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Our Pledge:Regime Change

Free Iran With Maryam Rajavi

Maryam Rajavi: Iranian society is ready for change and the path to that change has already been paved

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Saturday, July 9, 2016

West should push for Iran regime change






The only way to make peace with Iran, according to the Obama administration, is to appease its cruel and authoritarian government.
The alternative, according to the White House, would be increased hostility and perhaps even war.
Under this dichotomy, U.S. President Barack Obama has extended an olive branch to America’s longtime adversary.
Last summer, the U.S. struck an historic nuclear deal with the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Obama teamed up with members of the UN Security Council and Germany to lift economic sanctions against Iran in exchange for Iran halting its uranium enrichment program.

http://www.torontosun.com/2016/07/08/west-should-push-for-iran-regime-change
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Thursday, July 7, 2016

MARYAM RAJAVI TELLS UN AND US: FULFIL YOUR COMMITMENTS TO CAMP LIBERTY



INU - After a barrage of more than 50 rockets hit Camp Liberty on the night of 4 July, Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, the President-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, called on the international community to fulfil the commitments already made to provide security for the residents of Camp Liberty until such time as they depart Iraq for third countries. 
Mrs Rajavi also demanded that the UN Security Council and the European Union unequivocally condemn the missile attack on Camp Liberty. The Iranian regime’s intentions towards the camp were clear, she said. It was therefore a matter of urgency that the international community act. 

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Maryam Rajavi wins hearts and minds of Iranian diaspora



On Saturday, July 9th, the world will witness the largest annual gathering of Iranian exiles in Le Bourget, Paris, with Maryam Rajavi as the keynote speaker. 
More than one 100,000 Iranians as well as hundreds of politicians and personalities from five continents will converge in Le Bourget to declare their support for Maryam Rajavi, the Iranian Resistance and their struggle to overthrow the regime ruling Iran and establish freedom and democracy in their country. But who is Maryam Rajavi?
https://www.mojahedin.org/newsen/48108/Maryam-Rajavi-wins-hearts-and-minds-of-Iranian-diaspora
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Thousands of Iranians to descend on Paris in call for reform



Thousands of Iranian opposition members are expected in Paris this weekend for the annual conference of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI).
The event, which is aimed at promoting human rights and democracy in Iran, is expected to be attended by tens of thousands of Iranians who say the current regime is not moderate ‘in any way’, despite claims to the contrary, according to the main opposition party’s website.
The NCRI believes the situation in Iran is actually worsening, with a deterioration in human rights and the regime becoming more ‘closed and introverted’.

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Essential to Counter to Iran’s Regional Misconduct



As we approach the first anniversary of the Iranian nuclear deal, tens of thousands of activists and Iranian dissidents are set to rally this Saturday in Paris, calling for Tehran’s nefarious conduct at home and in the region to be tackled. One of the primary messages at this rally will be to condemn Iran’s role in the massacre of the Syrian people and to demand an end to its assistance to the Assad government.

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/lord-maginnis/essential-to-counter-to-i_b_10853404.html#comments
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Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Friends of a Free Iran in European Parliament strongly condemn rocket attack on Camp Liberty

The following is a press release issued on Tuesday by the Chairman of the Friends of a Free Iran (FOFI) group at the European Parliament following the rocket attack on Monday on Camp Liberty which houses members of the main Iranian opposition group People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI or MEK):
Press release ‐ Friends of a Free Iran in European Parliament ‐ 5 July 2016
Friends of a Free Iran in European Parliament strongly condemn rocket attack on Camp Liberty in Iraq
The Friends of a Free Iran group in the European Parliament which enjoys the support of several hundred MEPs strongly condemns the terrorist attack against Iranian opposition refugees in Camp Liberty in Iraq last night.
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Maryam Rajavi calls on the U.S. and the UN to guarantee Camp Liberty’s security until all residents depart Iraq



Following tonight’s missile barrage on Camp Liberty by militias affiliated with the terrorist Quds Force, Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, the President-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, hailed the heroic perseverance of the residents of Camp Liberty and wished a quick recovery for those wounded in the criminal attack.
She said that the missile attack on Camp Liberty, especially following an inhumane eight-day siege, blocking fuel, food and medicine from entering the camp, demonstrated that the religious dictatorship ruling Iran is terrified of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) and the Iranian Resistance, which it views as an existential threat.
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Maryam Rajavi: Urgent action needed to safeguard Camp Liberty




Paris, 5 Jul - After more than 50 rockets injured 40 and set large areas ablaze at Camp Liberty, Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, the President-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), called for urgent action to protect the camp's residents.
The rocket attack left craters seven feet wide and five feet deep. Mrs Rajavi wished the injured speedy recoveries, and praised Camp Liberty's residents for their perseverance in such appalling conditions.
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MEPs call for action against Iran's IRGC in wake of missile attack



London, 5 Jul - Members of the European Parliament today called on the European Union and its member states: to condemn Monday's missile bombardment of Camp Liberty; to press for an independent inquiry into the attack; and to act to dislodge the Quds Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps from Iraq.
The Friends of a Free Iran group in the European Parliament, which enjoys the support of several hundred MEPs, strongly condemned "the terrorist attack against Iranian opposition refugees."
At about 20:30, local time, on 4 July, a barrage of 50 missiles were fired at Camp Liberty, near Baghdad airport, home to unarmed members of the main Iranian opposition, the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI or MEK).  
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Iran nuclear deal one year later: reconsidering Western optimism



July 14 marks one year since the conclusion of negotiations between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the P5+1 over the Iranian nuclear program. The 2015 agreement renewed optimism that became fashionable in the context of the election of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani two years earlier.

