Justice for All

The Motto of the Theology State in Iran

The Motto of the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI), it is better to be feared than to be loved. The IRI is using Iron Fist by utilizing Machiavelli doctrine of Fear, Fraud and Force to rule Iran.

Think Independently, and freely because you are a free person.




Thursday, March 26, 2009

Central America: An Emerging Role in the Drug Trade

By Stephen Meiners
As part of STRATFOR’s coverage of the security situation in Mexico, we have observed some significant developments in the drug trade in the Western Hemisphere over the past year. While the United States remains the top destination for South American-produced cocaine, and Mexico continues to serve as the primary transshipment route, the path between Mexico and South America is clearly changing.
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Tracking Mexico’s Drug Cartels
These changes have been most pronounced in Central America, where Mexican drug-trafficking organizations have begun to rely increasingly on land-based smuggling routes as several countries in the region have stepped up monitoring and interdiction of airborne and maritime shipments transiting from South America to Mexico.
The results of these changes have been extraordinary. According to a December 2008 report from the U.S. National Drug Intelligence Center, less than 1 percent of the estimated 600 to 700 tons of cocaine that departed South America for the United States in 2007 transited Central America. The rest, for the most part, passed through the Caribbean Sea or Pacific Ocean en route to Mexico. Since then, land-based shipment of cocaine through Central America appears to have ballooned. Earlier this month, U.S. Ambassador to Guatemala Stephen McFarland estimated in an interview with a Guatemalan newspaper that cocaine now passes through that country at a rate of approximately 300 to 400 tons per year.
Notwithstanding the difficulty associated with estimating drug flows, it is clear that Central America has evolved into a significant transshipment route for drugs, and that the changes have taken place rapidly. These developments warrant a closer look at the mechanics of the drug trade in the region, the actors involved, and the implications for Central American governments — for whom drug-trafficking organizations represent a much more daunting threat than they do for Mexico.
Some Background
While the drug trade in the Western Hemisphere is multifaceted, it fundamentally revolves around the trafficking of South American-produced cocaine to the United States, the world’s largest market for the drug. Drug shipment routes between Peru and Colombia — where the vast majority of cocaine is cultivated and produced — and the United States historically have been flexible, evolving in response to interdiction efforts or changing markets. For example, Colombian drug traffickers used to control the bulk of the cocaine trade by managing shipping routes along the Caribbean smuggling corridor directly to the United States. By the 1990s, however, as the United States and other countries began to focus surveillance and interdiction efforts along this corridor, the flow of U.S.-bound drugs was forced into Mexico, which remains the main transshipment route for the overwhelming majority of cocaine entering the United States.
A similar situation has been occurring over the last two years in Central America. From the 1990s until as recently as 2007, traffickers in Mexico received multiton shipments of cocaine from South America. There was ample evidence of this, including occasional discoveries of bulk cocaine on everything from small propeller aircraft and Gulfstream jets to self-propelled semisubmersible vessels, fishing trawlers and cargo ships. These smuggling platforms had sufficient range and capacity to bypass Central America and ship bulk drugs directly to Mexico.
By early 2008, however, a series of developments in several Central American countries suggested that drug-trafficking organizations — Mexican cartels in particular — were increasingly trying to establish new land-based smuggling routes through Central America for cocaine shipments from South America to Mexico and eventual delivery to the United States. While small quantities of drugs had certainly transited the region in the past, the routes used presented an assortment of risks. A combination of poorly maintained highways, frequent border crossings, volatile security conditions and unpredictable local criminal organizations apparently presented such great logistical challenges that traffickers opted to send the majority of their shipments through well-established maritime and airborne platforms.
In response to this relatively unchecked international smuggling, several countries in the region began taking steps to increase the monitoring and interdiction of such shipments. The Colombian government, for one, stepped up monitoring of aircraft operating in its airspace. The Mexican government installed updated radar systems and reduced the number of airports authorized to receive flights originating in Central and South America. The Colombian government estimates that the aerial trafficking of cocaine from Colombia has decreased by as much as 90 percent since 2003.
Maritime trafficking also appears to have suffered over the past few years, most likely due to greater cooperation and information-sharing between Mexico and the United States. The United States has an immense capability to collect maritime technical intelligence, and an increasing degree of awareness regarding drug trafficking at sea. Two examples of this progress include the Mexican navy’s July 2008 capture — acting on intelligence provided by the United States — of a self-propelled semisubmersible vessel loaded with more than five tons of cocaine, and the U.S. Coast Guard’s February 2009 interdiction of a Mexico-flagged fishing boat loaded with some seven tons of cocaine about 700 miles off Mexico’s Pacific coast. Presumably as a result of successes such as these, the Mexican navy reported in 2008 that maritime trafficking had decreased by an estimated 60 percent over the last two years.
While it is impossible to independently corroborate the Mexican and Colombian governments’ estimates on the degree to which air- and seaborne drug trafficking has decreased over the last few years, developments in Central America over the past year certainly support their assessments. In particular, STRATFOR has observed that in order to make up for losses in maritime and aerial trafficking, land-based smuggling routes are increasingly being used — not by Colombian cocaine producers or even Central American drug gangs, but by the now much more powerful Mexican drug-trafficking organizations.
Mechanics of Central American Drug Trafficking
It is important to clarify that what we are defining as land-based trafficking is not limited to overland smuggling. The methods associated with land-based trafficking can be divided into three categories: overland smuggling, littoral maritime trafficking and short-range aerial trafficking.

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The most straightforward of these is simple overland smuggling. As a series of investigations in Panama, Costa Rica and Nicaragua demonstrated last year, overland smuggling operations use a wide variety of approaches. In one case, authorities pieced together a portion of a route being used by Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel in which small quantities of drugs entered Costa Rica from Panama via the international point of entry on the Pan-American Highway. The cocaine was often held for several days in a storage facility before being loaded onto another vehicle to be driven across the country on major highways. Upon approaching the Nicaraguan border, however, the traffickers opted to avoid the official port of entry and instead transferred the shipments into Nicaragua on foot or on horseback along a remote part of the border. Once across, the shipments were taken to the shores of the large inland Lake Nicaragua, where they were transferred onto boats to be taken north, at which point they would be loaded onto vehicles to be driven toward the Honduran border. In one case in Nicaragua, authorities uncovered another Sinaloa-linked route that passed through Managua and is believed to have followed the Pan-American Highway through Honduras and into El Salvador.
The second method associated with land-based trafficking involves littoral maritime operations. Whereas long-range maritime trafficking involves large cargo ships and self-propelled semisubmersible vessels capable of delivering multiton shipments of drugs from South America to Mexico without having to refuel, littoral trafficking tends to involve so-called “go-fast boats” that are used to carry smaller quantities of drugs at higher speeds over shorter distances. This method is useful to traffickers who might want to avoid, for whatever reason, a certain stretch of highway or perhaps even an entire country. According to Nicaraguan military officials, several go-fast boats are suspected of operating off the country’s coasts and of sailing outside Nicaraguan territorial waters in order to avoid authorities. While it is possible to make the entire trip from South America to Mexico using only this method — and making frequent refueling stops — it is believed that littoral trafficking is often combined with an overland network.
The third method associated with land-based drug smuggling involves short-range aerial operations. In these cases, clandestine planes make stops in Central America before either transferring their cargo to a land vehicle or making another short flight toward Mexico. Over the past year, several small planes loaded with drugs or cash have crashed or been seized in Honduras, Mexico and other countries in the region. In addition, authorities in Guatemala have uncovered several clandestine airstrips allegedly managed by the Mexican drug-trafficking organization Los Zetas. These examples suggest that even as overall aerial trafficking appears to have decreased dramatically, the practice continues in Central America. Indeed, there is little reason to expect that it would not continue, considering that many countries in the region lack the resources to adequately monitor their airspace.
While each of these three methods involves a different approach to drug smuggling, the methods share two important similarities. For one, the vehicles involved — be they speedboats, small aircraft or private vehicles — have limited cargo capacities, which means land-based trafficking generally involves cocaine shipments in quantities no greater than a few hundred pounds. While smaller quantities in more frequent shipments mean more handling, they also mean that less product is lost if a shipment is seized. More importantly, each of these land-based methods requires that a drug-trafficking organization maintain a presence inside Central America.
Actors Involved
There are a variety of drug-trafficking organizations operating inside Central America. In addition to some of the notorious local gangs — such as Calle 18 and MS-13 — there is also a healthy presence of foreign criminal organizations. Colombian drug traffickers, for example, historically have been no strangers to the region. However, as STRATFOR has observed over the past year, it is the more powerful Mexico-based drug-trafficking organizations that appear to be overwhelmingly responsible for the recent upticks in land-based narcotics smuggling in Central America.
Based on reports of arrests and drug seizures in the region over the past year, it is clear that no single Mexican cartel maintains a monopoly on land-based drug trafficking in Central America. Los Zetas, for example, are extremely active in several parts of Guatemala, where they engage in overland and short-range aerial trafficking. The Sinaloa cartel, which STRATFOR believes is the most capable Mexican trafficker of cocaine, has been detected operating a fairly extensive overland smuggling route from Panama to El Salvador. Some intelligence gaps remain regarding, for example, the precise route Sinaloa follows from El Salvador to Mexico or the route Los Zetas use between South America and Guatemala. It is certainly possible that these two Mexican cartels do not rely exclusively on any single route or method in the region. But the logistical challenges associated with establishing even one route across Central America make it likely that existing routes are maintained even after they have been detected — and are defended if necessary.
The operators of the Mexican cartel-managed routes also do not match a single profile. At times, Mexican cartel members themselves have been found to be operating in Central America. More common is the involvement of locals in various phases of smuggling operations. Nicaraguan and Salvadoran nationals, for example, have been arrested in northwestern Nicaragua for operating a Sinaloa-linked overland and littoral route into El Salvador. Authorities in Costa Rica have arrested Costa Rican nationals for their involvement in overland routes through that country. In that case, a related investigation in Panama led to the arrest of several Mexican nationals who reportedly had recently arrived in the area to more closely monitor the operation of their route.
One exception is Guatemala, where Mexican drug traffickers appear to operate much more extensively than in any other Central American country; this may be due, at least in part, to the relationship between Los Zetas and the Guatemalan Kaibiles. Beyond the apparently more-established Zeta smuggling operations there, several recent drug seizures — including an enormous 1,800-acre poppy plantation attributed to the Sinaloa cartel — make it clear that other Mexican drug-trafficking organizations are currently active inside Guatemala. Sinaloa was first suspected of increasing its presence in Guatemala in early 2008, when rumors surfaced that the cartel was attempting to recruit local criminal organizations to support its own drug-trafficking operations there. The ongoing Zeta-Sinaloa rivalry at that time triggered a series of deadly firefights in Guatemala, prompting fears that the bloody turf battles that had led to record levels of organized crime-related violence inside Mexico would extend into Central America.
Security Implications in Central America
Despite these concerns and the growing presence of Mexican traffickers in the region, there apparently have been no significant spikes in drug-related violence in Central America outside of Guatemala. Several factors may explain this relative lack of violence.
First, most governments in Central America have yet to launch large-scale counternarcotics campaigns. The seizures and arrests that have been reported so far have generally been the result of regular police work, as opposed to broad changes in policies or a significant commitment of resources to address the problem. More significantly, though, the quantities of drugs seized probably amount to just a drop in the bucket compared to the quantity of drugs that moves through the region on a regular basis. Because seizures have remained low, Mexican drug traffickers have yet to launch any significant reprisal attacks against government officials in any country outside Guatemala. In that country, even the president has received death threats and had his office bugged, allegedly by drug traffickers.
The second factor, which is related to the first, is that drug traffickers operating in Central America likely rely more heavily on bribes than on intimidation to secure the transit of drug shipments. This assessment follows from the region’s reputation for official corruption (especially in countries like Nicaragua, Honduras, Panama and Guatemala) and the economic disadvantage that many of these countries face compared to the Mexican cartels. For example, the gross domestic product of Honduras is $12 billion, while the estimated share of the drug trade controlled by the Mexican cartels is estimated to be $20 billion.
Finally, Mexican cartels currently have their hands full at home. Although Central America has undeniably become more strategically important for the flow of drugs from South America, the cartels in Mexico have simultaneously been engaged in a two-front war at home against the Mexican government and against rival criminal organizations. As long as this war continues at its present level, Mexican drug traffickers may be reluctant to divert significant resources too far from their home turf, which remains crucial in delivering drug shipments to the United States.
Looking Ahead
That said, there is no guarantee that Central America will continue to escape the wrath of Mexican drug traffickers. On the contrary, there is reason for concern that the region will increasingly become a battleground in the Mexican cartel war.
For one thing, the Merida Initiative, a U.S. anti-drug aid program that will put some $300 million into Mexico and about $100 million into Central America over the next year, could be perceived as a meaningful threat to drug-trafficking operations. If Central American governments choose to step up counternarcotics operations, either at the request of the United States or in order to qualify for more Merida money, they risk disrupting existing smuggling operations to the extent that cartels begin to retaliate.
Also, even though Mexican cartels may be reluctant to divert major resources from the more important war at home, it is important to recognize that a large-scale reassignment of cartel operatives or resources from Mexico to Central America might not be necessary to have a significant impact on the security situation in any given Central American country. Given the rampant corruption and relatively poor protective security programs in place for political leaders in the region, very few cartel operatives or resources would actually be needed if a Mexican drug-trafficking organization chose to, for example, conduct an assassination campaign against high-ranking government officials.
Governments are not the only potential threat to drug traffickers in Central America. The increases in land-based drug trafficking in the region could trigger intensified competition over trafficking routes. Such turf battles could occur either among the Mexican cartels or between the Mexicans and local criminal organizations, which might try to muscle their way into the lucrative smuggling routes or attempt to grab a larger percentage of the profits.
If the example of Mexico is any guide, the drug-related violence that could be unleashed in Central America would easily overwhelm the capabilities of the region’s governments. Last year, STRATFOR considered the possibility of Mexico becoming a failed state. But Mexico is a far stronger and richer country than its fragile southern neighbors, who simply do not have the resources to deal with the cartels on their own.

