authoritative response of government to the new identity-seeking gestures.

The Turkish government believes that Peoples’ Democratic Party acts as the political wing of the PKK. Under such conditions, to which direction is the state of affairs moving?

Surely, under these conditions, the mechanism Kurds have been using to attain the object has changed and the growing tension the Peoples’ Democratic Party has resorted to internationally, will not be ineffective in its growth. But in my opinion, under such conditions, Kurds’ strata will launch harsher campaigns against the government. This will cost dearly both for Turkish government and Kurds from partisan and non-partisan points of view. The most tangible result of such measures should be looked into in polarization of the society in Turkey in escalating tension in external view of Turkey.

However, Kurdish movement in Turkey in the post-coup era cannot be separated from such strata as the military. We should admit that under the current conditions, security is the top priority for the government in Turkey and the government and Erdogan try to manage it at any price, even if they would resort to merciless and crackdown measures and depriving envoys from immunity and their arrest and drastic encounter with the wings supporting them and their social strata.

Do you think that the civil campaign sought by Kurds would alter its direction towards an uncivilized campaign coupled with violence?

Definitely, with regards to the ongoing developments in Turkey, violence or growing violence and uncivilized methods will be on agenda. The parties, viewed as under-ash fire, might keep silent but in the near future, we will witness conflict between the Kurdish and non-Kurdish strata. It is of course possible to imagine lobbies and certain groups trying to manage the ongoing developments. However, the atmosphere is in general moving in that direction.

Will this force Turkey to step up its activities in Syria?

As for growing movements of Turkey in suburbs of Iraq and Syria, we have been witnessing that Turkey treats certain issues as red line. The impact of such an issue inside and outside will couple with certain strict measures. This is because, Turkey has a systematic approach towards the issue and it is not ready to make a distinction at least between them under present atmosphere.

Iran’s Surplus Heavy Water Sent to Oman: AEOI

Behrouz Kamalvandi

“In view of the progress of talks with several foreign firms and countries to purchase heavy water, some quantities of Iran’s surplus production has been transferred to Oman,” said AEOI spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi on Sunday.

He added that further amounts of surplus heavy water will be sent to Oman in the future.

Earlier in the month, the International Atomic Energy Agency claimed in its quarterly report that Iran’s stocks of heavy water had slightly exceeded the 130-ton level set out in last year’s nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

Iran and the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council – the United States, France, Britain, Russia and China – plus Germany signed the JCPOA in July 2015 and started implementing it in January 2016. Under the JCPOA, Iran undertook to put limitations on its nuclear program in exchange for the removal of nuclear-related sanctions imposed against Tehran.

On Friday, Kamalvandi stressed that Iran has remained committed to its JCPOA obligations, including those concerning its heavy water stockpiles.

Iranian Referees Honored after A Landmark Year

Alireza Faghani

The Iranian referees as well as the women’s team comprising Australians Kate Jacewicz and Renae Coghill as well as India’s Uvena Fernandes – received their awards from the AFC Referees Committee Vice-Chairman, Hany Taleb Ballan Safar (Qatar), at the opening of the AFC Elite Referees and Assistant Referees Seminar taking place in the Malaysian capital.

Faghani, Sokhandan and Mansouri made history this year as Asia’s first trio to officiate the final of the Men’s Olympic Football Tournament when they took charge of the Brazil versus Germany gold medal match in August in Rio de Janeiro.

During the hugely successful AFC Asian Cup 2015 Australia, Faghani and Sokhandan were appointed to officiate the final match between Korea Republic and host nation Australia. The men’s trio also officiated the 2015 FIFA Club World Cup final in Tokyo, which saw Barcelona take on Argentina’s River Plate, the-afc.com reported.

AFC President Shaikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa said: “The AFC’s Vision and Mission has underlined our desire to ensure Asian players and officials succeed on the world stage. The performances of our men and women referees this year demonstrate once again our continent as a great force in world football and that our referees – both men and women – have earned global respect

“Their achievements serve as a testament to the progressive steps Asian football continues to undertake under the banner of One Asia, One Goal and I am confident that they will continue to do us proud in the years ahead.”

The AFC Referees Special Awards are the first of the AFC Annual Awards to be presented this year and among four awards that will be presented at specific occasions relevant to the individual recipients.

Iran Urges ICC to Address Reasons for African Exit

icc

Addressing the 15th session of the ICC’s Assembly of States Parties, held in The Hague, Hossein Panahi Azar described some African countries’ decision to exit from the ICC as a symptom of discontent with the tribunal’s measures.

The ICC should seriously study the reasons behind that decision and try to address the concerns of those African countries, he added.