http://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-blog/foreign-policy/286434-iran-nuclear-deal-one-year-later-reconsidering-western
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Shahriar Kia: The plight of human rights violations in Iran




Shahriar Kia, a press spokesman for members of the People’s Mujahedin Organization of Iran opposition group (PMOI, also known as MEK) in Camp Liberty, Iraq, on Tuesday wrote the following op-ed in The Hill:
The plight of human rights violations in Iran
The European Parliament recently witnessed 270 of its members issue a strongly worded statement lashing out and condemning the regime in Iran for its continuous and horrendous trend of human rights violations in contrast to preposterous claims of reforms and adopting a new approach. The statement encourages and rightfully demands the European Union and all Western governments “to condition any further relations with Iran to a clear progress on human rights and a halt to executions.”
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US Amb. Ken Blackwell: the NCRI leads the way for US foreign policy on Iran



Washington, 5 Jul - Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Human Rights Commission, Ken Blackwell, said that the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) had already united "officials from several presidential administrations" of both parties in "common cause" against fundamentalist terrorism. In pursuit of "the universal imperative to confront the threat of Islamic extremism," the new administration, whether Republican and Democratic, needed to join the coalition developing around the NCRI, he argued.
http://www.iranfocus.com/en/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=30593:us-amb-ken-blackwell-the-ncri-leads-the-way-for-us-foreign-policy-on-iran&catid=49:multimedia&Itemid=101
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Ad Feedback A Message from Paris Both Republicans and Democrats Should Heed



Okay. Let’s face it. The two presidential nominees have effectively been chosen.  The Democratic and Republican National Conventions are ahead of us, and the U.S. is on the precipice of a highly contentious several months of campaigning.  

http://cnsnews.com/commentary/ken-blackwell/message-paris-both-republicans-and-democrats-should-heed
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An Iranian Voice Republicans and Democrats Should Heed



Okay. Let’s face it. The two presidential nominees have effectively been chosen. The Democratic and Republican National Conventions are ahead of us, and the U.S. is on the precipice of a highly contentious several months of campaigning.
https://patriotpost.us/opinion/43594
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The plight of human rights violations in Iran




The European Parliament recently witnessed 270 of its members issue a strongly worded statement lashing out and condemning the regime in Iran for its continuous and horrendous trend of human rights violations in contrast to preposterous claims of reforms and adopting a new approach. The statement encourages and rightfully demands the European Union and all Western governments “to condition any further relations with Iran to a clear progress on human rights and a halt to executions.”


http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/foreign-policy/286474-the-plight-of-human-rights-violations-in-iran#disqus_thread
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Monday, July 4, 2016

Raymond Tanter: Why the “Free Iran” rally is important



Prof. Tanter, a former senior staff member of the U.S. National Security Council and a professor emeritus at the University of Michigan, said in an interview: “As a scholar studying the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (PMOI or MEK), the main resistance group that rejects clerical rule, and espouses a secular, democratic, and nonnuclear Iran, I have had the privilege of conducting a series of interviews in the annual rallies in Paris sponsored by supporters of the resistance.”
“Instead of being a routine commemoration, these rallies have taken on a huge political meaning. The outsized attention the Iranian regime gives to the rallies, how upset it gets because of the worldwide press coverage, efforts to block media coverage in Iran, and attacks by Tehran against the dissidents when the rallies occur are indicative of the political message: As the only movement that has not compromised with the Iranian regime’s assertion that radical clerics should rule, they consider the resistance as a threat to their survival. The rallies remind those who reign in Iran that regime change from within remains on the table.”

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Italian MEP Patrizia Toia voices support for Maryam Rajavi’s campaign to free Iran





NCRI - Patrizia Toia, a Member of the European Parliament from Italy, has voiced support for the campaign by Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, President-elect of the Iranian Resistance, to achieve a free and democratic Iran.

Ms. Patrizia Toia : Hello, my name is Patrizia Toia, member of European Parliament from Italy. I would like to use this opportunity to express my solidarity with the people of Iran who are living under a religious dictatorship. I am particularly concerned about women in Iran and about the limitations they have to tolerate.
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Political prisoner Ali Moezzi support “Free Iran” rally by MEK supporters




Tehran, 3 Jul - Iranian political prisoner Ali Moezzi, who is father to two members of the main Iranian opposition group People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI or MEK), has sent a message from Tehran’s notorious Evin Prison declaring his support for the annual gathering of the Iranian Resistance held in Paris on 9 July.
"Undoubtedly, our nation has the right to live freely because the leaders and pioneers of PMOI have sacrificed themselves in prisons and on the streets", he said.

http://www.iranfocus.com/en/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=30581:political-prisoner-ali-moezzi-support-free-iran-rally-by-mek-supporters&catid=4:iran-general&Itemid=109
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Interview with Struan Stevenson about the “Free Iran” rally



Stevenson has been a staunch supporter of freedom for the Iranian people for many years. Until his retirement in 2014, he chaired the Friends of a Free Iran Intergroup (Caucus) in the European Parliament for over 10 years. During that time and in subsequent years, he has participated in the annual “Free Iran” rallies organized by the Iranian Resistance each year in Paris.
We asked him why he thinks the rallies are important to Iranians inside the country.


http://www.ncr-iran.org/en/news/iran-resistance/20611-interview-with-struan-stevenson-about-the-free-iran-rally
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Friday, July 1, 2016