P!nk - Please Don't Leave Me

P!nk - Sober

KATY PERRY "Hot'n'cold"

KATY PERRY-I Kissed a Girl

Cascada - The Night Out

Cascada - A Never Ending Dream

Cascada

Enrique Iglesias - Hero

Enrique Iglesias - Escape

Cascada - Miracle

Enrique Iglesias - Tired Of Being Sorry

Enrique Iglesias - Push

Timbaland - The Way I Are

MADONNA - 4 MINUTES TO SAVE THE WORLD

Madonna ft Justin Timberlake & Timbaland - 4 Minutes (Gustavo Scorpio Mix) by VJ Tarkan & VDJ Alex Ritton

Modern Talking - You're my heart, you're my soul '98 Rap V

Modern Talking - Brother Louie

Modern Talking - Last Exit To Brooklyn

Modern Talking Megamix 2000

MODERN TALKING - SEXY SEXY LOVER

Modern Talking - You are My Heart Youre My Soul

Shapour BAKHTIAR-Traitor of Iran

Shapour BAKHTIAR-Traitor of Iran

Bahram MOSHIRI-Clueless

Bahram MOSHIRI Confused

Bahram MOSHIRI-Dazed and Confused

Bahram MOSHIRI-Dazed and Confused as Usual

Leona Lewis - Bleeding Love

Jordan Sparks Ft. Chris Brown: No Air

Timbaland - Apologize (feat. One Republic)

Flo Rida - Elevator

Nicole Scherzinger "Jai Ho (You Are My Destiny)"

Iran accepts US Afghan invitation

Iran has confirmed it will attend a US-backed international conference on the future of Afghanistan next week.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Hassan Ghashghavi said Tehran had not yet decided who it will send to the summit in The Hague next Tuesday.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said earlier this month that Iran should attend the high-level meeting.
While the US and Iran are at odds over Tehran's nuclear plans, the two share an interest in a stable Afghanistan.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Classical Iranian Dance

Iranian Girl is Dancing

His Imperial Majesty, Light of Aryan, King of Kings Mohammad Reza PAHLAVI

Long Live Monarchy-Pahlavi Dynasty-Dr. Fereydoun Farrokhzad

Houshang Touze

According to this man, Houshang Touze, the Islamic Republic in Iran has been doing a lot of contribution to Iran, and Iranian need to preserve the system in Iran and not to revolt against the establishment in Iran.

Quite frankly, this man is submissive and wants everyone to be submissive to opperssion. We are Iranian, and do not put up with none sense. We want free Iran peroid.

He can stay in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and gets his money from Mullah while he can because Iran must be free from all harmful nature.

