Category: Iran

  • Can Turkey prevent a US war with Iran?

    Can Turkey prevent a US war with Iran?

     

    Can Turkey prevent a US war with Iran?

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu is headed to Iran amid escalating tensions with US.

    JERUSALEM —Two Middle Eastern countries in flux will attempt to cement their fraught ties as Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu flies to Tehran today for “nuclear talks” with his Iranian counterparts.

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    Lebanon’s Daily Star reported that the two days of consultations will also address other issues of regional concern, such as “developments in Iran and Syria.”

    In Israel, observers of Iran and of the deteriorating relations between Israel and Turkey are postulating that the visit may also indicate that Turkey is positioning itself as a potential go-between for Western countries hoping to deescalate tensions with Iran rather than find themselves obliged to impose crippling sanctions.

    Meanwhile, Ha’aretz reported Wednesday that Iranian President Mahmood Ahmadinejahd has warned Israel that its “attempts to Judaicize” Jerusalem will lead to its demise.

    More from GlobalPost: Turkey enters the ring as the US and Iran fight it out

    Addressing the Turkish-Palestinian Parliamentary Friendship Group meeting in Iran, Ahmadinejad was quoted by Iranian state television saying that the “Zionists, who have no faith in religion or even God, now claim piety and intend to take away the Islamic identity of the Holy Quds.” (El-Quds is the name of Jerusalem in Arabic.)

    “This ridiculous move is in fact the continuation of the colonialist polices of oppressors, which will not save the Zionist regime, but also take the regime closer to the endpoint of its existence,” the Iranian president added.

    Iran’s official news agency, IRNA, reported that Ahmadinejad added, “issue of Palestine is the main issue in the region and the whole world and nobody can ignore it.”

    On Tuesday, Iranian Armed Forces Chief of Staff, Maj. Gen. Ataollah Salehi, warned an American warship with military action should it return to its previous location in the Straights of Hormuz.

    Escalating increasingly belligerent language directed at the United States, Salehi said, “We advise, recommend, and warn them that this aircraft carrier not return to its previous place in the Persian Gulf, because we are not used to repeating a warning and give a warning only once,” according to the Teheran Times.

    A spokesman for the American Defense Department, Cmdr. Bill Speaks, declined to discuss future movements of the carrier, called the John C Stennis. He said that “the deployment of U.S. military assets in the Persian Gulf region will continue as it has for decades.”

    The John C Stennis originally shipped out of the Straights of Hormuz, a critical byway for crude oil tankers, through which 40 percent of the world’s oil is shipped, about two weeks ago, to accommodate 10 days of naval exercises planned by the Iranian navy.

    Salehi made his statement at a ceremony marking the successful completion of the exercises.

    While the drills were taking place, Iranian officials threatened to shut down the Straights if Western powers impose more severe sanctions on its crude oil exports or its banks.

    Also on Tuesday, the daughter of former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, Faezeh Hashemi, herself formerly a member of parliament and now a political activist whose views are considered close to those of the reformist Green movement, was sentenced to six months in jail for “making propaganda against the ruling system.”

    The Guardian reported that Hashemi was most likely arrested due to an interview she gave to an opposition website, Roozonline in which she blamed regime supporters for harassing her in public.

    She has been arrested twice before for her political activities.

    via Can Turkey prevent a US war with Iran? | GlobalPost.

  • Turkey warns against Shi’ite-Sunni Cold War

    Turkey warns against Shi’ite-Sunni Cold War

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    An Iranian Sunni Kurd walks at a bazaar while shopping in Marivan in Kurdistan province

    An Iranian Sunni Kurd walks at a bazaar while shopping in Marivan in Kurdistan province (Morteza Nikoubazl Reuters, REUTERS / May 13, 2011)

    Reuters

    10:12 a.m. CST, January 4, 2012

    ANKARA (Reuters) – Middle East powerhouse Turkey on Wednesday warned against a sectarian Cold War in the region and said rising Sunni-Shi’ite tensions would be “suicide” for the whole region.