Human rights deteriorate in Iran despite European optimism



No amount of trade and economic growth can make up for the suffering and loss of life caused by Iran’s brutal regime. The West must demand change before deepening relations with Tehran, writes Gérard Deprez.
Gérard Deprez is a veteran member of the European Parliament, is vice-president of the Belgian Liberal Mouvement Reformateur Party and chairs the Friends of a Free Iran group in the European Parliament.
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Iran’s empty condemnation of terrorism




ANALYSIS/OPINION:
About two days after an Orlando gunman carried out the worst mass shooting in U.S. history, the Iranian foreign ministry issued a statement purporting to decry the incident. Speaking via the state-run IRNA, a spokesperson said the Iranian regime “condemns” the attack “based on its principled policy of condemning terrorism and its strong will to seriously confront this evil phenomenon.”
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/jun/29/irans-empty-condemnation-of-terrorism/

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While denouncing the Orlando shooter, Iran regime leads the world in attacks - Gov. Tom Ridge




The Iranian regime's condemnation of the Orlando mass shooting must be viewed against a backdrop of its status as the world’s most active state sponsor of terrorism, former United States Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge wrote in an op-ed piece in The Washington Times on Thursday.
"It’s hard to imagine an expression of sympathy more disingenuous," he wrote, adding that the West must not fall for the deceptive smiles of the terrorist regime in Iran.
"The Orlando condemnation was issued by the administration of President Hassan Rouhani, known to wear a much friendlier face in public than its predecessor. This was most obvious during the nuclear negotiations last July. But neither the nuclear deal nor any subsequent statements justify claims that Mr. Rouhani and his colleagues represent a trend toward moderation."


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Thursday, June 30, 2016

UN RASSEMBLEMENT POUR UN "IRAN LIBRE" AFIN DE DONNER LA PAROLE À CEUX QUI SOUFFRENT EN IRAN


Le 9 juillet, je rejoindrai un grand nombre de mes compatriotes iraniens en exil et leurs partisans internationaux au rassemblement annuel pour " un Iran libre" à Paris, au Bourget. Le Conseil national de la Résistance iranienne (CNRI) tient ce genre d'événements depuis plus de dix ans.

Inutile de dire que c'est un événement international majeur portant sur une question de premier plan. Mais pour moi, c'est aussi très personnel. En esprit, je serai avec une foule beaucoup plus grande. Nous serons rejoints par un nombre incalculable d'Iraniens vivant encore sous le joug du régime théocratique et qui prendront le risque de représailles en regardant le rassemblement sur les chaînes tv satellites interdites.

Comment je le sais ? Après ce rassemblement, j'aurai eu l’occasion de voir cet événement des deux côtés du mur idéologique qui sépare la République islamique de la plupart du reste du monde. Ces dernières années, je faisais partie des Iraniens qui soutiennent le CNRI et son groupe principal, les Moudjahidine du peuple d'Iran (OMPI), depuis un endroit silencieux à l'intérieur du pays. J'ai mis ma sécurité et ma liberté à risque, comme beaucoup de mes amis, pour poursuivre les activités des groupes locaux. J'ai passé cinq ans en prison de 2009 à 2014 et j'ai subi des tortures physiques et psychologiques pour mon soutien à l'OMPI. Je me suis enfui d'Iran à l'âge de 29 ans l'an dernier.

Malgré la répression agressive du régime dont j'ai été témoin, je n'ai jamais perdu l'espoir que ce système de domination reigieuses finira par s'effondrer. Les images du rassemblement du CNRI avec quelque 100.000 Iraniens et leurs partisans internationaux appelant à un "Iran libre" ont renforcé cet espoir. Pour nous, les militants, ce jour-là a toujours été une occasion spéciale. J'ai même suivi les messages de l'événement en prison.

Depuis les manifestations nationales de 2009 jusqu'aux défis que lancent quotidiennement les Iraniens, il a toujours été clair à mes yeux que l'écrasante majorité de la population fait cause commune avec le réseau militant auquel je me consacre. De son côté, le CNRI à l'étranger a déployé des activités indiquant clairement que notre leadership en exil a fait de grands progrès pour obtenir les soutiens qui vont catapulter notre cause vers la victoire.

Je me réjouis de pouvoir contribuer à cet effort cette année. Les décideurs mondiaux ont pris progressivement conscience de la nécessité urgente d'un changement de régime en Iran, et maintenant je vais être en mesure de plaider personnellement cette cause devant un public international. Si la chance est avec moi, mon histoire et celles des autres qui ont fui récemment d'Iran atteindront les oreilles de la plupart des politiciens et des experts américains et européens de premier plan qui seront présents.

En tout état de cause, je sais qu'ils ont déjà compris un message plus général : la modération dans le gouvernement iranien n'est pas réaliste. La liberté et la démocratie en Iran ne peuvent être garanties que par un changement de régime. Je suis convaincu que les rangs de ces partisans occidentaux vont continuer à grossir tandis que l'image de la répression en Iran et de l'ingérence régionale de ce régime deviennent plus apparentes.

L'événement de cette année aura lieu presque exactement un an après l'accord nucléaire entre l'Iran et les P5 + 1. Ainsi, ce sera une occasion pour les décideurs occidentaux d'évaluer l'impact du plan global d'action et la stratégie générale de complaisance. Les politiciens participant à l'événement savent déjà que cette stratégie présente de graves insuffisances.

Certains en Occident semblent persister dans leur optimisme sur les perspectives de l'Iran sous la présidence d’Hassan Rohani. Ma présence et celle d'autres militants va sûrement aider à faire comprendre que les conditions à l'intérieur de l'Iran n’offrent aucune tendance à la modération. La répression dans le pays et l'agression des pays étrangers se poursuivent sans relâche sous Rohani. La première continue à envoyer les dissidents iraniens, les militants et les artistes en prison ou à les forcer à quitter le pays. La seconde contribue à attise la crise des réfugiés, avec le soutien indéfectible du pouvoir iranien au dictateur syrien Bachar al-Assad.

