Category: Iran

  • Iran Hangs Convicted Spy for Israel

    Iran Hangs Convicted Spy for Israel

    Security Official in Tehran Sees ‘Intensifying Intelligence War’

    By Thomas Erdbrink

    Washington Post Foreign Service

    TEHRAN, Nov. 22 — Iran has executed a man convicted of spying for Israel in an “intensifying intelligence war” between the two countries, a high-level Iranian security official announced Saturday at a rare news conference.

    Ali Ashtary, a businessman who sold communication and security equipment to Iranian security organizations, was arrested in 2007 and found guilty in June of spying for the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency, the semiofficial Mehr News Agency quoted the official as saying.

    The official, who heads the counterespionage unit of the Intelligence Ministry but was not identified by name, said Ashtary was put to death Monday morning. The Associated Press reported that he was hanged.

    The case “shows a new dimension and intensifying of the widespread intelligence fight between us and the Israeli intelligence service,” the official reportedly told a select group of local reporters.

    Israel has repeatedly said it is prepared to attack Iran over its nuclear program. Israel and the United States say Iran is trying to develop a nuclear weapon. Iran, which does not recognize Israel, maintains that its nuclear program is meant only for energy purposes.

    The counterespionage official said the Mossad is using satellite television advertisements and Internet chat rooms to recruit Iranians in order to obtain information about Iran.

    Pars TV, one of the dozens of Farsi-language opposition satellite television channels that broadcast from California, is running advertisements offering $10 million for information about a missing Israeli airman, Ron Arad, whose plane was shot down in 1986 over Lebanon. The ads urge Iranians to call or fax if they have information about his case.

    “Some people inside our country who were trying to make some money got in touch with that organization. But they fell into the intelligence operation created by the Zionist regime,” the official said. “Those people were changed into pawns in the hands of the Mossad, but they didn’t have any news on the Israeli pilot. Neither do we. They were used by Mossad to gather information.”

    Offering insight into Iran’s international intelligence operations, the official said that four people had been “identified and arrested” in the neighboring Kurdish region of Iraq, where anti-Iranian militant groups are active.

    “This team had gadgets and weapons made by Israel and intended to assassinate people who were not officials of the country. But now they are important for us,” he said, adding that the targets were not politicians or other members of Iran’s leadership. “Because we control the borders and have operations there, this group was arrested before they could carry out any action.” His comments were carried in the semiofficial Fars News Agency.

    Iranian officials accuse Israel and the United States of supporting several militant separatist groups inside and outside their country. One of the groups is a splinter of the separatist Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, which regularly attacks Turkish troops. Both militant organizations operate from the mountainous areas along the Iraqi-Turkish border. Since 2003, dozens of Iranian troops and insurgents have died in raids in the area.

    On Tuesday, at the start of a trial in Tehran, three men confessed to involvement in the bombing of a place of worship in the central city of Shiraz in April. Iranian officials have said the United States and Israel were involved in the blast, which killed 14 people.

    Ali Akbar Heidarifar, representing Tehran’s prosecutor general, called for death sentences in the attack, which also wounded 200, the official IRNA news agency reported.

    “I was brainwashed by the Iranian monarchy association to act against Islam and the system and told I had to save the people,” Mohsen Islamian, one of the defendants, reportedly said, referring to an unknown opposition group.

    Source: www.washingtonpost.com

  • Women rights activist arrested in Iran

    Women rights activist arrested in Iran

    According to the news from Tabriz, Iran, Mrs Shahnaz Gholami, journalist, member of Iranian women journalist
    Association (RAZA) and women rights activist was arrested 09.11.2008 by The Ministry of Intelligence Service.

    Mrs Gholami is headeditor of “Azar Zan” weblog and had been jailed 5 years 1990-1995 in Tabriz prison due to her political activities and later she was jailed once more for a month on june 2008 for participating in Khordad 85 movement anniversary. She also has been tortured in jail.

  • Iran claims Israel spy ring broken

    Iran claims Israel spy ring broken

    • The Guardian, Tuesday November 25 2008

    Iran’s revolutionary guards ratcheted up the war of nerves with Israel yesterday by claiming to have broken a spy network run by Mossad, the Israeli espionage agency.

    The guards’ commander-in-chief, Muhammad Ali Jafari, said they had arrested Israeli-trained agents and seized hi-tech communications equipment.

    Two days ago, Iran announced it had hanged a businessman who allegedly admitted spying for Israel.

    Jafari said the latest group arrested had confessed to having been trained in Israel to carry out assassinations and bombings. He did not specify how many people had been held. But he told the semi-official news agency Mehr that the group had sought information about the revolutionary guards, military intelligence officials and Iran’s nuclear programme, which Israel and the west fear is designed to produce an atomic bomb.

    Mossad had provided money to buy cars and equipment, said Jafari. “The arrested people confessed that they have been specially trained in Israel for bombings and assassinations.” Iran routinely accuses Israel and the US of spying against it, but yesterday’s allegation was the latest in a string of such claims in recent days.