    “Let me openly say that there are some willing to start a regional Cold War,” Foreign Minster Ahmet Davutoglu told state-run Anatolian news agency before heading to Shi’ite Iran.

    “We are determined to prevent a regional Cold War. Sectarian regional tensions would be suicide for the whole region,” Davutoglu said, adding such effects would last for decades.

    “Turkey is against all polarizations, in the political sense of Iran-Arab tension or in the sense of forming an apparent axis. This will be one of the crucial messages that I will take to Tehran.”

    Majority Sunni Turkey, which borders Iran, Iraq and Syria, has attempted to play a moderating role as rivals Shi’ite Iran and Sunni powerhouse Saudi Arabia jockey for influence in a region undergoing sweeping changes brought on by “Arab Spring” popular uprisings.

    Davutoglu is expected to hold talks in Tehran later on Wednesday on Iran’s nuclear program and developments in neighboring Iraq and Syria.

    The United States and the European Union stepped up pressure on Iran on Wednesday with European diplomats agreeing in principle to ban Iranian oil imports and Washington sending its Treasury Secretary to Asia to discuss new sanctions.

    And Iran has threatened to take action if the U.S. Navy moves an aircraft carrier into the Gulf, Tehran’s most aggressive statement yet after weeks of saber-rattling as new U.S. and EU financial sanctions take a toll on its economy.

    “Turkey is fiercely against new regional Shi’ite-Sunni tensions, or an anti-Iran or similar tensions arising like in the Gulf,” Davutoglu said.

    He singled out the case of neighboring Iraq, which is splitting up into sectarian and ethnic fiefdoms, with Kurds consolidating their autonomy in the north, Shi’ites dominant across the south and entrenched in Baghdad, and Sunnis exploring whether to set up their own autonomous region in the centre and west.

    “Our Iraq policy foresees close contact with all sides. No one should make a mistake here. No one should act with a conviction that one ideology, one sect, one ethnicity could dominate in any country as it was the case in the past. The societies in the region want a new political understanding.”

    (Writing by Ibon Villelabeitia; Editing by Alison Williams)

    via Turkey warns against Shi’ite-Sunni Cold War – chicagotribune.com.

  • Turkey will never team up against Iran

    Turkey will never team up against Iran

    c 330 235 16777215 0 images stories dec01 26 01 turkyTurkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu says that Turkey will never be a party to any foreign interference in the Islamic Republic of Iran.

    On Saturday, Davutoglu also said that Tehran-Ankara relations have greatly improved over the past nine years and have never been as good as they are now.

    “Turkey will not be part of any foreign intervention in Iran,” the Turkish foreign minister insisted.

    He noted that he has met with Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi more than any of his other counterparts, saying they hold regular meetings to discuss issues of mutual interest and regional developments.

    On Iran’s opposition to the NATO missile defense system that is to be based in Turkey, Davutoglu said that despite the difference in viewpoint, Iran and Turkey have similar views on many issues.

    Davutoglu also emphasized that Iran has the right to develop and acquire nuclear technology meant for peaceful purposes and called for dialogue to resolve the dispute over Tehran’s nuclear program.

    (Source: Press TV)

  • Iran proposes to reopen nuclear talks

    Iran proposes to reopen nuclear talks

    Islamic republic says it has notified UN of its intention to resume negotiations amid confusion over reported missile tests

    • guardian.co.uk,

    Irans top nuclear negotia 007

    Iran’s top nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili says his country is ready to return to the table. Photograph: Olivier Hoslet/EPA

    Iran has proposed to reopen negotiations about its controversial nuclear programme with the US, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany.

    The invitation by Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, comes in the wake of new sanctions recently imposed by the UN over Tehran’s uranium enrichment programme.

    The last round of talks between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN security council and Germany – held in Istanbul in January – ended in failure.

    “We formally declared to them [the intent] to return to the path of dialogue for cooperation,” Jalili told Iranian diplomats in Tehran, according to the official IRNA news agency.