While the ICC tries to expand into new geography and investigate new types of crimes, such as the crime of aggression, the tribunal faces the most serious challenge to its existence. Three nations, all from Africa, have announced decision to withdraw from the court, intensifying a longstanding debate over whether it is biased against the continent.

In October, Gambia announced its intention to pull out of the tribunal, denouncing it on state television as the “international Caucasian court.” Though most of the court’s judges are not white, almost all of its full-fledged investigations have focused on Africa.

Gambia is the home country of the court’s chief prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda.

Before that, Burundi had announced plans to withdraw, months after Ms. Bensouda announced that she would open a preliminary examination into the killings of antigovernment protesters there.

But most damaging for the court, one of its early champions, South Africa, announced in late October that it would leave, too, saying that the court’s writ was “incompatible” with its ability to resolve political conflicts in its neighborhood.

ISIS’ Atrocities Bring Shiite and Sunni Muslims in Iraq Closer to Each Other!

According to a report translated by IFP, millions of Muslim pilgrims, mainly Shiites, have been flocking to the Iraqi city of Karbala to mark Arbaeen, the 40th day after Imam Hussein’s martyrdom.

Meanwhile, a Sunni Muslim in Iraq has written the following text on the back of his car:

“I’m a Sunni, but I transport Shiite pilgrims for free to show we are [all] enemies of ISIS.”

Iran in No Visa Waiver Talks With Europe, Other Countries: Qassemi

bahram qassemi

“The fake report published by some media outlets, which quoted a fictional and unknown source at [Iran’s] Ministry of Foreign Affairs as saying that talks are underway with some countries, including a number of European countries, to remove visa requirements is invalid,” Bahram Qassemi said on Sunday.

He added that any agreement with other countries on the facilitation of consular affairs would be announced only through “official channels.”

The Iranian diplomat further noted that Iran’s Foreign Ministry has always made efforts, particularly in recent years, to boost the credibility and status of Iranian passports and pursued this issue as one of its main plans.

Qassemi emphasized that the ministry has held consultations with many countries to facilitate consular affairs for all Iranian nationals, especially regarding the agreement on the abolition of visa requirements with more states.

He said the ministry would certainly continue with such efforts as one of its main and permanent responsibilities, adding that many countries have also offered similar visa waiver requests and proposals to Iran.

Qassemi made the comments after some media reports claimed that a source at Iran’s Foreign Ministry had said that 72 countries mainly in Asia, Africa and South America have accepted to lift visa requirements for Iranians or give visas on arrival to holders of Iranian passports.

The reports also quoted the source as saying that talks are underway with France, Germany and Italy to remove visa requirements for Iranians.

Luxury Train Arrives in Iran on Maiden Journey from Russia

Luxury Train

The train which is carrying some 40 international tourists started its journey from Moscow and has already passed through Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan.

The tourists are from the UK, the US, Australia, South Africa, France, Taiwan, China and Hong Kong, Russia’s Sputnik news agency earlier reported.

Luxury Train Arrives in Iran on Maiden Journey from Russia
A view of the interior of the “Golden Eagle” train that has just arrived in Iran in a maiden trip that started from Russia. (Photo by Faradeed.ir)

A foreign tourist having breakfast on board the “Golden Eagle” luxurious train while in Iran. (Photo by Faradeed.ir)

While in Iran, the train will take the visitors to Iran’s tourism hubs of Kerman, Yazd, Isfahan, and Shiraz. The train is expected in Tehran on 27 November where it will stay for two nights. It will later return to Mashhad and then to Turkmenistan and further on its way back to unwind its 18-day tour.

Luxury Train Arrives in Iran on Maiden Journey from Russia

The main route of the Trans-Siberian Express – which is equipped with a 4 to 5 star hotel service – was always through Russia, the Trans-Siberian route, as well as the Silk Road through Central Asia. It represents the first train from Russia to arrive in Iran in decades.

The Trans-Siberian Express had to change the cars and truck wheels, so they fit the Iranian track which has a different gauge of railways than that of Russia.

Tim Littler, the president of Britain’s Golden Eagle Luxury Trains Limited that operates the railway cruise to Iran, had earlier told Sputnik news agency that the luxurious cruise is not a one-time trip. “This is a real active project that will have a permanent schedule of tours,” Littler had said.

“The luxury train from Moscow to the Persian Odyssey will run on a continuous basis. They will go twice a year. In Iran, the best time to go is in spring and autumn. At other times of the year, it is virtually impossible to conduct tours, as it is either very hot or cold. Therefore, we will travel in October and November and in March and April.”

The Golden Eagle Luxury Trains had already conducted three rail trips to Iran from Europe.