    Ali Ashtari, 45, whose execution was announced on Saturday, was the manager of a company selling communication and security equipment to the Iranian government. The Iranian authorities said he had admitted during a trial last June to spying for Mossad for three years. They claimed he had been recruited to intercept the communications of officials working on military operations and the nuclear programme. Israel has denied the claims.

    Similar allegations have also been made against a prominent Iranian blogger, Hossein Derakhshan. Jahan News, a website close to Iran’s intelligence services, reported that he had been arrested last week. Jahan said Derakhshan had confessed in custody to spying for Israel.

    Source: www.guardian.co.uk, November 25 2008

  • Iran, Armenia ink 10 agreements, official

    Iran, Armenia ink 10 agreements, official

    Tehran, Nov 24, IRNA

    Secretary of the National Security Council of Armenia Arthur Baghdasaryan told reporters on Monday that Iran, Armenia inked ten agreements on security, political and economic cooperation.

    In a meeting with his Iranian counterpart Saeed Jalili, Baghdasaryan said that his talks with the Iranian officials have been fruitful.

    Referring to his talks with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as promising, Baghdasaryan said that the two sides conferred on issues of mutual interest.

    He also expressed pleasure with his acquaintance with Iran’s Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council Saeed Jalili as a professional man.

    The Armenian official said that Iran and Armenia are two friendly countries determined to boost mutual ties in security, political and economic fields as well as legal cooperation.

    He extended his invitation to Jalili to visit Armenia.

    Meanwhile, Jalili said that Tehran and Yerevan enjoy longstanding historical and friendly ties; therefore, they can develop those ties.

    He added that the two countries would promote mutual relations and hold consultations on international and regional cooperation as well.

    Jalili said that the two sides’ talks focused on paving the way for cooperation based on mutual interest.

    Baghdasaryan arrived in Tehran on Sunday and was accorded formal welcome by his Iranian counterpart.

  • Turkey’s diplomatic offensive: no time for second thoughts

    Turkey’s diplomatic offensive: no time for second thoughts

    By The Daily Star

    Iran’s expression of open-mindedness to Turkish mediation between itself and the United States is the latest evidence of Ankara’s increasing indispensability, at least for those who prefer negotiated solutions over imposed remedies for the Middle East’s many quandaries. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been especially active in recent months, parlaying improvements in Turkey’s relations with Syria to broker contacts between that country and Israel, for instance, and working behind the scenes to help defuse tensions in Lebanon this past May. These endeavors have been acutely helpful given the poor state of ties between the West and Syria, which until the past few years had positioned itself a bridge between Iran and France. With Damascus only now emerging from isolation imposed since 2005, Turkey’s role has been essential, and Erdogan has not limited it to the Middle East: He has also sought to make Turkey a fulcrum for the development of cooperation in the Caucasus.

    The strategy is not without risks: Every project Ankara adopts stretches its diplomatic resources and creates expectations. The potential payoffs, however, are enormous: Apart from the general shared benefits to be derived from greater stability in its neighborhood, Turkey also stands to reap considerable revenues from pipelines crossing its territory from areas previously seen as untouchables because of their instability and/or poor relationships with other partners. This is not to mention all the goodwill that the Turks stand to generate by helping to end conflicts among its neighbors or between some of them and outside powers.

    Turkey’s conspicuous raising of its public profile means that its prestige is invested, and Erdogan has taken something of a personal gamble by doing what many hope US President-elect Barack Obama will do when he takes office in January: He has de-emphasized interactions with some of Turkey’s traditional partners and turned away from some of the policy priorities pursued by successive governments before his. His own reputation is therefore in play, and by extension that of his party – which has not been without determined enemies at home.

    Given all of the foregoing, this is no time for second thoughts. Turkey needs to undertake even more of the active diplomacy that Erdogan has overseen if it is to meet the expectations it has created at home and abroad. Overall, no country is better-equipped to serve as a moderator in a “dialogue of civilizations” that is more necessary than ever. And if Obama fulfills even part of his promise as an agent for change, Erdogan might even have an enthusiastic colleague in the White House.

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  • No restriction for expansion of Iran-Turkey ties: president

    No restriction for expansion of Iran-Turkey ties: president

    Tehran, Nov 17, IRNA

    President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Sunday evening that there is no obstacle in the way of further expansion of Tehran-Ankara all-out cooperation.

    In a meeting with the visiting Turkish Energy Minister Hilmi Guler, he expressed hope that bilateral relations would further boost in all areas.

    Terming his August visit to Turkey as a crucial and determining visit, the president said the visit was in line with the two countries mutual interest.

    During Ahmadinejad’s visit to Turkey, a joint statement was issued by the two sides stressing the importance of energy in economic development of the two states.

    The two sides agreed to promote the level of cooperation in the fields of energy, gas and oil to the highest level and try to finalize agreements signed between the two capitals in 2007 and 2008 to this end.

    Guler expressed his satisfaction with the current level of cooperation between the two neighboring states.

    He reiterated that Ankara attaches great importance to expansion of ties with Tehran.

    The Turkish energy minister further called for materialization of the agreements reached between the two sides.

    Guler, heading a delegation, arrived in Tehran Saturday evening to finalize a gas accord with Iranian officials.