Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Trump administration says it’s putting Iran ‘on notice’ following missile test – Washington Post

The Trump administration said Wednesday it was officially putting Iran on notice that it is paying attention to what it called defiance of nuclear agreements with its test launch of a ballistic missile.

The launch, along with Tuesdays attack by Houthi rebels on a Saudi warship off the coast of Yemen, underscore what should have been clear to the international community all along about Irans destabilizing behavior across the Middle East, said Michael T. Flynn, President Trumps national security adviser.

Flynn read the Iran statement at the regular White House press briefing and did not take questions.

In his first media appearance since the inauguration, Flynn recalled that Trump during his campaign criticized the nuclear deal negotiated by the Obama administration with world powers, Iran and the United Nations as being weak and ineffective.

Instead of being thankful to the United States for these agreements, he said, Iran now feels emboldened. The brief statement, calling the missile launch provocative, did not outline any actions the administration intends to take.

Irans launch Sunday of a medium-range Khorramshahr missile ended in failure, with the missile reportedly traveling about 600 miles before exploding in the air.

The United States called for an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council. Following the Tuesday session, Nikki Haley, the new U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said the world should be alarmed by the test and called for unspecified U.N. action.

In a Tehran news conference Tuesday, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif did not confirm the launch but said that the missile issue is not part of the nuclear deal. Iranian missiles are not designed for the capability of carrying a nuclear warhead, he said. Our ballistic missile was designed to carry a normal warhead in the field of legitimate defense.

The agreement, which took effect a year ago, prohibits development of ballistic missiles as part of a nuclear weapons program that the accord was designed to prevent. Differences of opinion on whether the launch is a violation of the agreement rest on interpretation of the strength of the nuclear deal and of Irans intentions.

Although a number of Republican presidential primary candidates, and some members of Congress, have called for tearing up the agreement, Trump has not taken that position. He has called it a bad deal and said his administration would review it to determine whether it should be renegotiated.

U.S. partners in the negotiations, including Britain, France, Germany, China and Russia, have warned against a renegotiation of the deal, under which severe restrictions on a nuclear program Iran insisted was solely for energy production were put in place in exchange for the lifting of nuclear-related U.S. and international sanctions.

Flynn also referenced the Saudi warship that was attacked Tuesday by Houthi rebels in Yemen. A rebel suicide boat exploded after striking the ship, which was patrolling off the Yemeni coast. Two Saudi sailors were killed.

Saudi Arabia is fighting Yemeni rebels from the Houthi tribe who have taken over broad swaths of the neighboring country. Its actions include offshore naval patrols to intercept what it has said are Iranian arms supplies to the rebels.

Read more here:
Trump administration says it's putting Iran 'on notice' following missile test - Washington Post

Trump and the Saudi king discuss major pact to confront Iran – Salon

This article originally appeared on AlterNet.

President Donald Trump and the monarch of the repressive Saudi regime spoke on the phone for more than an hour on Sunday. According to a White Housestatement,The two leaders reaffirmed the longstanding friendship and strategic partnership between the United States and Saudi Arabia.

The official Saudi Press Agencyreportedthat Trump and Saudi King Salman stressed the depth and strength of the strategic relations between the two countries.

The two agreed to greater military intervention in the Middle East, and the creation of so-called safe zones in Syria and Yemen. The details of how such zones would be created are not clear, but if they were instituted, it would likely take direct U.S.military involvement.

Hillary Clinton ran her 2016 presidential campaign against Trump on a pledge to create a safe zone in Syria, though she had previously acknowledged that instituting a safe zone could kill a lot of Syrians and lead to American and NATO involvement where you take a lot of civilians.

Reutersreported, citing a senior Saudi source, that the two leaders agreed to step up counter-terrorism and military cooperation and enhance economic cooperation.

The White House said Trump and Saudi King Salman also agreed on the importance of strengthening joint efforts to fight the spread of radical Islamic terrorism.

Saudi Arabia, a close U.S. ally since the 1930s, is a theocratic absolute monarchy that brutally represses all internal dissent, beheads nonviolent protesters and funds and spreads extremist Islamismthroughout the globe. A leaked 2014 email from Hillary Clinton revealed,citingWestern intelligence sources, that the U.S.-backed regimes in Saudi Arabia and Qatar supported the genocidalmilitant group ISIS.

Saudi Arabia also has the worlds second-largest oil reserves, plays a leading role in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), and has been offered more than $115 billion inweapons dealsby the U.S. government in the past eight years. U.S. arms sales to Saudi Arabia continue uninterruptedunder Trump.

While agreeing on Middle East policy, Trump and King Salman took a hard line against Iran, Saudi Arabias arch nemesis. The White House said they agreed to address Irans supposed destabilizing regional activities. Reuters reported, according to the Saudi source, that, Trump agreed with Riyadhs suspicion of what it sees as Tehrans growing influence in the Arab world.