Prescription for Poverty

By Ben JohnsonFrontPageMagazine.com 3/25/2009 Barack Obama’s press conference last night claimed economic recovery is “inseparable” from a proposed budget that offers charity for none, malice toward many, and debt for generations to come. In a conference replete with bad ideas, his most egregious proposal is reducing tax deductions for charitable donations. Currently, those in the top two tax brackets can deduct 33 and 35 percent of charity, respectively. Obama’s plan would reduce this to 28 percent, raising little more revenue than the AIG bonuses his Treasury team made possible. More than 40 percent of all philanthropy comes from those in the top tax bracket – the “one percent of the American people” Obama targets. One left-leaning think tank estimates the deduction reduction will reduce annual philanthropy by $9 billion. When asked if his plan will reduce giving, Obama responded with a sermonette that, “If it's really a charitable contribution, I'm assuming that that shouldn't be the determining factor as to whether you're giving that $100 to the homeless shelter down the street.” But to let the naïf-in-chief in on a secret, sometimes the wealthy give to charity to reduce their tax burden. The Bank of America found the wealthier a family is, the more income tax deductions affect their total philanthropy. It added in a December 2007 report, that 52.7 percent of “high net worth households” would give more to charity “if they felt more financially secure.” Obama will not induce this feeling while selling the charity deduction as a piece of class warfare. Obama added that under the current system, if someone with an annual income of $50,000 gives money to charity, “he gets to write off 28 percent; I get to write off 39 percent. [Not quite. – Ed.] I don’t think that’s fair.” If that is his motivation, a more, well, charitable plan might call for increasing the bottom rate, rather than grinding the classes to the lowest common denominator. His logic serves as an eloquent call for a flat tax: if it is unfair for some Americans to get a larger percentage write-off than others based on income, certainly it is equally unfair for them to pay a greater burden?Common sense proves an increase in demand for charitable services caused by the recession, plus an increase in the tax burden for those most likely to finance charities, combined with a disincentive to make contributions, will assure fewer private dollars are more finely spread over a larger clientele. His is a prescription for poverty. It virtually seems designed to bankrupt charities and replace them with the dole.Experts in the field have another proposal. The Non-Profit Times quotes two experts on giving stating, “when wealth is created, giving increases. If the president’s plan generates more wealth for Americans, then giving will go up.” There is a name for this economic principle: trickle-down economics. And President Obama has lambasted the concept for years, stating in a fall commercial, “Instead of prosperity trickling down, pain has trickled up.” Obama’s Robin Hood economic plan will halt all economic progress downward to a trickle. He is squeezing the rich to “provide a tax cut to 95 percent of all working families,” albeit they are largely non-taxpayers. This largesse tops out at a whopping $400 per individual (with an adjusted gross income of less than $75,000) or $800 per family (with an AGI of $150,000) and will be carved into weekly allotments of $13, or $65 a month. By 2010, this drops to a piddling $7.70 a week, at which point Senate Democrats are content to let it die. By that time, Sasha and Malia can expect to receive higher weekly allowances, and the American people can expect to have nothing to show but greater indebtedness.After touting his stunningly inept mortgage reform, he vowed to raise federal revenues by increasing the amount Americans must pay to stay in their homes. In the midst of a foreclosure epidemic, the president wants to reduce the mortgage deduction for the wealthiest Americans – the ones most likely to purchase one or more expensive homes. Some on the Right have argued the measure will no effect on future sales, but it negatively impacts those making payments on existing mortgages, contracted while the rules were different. Although President Obama urged taxpayers to make “investments” in big government, he plans to find “savings” by capping deductions on business investment expenses and has called for hiking capital gains taxes, anti-business measures in an already adverse market.…An adverse market made worse by his nonsensical cap-and-trade proposal. Although he showed flexibility about signing a budget without the measure, he told Jake Tapper, “I think cap-and-trade is the best [plan]…because what it does is it starts pricing the pollution that’s being sent into the atmosphere.” Such is a rationale long championed by his science adviser, John Holdren, and Holdren’s longtime collaborators, Paul and Anne Ehrlich. But who will pay that price? According to a recent report from the Tax Foundation, carbon taxes hit the bottom 20 percent of wage-earners three times as hard as most Americans, and five times harder than the wealthiest quintile. That is not news to Obama, who told the San Francisco Chronicle last year, “under my plan of a cap and trade system, electricity rates would necessarily skyrocket.” He acknowledged “That will cost money…they will pass that money on to the consumers.” Although he promises “clean-energy jobs” will produce “broad economic growth,” the myth of green jobs is growing. Obama trades in legends most explicitly when pledging to “cut the deficit in half by the end of my first term.” Since he is “inheriting a $1.3 trillion deficit” from Republicans, he apparently feels his adding another $9.3 trillion to the national debt over ten years is irrelevant. Obama’s $1.2 trillion deficit is nearly as large as the entire federal budgets submitted by his exemplar of fiscal discipline, Bill Clinton. Incredibly, Obama sold this plan as “moving from an era of borrow-and-spend to one where we save and invest.” After quadrupling the budget deficit this year, he plans to halve the deficit within four years – as have his last three predecessors – leaving us by his estimates with a budget deficit that is larger than any in pre-Obama history. (For perspective, last July Bloomberg News reported, “The U.S. budget deficit will widen to a record of about $490 billion next year.”)Even this relies on overly rosy economic forecasts, fails to account for “temporary” spending (a Beltway oxymoron if ever there were one), and assumes no expansion of any program. All this is undermined by the fact that previous Congresses have had no luck in controlling future spending limits. And despite a nod to “reducing non-Defense discretionary spending,” he has proposed an 11 percent increase in non-defense spending. His estimates also assume the $634 billion “health care reserve” will not increase by one dollar, a blatantly disingenuous move. When he announced the initiative, an administration official called it “a very substantial down payment” toward federalizing health care, adding, “We aim to get to universal coverage.” Obama is the Teddy Roosevelt of socialized medicine, sending the Navy halfway to its destination and daring Congress to cut its funding. This budget is but a series of budget gimmicks. Correcting for these, federal budgets will consume a quarter of GDP within a decade, even with trillion dollar deficits. Sen. Judd Gregg noted Kent Conrad’s budget (which would phase out Obama’s $13/week tax cut) is similarly “a lot of gimmicks,” short on genuine savings.This is particularly troubling, as Obama sang the praises of “an efficient health-care system that controls costs,” warned against “fattening defense contractors” (a favorite bogeyman of the Left) and concluded his prepared remarks with the collectivist exhortation: “when each of us looks beyond our own short-term interest to the wider set of obligations we have towards each other, that’s when we succeed.”The president faced more serious questions than this author expected. Jennifer Loven of AP got the first question (fulfilling Michelle Malkin’s prophecy from October), which asked why he should be trusted with the power to seize firms like AIG. But the award for strangest question goes to Kevin Chappell, Senior Editor of EBONY magazine, for asking: “With shelters at full capacity, tent cities are sprouting up across the country. In passing your stimulus package, you said that help was on the way, but what would you say to these families, especially children, who are sleeping under bridges and in tents across the country?”He could always tell them, Don’t worry – I am working round the clock to make sure the wealthy will not get a disproportionate tax break if they contribute to your homeless shelter.
Ben Johnson is Managing Editor of FrontPage Magazine and co-author, with David Horowitz, of the book Party of Defeat. He is also the author of the book 57 Varieties of Radical Causes: Teresa Heinz Kerry's Charitable Giving.

U.S. journalist held in Iran suicidal, father says

KANSAS CITY, Mo., March 24 (Reuters) - The father of a Iranian-American journalist imprisoned in Iran said on Tuesday that his daughter had become suicidal and threatened to mount a hunger strike as her confinement drags on.
Reza Saberi told Reuters he spoke to 31-year-old freelance journalist Roxana Saberi by telephone early Tuesday morning.
"I am very worried. She is pretty suicidal," said the elder Saberi, who lives in Fargo, North Dakota. "She is saying she will go on a hunger strike if they keep her there. I tried to calm her down. I told her we are doing everything and to just hold on. Don't give in. We will try to secure her release."
Roxana Saberi has been jailed since Jan. 31 and was being held at Tehran's Evin prison.
Saberi said his daughter told him she had met with a prosecutor in Tehran and been told she may be in prison for several months and possibly up to two years.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has demanded that Tehran immediately release the journalist. And an official from the Iranian prosecutor's office said earlier this month that Iran's investigation of Saberi had been completed and she would be freed soon.
U.S.-born Saberi has worked for National Public Radio, the BBC, ABC News and other international media outlets.
An Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman had said Saberi was working illegally after her press card was withdrawn two years ago.
Saberi's father said she was arrested ostensibly for buying a bottle of wine, which is banned under Iran's Islamic law.
He confirmed her credentials as a correspondent had been revoked, but said she had stayed in Tehran to pursue a master's degree and was doing research for a book about Iranian society. (Reporting by Carey Gillam, editing by Philip Barbara)

Man shot by Vancouver police not the man officers were seeking

The man who was shot and killed last week by Vancouver police was not the man they were looking for after a report of a car break-in, police said on Tuesday.
The break-in report described a suspect as carrying a black backpack. When police approached 58-year-old Michael Vann Hubbard, who was also wearing a black backpack, he advanced on officers with an X-Acto knife and was fatally shot, police said, though a witness said he didn't see Hubbard move toward police.
Abbotsford police, who are handling an investigation into the shooting, said there was nothing to link Hubbard with the break-in.
Hubbard was shot by a 31-year-old officer who has five years of experience.
After learning of Hubbard’s death, his family contacted David Eby of the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, searching for answers.
"They understood him to be a real rules follower, that he would never dream of being in a fight, let alone assaulting a police officer. And I think his criminal record reflects that," said Eby.
CBC News confirmed on Monday that Hubbard did not have a criminal record.
Abbotsford police said they are currently looking at surveillance footage from two nearby security cameras that they believe may shed more light on the events that led up to the shooting. Investigators said they will release the footage once it's determined it won't jeopardize future proceedings.
Police also want to hear from Adam Smolcic, who said cellphone footage he captured of the incident was erased by a Vancouver Police officer.
Smolcic said he plans to take his cellphone to a forensic expert to determine whether the footage can be retrieved.With a file from the Canadian Press

The most corrupt countries

Corruption is on the march. In 2008, the number of countries sinking deeper into the clutches of influence peddling, bribery and scandalous business dealings outpaced improvements by a 2 to 1 margin. Countries falling by more than 10 spots outnumbered risers 8.5 to 1.Chad leads the way down in this year's report. With a heavy reliance on foreign assistance (mostly for oil exploration and development), the Sudanese neighbour gets black marks for corruption in the ranks of government officials—not surprising given its military dictatorship has been in place for 19 years.
Go to Forbes.com to view the slideshow(Opens new window)No. 2? The Central Asian nation of Kyrgyzstan, where president Kurmanbek Bakiyev faces mounting opposition brought to a fevered pitch by recent allegations that his administration organized the assassination of a former administration official. Others in the top 10 include Azerbaijan, Venezuela, Cambodia and Ecuador.In terms of economic impact, the debilitating affect of corruption is tangible: More than 5 per cent of global gross domestic product, or US$2.6 trillion, was smuggled, used for bribes or stolen from taxpayers in the past year, says the World Bank in a recent report. For honest companies, moving from a low corruption climate to one where corporate and government misdeeds are more prevalent can represent as much as a 20 per cent additional tax on top of the normal costs of doing business.Socioeconomic risk experts at the Eurasia Group also warn of corruption's corrosive effect on foreign investment. Especially in times of sluggish economic activity—and in many developed nations, recession—the added drag of distrust on the part of investors and business owners can take a mighty toll."Corruption is the single greatest obstacle to economic and social development," says Fluor Corp. (nyse: FLR) CEO Alan L. Boeckmann in the report.Nations with the highest risk of corruption are often the desperately poor, where foreign aid and assistance can easily be transferred through back channels of oppressive regimes. As a result, the impact of corruption can extend well beyond any economic detraction to affect the quality of life for millions of citizens."Corruption is a major cause of many human rights abuses," says Irene Khan, secretary general of Amnesty International, in a December 2008 report by watchdog Transparency International.One example Khan cites is Zimbabwe, the poorest nation in the world at just US$200 of GDP per capita. The African nation fell 13 places among the 127 countries in our ranking, according to TI's perceived levels of corruption. Recent reports accused president Robert Mugabe of stealing over US$7 million in foreign aid meant for the distribution of medicine to combat, among other diseases, widespread malaria in the region. Instead, Mugabe allegedly used the payments to fund political activities.Even in developed nations, corruption can often occur in the procurement of government projects—and within established corporations. Italy fell 12 spots in the corruption category after its government passed legislation granting top officials immunity from prosecution while in office. Perhaps not coincidentally, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi had been involved in an ongoing investigation regarding the payment of more than US$500,000 from undisclosed funds to the husband of an Olympic minister in the U.K.Japan and Canada were also cited in a 2008 report by Transparency International as having sub-par enforcement standards vis-à-vis accepted G7 guidelines for bribes from foreign businesses. TI could find only one case in each country pursued by local authorities, compared with more than 40 investigations in Germany, 19 in France and 16 in Switzerland.Industries can also be particularly prone to corruption, with greater levels of bureaucracy often increasing the likelihood of misuse. TI contends that public construction projects, water sanitation, oil and gas development and defence contracting most often show a proclivity for abuse of public and investor funds.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

