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Friday, January 31, 2014
Iran Website Publishes Names and Photos of Iran’s KIA in Syria
Hardline Iranian University Students News (IUSN) today published
the names and photos of 15 Iranians killed in action in Syria. Among the names
published is Seyyed Mehdi Mousavi, the deputy commander of Ahvaz’s 10th Basij
Zone (top photo), Al-Monitor’s Arash Karami reported today.
Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said this week that Iran does not have any troops in Syria. IUSN’s report questions the truthfulness of that claim.
In a report to the Senate this week, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said Iran provides billions of dollars in military and economic aid to Syria and train pro-regime and Iraqi Shia militias as well as deploying its own personnel. Iran’s ally, the Lebanese Hezbollah has also committed thousands of fighters to Syria.
It was not clear why IUSN chose to begin publishing the names and affiliation of Iranian KIAs in Syria at this time. With the exception of statements by Iranian officials or commanders in support of the Syrian government, discussion and debate over Syria in the Iranian media is almost non-existent.
Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said this week that Iran does not have any troops in Syria. IUSN’s report questions the truthfulness of that claim.
In a report to the Senate this week, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said Iran provides billions of dollars in military and economic aid to Syria and train pro-regime and Iraqi Shia militias as well as deploying its own personnel. Iran’s ally, the Lebanese Hezbollah has also committed thousands of fighters to Syria.
It was not clear why IUSN chose to begin publishing the names and affiliation of Iranian KIAs in Syria at this time. With the exception of statements by Iranian officials or commanders in support of the Syrian government, discussion and debate over Syria in the Iranian media is almost non-existent.
Photos: Iranian University Students News/Al-Monitor
India to Reconsider IPI Gas Pipeline
Indian Minister of External Affairs Salman Khurshid said India may
join the multi-billion dollar Iran-Pakistan (IP) gas pipeline to import natural
gas from Iran that would pass through Pakistan, Fars News Agency reported
today.
The original agreement signed before the latest U.S. and EU
sanctions was imposed against Iran was to build a so-called Iran-Pakistan-India
(IPI) pipeline, linking Iran’s rich Assalouyeh gas field to the two countries.
Iran finished its share of pipeline construction up to the Pakistani border in
Iranian Baluchistan.
India reneged on the agreement, citing new sanctions imposed against
developing such pipeline. Pakistan then announced that it was ready to
participate in the project alone, but also backed off from the agreement last summer
saying Iran could not finance the construction costs of the pipeline inside
Pakistan as previously expected.
Now in light of the Geneva agreement on Iran’s nuclear program and
the expectation that a comprehensive deal could be reached soon, lifting
all sanctions against Iran’s oil and gas industry, India is apparently
reconsidering its position.
“If there is seriousness from all sides, we are ready to import
natural gas from Iran and Central Asia through Pakistan,” Khurshid said in New
Delhi on Thursday. (Fars News Agency)
Meanwhile, Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said in Ankara today that Turkey can double gas imports from Iran if the two sides could agree on a price.
The Iranian export of gas to Turkey during the sanctions, the
so-called “gas-for-gold” scheme, has caused an on-going scandal in that
country.
Mehr Shopping Center and ASP Towers in Tabriz, under construction
Mehr Shopping Center being built at Roshdiyeh in northeastern Tabriz. Five-floor structure includes provisions for 80 retail units.
ASP Twin Towers residential development construction site at Roshdiyeh in northeastern Tabriz. Wheeled excavator and Mercedes-Benz L-series based dump truck seen working the site beside concrete-related silos. Weather conditions appear to suggest photo taken before first snow on 3 December 2013.
Photos: Tabriz City of Dreams
Daylight rendering of completed Mehr Shopping Center at at Roshdiyeh
Evening rendering of completed Mehr Shopping Center at at Roshdiyeh
ASP Twin Towers residential development construction site at Roshdiyeh in northeastern Tabriz. Wheeled excavator and Mercedes-Benz L-series based dump truck seen working the site beside concrete-related silos. Weather conditions appear to suggest photo taken before first snow on 3 December 2013.
Rendering of completed ASP Twin Towers development, providing for 128 residential units
Photos: Tabriz City of Dreams
Thursday, January 30, 2014
U.S. Slams Syria for Failing to Meet Chemical Weapons Commitments
The Obama administration today slammed Syria for failing to
fulfill its pledges to surrender its chemical weapons for destruction and
voiced concern that the entire project could now be in jeopardy. U.S.
Ambassador to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons Robert
P. Mikulak accused Syria of “open-ended delaying” of the disarmament process in
an attempt to renegotiate the deal it agreed to last fall. (LATimes, 30
January)
“Syria’s open-ended delaying of the removal operation could
ultimately jeopardize the carefully timed and coordinated multistate removal
and destruction effort,” Ambassador Mikulak added.
Meanwhile, U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, in Warsaw today for
a visit, said the Syrians “need to fix this.”
Syrian President Bashar Assad agreed to surrender his chemical arsenal to deflect President Obama’s threat to launch punitive missile strikes last summer in response to use of chemical weapons in the civil war in Syria.
Under a disarmament plan proposed by the Syrians, Damascus was to
deliver 700 tons of its most dangerous chemicals by next Wednesday to the port
of Latakia, where the material would be loaded onto ships and destroyed at sea.
But officials say it has delivered only about 32 tons, in two shipments on 7
and 27 January.
Mikulak also accused Syria of violating its pledge to destroy
chemical weapons production facilities. Instead of following through on
promises to destroy seven hardened aircraft hangars and five underground
facilities, Syria is proposing to make the facilities “inactivated” by welding
doors shut and erecting interior obstacles.