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curiosocasanova's Journal in July 2007


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Rice: Iran biggest threat to Middle-East


Tuesday,Jul 31 2007, 10:42:47 AM
Iran 'biggest threat to Mid-East'
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in Sharm el-Sheikh
Ms Rice says Iran, not the US is the region's main problem
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has warned that Iran poses the biggest threat to US Middle East interests, as she begins a major regional tour.

Ms Rice and US Defence Secretary Robert Gates are meeting Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Arab ministers at the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.

The meeting comes after Washington confirmed plans for a massive arms deal for the region.

The tour is aimed at uniting US allies against Iran, Syria and Hezbollah.

Ms Rice denied Iranian claims that US policies were spreading fear in the Middle East.

Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini had accused the US of tarnishing good relations between countries of the region.

MIDDLE EAST TOUR
Ms Rice is due to stop off in the following places:
Egypt
Tuesday: meeting ministers from the Gulf Co-operation Council, as well as Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak
Saudi Arabia
Tuesday: meeting King Abdullah to discuss Iraq and other issues
Israel
Wednesday: meeting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, President Shimon Peres and other senior ministers
West Bank
Wednesday-Thursday: talks with President Mahmoud Abbas

Iran's nuclear programme and influence among Shia Muslim militant groups have long been sources of US concern.

During a stop-over in Shannon, Ireland, Ms Rice told reporters: "There isn't a doubt, I think, that Iran constitutes the single most important, single-country challenge to... US interests in the Middle East and to the kind of Middle East that we want to see."

The trip is the two officials' first joint tour of the region.

They will visit Egypt and Saudi Arabia together, and other countries separately.

Mr Gates told reporters travelling with him that US officials wanted "to reassure all of the countries that the policies that (US President George W Bush) pursues in Iraq have had and will continue to have regional stability and security as a very high priority".

Congressional opposition

The main beneficiaries of the deals are Israel, Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

The $30bn aid to Israel over 10 years represents a 25% increase from present levels.

US ARMS DEAL BENEFICIARIES
Israel - $30bn
Egypt - $13bn
Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman and UAE - to share $20bn

The Jewish state said the package would allow it to maintain its military "qualitative edge" in the region.

The sale of satellite-guided bombs to Saudi Arabia, the first such sale to any Arab country, is thought to be part of the proposed $20bn arms deal with the kingdom and give other Gulf states - the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman.

During their lobbying tour of the region, Ms Rice and Mr Gates are expected to ask Saudi King Abdullah to do more to support the Iraqi government of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki.

The US ambassador to the United Nations, Zalmay Khalilzad, has gone as far as accusing Saudi Arabia of undermining efforts to stabilise Iraq.

The weapons deals need to be approved by Congress, and appear set to encounter opposition.

Two Democratic congressmen, Anthony Weiner and Jerrold Nadler of New York, said at the weekend they would introduce legislation to block military aid to Saudi Arabia.





South AsiaAsia Pacific

Film Director Bergman dies at 89


Monday,Jul 30 2007, 09:38:13 AM
Film director Bergman dies at 89
Ingmar Bergman
Bergman was one of the foremost film-makers of the 20th Century
Legendary film-maker Ingmar Bergman has died aged 89, according to a Swedish news agency.

One of the key figures in modern cinema, his 60-year career has spanned intense classics like Cries & Whispers, The Seventh Seal and Wild Strawberries.

He was nominated for nine Oscars himself, while his films won the best foreign film Oscar three times.

Bergman died at his home in Faro, Sweden, the Swedish news agency TT said, citing his daughter Eva Bergman.

The director was married five times, most recently to Ingrid von Rosen.

He fathered eight children, including one who only found out she was his daughter at the age of 22.

Unsurprisingly, his work often explored the tensions between married couples.

Acting student

Bergman was born in 1918. His father was a Lutheran chaplain to the Swedish royal family and a strict disciplinarian.