Je sais par expérience combien l'événement du 9 juillet sera émouvant pour les dissidents et les militants iraniens à l'intérieur du pays. Il est important que les gouvernements occidentaux soient attentifs à son message. Ce message résonnera depuis Paris et dans la majorité silencieuse des Iraniens de l'intérieur : "un Iran libre."

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Congress is rightfully concerned over possible Boeing-Iran deal


Two members of the U.S. House of Representatives from the Republican Party have joined a chorus of colleagues raising major concerns over a provisional agreement between Boeing and Iran involving a multi-billion dollar purchase of a hundred commercial airliners. Lawmakers on the Hill are sounding alarm bells over possible significant national security repercussions in this regard.

U.S. companies must not play a role in “weaponizing” the regime ruling in Iran is the core of a strong joint statement made recently by House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling (R-TX) and Rep. Peter Roskam (R-IL), a member of the Ways and Means Committee.

“We strongly oppose the potential sale of military-fungible products to terrorism’s central supplier,” the two lawmakers wrote in a damning June 16th letter to Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg, citing the major implications of such a deal. The U.S. State Department has in fresh reports -- most recently on June 2nd -- once again designated Iran as “the foremost state sponsor of terrorism” and emphasized Tehran’s support of terrorism has not diminished at all.

If this deal receives a green light, it would represent a major contract and breakthrough between a U.S. firm and Iran following nuclear “implementation day” back in January when sanctions began to ease on the regime in return for the mullahs curbing a controversial and clandestine nuclear program engulfed in major suspicions of involving a drive to obtain nuclear weapons.

“In light of recent reports that a deal is imminent, we seek information to assist the U.S. Congress in determining the national security implications of a potential sale of Boeing aircraft to Iran," Hensarling and Roskam continued in their strongly-worded letter.

Iran is also claiming to be on track to a parallel purchase from Airbus, Boeing’s European rival, according to various news reports. The Washington Times, however, raised doubts over Iran boasting success in this regard.

“The Airbus deal to sell more than 100 planes to the Iranians made headlines in January but ‘still hasn’t been finalized. And one of the reasons is that Airbus has had a terribly difficult time finding a private financial institution to bank the deal,’” The Times wrote, citing Eric Lorber, a former attorney in the U.S. Treasury Department’s office of foreign assets control.

“The risks associated with doing business with Iran haven’t changed,” The Times went on to quote Chip Poncy, former head of the Treasury’s office of strategic policy for terrorist financing and financial crimes through 2013.

Despite all this, U.S. president Barack Obama, continuing his so-far failed appeasement policy vis-à-vis Iran, is strongly backing the possibility of a lucrative Boeing-Iran deal. This has only fueled growing concerns over Iran’s nature of remaining a significant “source of funds and banking services” for leading terrorist groups wreaking havoc across the globe.

While Obama may be lobbying for the deal, a potential kink will definitely stem from outstanding U.S. sanctions that continue to cast a heavy shadow on Iran and ban the use and access to the U.S. dollar for any party possibly interested in doing trade with Tehran. If such sanctions remain intact, as seems to be the case up to this point, any thinkable Boeing-Iran deal will be forced to seek non-U.S. financing. This is one hurdle Iran simply cannot surpass, and Boeing will suffer huge losses in such a challenging endeavor.

Boeing has been asked to respond by July 1st to ten serious questions raised by U.S. lawmakers. Members of Congress are currently dissatisfied, saying the Chicago-based plane manufacturer is refusing to relieve the concerns raised by lawmakers over their ongoing discussions with Iran. This will naturally not play well in Washington and place even more obstacles before the Obama administration in its promotion of the deal.

Hensarling and Roskam continued in further concerns over the arrangement, saying Iran’s “commercial aviation sector has been deeply involved in supporting hostile actors.”

Senator John Cornyn (R-TX) has sought to target the Revolutionary Guards-affiliated Mahan Airline in Iran, describing the company as a “terrorist airline or airways.”

"[Iran’s] largest commercial airline is the number-one state sponsor of terrorism," The Hill cited Senator Cornyn saying. "This airline has repeatedly played a role in exporting Iran's terrorism."

Saudi Arabia took a similar approach in banning Mahan from using its airspace, Bloomberg reported on May 25th.

Iran’s military, especially the Revolutionary Guards and its terrorist-designated extraterritorial wing, the Quds Force, are known to frequently dispatch troops, send weapons and even rocket and missiles across the globe by way of commercial airliners. This notorious effort has procured the arms needed for groups such as the Lebanese Hizb’allah and the dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad in Syria that has leveled his own country for over five years now, leading to over 400,000 deaths, according to some estimates, scores more injured and the largest refugee crisis since World War II. This onslaught has rendered millions displaced inside the country and seeking refuge abroad, with no end in sight. With the international community failing to respond, Iran has successfully developed and cemented deep-seated terror across the region, leaving barely any room for optimism.

Iran is looking to modernize its aging fleet by replacing a gigantic number of 400 planes. As far-fetched as the extent of this effort remains considering Iran’s disastrous economic conditions three years into the tenure of the so-called moderate President Hassan Rouhani, such an initiative will most definitely further fuel Iran’s support for international terrorism and boost the mullahs’ effort to continue inflicting mayhem in conflicts plaguing the Middle East, from Iraq to Syria, Yemen, and beyond.

