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Top MP: Prospect of nuclear talks is promising

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The speaker of the Islamic Consultative Assembly says that positive steps have been taken toward the settlement of disputes which have emerged in nuclear talks between Iran and P5+1.

Ali Larijani made the comment in a meeting with the ambassadors of the Islamic nations in Tehran on Saturday and added that the prospects of the talks are bright. Entekhab.ir on July 5 released a report on his remarks which also featured the ominous phenomenon of terrorism in the region. The following is the translation of part of Larijani’s remarks in the meeting:

Nuclear talks

Nuclear talks between Iran and P5+1 are rather complex. Iran is trying to help talks proceed successfully. Inside the country, all government branches and officials see eye to eye when it comes to the advancement of the talks.

The Islamic Republic of Iran has always tried to achieve a positive result from the talks. The prospect of nuclear negotiations is positive and great steps have been taken to settle the disputes. Iran is walking down the right path.

Options on the table

Comments by American officials that all options remain on the table in dealing with the Iranian nation have domestic consumption and are simply theatrics [by politicians]. Such behaviors are not constructive. By making ill-considered comments, the Americans have caused huge losses to themselves and to the region. We hope the talks can produce positive results for the region and set the stage for patching up the differences. The positive outcome of the talks will ensure sustainable security in the region.

Terrorism and extremism

Today several Islamic countries have been entangled in terrorism and the energy the Islamic community should spend on solving the question of Palestine has instead been used up for solving infightings [in different countries].

Certain powerful countries, which have a hand in the creation of terrorist groups, are trying to foment crises in Syria, Iraq and Yemen. It is regrettable that the Islamic community has been in the grips of such a disaster, which prevents Muslim nations from mobilizing their efforts to counter the Zionist regime.

Plots are at work to disintegrate Muslim nations for which the weakness of Muslims is to blame. History has shown that a divided Muslim community serves the interests of colonial powers. The Islamic Republic of Iran has always highlighted Muslim unity.

The countries that took the wrong direction in dealing with terrorism and supported the terrorists are highly expected to correct their past mistakes.

Iran is seriously determined to take on terrorism and will offer a helping hand to any country which seeks to tackle this ominous phenomenon. The responsibility lies with all nations, Islamic and non-Islamic, to fight terrorism.

 

 

Where did it all go wrong with IRIB?

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A medium which is expected to act in line with national interests in covering Iran’s nuclear talks with P5+1, is ignoring the country’s interests and has overtaken foreign media in beating the drums of cynicism [about the final result of nuclear talks].

Nuclear talks are at their final stop with the world waiting to see what comes out of Vienna. Certain media outlets spare no effort to paint a black picture of what is unfolding in the Austrian capital. Pessimistic news stories come as a surprise when they are aired by a national medium which is funded by the country’s public budget.

Fararu.com on July 4 published an analytical report on where Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) stands when it comes to nuclear talks, saying that the national broadcaster has overlooked the country’s national interests and expediency, swimming against the tide of the Islamic Republic’s policies – which are aimed at the settlement of Iran’s nuclear case through talks.

The following is the translation of excerpts of that report which also includes an expert view by Hassan Beheshtipour:

At a time when Iranians are following news on a daily basis eagerly waiting for good news, IRIB is trying – in its different news programs – to convince its viewers that any agreement [with P5+1] would be a bad deal.

A case in point is a report entitled “A good Iranian agreement and a good US agreement” that has been aired in all news bulletins of the Islamic Republic of Iran News Network (IRINN) making a distinction between a good deal from the viewpoints of the Iranians and Americans, disputing the president’s stress on a win-win situation in nuclear talks.

[…]

Selection and broadcast of pessimistic reports and headlines are not all. The experts different IRIB channels host are chosen from among the opponents of the talks, who lash out at government’s nuclear policies whispering “We cannot succeed [in the talks]”, with the proponents who can defend the talks conspicuous by their absence.

A producer of a program in which Seyyed Mehdi Tabatabaei – the guest – had defended the Iranian nuclear team has been reprimanded, according to khabaronline.ir.

With Iran and six world powers getting closer than even before to a nuclear deal, IRIB’s managers have reportedly ordered the producers of religious programs at radio and TV services as well as news shows not to talk about the peace treaty signed by Imam Hassan. [In a bid to serve the interests of the faith, the second Shiite Imam signed a peace deal, renouncing his right to official leadership of the Muslim community.]