As a child, Bergman used to help a local projectionist with film screenings and trained as an actor and director at the University of Stockholm.

He eventually became director of the Helsingborg City Theatre in 1944, the same year that saw his first film script, Frenzy, brought to the big screen by Alf Sjoberg.

Bergman made his own directorial debut with Crisis in 1946, the first of more than 40 films he directed in his career.

But it was not until the appearance of two tales of all-consuming love affairs - Summer Interlude in 1951 and Summer with Monika in 1953 - that his cinematic work was celebrated.

His reputation was sealed by the international art-house hit The Seventh Seal in 1957.

The movie, currently back in cinemas to celebrate its 50th anniversary, is famous for the often-parodied scene in which one of the characters plays chess with death.


Canditates see Iran nuclear threat


Friday,Jul 27 2007, 10:48:59 AM

Candidates see Iran nuclear threat

By Carol Giacomo, Diplomatic Correspondent Thu Jul 26, 8:29 AM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. presidential candidates agree Iran should not be allowed to acquire nuclear weapons but at this point in the 2008 campaign, their prescriptions for preventing such an outcome are vague.

Dealing with Iran -- its nuclear ambitions, its involvement in Iraq and its opposition to Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts -- commands a lot of President George W. Bush's attention.

But he is not likely to resolve the conflicts before leaving office in January 2009, so Iran is expected to be among the more difficult foreign policy challenges inherited by his successor, U.S. officials and experts say.

"Allowing Iran, a radical theocracy that supports terrorism and openly threatens its neighbors, to acquire nuclear weapons is a risk we cannot take," Democratic Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois said in a letter to the Israel Project, a pro-Israel group that educates the public about Israel and advocates an end to investment in Iran.

Obama's tough line on Iran was largely echoed in other letters from seven other candidates, including Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York and former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina, both Democrats.

Two Republican candidates -- former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas -- stressed, as Bush has done, that the military option must remain on the table.

All were asked by the Israel Project to discuss their views and endorse a petition signed on-line by more than 75,000 people telling the United Nations Security Council "Iran must be stopped now -- before it develops a nuclear bomb."

Tehran, which insists its nuclear program is entirely peaceful, has defied a Security Council demand to halt its uranium enrichment program, resulting in two sets of sanctions. A third sanctions resolution is under consideration.

DIVESTMENT

Only three candidates -- Obama, Brownback and Romney -- at this point supported the project's effort to persuade state pension funds and others to withdraw investments from companies invested in Iran's oil and gas industry.

Obama praised Florida, Illinois and California for taking the lead on divestment and said he would work to pass this year a new law he is sponsoring to make divestment easier.

Romney outlined a five-point strategy including tightening sanctions, denying Iran access to the international financial system and indicting Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for "incitement to genocide" against Israel.

The United States should "isolate Iran diplomatically" but also "keep communication channels open," Romney advised.

Edwards offered to negotiate directly with Iranian leaders who meet criteria like recognition of Israel, but also promised "new" targeted sanctions for U.S. and foreign companies against Tehran, which he did not define.

He also proposed enticing Iran into compliance with U.N. demands through incentives like offering increased refinery capacity, modification of the U.S. trade embargo, membership in multinational organizations and creation of a fuel bank.

Clinton urged enforcement of "meaningful, tough economic sanctions" on Iran and noted her sponsorship of legislation that would prevent international corporations from evading sanctions through foreign subsidiaries.

During a televised debate on Monday, Obama stressed the need to engage the leaders of Iran, North Korea and other states Bush has kept at arms' length. He said he would meet them without preconditions during his first year as president.

Clinton promised to pursue diplomacy vigorously but rejected meeting these leaders until the way had been cleared by high-level envoys. "I don't want to be used for propaganda purposes. I don't want to make a situation even worse," she said. Edwards endorsed her comments.

In the Israel Project responses, another Democrat, Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut, said U.S. sanctions are not enough, so the international community must enforce U.N. sanctions, including a resolution calling for disarming Hezbollah, an Islamic militant group Washington says is armed and financed by Iran.