UN human rights 'peer review' turns into Beijing love-in


UNITED NATIONS — A number of countries attending a United Nations review of China’s human rights record Monday lauded Beijing for maintaining the death penalty, encouraged it to tighten Internet controls, and described it as “ethical and moral.”
Canada was among Western countries that took an opposite view, and China was so perplexed by what Australia said about Tibet its ambassador complained about Canberra’s “politicized statement.”
The gap between those praising Beijing and its critics illustrates the extent to which UN member states are split over the way they view human rights. That in turn, raises questions about the utility of sessions such as Monday’s, which was part of a new “peer review” process the Geneva-based Human Rights Council now presents as its flagship monitoring mechanism.
“While the UN promised to reform itself with a procedure that would hold all countries to account on an objective and equal basis, and help human rights victims worldwide, instead the council has turned into a mutual praise society, giving a free pass to the world’s worst abusers,” said Montreal native Hillel Neuer, executive director of Geneva-based UN Watch.
Canada’s leading concerns included China’s widespread use of the death penalty, a “re-education” through labour program, and arbitrary detention of minorities such as Tibetans, Mongols and Muslim separatist Uyghur people.
Australia highlighted reports of Chinese harassment, arbitrary arrest, detention and punishment of religious minorities — specifically mentioning Tibetans.
“There were a few countries like Australia, which made some ill-founded comments on the question of Tibet,” said LI Baodong, China’s ambassador in Geneva.
He and other Chinese delegates insisted China is guided by the “rule of law,” denying Western charges it uses torture or jails dissidents.
Iran said at the “peer review” of Canada’s human rights record last week that it “noted the growing discriminatory treatment against indigenous people, aboriginal women, migrants, Muslims, Arabs and Afro-Canadians,” said a UN-issued summary of the hearing.
Other non-Western countries added Canada was not doing enough in areas like aboriginal rights, violence against women, poverty and racism.
Commenting on China Monday, Iran’s Farhad Mamdouhi commended China on its “overall strong commitment to human rights.” He highlighted the “negative effects” of the Internet, and said China should press ahead with a crackdown in a bid to combat racial hatred, defamation of religions and pornography.
Many human rights advocates have long said that such statements are code used on the international stage for cracking down on ethnic and religious minorities, and free speech.
Egypt’s Hisham Badr said China had “demonstrated its commitment to protecting human rights despite facing the “challenges” of a nation of 1.3 billion people.
“We understand the need of China to keep the death penalty,” he said after noting Egypt too, retains capital punishment.
Praising China’s “controls” on death penalty usage, Badr highlighted Beijing does not execute those under 18 “or any pregnant woman.”
Cuba’s Juan Antonio Fernandez Palacios described China as a “exceptional country” adding — in an apparent dig at Western countries — its “millennium-long history and hard work have put to shame all those who have tried to criticize” it.
Speaking for Canada, Louis-Martin Aumais opened and closed in Mandarin — but criticisms were delivered in English.
“Canada recommends China reduce the number of crimes carrying the death penalty and regularly publish detailed statistics on death-penalty use,” he said.
“Canada recommends China abolish all forms of administrative detention, including re-education through labour. Canada recommends China eliminate abuse of psychiatric committal.”
While China has avoided seeing its human rights practices discussed in any detail by any previous UN body, the new “peer review” process involves reviewing every country in turn. Observers said Beijing’s strong reaction showed deep sensitivity on the issues involved.
“This was a display of very low tolerance of critical comments,” Sharon Hom, a Hong Kong-born lawyer who heads the U.S.-based Human Rights in China, told a news conference.
© Copyright (c) Canwest News Service

Report Says Executions Doubled in 2008

By MARK McDONALD and MICHAEL WINES
HONG KONG — The number of executions worldwide nearly doubled last year compared to 2007, according to Amnesty International, and China put to death far more people than any other nation.
Asian countries accounted for more executions than the rest of the world put together, the rights group said Tuesday in its annual report on the death penalty.
The group chronicled beheadings in Saudi Arabia; hangings in Japan, Iraq, Singapore and Sudan; lethal injections in China; an electrocution in the United States; firing squads in Afghanistan, Belarus and Vietnam; and stonings in Iran.
In all, 59 countries still have the death penalty on their books, but only 25 carried out executions last year. Two nations, Uzbekistan and Argentina, banned the death penalty last year. Amnesty said at least 2,390 people were executed worldwide in 2008, compared to its 2007 figure of at least 1,252.
With at least 1,718, China was responsible for 72 percent of all executions in 2008, the report stated. After China were Iran (346), Saudi Arabia (102), the United States (37) and Pakistan (36), according to the group.
“Together they carried out 93 percent of all executions worldwide,” the report said.
Chinese authorities also handed down at least 7,003 new death sentences last year, although the report said the true total of both executions and death sentences “remains shrouded in secrecy.” Some countries, China and North Korea among them, do not disclose the number of executions they carry out.
In China’s case, “real figures are undoubtedly higher,” the report stated.
Although admittedly incomplete, the figures from Amnesty International are widely accepted as authoritative. The United States State Department, for example, cited the group’s statistics and findings in its recent report on human rights.
Amnesty International, which has long opposed the death penalty, said Europe and Central Asia have become “virtually a death-penalty-free zone” with only Belarus, the former Soviet republic, continuing to execute prisoners.
“In the Americas, only one state — the United States — consistently executes,” the group said, noting that the number of U.S. executions last year, 37, was the lowest since 1994.
Michael Wines contributed reporting from Beijing.

Supervising officer says he ordered Dziekanski Tasered

CTV.ca News Staff
The senior RCMP officer on duty the night that Robert Dziekanski died testified Monday that he gave the order to stun the Polish man with a Taser.
Cpl. Benjamin Monty Robinson, the supervising officer that night, said he gave Const. Kwesi Millington the command after Dziekanski picked up a stapler.
"When he took the step forward, that's when I gave Const. Millington the command to deploy the Taser," Robinson said. "And at that point, the Taser was deployed."
In earlier testimony, Millington said Robinson only told him to use the Taser the third time it was used, when Dziekanski had already fallen to the ground.
Robinson is the fourth RCMP officer to testify in the inquiry. He has been a Mountie since 1996 and had been trained in Taser use, but that training had expired seven months prior to the incident.
Robinson said that Dziekanski didn't fall to the floor until after the second time he was hit by the Taser, even though a video taken by a bystander shows the second jolt came while the man was already on the ground.
As with the other three officers involved, there inconsistencies with between Robinson's testimony and what he originally told investigators about the incident.
He originally said that Dziekanski was holding the stapler high and wildly swinging it at the officers, but that doesn't appear on the video.
Robinson testified that he actually meant the Polish man was holding the stapler at his chest and took a step towards the Mounties.
"I agree, it's not articulated well," Robinson said on his original statement.
He also said officers had to wrestle Dziekanski to the floor, even though the video shows the man fell after being hit by the first Taser jolt. All four officers made the same mistake in their statements.
Robinson was the last of four RCMP officers to arrive at the Vancouver airport after receiving a call about a man throwing furniture.
He said there was no discussion between the officers as they walked into the airport's international terminal to confront Dziekanski.
With files from The Canadian Press
© 2008 All Rights Reserved.

Near-Catastrophe in Israel

By P. David HornikFrontPageMagazine.com 3/24/2009
The worst terror attack in Israeli history was narrowly averted Saturday evening.
Someone—it is not yet known who—managed to drive a car carrying 100 kilograms of explosives, mixed with metal ball bearings to maximize impact, into an outdoor parking lot of the Lev Hamifratz mall in Haifa. At about eight o’clock, when a malfunction in the detonation mechanism caused a small explosion, a civilian summoned police, and sappers were able to defuse the rest of the bombs.
The car belonged to an Arab woman from East Jerusalem but may have been stolen. The bombs could possibly have brought down the entire three-story mall with over a hundred stores and 23 movie theaters. Or according to another scenario, “the attackers could have been aiming to…set other parked vehicles on fire, resulting in a chain reaction of exploding fuel tanks,” which means “the majority of the cars in the parking lot would have gone up in flames. The gas in them could have exploded. This would have been a major terrorist attack.”
Although a shadowy Israeli Arab group called the Galilee Freedom Fighters claimed responsibility, most media reports say the security forces doubt such a group exists. Outgoing prime minister Ehud Olmert implied that Hamas was responsible, claiming the attack had originated in the West Bank “where Hamas wishes to strengthen its infrastructure and status, while continuing its terror activity and [efforts to] cause severe harm to Israeli citizens.” Other suspicions center on Hezbollah. On Sunday evening, Israel’s Channel 1 reported that in any case the attack would have required collusion by Arab citizens of Israel.
Meanwhile, Israeli media and particularly the left-wing daily Haaretz have launched a different kind of attack on Israel.
It started on Thursday when Haaretz reported on six veterans of Operation Cast Lead in Gaza who, in speeches to the pre-military preparatory program of which they were graduates, had complained of alleged moral breaches during the war involving the killing of civilians in difficult or ambiguous situations. Even though the allegations were based on hearsay, the program’s founder and current head, Danny Zamir—a left-winger who previously served 28 days in military jail for refusing to guard a Jewish religious ceremony in the West Bank city of Nablus—published the soldiers’ complaints in a newsletter that found its way to Haaretz.
Haaretz further reported on Sunday that “Testimonies on IDF misconduct in Gaza keep rolling in.” It noted that on Saturday evening (roughly coterminous with the abortive Haifa attack), Israeli TV’s Channel 10 had “show[n] a documentary that included a security briefing by a company commander on the eve of the Gaza invasion.” The company commander’s supposedly scandalous words were:
“We’re going to war. We’re not doing routine security work or anything like that. I want aggressiveness—if there’s someone suspicious on the upper floor of a house, we’ll shell it. If we have suspicions about a house, we’ll take it down…. If it’s us or them, it’ll be them. If someone approaches us unarmed, shoot in the air. If he keeps going, that man is dead. Nobody will deliberate—let the mistakes be over their lives, not ours.”
The soldiers, in other words, were embarking on the most difficult urban combat imaginable, fighting ununiformed terrorists who melt into and manipulate the civilian population at every turn, booby-trapping homes and mosques with explosives. The civilian population, moreover, largely supports and cooperates with the terrorists and is itself known to launch suicide bombings. Those who object to the words “let the mistakes be over their lives, not ours” are presumably nostalgic for Israel’s 2002 confrontation with terror in the Jenin refugee camp, when, purposely avoiding shelling so as to lessen Palestinian civilian casualties, Israel instead lost 23 soldiers fighting in the alleys of the camp.
Nevertheless, Israel’s military police stated that the incidents alleged by the soldiers quoted in Thursday’s Haaretz report will be investigated. The trouble is that—as could easily be foreseen by anyone who, unlike the folks who run Haaretz, is genuinely concerned with fairness and Israel’s welfare—by that time Israel will long since have been tried, found guilty, and hung by international media.
As in, to take one among numerous examples, a widely disseminated AP story that refers jeeringly to Israel’s “mantra” of having “the most moral army,” quotes Israeli far-Left former security chief Ami Ayalon saying that “the IDF’s ethos…was once built on ethics, sacrifice” and “after the Gaza offensive…is based on force alone,” unreservedly quotes casualty figures of the pro-Hamas Palestinian Human Rights Center in Gaza, and quotes rabidly anti-Israeli UN “human rights” rapporteur Richard Falk saying Israel’s actions in Gaza could “constitute a war crime of the greatest magnitude….”
All this at a time when Israel’s defensive war against Hamas terror in Gaza is under fire from the UN and a bevy of human rights NGOs, the International Criminal Court is considering war crimes charges against Israel, and Israeli soldiers and officers risk arrest if they step foot in certain European countries. Also worth noting is that recently a film depicting Israeli soldiers—in another war on terror almost thirty years ago in Lebanon—as wanton killers of both animals and people has won huge success and was up for an Oscar.
Seemingly the near-catastrophe in Haifa should be a reminder that Israel, as a Jewish and non-Arab/non-Muslim state smack in the middle of the Arab Middle East, is under very vicious attack and has no easy solutions for how to protect itself. Even in such a reality, of course, Israeli soldiers are human and could commit misdeeds. Patriots would handle complaints—assuming they had some basis other than rumor—quietly and fairly and only publish results once investigations have concluded. But, unfortunately, Israel is also under internal attack from those, like Haaretz, who want it to be besmirched as often and publicly as possible and therefore add demoralization and defamation to the harsh burdens with which heroic Israeli soldiers already cope.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Nuclear-Powered U.S. Sub Involved in Collision