IRIB rejected the report as sheer lie, with the head of the broadcaster’s Public Relations Office saying that IRIB is seriously pursuing the nuclear issues. The performance of the national broadcaster, which has been repeatedly criticized by the president, shows that it is banging the drums of defeatism more than any foreign media.

Hassan Beheshtipour, an expert in nuclear issues, says the performance of the broadcaster should be assessed by looking at its different programs.

“As a viewer, I should say that the warnings the national broadcaster airs on the news on nuclear talks outnumber the hopeful remarks it releases.

“We should avoid generalization [when it comes to the performance of IRIB on nuclear talks] and we need to first review different news bulletins – case by case – in a [special] period and then pass judgment.

“It is my impression that at news bulletins which are broadcast at 14:00 PM, 20:30 PM and 21 PM local time, the promising parts which indicate talks are likely to result in a deal are less than the parts which sound notes of warning [that the talks may end without producing a deal].

“Generally speaking, I don’t think making programs on the downsides of the talks is something bad; rather, it seems necessary because it can be as a wake-up call. But a proper balance should be struck between the parts which issue warnings and the ones which beam hopeful pieces of news [on nuclear talks].

“For instance, reports of Iran repatriating 13 tons of frozen gold and of Britain removing seven Iranian real entities from its list of sanctions can be screened along with news stories that sound a note of caution.

“I still believe that we need to examine IRIB’s programs carefully and in a case-based fashion in order to make [impartial and] fair judgment on the workings of IRIB.

IRIB out of tune with government and people

“We are living in a society in which multiple [distinctive] voices are heard with different people holding and expressing different views. IRIB has nothing to do with people’s political leanings and viewpoints; rather, it pursues its agenda according to the macro policies of the establishment.

Why so alarming than promising?

“Like other media outlets, there are editors-in-chief, journalists and managers of different channels at IRIB who act in line with the general policies of Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting – which are outlined by the Supreme National Security Council – but at times they act selectively.

“The selective approach by editors and managers of IRIB channels in choosing the newsworthy items becomes remarkably evident when we are reminded that Peyman Jebelli, who is now a deputy to IRIB president for news affairs, used to serve as a deputy to Saeed Jalili – the secretary of the Supreme National Security Council when President Ahmadinejad was in office.

Iftar tables set by wives of ambassadors of Islamic countries to Iran

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At a ceremony dubbed “Ramadan, Legacy of Muslims” held on July 4 in Tehran’s Milad Tower, the wives of some ambassadors of Islamic nations to Iran, including Indonesia, Pakistan, Malaysia, Algeria, Lebanon, Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Oman, put on display the meals served in their countries for Iftar [breaking fast at sundown].

Images of the event released online by the Islamic Republic News Agency:

 

 

Sultan Qaboos approves Iran-Oman Maritime Border Demarcation deal

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Sultan Qaboos of Oman approved an agreement by Tehran and Muscat on Saturday to demarcate their maritime borders in the Sea of Oman.

The agreement was signed by Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and Omani Interior Minister Hamud bin Faisal bin Said al-Busaidi in Muscaton Sunday.

The Iranian foreign minister is in Oman on a one-day visit to the Arab country.

According to the agreement, Tehran and Muscat agreed on demarcation of 450 kilometers of their common sea borders.

Iran and Oman had demarcated their maritime borders in the Strait of Hormuz in the 1970s.

During the meeting, Zarif said that Iran and Oman have very good relations and this agreement demonstrates the kind of ties Iran is keen to have with all its neighboring countries, especially in the Persian Gulf.

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

Iranian Newspapers Headlines
Iranian Newspapers Headlines

The Supreme Leader’s comments underlining efforts to accelerate the country’s scientific drive and an order by the president to revamp the country’s banking system and capital market dominated the front pages of Iranian newspapers on Sunday. Also in the news were the comments of Major General Firuzabadi in support of the nuclear negotiating team.

 

Ettela’at: “Under no circumstances should the country’s scientific drive lose its momentum,” the Supreme Leader said at a meeting with university professors.

Ayatollah Khamenei further said universities should serve as a forum for political understanding and awareness and that politicking deals a blow to the main mission of universities which is to strive toward scientific progress.


 

Abrar: Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham has condemned the crimes Boko Haram has committed in Nigeria.