Democratic Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said the issue of Iran's nuclear ambitions "demands urgent and decisive action," but gave no details. Neither did former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, a Republican who called Iran an "unacceptable threat" and urged it to halt enrichment and support for terrorism.

Chinese missiles to Iraq through Iran.


Monday,Jul 23 2007, 11:00:55 AM

Chinese missiles smuggled through Iran into Iraq: US

by Ammar Karim Sun Jul 22, 6:56 PM ET 
BAGHDAD (AFP) - The US military on Sunday said its troops had found Chinese-made missiles which they believe were smuggled into Iraq by groups in Iran in order to arm groups fighting US-led forces. "We have seen ordnance and weapons that come from other places, but we assess that they have come through Iran," US military spokesman Admiral Mark Fox told reporters.
"There are missiles that are actually manufactured in China that we assess come through Iran as well." Fox also alleged Iranian agents continue to smuggle Iranian made armour piercing bombs -- explosively-formed penetrators (EFPs) -- to Iraqi extremist groups across the country's long border.

"We do feel that there are networks of EFPs that are coming from Iran," he said, adding the troops had detained two suspects believed to be linked to the Iranian Revolutionary Guards' covert Qods Force.
We  have detained two suspects near the Iran-Iraq border just this weekend that we suspect to be part of the IRGC-Qods Force network," he said.The US military has repeatedly accused Iranian linked groups of training Iraqi extremists in the use of EFPs.Since May 2004, when the EFPs emerged on the Iraqi battlefield, more than 200 US soldiers have been killed by these bombs which fire a fist-sized chunk of molten metal that can cut through even a heavily armoured vehicle. Tehran denies being behind any weapons smuggling, but Fox insisted that weapons seized by Iraqi and US forces are clearly of Iranian manufacture.
"They are distinctive ... in particular mortars, mortar pins, some of the residue that you see from the mortar attacks that are distinctly and uniquely Iranian," he said.
"Also the technologies associated with some of the improvised-explosive devices, some of the triggering mechanisms and also some of the techniques and also the technology associated with manufacture of EFPs are distinctly and uniquely Iranian."
The military maintains that many of the extremist groups trained by alleged Iranian agents are Shiite militants who have broken away from the Mahdi Army, the Iraqi militia loyal to anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. Fox, nevertheless said that the broader organisation -- which is a powerful political and religious movement as well as a militia -- is not in itself a terrorist outfit.
"As I described earlier there are secret cells, rogue elements of Jaish al-Mahdi that we consider to be extremists, to be terrorists or that are not answerable to any higher authority and are in fact as I said rogue," Fox said.
"We have not necessarily felt that the entire large organisation of JAM is like that," he said, using the common US abbreviation for the Mahdi Army.
"We understand that there are factions or splinters or pieces of JAM that are still decent and hardworking and members of society that are not like that."
Meanwhile, the US general in charge of training Iraqi security forces said on Sunday the military was adopting a step-by-step approach and not working towards a "precise date" for completion of the training.The Iraqi troops are being trained "one division at a time, one province at a time, one situation at a time," Lieutenant General James Dubik told AFP.

"There is no blanket answer ... they are in much better shape this year than last year. That doesn't mean we can give a precise date for any transition."

Dubik, who toured bases in the restive cities of Baquba and Samarra along with Iraqi Defence Minister Abdel Qadir Jassem Mohammed on Sunday, said the Iraqi troops there were "becoming stronger every singe day."

A White House report earlier this month submitted to the US Congress criticised Iraq for failing to successfully prepare its forces for taking over the security in the country.

A well-armed and trained Iraqi force is seen as the cornerstone for an eventual withdrawal of US-led troops.

Americans Shown on Iran's TV


Thursday,Jul 19 2007, 06:19:22 PM

Americans held in Iran on alleged security offenses shown on state TV

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- Two detained Iranian-Americans were shown on state television Wednesday night in a program contending they tried to foment regime change in Iran with the support of the U.S. government.

