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Iraq
Iranian clout seen growing over Iraq
2012-09-26
After years of growing influence, a new sign of Iran’s presence in Iraq has hit the streets. Thousands of signs, that is, depicting Iran’s supreme leader gently smiling to a population once mobilised against the Islamic Republic in eight years of war.

The campaign underscores widespread doubts over just how independent Iraq and its population can remain from its eastern neighbour, now that US troops have left the country.

The posters of Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei first appeared in at least six neighbourhoods in Baghdad and across Iraq’s south in August, as part of an annual pro-Palestinian observance started years ago by Iran. They have conspicuously remained up since then.

“When I see these pictures, I feel I am in Teheran, not Baghdad,” said Asim Salman, 44, an owner of a Baghdad cafe. “Authorities must remove these posters, which make us angry.”

In Basra, located 550 km south of the capital, they hang near donation boxes decorated with scripts in both countries’ languages — Arabic and Farsi.

One such militia, Asaib Ahl Al Haq, even boasted that it launched the poster campaign, part of a trend that’s chipping away at nearly a decade’s worth of US-led efforts to bring a Western-style democracy here. Sheik Ali Al Zaidi, a senior official in the militia, said they distributed some 20,000 posters of Khamenei across Iraq. He said Khamenei “enjoys public support all over the world” including Iraq, where he “is hailed as a political and religious leader.”

Asaib Ahl Al Haq, or Band of the People of Righteousness, carried out deadly attacks against US troops before their withdrawal last year. This month, the group threatened US interests in Iraq as part of the backlash over a blasphemous film.

Iraqi and US intelligence officials have estimated that Iran sends the militia about $5 million in cash and weapons each month. The officials believe there are fewer than 1,000 Asaib Ahl Al Haq militiamen, and that their leaders cower live in Iran.

Iran’s clout with Iraq’s Shias picked up after Saddam Hussein’s fall from power in 2003, and, in many ways, accelerated since the US military pulled out. Iran has backed at least three militias in Iraq with weapons, training and millions of dollars in funding. Billion-dollar trade pacts have emerged between Teheran and Baghdad, and Iran has opened at least two banks in Iraq that are blacklisted by the United States.

Religious ties also have been renewed, with thousands of Iranian pilgrims visiting holy sites in Iraq daily, including in Najaf, where Iranian rials are as common a currency as Iraqi dinars, and Farsi is easily understood. The posters may reflect a push among some groups for a clerical system similar to Iran’s. Teheran is widely believed to be lobbying for a member of its ruling theocracy, Grand Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, to succeed Iraq’s 81-year-old spiritual leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali Al Sistani.

Ever since the ouster of Saddam’s regime, political leaders in Iraq have sought to rebuild and strengthen relations with Iran, which has responded in kind. Teheran has not been shy about wielding its influence. It was at Iran’s urging that cleric Muqtada Al Sadr grudgingly threw his political support behind longtime foe Nouri Al Maliki, allowing him to remain prime minister in 2010 after falling short in national elections.

In return, Al Maliki last year all but ignored Iranian military incursions on Kurdish lands in northern Iraq. The government also has delayed, and in Al Sadr’s case, quashed, arrest warrants on militants backed by Iranian forces and financiers. Still, even some Iraqis, like the cleric Al Sadr and the cafe owner Salman, advocate retaining strong Iraqi nationalism and their Arab identity.

Iraqi government spokesman Ali Al Dabbagh condemned the Khamenei posters and said they could add to the already-strained political unrest in the country.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Muhammad Ali joins two mothers in asking Iran to free their sons
2011-05-25
With Muhammad Ali at their side, the mothers of hikers Josh Fattal and Shane Bauer on Tuesday called upon Iran to release their sons after 22 months in captivity. Under a banner with the words "662 Days Without Freedom," Laura Fattal and Bauer's mother, Cindy Hickey, stood with the boxing icon and American Muslim leaders to stress the pair's innocence. They face trial on charges of entering Iran illegally for espionage.

Their plight brought Ali to Washington from his home in Arizona. With his speech impeded by Parkinson's disease, his wife, Lonnie, spoke for him. The hikers reminded her husband of himself as a young man, "a citizen of the world" with a thirst for knowledge of other cultures, she said.

"After reading about Shane and Josh, he felt . . . these were two young men - who regardless of what international policy says, regardless of what politics says - wanted to experience the world, wanted to experience other cultures, wanted to experience other people," she said. ". . . That's a good thing."

On Tuesday, an official from the Iranian Foreign Ministry said that calling the pair "hikers" was a "joke," and suggested their prosecution would proceed. Laura Fattal said, "Iran's indecision and delay have taken a terrible toll - on them and on us."

On Sunday, the two were allowed five-minute phone calls home - for the first time since Nov. 27, and third since their arrest. Josh Fattal told his father he was "honored" Ali had taken up his cause.

The Islamic representatives who joined the mothers - from the Islamic Society of North America, the Muslim American Society Freedom Foundation, the Universal Muslim Association of America, and the Council on American Islamic Relations - sent a letter to Iran's Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei pleading for "compassion and mercy."