Abrar: A senior US nuclear negotiator who took part in talks with Iran when Ahmadinejad was in office has said that when Jalili was Iran’s top negotiator, he mostly focused on the history of Islam and Iran in nuclear meetings with foreign diplomats.

Abrar:An MP has said that more than one oil derrick went missing [when Ahmadinejad was in office].

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

 


 

Afarinesh: Oman’s Sultan Qaboos has signed a maritime border demarcation deal with Iran.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

 


 

Afkar: “Terrorism has grown in the region on the back of American and Israeli support,” said Ali Akbar Velayati, a former foreign minister.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

 


 

Aftab-e Yazd: “Some simpletons are contributing to the ‘Shiite Crescent’ plot,” said Mohammad Sadr, a senior advisor to the foreign minister.

Those who say after Yemen the Saudi-led coalition will train its guns on three Iranian islands in the Persian Gulf do not appreciate foreign policy.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

 


 

Arman-e Emrooz: A final step toward a final deal

The green-light of the International Atomic Energy Agency at the crossroads of a deal

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

 


 

Asr-e Iranian: The Iranian MPs have called on the negotiating team not to bring home an unsigned deal.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

 


 

Asrar: Chairman of parliament’s Research Center Kazem Jalali said he was terrified when he heard a report on the country’s water resources.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

 


 

Ebtekar: “Up to 95 percent of the comprehensive nuclear deal has been finalized,” said Hossein Mousavian, a former Iranian nuclear negotiator.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

 


 

Jomhouri Islami: “All radio pharmaceuticals needed in the country are produced inside the country,” said a senior Health Ministry official.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5


 

Kayhan: Nuclear talks in Vienna, final days or endless extensions?

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

 


 

Khorasan: According to a report released by The Guardian, Britain seems to have had advance knowledge about Saddam Hussein’s decision to use chemical weapons against Iran.

Khorasan: A buyer has stepped forward to purchase the telecommunications company.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

 


 

Rooyesh-e Mellat: “The Constitution recognizes the citizens’ right to protest,” said Tehran MP Ali Motahari.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

 


 

Sharq: “We will break the hand that signs a bad deal,” said [hardline MP] Hamid Reza Rasaei.

The Worriers [staunch supporters of Ahmadinejad who are opposed to anything President Rouhani and his administration do on the local and international fronts] are working out a new post-deal scenario.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 5

 

 

Highlights of Ettela’at newspaper on July 5

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“Under no circumstances should the country’s scientific drive lose its momentum,” the Supreme Leader said at a meeting with university professors.

Ayatollah Khamenei further said universities should serve as a forum for political understanding and awareness and that politicking deals a blow to the main mission of universities which is to strive toward scientific progress.

 “I swear that this government wishes well for the people and the Revolution,” said Chief of Staff of the armed forces Major General Firuzabadi.

He further said just like soldiers who need the thoughts and prayers of the public as they launch an operation, people should pray for nuclear negotiators.

He also urged the Iranians to throw their weight behind Iran’s nuclear negotiators.

 A coup by 13 IS leaders against Al-Baghdadi [the kingpin of the terrorist grouping] has failed.

Al-Baghdadi has ordered the execution of all 13. In another development, 60 terrorists of the Al-Nusra Front were killed by IS in a mosque in Syria.

 In a letter to his deputy, President Rouhani has ordered the country’s banking system and capital market overhauled.

The financial problems caused by lack of fiscal and monetary discipline dating back to the time when there was a massive inflow of oil revenues coupled with banking and financial sanctions are standing in the way of economic growth, the president said in the letter.    

 “I see emergence of reason over illusion,” said Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif of nuclear talks between Iran and P5+1.

The top diplomat further said, “We have never been closer to a lasting outcome.”    

 The United Nations has said that Israel should be tried for war crimes.

Forty-one of the 47 countries with a seat on the UN Human Rights Council voted for an anti-Israeli resolution.

 

Sanctions to be lifted on day of nuclear deal finalization: Iran’s Araghchi

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All economic and financial sanctions against Iran will be lifted on the day a nuclear deal takes effect, Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi says.

“On the day of the agreement, all economic and financial sanctions by the EU, the US, and the Security Council will be removed and we will take measures to meet commitments,” the top Iranian negotiator said during a live program from Vienna broadcast by IRIB on Saturday.

Both sides are trying to reach the July 7 deadline, but Iran is not bound to the date, Araghchi said, adding that Tehran will not accept a bad deal and is looking for an agreement that respects its red lines and the Iranian nation’s rights.