Trumps administration is full ofanti-Iran hawks.

Saudi Arabia, which speaks of itself as the home of Islam, has remained silent on Trumps extremist anti-Muslim policy, while massive protests have errupted throughout the U.S. and the world. Iranians are the group most affected by Trumps immigration ban, whereas Saudis are not targeted.

The Saudi Press Agency summarized the discussion, writing, The views of the two leaders were identical on the files that were discussed during the call, including the fight against terrorism, extremism, their finance, formulating the appropriate mechanisms for that, and confronting those who seek to undermine security and stability in the region and interfere in the internal affairs of other states.

The White House noted that President Trump likewise voiced support for the Kingdoms Vision 2030 economic program, a plan to revamp the Saudi economy that includes few political reforms and does not guarantee equal rights for women, who face systematic subjugation.

Both leaders expressed a desire to explore additional steps to strengthen bilateral economic and energy cooperation, the White House statement added.

The Saudi Press Agency said the two leaders invited each other to visit their respective countries.

See the article here:
Trump and the Saudi king discuss major pact to confront Iran - Salon

Royce: Iran prepping smart bomb attacks on Jerusalem – Washington Examiner (blog)

Iranian leaders are working to give a terrorist proxy the ability to launch guided missiles at Israel's most important secular and religious sites, according to a top Republican.

"What they intend to do is transfer a GPS capability to what right now are dumb rockets and dumb missiles," House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce said Wednesday during an event with the Israel Project. "If they succeed in this, they can pick the tallest buildings in Tel Aviv, the main landmarks in Jerusalem, the airport, the ships in the harbor."

That warning punctuated Royce's call for President Trump to prepare to reverse some of the economic concessions that the Obama administration made while negotiating the Iran nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. And the crackdown has bipartisan support, as Royce's Democratic counterpart on the committee emphasized throughout the panel.

"I hope that the new administration will slap sanctions on them and they'll certainly have my support if they decide to do it," said New York Rep. Eliot Engel, the ranking member on the Foreign Affairs Committee.

Subscribe today to get intelligence and analysis on defense and national security issues in your Inbox each weekday morning from veteran journalists Jamie McIntyre and Jacqueline Klimas.

Sorry, there was a problem processing your email signup. Please try again later.

Processing...

Thank you for signing up for the Daily on Defense newsletter. You should receive your first issue soon!

Engel and Royce predicted that Israel would have to go to war in Lebanon against Hezbollah, a terrorist group funded by Iran, and reiterated that President Obama miscalculated by doing a deal with the regime. "I think from day one [of the talks] that they played us like a fiddle," Engel said of Iran.

But Engel cautioned against walking away from the agreement entirely, because Iran has already received the infusion of cash it sought from the agreement. "If we were to simply walk out of the deal now, they'd have all this money without really doing anything and I don't think we should let them off the hook," he said.

That requires swift condemnation of Iranian support for terrorists and other destabilizing activities, according to the lawmakers. The regime tested a ballistic missile over the weekend, which the lawmakers called a violation of their obligations under the terms of the nuclear deal.

Royce suggested that Trump should warn Iran that if it conducts another test, the Treasury Department will bar international banks from conducting dollar transactions with the regime. And a message should be sent to international companies that hope to do business in Iran.

"If there's another test, all you companies out there in Europe and beyond know that we have a know your customer law in the United States," Royce said. "And guess what would be out of compliance with know your customer? Any conduct with the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps."

Also from the Washington Examiner

Payments would rise an average of 0.25 percent for plans in the private healthcare program.

02/01/17 5:01 PM

The bipartisanship of the panel was diluted only by Engel's worry that Trump might not recognize Russian President Vladimir Putin as a threat to the United States and a supporter of Iran.

"They're all in it together," Engel said. "Russia and Iran have collaborated, it's my belief that they collaborated all during the negotiations on the JCPOA [nuclear deal] and I think that that's the old line of the axis of evil, I think this is the axis of evil today. And we have to confront it."

Top Story

President Trump and his daughter Ivanka departed the White House for Dover Air Force Base in Delaware Wednesday afternoon to witness the arrival of Chief Petty Officer William "Ryan" Owens, who was killed during an intelligence gathering raid in Yemen last weekend.

Owens, a member of the Navy's SEAL Team Six, was killed in a clandestine raid at an al Qaeda facility that Trump had authorized early Sunday morning. The operation left four additional U.S. service members wounded and marked the first military fatality under the new administration.

Trump, who was to be joined by Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., upon arriving at Dover, had a "very somber and lengthy" conversation with Owens' family on Tuesday.