A nuclear-powered U.S. submarine operating in waters near Iran was involved in a collision Friday with an amphibious U.S. vessel, Reuters reported (see GSN, Feb. 20).
The accident in the Strait of Hormuz did not damage the nuclear propulsion unit on the USS Hartford, according to U.S. Fifth Fleet spokesman Lt. Nathan Christensen. However, 15 sailors on the submarine suffered minimal injuries in the collision with the USS New Orleans.
"It was a nighttime event and the submarine was submerged at the time," Christensen said. "Both ships are operating under their own power and have passed through the strait."
The accident follows a 2007 incident in which another nuclear-powered submarine, the USS Newport News, hit a Japanese ship in the strait, Reuters reported (Raissa Kasolowsky, Reuters/International Herald Tribune, March 20).

US wants Afghanistan "exit strategy", meets NATO

Mon Mar 23, 2009 12:47pm EDT* U.S. briefs NATO and EU allies on Afghanistan* Obama says military force alone cannot win war* Holbrooke says Afghan problem inseparable from Pakistan* Greater emphasis on economic development* Haqqani network rejects dialogueBy David BrunnstromBRUSSELS, March 23 (Reuters) - The United States said on Monday it had found an encouraging symmetry of views with its NATO and EU allies after outlining a strategy review meant to end a stalemate in Afghanistan.U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke discussed the review with Washington's NATO and EU allies after President Barack Obama said it would contain an exit strategy and greater emphasis on economic development.Holbrooke stressed the need for a regional approach to the Afghan problem, including Pakistan, and of stepping up both civilian and military efforts, a NATO spokesman said.He also underlined the importance of plans for a significant boost in size of the Afghan police force."I found a very encouraging symmetry of views between our NATO allies and other troop-contributing countries and the United States," Holbrooke told reporters after the meeting in Brussels."They put a heavy emphasis on increasing the police, the size of the police in Afghanistan," he said.With violence rising ahead of elections in August, Obama has already committed an extra 17,000 troops to Afghanistan, but on Sunday he said military force alone would not end the war."What we can't do is think that just a military approach in Afghanistan is going to be able to solve our problems," he said in an interview with CBS TV's "60 minutes"."So what we're looking for is a comprehensive strategy. And there's got to be an exit strategy ... There's got to be a sense that this is not perpetual drift."Holbrooke, who met NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer on Monday before briefing the 26 alliance ambassadors, said the review would be completed "soon".He told the BBC in an interview that the priority would be dealing with the situation in tribal regions along the border with Pakistan, which have been a haven for militants."That is the main message we want to get across. You cannot separate Afghanistan and Pakistan," he said.MORE TROOPS, MORE RESOURCES, MORE ATTENTIONHe also criticised the previous Bush administration for neglecting Afghanistan and vowed "more troops, more resources, more high-level attention"."I can't promise you a timetable or guaranteed success in an area this difficult," he said. "But I can guarantee you that this administration is going to do everything it can to succeed in one of the most difficult situations in the world."Some analysts say Washington is going to have to engage in dialogue with some Taliban elements, a point Obama and Vice President Joe Biden have conceded this month. However, in Afghanistan, other experts have dismissed that idea.And Taliban-led insurgents such as the Haqqani network, which has admitted carrying out some of the most deadly attacks on civilians and foreign troops in Afghanistan, dismiss the dialogue proposals as a trick to weaken and divide militants.In an interview with Reuters on Monday Sirajuddin Haqqani said no Taliban would engage with Washington or Kabul.The deployment of 17,000 additional U.S. troops, on top of the 38,000 already serving there, is meant to help subdue a resurgent Taliban and stabilise the country.Other countries have about 30,000 soldiers helping the Kabul government under NATO and U.S. command, but have mostly been reluctant to commit more forces.NATO-led forces deployed in southern and eastern Afghan provinces bordering Pakistan are overstretched and many of the new U.S. troops will be sent to these areas to reinforce efforts to stem insurgent activity on the porous Afghan-Pakistan border.On Monday, eight policemen were killed by Taliban insurgents while they were on patrol in southern Kandahar province in a district just inside the Afghan border with Pakistan, the Interior Ministry said.BIG CHALLENGEObama said the "destabilising border" between Afghanistan and Pakistan was a big military challenge. Al Qaeda and Taliban leaders are believed to be hiding out there using the remote region as a staging ground for attacks in Afghanistan."This is going to be a tough nut to crack. But it is not acceptable for us to simply sit back and let safe havens of terrorists plan and plot," he said.U.S. air strikes on militants on the Pakistan side of the border have raised tensions with Islamabad, and the deaths of hundreds of Afghan civilians caught in the conflict have turned ordinary people against foreign forces and the government of President Hamid Karzai in Kabul.The issue has flared again, with Afghan officials launching an investigation into a new U.S. military operation in Kunduz which killed five Afghans that police officials said were civilians, but U.S. forces insisted were militants. (Reporting by David Brunnstrom; Kamaal Sadaat, Jon Hemming and Golnar Motevalli in KABUL; Elyas Wahdat in KHOST; Matt Spetalnick in WASHINGTON; and Myra MacDonald in LONDON; Writing by David Fox and Jerry Norton; Editing by Myra MacDonald)
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Iran's View of Obama