“We had never advanced this far during the past talks,” he added.

Also on Saturday, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif met with US Secretary of State John Kerry in the presence of deputy foreign ministers and head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran Ali Akbar Salehi as well as US Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz.

Zarif also participated in talks with the International Atomic Energy Agency chief Yukiya Amano.

“With the cooperation from Iran I think we can issue a report by the end of the year on the … clarification of the issues related to possible military dimensions,” said Amano before heading to the latest round of talks.

Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council – the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China – plus Germany are pressing ahead with talks to hammer out a final deal after they missed a self-imposed June-end deadline.

Ulterior motives behind sanctions on Iran: Ayatollah Khamenei

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Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei says the sanctions against Iran have nothing to do with the country’s nuclear activities or human rights record, adding that there are other motives behind the bans.

Addressing a group of university professors and researchers on Saturday night, Ayatollah Khamenei said those who have imposed sanctions on Iran are themselves the ones who foster terrorism and commit human rights violations.

The Leader said the sanctions against Iran have been imposed because the Islamic Republic has emerged as a nation, a movement and an identity guided by principles against the hegemonic system.

“Their objective is to prevent Iran from reaching a prominent civilizational status,” Ayatollah Khamenei said.

The Leader also highlighted the special role of professors in educating a generation of self-reliable, confident and diligent youth who will further Iran’s march toward progress.

Rouhani orders financial system reforms

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Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani in a directive on Saturday ordered the implementation of a series of reforms in the country’s financial and banking systems.

President Rouhani in his directive that has been addressed to his First Vice President Eshagh Jahangiri has emphasized that reforms are needed to help promote the Iranian economy simultaneous with the advancements in the area of foreign policy.

Reforms, he added, are necessary to remove the obstacles in the way of the competitive industrial output and also to enhance the efficiency of the overall financial structure.

To do this, he added, it is necessary to overcome certain challenges that have resulted from a lack of discipline in different sections of Iran’s financial structure, specifically during the period that the country was obtaining huge revenues from high oil prices.

Rouhani has warned that those challenges have already become even more difficult after the implementation of the banking and financial sanctions against Iran.

The Iranian president has accordingly called on Jahangiri to devise a comprehensive financial reforms plan. The plan needs to provide mechanisms to reform Iran’s banking system, help the development of the capital market and also organize the government’s debts.

Jahangiri has been required by Rouhani to use the help of Minister of Economy and Financial Affairs Ali Tayyebnia and the Governor of the Central Bank of Iran Valiollah Seif as well as any other related official to prepare the plan.

IRGC’s Ghadir radar deployed in southern Iran

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The Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) deployed its Ghadir phased-array radar system with a range of 1,100 kilometers in southern Iran on Saturday.

The Ghadir radar system is capable of discovering and tracking planes from a 600-kilometer and ballistic missiles from a 1,100-kilometer distance and an altitude of 100 kilometers.

Commander of Khatam al-Anbiya Air Defense Base Brigadier General Farzad Esmaeili and a number of other Iranian Armed Forces commanders were present in the unveiling ceremony at IRGC’s Air Defense Site in the city of Ahwaz in the bordering province of Khuzestan in southwestern Iran.

The Ghadir radar system was unveiled for the first time in Garmsar radar site in Semnan Province, northern Iran last year.

The radar system is equipped with over 100 antennas which are capable of 360 degrees rotation.

The phased-array Ghadir radar system can be used in all types of electronic warfare and in all climatic conditions.

In May 2012, IRGC Aerospace Commander Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh said Iran is mass-producing Ghadir radar systems in great numbers, adding that the radar system covers areas over 1,000km in distance.

“This radar system can cover areas around 1,100 km in range and its designing and production project ended early last (Iranian) year and is now being mass-produced,” Hajizadeh told FNA at the time.

In June 2011, the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps put into operation the new home-made long-range Ghadir radar system that enables its forces to monitor low-altitude satellites.

The Ghadir radar system which covers areas (maximum) 1,100km in distance and 300km in altitude has been designed and built to identify aerial targets, radar-evading aircraft, cruise missiles and ballistic missiles as well as low-altitude satellites.

In recent years, Iran has made great achievements in its defense sector and attained self-sufficiency in producing essential military equipment and systems.

Iranian officials have always stressed that the country’s military and arms programs serve defensive purposes and should not be perceived as a threat to any other country.