    Iran’s ambassador to Germany, Ali Reza Sheikh Attar, said earlier on Saturday that Jalili would write to the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, to arrange a new round of talks.

    The proposal for new negotiations came as there were conflicting reports as to whether Iran had tested long-range missiles during naval exercises in the Persian Gulf. Iran’s state media initially reported early on Saturday that missiles had been launched – a move likely to worry the west, which is concerned over threats by Tehran to close a vital oil shipping route.

    But Iranian deputy navy commander Mahmoud Mousavi later told Press TV that no missiles had been fired. “The exercise of launching missiles will be carried out in the coming days,” he told the channel, owned by the state Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting Corporation.

    The UN has imposed four rounds of sanctions on Tehran over the nuclear enrichment, while the US and the EU have also imposed their own sanctions.

    Earlier in December, Iran reinstated an offer for the International Atomic Energy Agency to visit Tehran, although it did not say whether officials would be able to focus on suspicions that Iran is secretly working on nuclear arms – a key condition set by the agency.

    The US and Israel have not ruled out a military strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities if Tehran doesn’t stop its nuclear programme. Jalili warned that any attack on Iran would be met with retaliation. “We will give a response that will make the aggressor regret any threat against the Islamic Republic of Iran,” he said.

    via Iran proposes to reopen nuclear talks | World news | guardian.co.uk.

  • Turkey arrests anti-NATO protesters

    Turkey arrests anti-NATO protesters

    hosseinsharifi20111227145646797File photo of Turkish police

    Turkish police have arrested 16 protesters during a demonstration against Ankara’s plan to host a NATO missile system in the country, Press TV reports.

    According to informed sources in Turkey, police attacked the demonstration in the southwestern city of Antalya on Tuesday.

    The demonstrators, who were mainly high school students, issued a statement calling for “a free Turkey,” the sources said.

    Over the past weeks, Turkish activists in different cities across the country have held demonstrations to voice their opposition to the deployment of the system, in the eastern province of Malatya, saying that they do not want Turkey to turn into “a base for the US and Israel.”

    Last week, police cracked down on a demonstration held in the northwestern city of Edirne.

    Ankara announced its agreement to deploy the US-made system in September and according to the Turkish media, the system will be operational next week.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has said that the missile system is not against any country, although commentators say that Turkey faces no missile threat from its neighbors, and did not need to accept the system.

    HSN/JR/HGH

    via PressTV – Turkey arrests anti-NATO protesters.

  • Iran extends oil deal with Turkey for 2012 despite sanctions

    Iran extends oil deal with Turkey for 2012 despite sanctions

    Dec 24 (Reuters) – Iran said on Saturday it has extended its crude export contract with Turkey for 2012, state-run English Language Press TV reported, suggesting it aims to trade via Turkey to circumvent tight sanctions imposed over its disputed nuclear programme.

    Turkey has said it is complying with the sanctions, after trying unsuccessfully to mediate between Iran and the international community.

    “The National Iranian Oil Co. has renewed its crude export contracts with a number of Turkish oil companies … by the end of 2012,” Press TV said in the report.

    The report said Turkey was a potential market for the export of Iranian crude to Europe, and predicted the Islamic state’s crude exports to Turkey would rise by a third in 2012.

    “In 2011, Turkey’s oil purchases from Iran was 150,000 barrels per day which is expected to rise to 200,000 barrels in 2012.”

    The European Union is considering a ban – already in place in the United States – on imports of Iranian oil, although diplomats and traders say awareness is growing in the EU that such a ban could damage the bloc’s economy without doing much to undercut Iran.

    Iran warned that any move to block its oil exports would more than double crude prices.

    The West suspects Iran’s nuclear programme might be aimed at making atomic bombs, while Tehran denies this and says its nuclear development is entirely for peaceful ends.

    Many foreign companies with capital and modern technology have been forced to pull out from the country’s lucrative energy sector because of the international sanctions. (Writing by Ramin Mostafavi; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

    via Iran extends oil deal with Turkey for 2012 despite sanctions | Reuters.