The 50-minute program showed a montage of disparate quotes from Haleh Esfandiari and Kian Tajbakhsh combined to form what could be interpreted as incriminating statements, which their supporters and the U.S. government called illegitimate and coerced.

The scholars appeared alongside footage of anti-government protests in the former Soviet Union and of President Bush saying that the "untamed fire of freedom will reach the darkest corners of our world."

Esfandiari, 67, appeared first, describing her activities as director of the Middle East program at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. She has been held largely incommunicado since May except for brief telephone conversations with her mother, whom she was visiting before her detention.

"The aim of the Iran program was to plan sessions of lectures," she said. "When people came to the U.S. for lectures, policy makers listened to their lectures ... and a network was formed."

It was not clear if the broadcast signaled any impending change in the cases of Esfandiari and Tajbakhsh, an urban planning consultant detained since mid-May.

British sailors detained for two weeks for allegedly entering Iranian waters were freed in April after appearing in videos in which they "admitted" trespassing. Other people have been jailed for long periods even after their purported confessions were broadcast.

Esfandiari and Tajbakhsh have been accused of endangering Iran's national security and Iran announced this month that fresh evidence had pushed its judiciary to further investigate their cases. Two other Iranian-Americans -- journalist Parnaz Azima and peace activist Ali Shakeri -- also are being detained on national security charges.

Esfandiari's daughter, Haleh Bakhash, characterized the TV program as "propaganda," saying her mother's statements did not appear to amount to a confession of wrongdoing.

"She didn't say anything even remotely incriminating. She just talked about her job," said Bakhash, a Washington resident who has not seen her mother since the went to Iran in December.

Clips promoting the program with Esfandiari and Tajbakhsh, described as a documentary titled "In the Name of Democracy," had been shown on state TV since Monday.

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said before Wednesday's broadcast: "Simply, we're appalled by the fact that these innocent people were paraded on Iranian state television."

"The Iranian government should focus on making sure that these people are reunited with their families as soon as possible," he said. "These are people who pose no threat to the Iranian regime. They pose no threat to the Iranian people."

Iranian state television said a second episode would be broadcast Thursday.

Esfandiari said on the program that she had attended meetings at the University of California-Los Angeles attended by U.S. and Israeli officials.

"I twice attended an annual UCLA conference on the Mideast ... in which people from the U.S. and Israel were present," she said. "Some of them were former intelligence officers."

The U.S. has "allocated a budget to create a change in decision-making bodies in Iran," she said. "It means change from the inside."

Appearing separately, Tajbakhsh, a 45-year-old urban planning consultant with George Soros' New York-based Open Society Institute, explained his purpose for visiting Iran.

He said the institute financed Iranian university libraries on two conditions -- "the formation of a non-governmental organization, and its participation in the international networks formed by the Soros Foundation."

He said the "long-term aim" of the Soros Foundation is to "implement a philosophy of open society" in the countries where it operates.

Both detainees were also seen describing their families' ties to the dynasty of Iran's former pro-American shah, who was toppled in the 1979 revolution that brought hard-line Islamic clerics to power.

Esfandiari and Tajbakhsh have been held in Tehran's notorious Evin prison. They appeared in the video clips in what seemed to be homes or offices.

The Woodrow Wilson Center on Monday discounted any "confessions" that Esfandiari might make. "Any statements she may make without having had access to her lawyer would be coerced and have no legitimacy or standing," it said.

The Open Society Institute said Monday that it was "disheartened by the Iranian government's decision to stage television footage of coerced statements" from Tajbakhsh and Esfandiari.

Iran's state radio said those reactions showed there is a Western plot to overthrow the regime.

"A wide reaction, by the Western media and governments, to expressions of some citizens with dual nationality indicates a calculated conspiracy to topple the system in Iran," state radio said in a commentary after the TV program aired. 


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