By George Friedman

U.S. President Barack Obama released a video offering Iran congratulations on the occasion of Nowruz, the Persian New Year, on Friday. Israeli President Shimon Peres also offered his best wishes, referring to “the noble Iranian people.” The joint initiative was received coldly in Tehran, however. Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said the video did not show that the United States had shifted its hostile attitude toward Iran.
The video is obviously part of Obama’s broader strategy of demonstrating that his administration has shifted U.S. policy, at least to the extent that it is prepared to open discussions with other regimes (with Iran being the hardest and most controversial case). The U.S. strategy is fairly straightforward: Obama is trying to create a new global perception of the United States. Global opinion was that former U.S. President George W. Bush was unwilling to engage with, and listen to, allies or enemies. Obama’s view is that that perception in itself harmed U.S. foreign policy by increasing suspicion of the United States. For Obama, offering New Year’s greetings to Iran is therefore part of a strategy to change the tone of all aspects of U.S. foreign policy.
Getting Peres to offer parallel greetings was undoubtedly intended to demonstrate to the Iranians that the Israelis would not block U.S. initiatives toward Iran. The Israelis probably were willing to go along with the greetings because they don’t expect them to go very far. They also want to show that they were not responsible for their failure, something critical in their relations with the Obama administration.
The Iranian response is also understandable. The United States has made a series of specific demands on Iran, and has worked to impose economic sanctions on Iran when Tehran has not complied. But Iran also has some fairly specific demands of the United States. It might be useful, therefore, to look at the Iranian view of the United States and the world through its eyes.
From the Iranian point of view, the United States has made two fundamental demands of Iran. The first is that Iran halt its military nuclear program. The second, a much broader demand, is that Iran stop engaging in what the United States calls terrorism. This ranges from support for Hezbollah to support for Shiite factions in Iraq. In return, the United States is prepared to call for a suspension of sanctions against Iran.
For Tehran, however, the suspension of sanctions is much too small a price to pay for major strategic concessions. First, the sanctions don’t work very well. Sanctions only work when most powers are prepared to comply with them. Neither the Russians nor the Chinese are prepared to systematically comply with sanctions, so there is little that Iran can afford that it can’t get. Iran’s problem is that it cannot afford much. Its economy is in shambles due more to internal problems than to sanctions. Therefore, in the Iranian point of view, the United States is asking for strategic concessions, yet offering very little in return.
The Nuclear Question
Meanwhile, merely working on a nuclear device — regardless of how close or far Iran really is from having one — provides Iran with a dramatically important strategic lever. The Iranians learned from the North Korean experience that the United States has a nuclear fetish. Having a nuclear program alone was more important to Pyongyang than actually having nuclear weapons. U.S. fears that North Korea might someday have a nuclear device resulted in significant concessions from the United States, Japan and South Korea.
The danger of having such a program is that the United States — or some other country — might attack and destroy the associated facilities. Therefore, the North Koreans created a high level of uncertainty as to just how far along they were on the road to having a nuclear device and as to how urgent the situation was, raising and lowering alarms like a conductor in a symphony. The Iranians are following the same strategy. They are constantly shifting from a conciliatory tone to an aggressive one, keeping the United States and Israel under perpetual psychological pressure. The Iranians are trying to avoid an attack by keeping the intelligence ambiguous. Tehran’s ideal strategy is maintaining maximum ambiguity and anxiety in the West while minimizing the need to strike immediately. Actually obtaining a bomb would increase the danger of an attack in the period between a successful test and the deployment of a deliverable device.
What the Iranians get out of this is exactly what the North Koreans got: disproportionate international attention and a lever on other topics, along with something that could be sacrificed in negotiations. They also have a chance of actually developing a deliverable device in the confusion surrounding its progress. If so, Iran would become invasion- and even harassment-proof thanks to its apparent instability and ideology. From Tehran’s perspective, abandoning its nuclear program without substantial concessions, none of which have materialized as yet, would be irrational. And the Iranians expect a large payoff from all this.
Radical Islamists, Iraq and Afghanistan
This brings us to the Hezbollah/Iraq question, which in fact represents two very different issues. Iraq constitutes the greatest potential strategic threat to Iran. This is as ancient as Babylon and Persia, as modern as the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s. Iran wants guarantees that Iraq will never threaten it, and that U.S. forces in Iraq will never pose a threat to Iran. Tehran does not want promises alone; it wants a recognized degree of control over the Iraqi government, or at least negative control that would allow it to stop Baghdad from doing things Iran doesn’t want. To achieve this, Iran systematically has built its influence among factions in Iraq, permitting it to block Iraqi policies that Iran regards as dangerous.
The American demand that Iran stop meddling in Iraqi policies strikes the Iranians as if the United States is planning to use the new Baghdad regime to restore the regional balance of power. In fact, that is very much on Washington’s mind. This is completely unacceptable to Iran, although it might benefit the United States and the region. From the Iranian point of view, a fully neutral Iraq — with its neutrality guaranteed by Iranian influence — is the only acceptable outcome. The Iranians regard the American demand that Iran not meddle in Iraq as directly threatening Iranian national security.
There is then the issue of Iranian support for Hezbollah, Hamas and other radical Islamist groups. Between 1979 and 2001, Iran represented the background of the Islamic challenge to the West: The Shia represented radical Islam. When al Qaeda struck, Iran and the Shia lost this place of honor. Now, al Qaeda has faded and Iran wants to reclaim its place. It can do that by supporting Hezbollah, a radical Shiite group that directly challenges Israel, as well as Hamas — a radical Sunni group — thus showing that Iran speaks for all of Islam, a powerful position in an arena that matters a great deal to Iran and the region. Iran’s support for these groups helps it achieve a very important goal at little risk. Meanwhile, the U.S. demand that Iran end this support is not matched by any meaningful counteroffer or by a significant threat.
Moreover, Tehran dislikes the Obama-Petraeus strategy in Afghanistan. That strategy involves talking with the Taliban, a group that Iran has been hostile toward historically. The chance that the United States might install a Taliban-linked government in Afghanistan represents a threat to Iran second only to the threat posed to it by Iraq.
The Iranians see themselves as having been quite helpful to the United States in both Iraq and Afghanistan, as they helped Washington topple both the Taliban and Saddam Hussein. In 2001, they offered to let U.S. aircraft land in Iran, and assured Washington of the cooperation of pro-Iranian factions in Afghanistan. In Iraq, they provided intelligence and helped keep the Shiite population relatively passive after the invasion in 2003. But Iranians see Washington as having betrayed implicit understandings that in return for these services, the Iranians would enjoy a degree of influence in both countries. And the U.S. opening to the Taliban is the last straw.
Obama’s Greetings in Context
Iran views Obama’s New Year greetings within this context. To them, Obama has not addressed the core issues between the two countries. In fact, apart from videos, Obama’s position on Iran does not appear different from the Bush position. The Iranian leadership does not see why it should respond more favorably to the Obama administration than it did to the Bush administration. Tehran wants to be very sure that Obama understands that the willingness alone to talk is insufficient; some indications of what is to be discussed and what might be offered are necessary.
Many in the U.S. administration believe that the weak Iranian economy might shape the upcoming Iranian presidential election. Undoubtedly, the U.S. greetings were timed to influence the election. Washington has tried to influence internal Iranian politics for decades, constantly searching for reformist elements. The U.S. hope is that someone might be elected in Iran who is so obsessed with the economy that he would trade away strategic and geopolitical interests in return for some sort of economic aid. There are undoubtedly candidates who would be interested in economic aid, but none who are prepared to trade away strategic interests. Nor could they even if they wanted to. The Iran-Iraq war is burned into the popular Iranian consciousness; any candidate who appeared willing to see a strong Iraq would lose the election. American analysts are constantly confusing an Iranian interest in economic aid with a willingness to abandon core interests. But this hasn’t happened, and isn’t happening now.
This is not to say that the Iranians won’t bargain. Beneath the rhetoric, they are practical to the extreme. Indeed, the rhetoric is part of the bargaining. What is not clear is whether Obama is prepared to bargain. What will he give for the things he wants? Economic aid is not enough for Iran, and in any event, the idea of U.S. economic aid for Iran during a time of recession is a non-starter. Is Obama prepared to offer Iran a dominant voice in Iraq and Afghanistan? How insistent is Obama on the Hezbollah and Hamas issue? What will he give if Iran shuts down its nuclear program? It is not clear that Obama has answers to these questions.
Rebuilding the U.S. public image is a reasonable goal for the first 100 days of a presidency. But soon it will be summer, and the openings Obama has made will have to be walked through, with tough bargaining. In the case of Iran — one of the toughest cases of all — it is hard to see how Washington can give Tehran the things it wants because that would make Iran a major regional power. And it is hard to see how Iran could give away the things the Americans are demanding.
Obama indicated that it would take time for his message to generate a positive response from the Iranians. It is more likely that unless the message starts to take on more substance that pleases the Iranians, the response will remain unchanged. The problem wasn’t Bush or Clinton or Reagan, the problem was the reality of Iran and the United States. Only if a third power frightened the Iranians sufficiently — a third power that also threatened the United States — would U.S.-Iranian interests be brought together. But Russia, at least for now, is working very hard to be friendly with Iran.

What To Do With Rouge State of Islamic Republic in Iran


Justice for All
Logo
Address
Freedom, Justice, Honor
******************************************************************
Saturday March 21st, 2009
What To Do With Rouge State of Islamic Republic in Iran
Every day is passing by, it is becoming more difficult for Canada and US to bring peace and stability back in Afghanistan and Iraq because the rouge state of Islamic Republic in Iran is contributing in destabilizing Afghanistan and Iraq.
The state in Iran has become sold bold that Vice-President Esfandiar Rahim MASHAEI made a trip to Canada, and wanted to meet Iranian diaspora! Iranian fled their country because individual like MASHAEI was murdering them in Iran, and who really wants to see him. Really no one. He came to Canada with a message to Canada's Prime Minister Stephen HARPER that Canada's reputation has been tarnished since it took part with US in Afghanistan. The rouge state in Iran would assist Canada to rebuild its image and reputation by working with terrorist state in Iran.
The rouge state in Iran has expand its belligerent attitude toward Western nations for too long, and as long as, Western nations are willing to tolerate and allow the state in Iran to blackmail them. Future of world is not looking so good.
There was only one option on table which was regime change in Iran due to safety and security measure of world peace.
Thank you
Long Live Pure Divine Motherland of Iran
Pawn

Stephen HARPER and MEK


Justice for All
Logo
Address
Freedom, Justice, Honor
******************************************************************
Monday March 23rd, 2009
Right Honorable Prime Minister of Canada Stephen HARPER
80 Wellington Street
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A2
Via: E-mail pm@pm.gc.ca
Dear Honorable PM Stephen HARPER:
RE: MEK as a Terrorist Entity
On March 23rd, 2009 Macleans Magazine drafted an article “hosted by terrorists?” by Michael PETROU. In this article, this author stated that The National Council of Resistance of Iran {MEK} was an opposition group against rouge state of Islamic Republic in Iran. Moreover, there were politicians like “Liberal MPs Carolyn Bennett, Yasmin Ratansi and Raymonde Folco; Bloc Québécois MP Meili Faille; Andrew Telegdi and Tom Wappel, who were Liberal MPs at the time but are no longer; and Liberal Senator David Smith. David Kilgour, who sat as both a Progressive Conservative and Liberal MP before leaving politics as an Independent in 2006, was also there. Bennett and Telegdi were given a little less than $2,000 each toward transportation, accommodation, and meals. Wappel’s bill for the same totalled $3,780. Smith says he was put up free of charge in a hotel”1 that they supported the MEK.
This author exposed MEK's terrorist elements which went back to 1965, when the MEK began to engage in murdering civilians, American dignitaries, and how the MEK, in 1991, during Persian Gulf War I, took part in massacring Iraqi-Kurdish, and Shiite Muslims in Iraq. Most importantly, Canadian Security Intelligent Service already confirmed that the MEK did not have support of Iranian because during 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War, the MEK took side with Iraq. Thus, Iranian did not support the MEK.
In conclusion, the MEK was a terrorist entity, and needed to remain on terrorist list due to safety and security measure.
Thank you
Long Live Pure Divine Motherland of Iran
Signed
Pawn
Other dignitaries
1Macleans Magazine <http://www2.macleans.ca/2009/03/23/hosted-by-terrorists/> 23 March 2009