At a time when the Obama administration is continuously failing to rise to the occasion against such deeply hazardous enterprises, the efforts of Congress might by the last chance to spearhead the incorporation of a vital, universal concept to halt Tehran’s dangerous campaign aimed at solidifying its means of spreading absolute terrorism, ushering in growing extremism and Islamic fundamentalism
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Iran Nuclear Deal— Regional Instability, Unknown Compliance, and the Way Forward by Raymond Tanter



Agreed to on July 14, 2015, we are fast approaching the first year anniversary of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) between Iran and the world powers. The next couple of weeks are an ideal time to evaluate what changes have occurred in the interim.

Regional Instability

According to Matthew McGinnis, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, about a year after the nuclear deal with Iran, it is embroiled in several major regional conflicts. Two are “hot” ones: against opposition and Islamist groups in Syria and Islamic State in Iraq. The more are “colder” ones: a regional feud with Saudi Arabia and efforts against Israel in southern Lebanon and the Golan Heights, which are shaped by the Syrian Civil War.

On Apr. 3, 2016, United Arab Emirates Ambassador Yousef al Otaiba stated in the Wall Street Journal that, “One Year after the Iran Nuclear Deal—don’t be fooled. The Iran we have long known—hostile, expansionist, violent—is alive and well.” On June 29, he was on a panel I attended in Washington and elaborated on the argument in the WSJ. In October, November and in early March, Tehran conducted ballistic-missile tests in violation of UN Security Council resolutions.


CARTOONS | GLENN MCCOY
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Regarding March fighting in Yemen, the French navy seized a large cache of weapons en route from Iran to the Houthis in rebellion against the UN-backed legitimate government. In late February, Australia intercepted a ship off the coast of Oman with thousands of rocket-propelled grenades. In December, Tehran fired rockets dangerously close to a U.S. aircraft carrier in the Strait of Hormuz, a few weeks before detaining a group of American sailors.

Unknown Compliance

What about an International Atomic Energy Agency May 27, 2016 report on Iran’s compliance with the nuclear deal? Seeing the best in the nuclear agreement requires ignoring the obvious weaknesses in the IAEA report, which does not even specify how much low-enriched uranium the Islamic Republic has stockpiled, how many centrifuges are running at the Natanz enrichment site or whether enrichment activities have actually stopped at Fordow. That’s because under the terms of the nuclear deal, Iran only needs to demonstrate minimum openness. The head of the UN watchdog nuclear agency says that although Iran seems to be adhering to the letter of the deal, “his inspectors are stretched thin by the task of monitoring compliance across a country the size of Alaska.”
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Congress is rightfully concerned over possible Boeing-Iran deal

Congress is rightfully concerned over possible Boeing-Iran deal
Two members of the U.S. House of Representatives from the Republican Party have joined a chorus of colleagues raising major concerns over a provisional agreement between Boeing and Iran involving a multi-billion dollar purchase of a hundred commercial airliners. Lawmakers on the Hill are sounding alarm bells over possible significant national security repercussions in this regard.

U.S. companies must not play a role in “weaponizing” the regime ruling in Iran is the core of a strong joint statement made recently by House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling (R-TX) and Rep. Peter Roskam (R-IL), a member of the Ways and Means Committee.

“We strongly oppose the potential sale of military-fungible products to terrorism’s central supplier,” the two lawmakers wrote in a damning June 16th letter to Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg, citing the major implications of such a deal. The U.S. State Department has in fresh reports -- most recently on June 2nd -- once again designated Iran as “the foremost state sponsor of terrorism” and emphasized Tehran’s support of terrorism has not diminished at all.

If this deal receives a green light, it would represent a major contract and breakthrough between a U.S. firm and Iran following nuclear “implementation day” back in January when sanctions began to ease on the regime in return for the mullahs curbing a controversial and clandestine nuclear program engulfed in major suspicions of involving a drive to obtain nuclear weapons.

“In light of recent reports that a deal is imminent, we seek information to assist the U.S. Congress in determining the national security implications of a potential sale of Boeing aircraft to Iran," Hensarling and Roskam continued in their strongly-worded letter.

Iran is also claiming to be on track to a parallel purchase from Airbus, Boeing’s European rival, according to various news reports. The Washington Times, however, raised doubts over Iran boasting success in this regard.

“The Airbus deal to sell more than 100 planes to the Iranians made headlines in January but ‘still hasn’t been finalized. And one of the reasons is that Airbus has had a terribly difficult time finding a private financial institution to bank the deal,’” The Times wrote, citing Eric Lorber, a former attorney in the U.S. Treasury Department’s office of foreign assets control.

“The risks associated with doing business with Iran haven’t changed,” The Times went on to quote Chip Poncy, former head of the Treasury’s office of strategic policy for terrorist financing and financial crimes through 2013.

Despite all this, U.S. president Barack Obama, continuing his so-far failed appeasement policy vis-à-vis Iran, is strongly backing the possibility of a lucrative Boeing-Iran deal. This has only fueled growing concerns over Iran’s nature of remaining a significant “source of funds and banking services” for leading terrorist groups wreaking havoc across the globe.

While Obama may be lobbying for the deal, a potential kink will definitely stem from outstanding U.S. sanctions that continue to cast a heavy shadow on Iran and ban the use and access to the U.S. dollar for any party possibly interested in doing trade with Tehran. If such sanctions remain intact, as seems to be the case up to this point, any thinkable Boeing-Iran deal will be forced to seek non-U.S. financing. This is one hurdle Iran simply cannot surpass, and Boeing will suffer huge losses in such a challenging endeavor.