"After listening to the families, we believe that these Americans did not seek to cause any problems between the United States and the Muslim world . . . but were in the region for the opposite purpose, to promote dialogue and understanding," they wrote.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran vote seen as referendum on Ahmadinejad
2006-12-16
TEHRAN -- Nineteen months after an upset election victory catapulted him to a controversial role on the world stage, firebrand Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is facing criticism from both the left and right, much of it from Iranians who believe he hasn't delivered on his populist economic promises.

In national elections today, many Iranians view the vote as a referendum on Ahmadinejad's performance. City council races nationwide focus on who can do more to improve people's daily lives, with some candidates vowing to accomplish what they say the president has failed to do. And candidates for a key national assembly of Muslim clergy are clashing over how much power Iran's supreme leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, should wield.

But at both the local and national levels, the races pit supporters of Ahmadinejad against members of the reformist movement, which pushes for democratization within Iran's Islamic government. And in some cases, traditional conservatives have banded together with reformists to oppose Ahmadinejad allies.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran leader condemns US ’stupidity’
2004-05-17
(We shall see who is stupid very soon.)
Iranian Supreme leader Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has condemned what he described as the "stupid" and "shameless" actions of US troops in the Iraqi Shia holy cities of Najaf and Karbala.
This bearded, 7th century looking Shi’ite ’cleric’, Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei , neglected to include Iran’s ongoing infiltration of hard-core jihadists, and their Tehran ordered methods of instigating fire fights with American, British, Italian, Polish and other Coalition troops whose duty is re-establish order, along with assisting in the rebuilding of the nation Saddam & his Ba’ath Party cohorts ruined.

Iran’s dictatorship is fully aware an economically stable Iraq via exporting Iraqi crude oil in huge amounts for needed national revenue, coupled with a higher standard of living (if allowed) will eventually draw the attention of Iran’s dissatisfied population to their own deplorable repressive condition.

The ruling, fanatical, Iranian mullahs have had the population of Iran enslaved since 1979. Since over 50% of Iranian were born after Khomeini was allowed to overthrow the Shah in 1979 the younger people of ’Persia’ want the same freedoms other youth have in western nations.

The Iranian ’leaders’ of world-wide jihad revolution are on a time table and time is not on their side much longer.

He said the abuse of prisoners in Iraq showed that the US had merely taken the place of Saddam Hussein, and that it was time for them to leave the "bog of their own making". The following are excerpts from his remarks, delivered in a speech to theology students and broadcast by Iranian radio:

No Muslim, particularly a Shia, can remain calm in the face of the recent events in Najaf and Karbala...

[The US soldiers] have taken their tanks and artillery and armed forces to the holy site of Karbala. They have shown disrespect to the sacred dome of the Lord of the Faithful. They have fired bullets at the dome. That is not something that faithful Muslims can tolerate or accept...
We would not want to upset the dear peace loving terrorists, would we? Let them hid their imported weapons in the massive Shi’ite cemeteries, and use mosques as operational bases to murder more Americans and anyone else who is on the jihad hit list....it’s okay Iran, although you export thousands of terrorist trained killers into Iraq, we will just roll over....all of you ....with our tanks!
The Americans have combined stupidity with shamelessness. They are audacious and unrestrained. They are encroaching upon the people’s sanctities and what the people love... Muslim people, particularly Shia - in our own country or in Iraq, in various Iraqi cities or in other parts of the world - will not remain silent at this American encroachment and audacity... They think they can rule Iraq without any difficulty, take Iraq’s oil and humiliate the Iraqi people. What happened at Abu Ghraib prison showed this, and recently it became clear that this has not happened only at Abu Ghraib. It has happened at all, or at least most, American prisons in Iraq...

The president and the gang ruling America say they did not know what was going on. That is how they have apologised. They say they did not know and that they have closed Saddam’s torture chambers... You have not closed Saddam’s torture chambers. You have replaced Saddam... They say they did not know. They are lying, because the Red Cross explicitly declared that it had informed senior army officers and Americans of what was going on a long time ago...

It was wrong for the Americans to go into Iraq. It was wrong for them to stay. Their treatment of the people was wrong. Imposing an American ruler on the people was wrong. Going to Karbala and Najaf was wrong. The things that they did recently were especially wrong. They should realise that the Islamic world, and particularly the Shia world, will not remain silent... They have killed the innocent people of Najaf and Karbala. The have killed dozens of people. The crime that they have committed is the greatest of crimes. The Islamic world condemns it. The Iranian nation condemns it. The world’s Shia condemn it.
Najaf and Karbala??...WOW we did that ..there was not one terrorist in either one of those rat holes..WOW!
The Americans will fail on this path. The more they go along this path, the more they will sink in this bog of their own making... The Americans are trapped. There is nothing they can do. They will fail if they continue along this path, and they will failif they pull out. But continuing will be the greater defeat.
Hey, Mr Shi’ite! If you check your road map you shall notice the only one trapped ...........is you! We have you surrounded on Iran’s southern flank in the Gulf! Eastern and western borders, those are ours too...what options remain? Jump in the Caspian Sea and swim for it? That might work :)
This crumb must have overdosed on his on verbal rubbish!
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