Iranian VP Bashes Canadian Presence in Afghanistan

by Jeff Davis
One of Iran's 10 vice-presidents made a highly unusual visit to Ottawa last week, hinting that Tehran desires warmer relations with Canada while bearing stinging criticisms over its mission in Afghanistan.
"The military presence of Canada in Afghanistan, in a general view, has never guaranteed security in the region," Vice-President Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei told reporters through a translator on Thursday.
"Not only have they not guaranteed the security, but also it has created more crisis and more difficulties."
Mr. Mashaei, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's cultural heritage chief, said he was in Canada to meet with members of the Iranian diaspora, and did not have any official meetings with Canadian officials.
He said Canada's reputation in the Middle East and Central Asia is being damaged due to its military partnership with the United States.
"We believe the presence of Canada in Afghanistan is under the umbrella of United States," he said. "That Canada has a military presence in Afghanistan has a very negative impact and effect in the public opinion of hundreds of millions of people in the region."
Mr. Mashaei said people in the region do not understand why Canada is in Afghanistan, and he questioned the broader strategic coherence of the mission.
"It's a good news that Canada is leaving in 2011, and we welcome that, but three questions that still remain unanswered," he said. "Why did they come to Afghanistan? What have they done in Afghanistan? Why and under what condition are they leaving Afghanistan? These questions remain unanswered."
At the same time, the vice-president said his country could help NATO in Afghanistan, though he refused to explain exactly what kind of assistance Iran could provide.
"Iran can co-operate and help," he said. "If they are intending to secure Afghanistan, then the role of Iran will manifest and be stronger and will be there."
It appears that Iran could play a more substantive role in the multilateral effort in Afghanistan soon, as U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has extended an invitation to Iran to attend a high-level multilateral conference on Afghanistan on March 31.
So far Iran has been noncommittal.
Roland Paris, director of the Centre for International Policy Studies at Ottawa University, said Iran has been emitting murky signals as it adjusts its diplomatic strategy to a new American administration.
"I think the Iranians and Russians alike have been sending very mixed messages since the election of Barack Obama," he said.
"Iran is sending simultaneous mixed signals of openness to international engagement and openness to the new Obama administration, but at the same time continuing to take a hard line on its nuclear policies and on the region."
Mr. Paris said Shia Iran, which has been historically hostile to the Sunni Taliban, was very happy to see the Taliban ousted and was "very helpful" following the invasion of Afghanistan in such fora as the 2001 Bonn Conference. This co-operation stopped when the U.S. invaded Iraq and slapped Iran with an "axis of evil label," he said.
At the same time, there continue to be reports that entities within Iran are supplying weapons to the Taliban, raising questions about its real agenda.
Bilat Relations Still Frosty
During his press conference, Mr. Mashaei said Iran is "always welcoming to develop diplomatic relations with Canada."
However, the two countries have a ways to go before relations are normalized.
Canada and Iran established diplomatic relations in 1996, but stopped exchanging ambassadors in 2007 after the embarrassing mutual rejection of several proposed envoys.
By then, relations cooled considerably following allegations that Iran was building a nuclear weapons program, the murder under torture of Iranian-Canadian photographer Zahra Kazemi in 2003 by regime officials, and Canada's criticism of Iranian human rights issues at the UN.
Since 2005, DFAIT's website explains, bilateral relations have been governed according to a so-called Controlled Engagement Policy, which severely restricts the content of diplomatic exchanges.
"Official contacts between Canada and the Islamic Republic of Iran are now limited to four subjects: 1—the human rights situation in Iran, 2—Iran's nuclear program and its lack of respect for its non-proliferation obligations, 3—the case of Mrs. Zahra Kazemi who was killed in an Iranian prison by regime officials in 2003, and 4—Iran's role in the region," the site reads.
Mr. Mashaei said it was "unfortunate" that Canada and Iran currently do not exchange ambassadors, and said Iran has an ambassador ready to come to Canada.
He added that Iran has "indicated its favour" towards Canada in recent months by increasing consular co-operation with staff at the Canadian Embassy in Teheran.
But while Iran appears to be making timid overtures, Prime Minister Stephen Harper has not held back from inflammatory statements on Iran.
Last month, during a meeting with the editorial board of the Wall Street Journal, Mr. Harper called Iran "evil" while at the same time pledging continued support for Israel.
"It concerns me that we have a regime [in Tehran] with...an ideology that is obviously evil," he told the Journal. "My government is a very strong supporter of the state of Israel and considers the Iranian threats to be absolutely unacceptable and beyond the pale."
Thursday, after Embassy informed Mr. Mashaei of these comments, the Iranian fired back.
"Unfortunately I haven't heard that statement made by the Honourable Stephen Harper," he said. "But whoever makes such a statement anywhere in this world, of course, has no understanding of Iran whatsoever. This is a huge weakness of the person who created that statement.... I would like not to believe this statement has been made."
jdavis@embassymag.ca

The Budget Boondoggle

By Alyssa A. LappenFrontPageMagazine.com 3/23/2009
On March 3, days after Present Barack Obama grandly unveiled a $3.6 trillion 2010 budget overview, Office of Management and Budget (OMB) director Peter Orszag testified to the House Budget Committee that this budget is “fiscally responsible,” and doesn't constitute “big spending.” The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) disagrees. On March 20, it predicted that the Obama budget would generate some $9.3 trillion in new red ink by 2019---and unsustainable, significantly greater annual deficits than the Obama plan projected. The U.S. House Budget Committee had not yet responded.
Moreover, the 2010 budget process has only begun. The budget could still end up harboring billions in earmarks---those pet projects Congressmen slip to buddies who miraculously avoid competitive bidding or oversight. The White House and OMBblueprint” introduced February 26 isn't a true, line-by-line 2010 budget, explains Taxpayers for Common Sense (TCS) vice president Steve Ellis. Incumbent presidents unveil budgets in February. Until April, Obama benefits from the traditional “pass” Congress gives new administrations. Only then will his full budget appear. In May, Congress will start writing the bills that will fund the budget, Ellis says. This spring and summer, thousands of new earmarks will very likely bloom.
Indeed, the outline makes it seem that the 2010 budget will provide fertile ground for earmarks as Congressmen and Senators grapple over which cities and states will land the funds. The $4.5 billion Community Development Block Grant, for example, is supposed to rely on a new program formula “to better target economically distressed communities.” It doesn't specify who will write the formula or decide who gets the money. The Budget likewise proposes new Department of Housing and Urban Development funding to preserve “1.3 million affordable rental units” in multifamily properties.
And such housing grants have been massively abused in the past (along with many other department budgets), TCS' Ellis notes. Obama should know. As both a State and U.S. Senator, he blessed state and federal legislative aid for several developers who then received more than $700 million in grants, loans and tax credits for their projects. His Chicago law partner Allison Davis, Syrian developer Antoin “Tony” Rezko (now incarcerated on 16 political corruption charges) and Chicago slumlord Cecil Butler, for example, all profited greatly from federal funds to provide thousands of Chicago low-income apartment units---all of which were condemned or foreclosed within 10 years. Obama's 2010 budget overview offers nor regulatory or oversight measures to prevent such situations.
Obama campaigned heavily against Washington's heavy use of earmarks. Yet the $410 billion Omnibus law he signed on March 11 offers substantial evidence that billions of dollars in budgetary abuse could follow in 2010. The new law reportedly contained “only” 7,991 earmarks, to cost at least $5.5 billion. In fact, it includes more than 9,282 earmarks, TCS reports. The Senate had March 3 defeated Senator John McCain's proposal to strip over 8,500 original earmarks and $32 billion from the bill. Consequently, the law added 8% to fiscal 2009 spending, increases that bought less transparency than before. Congress publicly disclosed $500 million fewer juicy earmarks than last year, according to TCS. The visible earmarks are not comforting. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, for example, carved out $100 million in earmarks for Nevada, including $951,000 for Las Vegas “sustainability” (whatever that means) and $1.7 million for Las Vegas and Reno “dropout prevention.” By comparison, only three other cities got “dropout prevention” grants---Riverside, Ca. ($476,000); Scottsdale, Az. ($143,000); and Jackson, Ms. ($95,000). It's strange---unless Nevada's cities unaccountably cornered the U.S. market for high school dropouts.
TCS provides extensive lists of earmarks appropriated through U.S. departments overseeing agriculture, commerce, justice, science, defense, energy, water, financial services, homeland security, interior, U.S. legislature, military construction, Veteran's affairs, foreign affairs, and transportation. Hundreds of millions of earmarks for the Labor, Health and Human Services and Education departments alone take 211 pages to list. Thus we find that Nevada's $100 million in earmarks included $6 million from the Department of Education, for example, $143,000 for Reno to develop a comprehensive online encyclopedia---although many comprehensive online encyclopedias already exist---and $143,000 for a natural history museum in Las Vegas, whose horizon is neon.
Obama grandly promises to keep the 2010 budget transparent, “pay-as-you-go,” and return the U.S. “to honest budgeting.” But every federal budget is ripe for earmarks, says TCS V.P. Ellis. “People think budgets are about numbers, but they are about priorities. Where you put money shows where the priorities are. All program funding provides an opportunity for abuse.” This proposal, moreover, also has problematical “robust growth in spending” 10 years out, and increasingly enormous deficits, Ellis says.
It also suggests a reliance on nonprofit organizations. The $1.3 billion in loans and grants “to increase broadband capacity and improve telecommunication,” education and health services in rural areas---a laudable goal---could end up a nonprofit boondoggle. So could a “Social Innovation Fund” proposed to back “innovative non-profits” addressing serious national problems. Unfortunately, the 2010 budget outline offers no oversight on who decides “what works” or how Obama will control nonprofit spending.
Obama's February overview proposes new oversight mechanisms for financial institutions and markets, for-profit corporations and government agencies. Yet nonprofits clearly also need strict oversight---which this proposal does not provide. The Washington Post this week exposed a $250 million in earmarks to Electro-Optics Center---a supposedly innovative defense research non-profit, founded 10 years ago by Democratic Rep. John Murtha at the Pennsylvania State University to create new industry and jobs in Western Pennsylvania. Instead, Electro-Optics spent much of that funding at companies supporting Murtha. Likewise, the Omnibus law allocates $190,000 to a new New Orleans community center to be constructed by a nonprofit. Founded by Sen. Mary Landrieu's brother, that nonprofit organization no longer exists.
Unfortunately, Obama's $3.6 trillion plan also includes no strategy to limit the very haphazard way Congress “throws money at infrastructure, agriculture, energy, health care” and so on. In fact, the plan may well encourage more haphazard spending, which goes hand in hand with earmarks. So, don't expect earmarks to disappear soon.
Alyssa A. Lappen is a former Senior Fellow of the American Center for Democracy, former Senior Editor of Institutional Investor, Working Woman and Corporate Finance, and former Associate Editor of Forbes. Her website is www.AlyssaaLappen.org.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