Boeing has been asked to respond by July 1st to ten serious questions raised by U.S. lawmakers. Members of Congress are currently dissatisfied, saying the Chicago-based plane manufacturer is refusing to relieve the concerns raised by lawmakers over their ongoing discussions with Iran. This will naturally not play well in Washington and place even more obstacles before the Obama administration in its promotion of the deal.

Hensarling and Roskam continued in further concerns over the arrangement, saying Iran’s “commercial aviation sector has been deeply involved in supporting hostile actors.”

Senator John Cornyn (R-TX) has sought to target the Revolutionary Guards-affiliated Mahan Airline in Iran, describing the company as a “terrorist airline or airways.”

"[Iran’s] largest commercial airline is the number-one state sponsor of terrorism," The Hill cited Senator Cornyn saying. "This airline has repeatedly played a role in exporting Iran's terrorism."

Saudi Arabia took a similar approach in banning Mahan from using its airspace, Bloomberg reported on May 25th.

Iran’s military, especially the Revolutionary Guards and its terrorist-designated extraterritorial wing, the Quds Force, are known to frequently dispatch troops, send weapons and even rocket and missiles across the globe by way of commercial airliners. This notorious effort has procured the arms needed for groups such as the Lebanese Hizb’allah and the dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad in Syria that has leveled his own country for over five years now, leading to over 400,000 deaths, according to some estimates, scores more injured and the largest refugee crisis since World War II. This onslaught has rendered millions displaced inside the country and seeking refuge abroad, with no end in sight. With the international community failing to respond, Iran has successfully developed and cemented deep-seated terror across the region, leaving barely any room for optimism.

Iran is looking to modernize its aging fleet by replacing a gigantic number of 400 planes. As far-fetched as the extent of this effort remains considering Iran’s disastrous economic conditions three years into the tenure of the so-called moderate President Hassan Rouhani, such an initiative will most definitely further fuel Iran’s support for international terrorism and boost the mullahs’ effort to continue inflicting mayhem in conflicts plaguing the Middle East, from Iraq to Syria, Yemen, and beyond.

At a time when the Obama administration is continuously failing to rise to the occasion against such deeply hazardous enterprises, the efforts of Congress might by the last chance to spearhead the incorporation of a vital, universal concept to halt Tehran’s dangerous campaign aimed at solidifying its means of spreading absolute terrorism, ushering in growing extremism and Islamic fundamentalism.


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Marian Harkin MEP supports Maryam Rajavi’s 10-point plan for Iran

NCRI - Marian Harkin, an Irish Member of the European Parliament, has expressed her concerns over human rights abuses in Iran via a video released earlier this month.
Marian Harkin MEP said: “Discrimination and criminal repression against ethnic and religious minorities, arrests of critics and systematic censorship still exists [in Iran].”
Harkin was one of the 270 MEPs to sign a letter insisting that the EU condition their negotiations with Iran on improvements to the dire human rights situation.
Harkin, a member of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe, cited the rising number of executions in Iran as a major concern; the UN calculates that Iran’s execution rate is the highest in 25 years.
She said that she approved of the “progressive” ten-point plan laid out by Maryam Rajavi, President-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, which calls for the abolition of the death penalty and for equality between men and women.
Then she spoke about the grand gathering in Paris on July 9, for all members and supporters of the Iranian Resistance. It will be attended by world leaders, policy makers, journalists and religious leaders.
She said: “I would urge as many people as possible to attend that event.”
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NCRI’s Perviz Khazaii: West must make any trade ties with Iran regime conditional on improvements in human rights

 
Despite hope by some in the West that Hassan Rouhani’s presidency would herald an era of moderation and reform in Iran, there have been over 2,400 executions in Iran in just under three years that he has been in office, writes Perviz Khazaii, the representative of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) in Nordic countries.

Writing in The Diplomat on Wednesday, Mr. Khazaii said:

“Victims include political dissidents, most notably the activists of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran. In a report on March 10, 2016, Ahmed Shaheed, the UN special rapporteur for human rights in Iran, said that executions in Iran had surged to nearly 1,000 in 2015, the highest level in more than a quarter-century. The number of executions in 2015 was roughly double the number executed in 2010 and 10 times as many as were executed in 2005. Amnesty International underscored in its annual report that Iran has the highest number of executions per capita.

This trend continues. The Iranian regime carried out at least 21 hangings in a 48-hour period in the second week of May.

Iran is likely the biggest executor of juvenile offenders. And executions of ethnic and religious minorities have increased dramatically.

Meanwhile, those who are not put to death may be subject to other cruel punishments. Last August, a prisoner in Mashhad had his right hand and left foot amputated as others were forced to watch.

Violent punishments are not confined to Iran’s prisons, either. For instance, in October 2014, gangs affiliated with the regime carried out acid attacks on at least 25 Iranian women and girls who were regarded as being improperly veiled or otherwise in violation of religious norms.

This sort of enforcement of the regime’s ruling ideology has also motivated a massive, ongoing crackdown on activists, writers, bloggers, and artists. This has helped Iran to secure its title as the largest jailer of journalists in the Middle East.

In short, the human rights situation is deteriorating at a fast pace.

Tehran’s nefarious conduct is not limited by the country’s borders. Day by day, Iran is expanding its involvement in the Syrian civil war. It is now evident that if it were not for the Iranian regime’s all-out support for Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad, he would have been overthrown long ago. The Iranian regime is thus the main cause of continuing carnage in Syria.