02/01/17 3:38 PM

Visit link:
Royce: Iran prepping smart bomb attacks on Jerusalem - Washington Examiner (blog)

Reported Missile Launch Is Early Test For Trump Administration’s Approach To Iran – NPR

Missiles on display in northern Tehran in 2014. A reported missile test by Iran on Sunday has led some American officials to accuse the country of violating a U.N. resolution that accompanied the 2015 nuclear deal. Atta Kenare/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

Missiles on display in northern Tehran in 2014. A reported missile test by Iran on Sunday has led some American officials to accuse the country of violating a U.N. resolution that accompanied the 2015 nuclear deal.

U.S. officials say Iran test-fired a ballistic missile on Sunday, the first known test since President Trump took office which could provide an early assessment of how the new administration will interpret and enforce the terms of the international deal to curb Iran's nuclear weapons capabilities.

In a statement to the media on Monday, Iran's foreign minister insisted that Iran's missile program is not part of the nuclear agreement, even as he declined to confirm or deny the missile test. NPR's Peter Kenyon reported that Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad-Zarif said the missile program is purely defensive.

Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, released a statement calling the test a violation of a U.N. Security Council resolution passed as a side agreement to the 2015 nuclear deal. The statement did not provide any additional information on the reported test, instead linking to a Fox News article quoting unnamed U.S. officials.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer said Monday that he did not know the "exact nature" of the test, including the type of missile used.

On Monday, the U.S. mission to the United Nations wrote in a statement, "In light of Iran's January 29 launch of a medium-range ballistic missile, the United States has requested urgent consultations of the Security Council," AFP reported.

The meeting is expected to take place Tuesday afternoon, NPR's Michele Kelemen reports.

The nuclear deal between Iran and six countries, including the U.S., was reached in July 2015, and required Iran to scale back its nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions.

The specific issue of ballistic missile tests came up during the nuclear negotiations. A U.N. Security Council resolution in 2010 had expressly prohibited Iran from "any activity related to ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons, including launches."

In the final days before the nuclear deal was reached, the biggest remaining obstacle was Iran's desire to have U.N. weapons and missile sanctions rolled back, as The Two-Way reported.

Then-Secretary of State John Kerry eventually agreed to a missile-specific side agreement to the nuclear accord. In place of an outright prohibition on missile tests, the agreement stated that Iran was "called upon not to undertake any activity related to ballistic missiles designed to be capable of delivering nuclear weapons, including launches using such ballistic missile technology."

A recently released status report on the nuclear deal and missile program from the International Crisis Group think-tank described the missile language as "non-binding," and concluded:

"Controversy and concerns over issues outside the nuclear accord, mainly Iran's growing regional posture and ballistic-missile tests, have often overshadowed that the [nuclear accord's] two key components restricting and rigorously monitoring Iran's nuclear program and sanctions relief are working and delivering concrete results."

Acting State Department spokesman Mark Toner told The Associated Press on Monday that the U.S. was looking into whether Sunday's reported missile test violated the side agreement, and that the U.S. would "hold Iran accountable" if it did.

The disagreement about what is and isn't allowed under the agreement cuts both ways. After the nuclear deal lifted many sanctions on Iran last year, the U.S. government imposed new sanctions specifically targeting the country's ballistic missile program, as we reported.

"Iran and the U.S. disagree over whether such penalties violate the nuclear accord," NPR's Camila Domonoske reported at the time. Iranian officials warned the U.S. that financial penalties would be viewed by Iran's leader as a violation of the nuclear deal, but U.S. officials contended that non-nuclear missile program sanctions fell outside the accord.

President Trump has attacked the nuclear deal. Addressing the pro-Israel group AIPAC in March during the presidential campaign, he said, "My No. 1 priority is to dismantle the disastrous deal with Iran."

Later, however, Trump advocated for renegotiating some parts of the deal or treating it as he would a bad business contract, "policing that contract so tough that they don't have a chance," Peter Kenyon reported last fall.

See the article here:
Reported Missile Launch Is Early Test For Trump Administration's Approach To Iran - NPR

Iran Warns US Not to Escalate Missile Dispute – New York Times


New York Times
Iran Warns US Not to Escalate Missile Dispute
New York Times
The warning, made by Iran's foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, came a day after American and Israeli officials accused Iran of having conducted a missile test that they said had violated a United Nations Security Council resolution. The United ...
Iran will not use ballistic missiles to attack any country: foreign ministerReuters
Trump-Travel Ban-The LatestYahoo News
Iran will not use ballistic missiles to attack any country, says country's foreign ministerEconomic Times
Aljazeera.com -Press TV -The Times of Israel
all 220 news articles »

Read more here:
Iran Warns US Not to Escalate Missile Dispute - New York Times