US journalist held in Iran in 'dangerous' state

CHICAGO (AFP) — A US journalist who was supposed to have been freed from an Iranian jail has been reduced to a "dangerous" mental state by her continued imprisonment, her family said Thursday.
"She is under great psychological pressure and her condition seems to be dangerous now," Reza and Akiko Saberi wrote in an open letter begging Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to release their daughter.
"We are very worried about her health and fear that something tragic may happen to her."
On March 9, the ISNA news agency reported that Hassan Haddad, Tehran's deputy prosecutor for security matters, said Roxana Saberi, 31, would be freed "within a few days."
But when the family's lawyer attempted to make a bail payment, he was told that officials "cannot free her now," her father Reza Saberi said in a telephone interview.
"They didn't tell the lawyer what they're going to do next."
The US-born journalist with dual Iranian nationality was sobbing when she was visited Wednesday by her lawyer, her father said.
"I know my daughter. She's very sensitive. To keep her in confinement for 47 days and not tell her what will happen -- it's very hard on her," said Saberi, who now lives in North Dakota after immigrating from Iran decades ago.
"Physically there doesn't seem to be any harm but her mentality has been very poor."
Saberi has only spoken to his daughter once since her January arrest on what he initially thought to be charges of buying alcohol, which is prohibited in the Islamic republic.
He later came to believe she was arrested for her work as a reporter.
The Iranian foreign ministry said in February that Saberi was working "illegally" in the country after her press card was revoked in 2006.
Later Iran's judiciary said she had been arrested on the orders of a revolutionary court, which handles security charges in Iran, and kept in Tehran's Evin prison.
Saberi, who has reported for NPR, the BBC and Fox News, has been living in Iran for six years, working as a journalist and pursuing a master's degree in Iranian studies and international relations.
She was also writing a book about Iran, her father said, and was planning to move back to the United States later this year.
Iran, which does not recognize dual nationality and has had no ties with the United States for three decades, has detained several Iranian-Americans, including academics, in recent years.
Former FBI agent Robert Levinson has been missing for two years since vanishing on the Persian Gulf island of Kish. On March 8 the US State Department reiterated its call for Iran to help locate him, but has said no information has been forthcoming from Tehran on the case.

Omid Mir Sayafi


Omid Mir Sayafi was an Iranian blogger who has died in prison in Iran after being jailed for insulting Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and founder of the Islamic Republic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Read about it below and see a photo of Sayafi.


Omid Mir Sayafi was about 25-years-old and had been imprisoned in the notorious Evin prison in Tehran, Iran for insulting both the Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and founder of the Islamic Republic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. In February 2009, he was sentenced to 30 months in jail for the insults and on Thursday, February 19, 2009, it was reported that he had committed suicide in the prison.


Sayafi’s attorney, Mohammad Ali Dadkhah, is pressing for an autopsy and inquiry into the cause of death.

Sayafi was initially arrested and imprisoned in April 2008. He was released on bail, but re-arrested and has been in prison every since that time. He was just sentenced last month.
Other bloggers have been arrested for similar crimes. One blogger was arrested for questioning Khomeini’s ties to Hezbollah. This is all part of Iran’s crackdown on bloggers and internet users that the islamic state deems to be hostile to Iranian authorities and islamic values.

Some of the others who have been arrested and imprisoned include Hoder Derashkhan, a Canbadian-Iranian journalist and blogger detained in Iran last November. Mr Derashkhan’s family is said to have had no news of him since his arrest.

I hope Obama is becoming better versed in diplomacy than he was when he met with the British Prime Minister. Insulting the British with one gaff after the next is one thing, insulting the Iranian leadership would have an entirely different result. I suspect the embarrassment caused by his gaffs with the British and the Irish would pale in comparison to the propaganda value the Iranian government would get out of him during Obama’s much touted ‘dialog’ with them.

Note to Obama: Giving Khamenei and/or Ahmadinejad a gift set of American movies is probably not the right move. Just saying ….

A Facebook campaign has been launched to “Hold Iran Responsible for Death of Blogger Mirsayafi in Prison”.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Ayatollah/Sign of God Khamenei Supreme Leader of Iran vs US President Barack OBAMA


Justice for All
Logo
Address
Freedom, Justice, Honor
******************************************************************
Saturday March 21st, 2009
President Barack OBAMA
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington, DC 20500 US
Via: E-mail


Dear President Barack OBAMA:

RE: Ayatollah/Sign of God Khamenei Supreme Leader of Iran vs US President Barack OBAMA
US President Barack OBAMA was elected to office with promise of bringing change in US foreign policy which was focusing on the theocratic regime in Iran. Hopeful, President OBAMA was assuming that the cleric regime in Iran was willing to engage in dialogue with the president, and on Friday March 20th, 2009 President OBAMA made a direct talk with Ayatollah/Sign of God.
On Saturday 21st, 2009 Ayatollah/Sign of God responded to President OBAMA by saying that there was no change in the Islamic Republic in Iran's foreign policy toward the US, and the regime in Iran would remain steadfast in cause against the US regime.
Coming to this point that the regime in Iran was normative control model, and it does not change its policy under any circumstances. Also, President OBAMA made enormous judgment for calling upon the illegitimate state in Iran to have dialogue because the regime in Iran illustrated itself in eyes of fanatic Muslims as defiant against the superpower, and gained more support from fanatic Muslims to join destructive force to topple Western hemisphere.

There was only one solution to end this saga in Middle East and to bring back peace and prosperity in the region which was total removal of theocratic regime in Iran by imposing proper economic sanction, and assisting Iranian dissidents to remove this rotted and illegitimate regime in Iran.
Long Live Pure Divine Motherland of Iran
Pawn Iran Zamin
C.C. Honorable Prime Minister of Canada Stephen HARPER
C.C. Other dignitaries

Thursday, March 19, 2009

The Great Betrayal

By David Horowitz and Ben JohnsonFrontPageMagazine.com 3/19/2009
On this sixth anniversary of America's invasion of Iraq, there is finally a consensus among supporters and opponents that we’ve won the war. The surge that Bush launched and Democrats opposed has been successful and, as a result, Iraq has become a Middle Eastern democracy, an anti-terrorist regime, and an American ally. It would be hard to imagine a more remarkable turnabout or a more comprehensive repudiation of conventional political wisdom. Yet this has not led to a comparable reappraisal by critics of the war of their previous attacks, or to any mea culpas by Democrats who launched a scorched earth campaign against the president who led it, and continued it for five years while the war dragged on.
The Democratic attacks on the war described America’s commander-in-chief as a liar who misled his country and sent American soldiers to die in a conflict that was unnecessary, illegal and unjust. This made prosecution of the war incalculably harder while strengthening the resolve of our enemies to defeat us. It is time to re-evaluate the words and actions of the war’s opponents in the stark light of a history that proved them wrong.
In the fall of 2002, a majority of Democrats in the Senate joined Republicans in voting to authorize President Bush to use force to remove the regime of Saddam Hussein. In July 2003, only three months after Saddam had been removed, the Democratic National Committee launched a national campaign which accused President Bush of lying in order to trick Democrats into voting for the war. It was the beginning of a five-year campaign designed to paint the president as the liar-in-chief and America as a criminal aggressor, and the military occupier of a poor country that had not attacked us.
What had changed in the intervening three months to turn Democrats so vehemently against the war they had authorized? The answer can only be found in domestic politics. In those three months, an unknown antiwar candidate named Howard Dean had taken the lead in the primary polls and was looking like a shoe-in for the Democratic presidential nomination. As a result rival candidates who had voted for the war, including eventual nominees Kerry and Edwards, changed their positions 180 degrees and joined the attacks on President Bush. Naturally, the Democrats couldn’t admit their attacks were motivated by crass political calculations. Instead, they claimed that they had been deceived by the White House which had manipulated the intelligence on Iraq, persuading them to support the war on false premises.
This allegation was in fact the biggest lie of the war, since Democrats had full access to all U.S. intelligence on Iraq through their seats on the congressional intelligence committees. This intelligence was available to them, in advance of their vote to authorize the use of force. In the months and years that followed, the Democrats added other false charges -- that troops “killed innocent civilians in cold blood,” were “terrorizing kids and…women,” and had committed atrocities comparable to “Nazis, Soviets in their gulags, or some mad regime.” They rejoiced when news reporters leaked information about national security programs designed to combat the terrorists – and thus destroyed them. They held up funding for American soldiers on the battlefield, attempted to cut off all funding, and when that failed, tried to tie funding to a timeline that would ensure America’s defeat. They openly accused uniformed officers like General David Petraeus of lying about conditions on the ground and hoped against hope that “this war is lost, and the surge is not accomplishing anything.”
Dissent is legitimate in wartime, but the Democratic Party’s opposition to this war went far beyond dissent into unprecedented territory. Fortunately, the Bush administration was able to retrieve its own mistakes and its domestic opponents to win a war that Democrats said was unwinnable and (despite their own authorization) shouldn’t have been fought in the first place. But it was no thanks to the Party that now occupies the White House that this American war was won.
David Horowitz is the founder of The David Horowitz Freedom Center and author of the new book, One Party Classroom. Ben Johnson is editor of www.frontpagemag.com and co-author of Party of Defeat.