The Revolutionary Guards have now dispatched a conglomerate of more than 70,000 troops on the ground, consisting of 10,000 notorious Quds Force members, and tens of thousands of foot-soldiers and mercenaries from Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon, and Pakistan. Tehran is so caught in the Syrian quagmire that a brigade of Iran’s regular army was recently dispatched to Syria as well.

On May 13 Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif heaped praise on the notorious terror group Hezbollah’s top military commander in Syria, who died in a Damascus explosion.

‘I express my condolences on the martyrdom of the great holy fighter Mustafa Badreddine who was full of spirit and heroism in defending the righteous values of Islam and the combatant people of Lebanon,’ Zarif said in a message to Hezbollah leaders. This followed Zarif’s previous acts such as laying a wreath at the grave of Imad Mughniyah, the former military commander and head of the terror apparatus of Hezbollah, in 2014. Heaping such praises on notorious international terrorists clearly shows that Zarif regards terrorism as a state tool.

I am no stranger to diplomatic relations. I was one of three senior Iranian diplomats who resigned from our ambassadorships in protest against an unbridled wave of executions in Iran in the early 1980s and joined the National Council of Resistance of Iran, led by Mrs. Maryam Rajavi. Doing so came at great personal cost. Two of us were gunned down in broad daylight in Geneva and in Rome by terrorists dispatched from Tehran, the first in 1990 and the second in 1993. I am the sole survivor.

Despite the persistent danger, I remain active in the NCRI to this day. On July 9, I will travel to Paris to take part in the organization’s ‘Free Iran’ rally, which is expected to draw tens of thousands of people, comprised not only of Iranian exiles but also their supporters from the governments and activist communities of their many host countries to highlight Tehran’s nefarious conduct at home and abroad, calling for a new policy that sides with the Iranian people and their desire for freedom.

Recent Western policies that flirt with appeasement and neglect human rights, putting trade agreements and expanded relations ahead of such issues is totally unacceptable. Human life and safety cannot be made subordinate to short term economic interests.

It is high time for Western countries to take a stance on the dreadful human rights situation in Iran and make any improvement of relations with Tehran and any trade ties conditional upon improvement of the human rights situation in Iran, including an immediate halt to executions in that country.”

Perviz Khazaii is the former Ambassador of Iran in Sweden and Norway and the representative of the National Council of Resistance of Iran in Nordic countries.
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British politicians debate the human rights situation in Iran


NCRI - The United Kingdom’s House of Commons held a debate on Tuesday, June 28, on the human rights situation in Iran. The British Parliamentarians discussed the lack of progress on the matter since last year’s nuclear deal.

Dr Matthew Offord, the Conservative MP for Hendon, said: “I regretted Her Majesty’s Government’s decision to decouple Iran’s human rights abuses and support for terrorism from the nuclear negotiations. I believe that that was a lost opportunity, and that doing so sent the wrong message to Iran.”

In fact, the suppression of free speech and political dissidence has risen with a wave of arrests of human rights activists, union leaders, opposition supporters and journalists. They were held on bogus national security claims and some still remain in prison, where they are subject to torture.

The MPs discussed the fate of political prisoners like Jafar Azmizadeh, who has been on hunger strike for more than two months, Narges Mohammadi, who has been denied access to her medication, and Saleh Kohandel, who has been tortured and at times kept in solitary confinement over the past nine years simply for supporting the main Iranian opposition group People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI or MEK).

The execution rate in Iran has also increased rapidly during the course of Hassan Rouhani’s presidency, the MPs pointed out. An estimated 2,400 people (including women and minors) have been executed by the regime in just three years; in 2015 alone, the UN estimates that there were almost 1,000 people put to death by the state.

Mike Freer, the Conservative MP for Finchley and Golders Green, said: “Many of us were encouraged to support the lifting of sanctions in order to see a thaw in the repression of the regime. Given the acceleration in the use of the death penalty, the continued persecution of women and minorities, and the crushing of the opposition…we have been duped.”

Sir Roger Gale, Conservative MP for North Thanet, said that the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) and the People’s Mujahedin Organisation of Iran (PMOI) ought to receive international support in their campaign to overthrow the regime.

The MPs quoted Amnesty International’s former deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa programme, Said Boumedouha, who said that the “staggering execution toll” painted a “sinister” picture of the state and accused them of carrying out “premeditated, judicially-sanctioned killings on a mass scale.”

Boumedouha made that speech in July 2015, but the MPs said that nothing much had changed in the time since the nuclear deal was passed.

In fact, it’s highly suspected that the money raised through the nuclear deal will fund the Iranian regime’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), who were designated as a terrorist organisation by the U.S.

Margaret Ferrier and Dr Philippa Whitford, the SNP MPs from Rutherglen and Hamilton West, and Central Ayrshire, respectively, reminded the Parliament of the harsh realities for women and girls in Iran; women can be lashed for not wearing the hijab correctly, women can be denied food, accommodation or money if they do not perform marital duties and girls as young as nine can be forced into marriage with full-grown adult men.

Dr. Offord rejects the idea that human rights abuses are the result of hardliners as it implies that Rouhani is unable to stop them.

He said: “Neither Rouhani nor his Government have ever publicly condemned and distanced themselves from executions and the use of public hanging. On the contrary, Rouhani has explicitly supported the use of the death penalty. “

A Free Iran rally will be held on July 9, in Paris, attended by politicians, world leaders and the supporters of the Iranian opposition PMOI.

Mr Mark Williams, a Liberal Democrat MP from Ceredigion in Wales said that he, like Dr. Offord, has "attended the annual gatherings in Paris sponsored by the National Council of Resistance of Iran."

"At those meetings there are always many opportunities to talk to Iranian exiles from around the world. Perhaps 100,000 people go to those gatherings whose families have direct experience of human rights violations. All too often they have been denied the opportunity to communicate with family at home in Iran, for fear of repercussions; and, indeed, we meet people who have experienced persecution themselves."

"Our approach to Iran should include an active and direct dialogue with opposition groups committed to democratic change and the most basic human rights that should be common to any civilised society. ... People understand that the PMOI and Madam [Maryam] Rajavi are fighters for democratic change. That is what she has said, and it is reinforced by the 10-point programme we have heard about," he added.
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Hendon MP to discuss Iran’s human rights policy at House of Commons


A NEW initiative on Iran policy will be discussed by MP’s at the House of Commons.

Hendon MP Matthew Offord will join UK MPs from both the Houses of Parliament and the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) for a conference tomorrow (June 30).

They will present a set of specific recommendations to the UK government.

These recommendations include addressing the deteriorating human rights situation in Iran, Tehran's continued destabilising role in the region and its sponsor of Islamic fundamentalism and terrorism, especially in the post-nuclear deal era.
http://www.thisislocallondon.co.uk/news/14587800.Hendon_MP_to_discuss_Iran___s_human_rights_policy_at_House_of_Commons/
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Time to Act on Iran’s Human Rights Abuses


Throughout the three years of Hassan Rouhani’s presidency, some in the West have maintained hope that it would herald an era of moderation and reform in Iran. Subsequent to the nuclear deal between Iran and the P5+1, this sentiment was further accentuated by the same people.  This is an opportune time to fact check.

There have been over 2,400 executions in Iran in just under three years. Victims include political dissidents, most notably the activists of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran. In a report on March 10, 2016, Ahmed Shaheed, the UN special rapporteur for human rights in Iran, said that executions in Iran had surged to nearly 1,000 in 2015, the highest level in more than a quarter-century. The number of executions in 2015 was roughly double the number executed in 2010 and 10 times as many as were executed in 2005. Amnesty International underscored in its annual report that Iran has the highest number of executions per capita.

This trend continues. The Iranian regime carried out at least 21 hangings in a 48-hour period in the second week of May.

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Iran is likely the biggest executor of juvenile offenders. And executions of ethnic and religious minorities have increased dramatically.

Meanwhile, those who are not put to death may be subject to other cruel punishments. Last August, a prisoner in Mashhad had his right hand and left foot amputated as others were forced to watch.

Violent punishments are not confined to Iran’s prisons, either. For instance, in October 2014, gangs affiliated with the regime carried out acid attacks on at least 25 Iranian women and girls who were regarded as being improperly veiled or otherwise in violation of religious norms.

This sort of enforcement of the regime’s ruling ideology has also motivated a massive, ongoing crackdown on activists, writers, bloggers, and artists. This has helped Iran to secure its title as the largest jailer of journalists in the Middle East.

In short, the human rights situation is deteriorating at a fast pace.

Tehran’s nefarious conduct is not limited by the country’s borders. Day by day, Iran is expanding its involvement in the Syrian civil war. It is now evident that if it were not for the Iranian regime’s all-out support for Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad, he would have been overthrown long ago. The Iranian regime is thus the main cause of continuing carnage in Syria.

The Revolutionary Guards have now dispatched a conglomerate of more than 70,000 troops on the ground, consisting of 10,000 notorious Quds Force members, and tens of thousands of foot-soldiers and mercenaries from Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon, and Pakistan. Tehran is so caught in the Syrian quagmire that a brigade of Iran’s regular army was recently dispatched to Syria as well.

On May 13 Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif heaped praise on the notorious terror group Hezbollah’s top military commander in Syria, who died in a Damascus explosion.

“I express my condolences on the martyrdom of the great holy fighter Mustafa Badreddine who was full of spirit and heroism in defending the righteous values of Islam and the combatant people of Lebanon,” Zarif said in a message to Hezbollah leaders. This followed Zarif’s previous acts such as laying a wreath at the grave of Imad Mughniyah, the former military commander and head of the terror apparatus of Hezbollah, in 2014. Heaping such praises on notorious international terrorists clearly shows that Zarif regards terrorism as a state tool.

I am no stranger to diplomatic relations. I was one of three senior Iranian diplomats who resigned from our ambassadorships in protest against an unbridled wave of executions in Iran in the early 1980s and joined the National Council of Resistance of Iran, led by Mrs. Maryam Rajavi. Doing so came at great personal cost. Two of us were gunned down in broad daylight in Geneva and in Rome by terrorists dispatched from Tehran, the first in 1990 and the second in 1993. I am the sole survivor.

Despite the persistent danger, I remain active in the NCRI to this day. On July 9, I will travel to Paris to take part in the organization’s “Free Iran” rally, which is expected to draw tens of thousands of people, comprised not only of Iranian exiles but also their supporters from the governments and activist communities of their many host countries to highlight Tehran’s nefarious conduct at home and abroad, calling for a new policy that sides with the Iranian people and their desire for freedom.

Recent Western policies that flirt with appeasement and neglect human rights, putting trade agreements and expanded relations ahead of such issues is totally unacceptable. Human life and safety cannot be made subordinate to short term economic interests.

It is high time for Western countries to take a stance on the dreadful human rights situation in Iran and make any improvement of relations with Tehran and any trade ties conditional upon improvement of the human rights situation in Iran, including an immediate halt to executions in that country.

Perviz Khazaii is the former Ambassador of Iran in Sweden and Norway and the representative of the National Council of Resistance of Iran in Nordic countries.

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