Iran plays new game in US backyard
Russia Today, December 23, 2008, 10:41
Iranian trade agreements and anti-poverty drives across
left-leaning Latin American states kindle US fears of state-sponsored
extremism.
An unlikely force has emerged in the political landscape in South
America - Iran. Political alliances are changing in the U.S.’s backyard:
Iran, Russia and China
are all raising their profiles with
ambitions for a multipolar world.
Last week, Washington was not invited to a 33-country Latin American
and Caribbean summit in Brazil; Cuba, however, was welcomed. During the
summit, 80 companies from the Bolivarian Alternative of the Americas -
Venezuela, Cuba, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Bolivia and Dominica - held a trade
fair in Tehran.
Iran’s uranium enrichment program has led to
pariah status in the U.S. and Europe, as well as UN sanctions. Its
fundamentalist leadership has rejected isolation and prioritized
relationships with the United State’s southern neighbours through
anti-poverty initiatives and anti-U.S. rhetoric.
Speaking from
Tehran last Saturday, Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa - leading his
country’s delegation - called for the two countries “strategic
relations” to develop further. Iran’s Supreme National Security Council
Secretary, Saeed Jalili, stressed the importance of south-south
cooperation among developing countries.
Having defaulted on its
foreign debt this month, Ecuador will lose access to international
credit markets. It will need friendly countries like Iran for financial
support. Correa became president of Ecuador in 2007, the year that
Tehran’s policy of developing ties with left-leaning South American
countries began.
Since then Iran’s closest ally has been
Venezuela. Speaking at the fair in Tehran, Venezuelan Minister of
Industries and Mines Ali Akbar Mehrabian announced that Iran and
Venezuela had signed 200 documents for bilateral cooperation.
The relationship is particularly strong in the construction sector, as
well as the sophisticated area of cars, tractors and ammunition.
Iran’s investment in Venezuela has raised eyebrows in the
international community. There is concern that Iran could use the South
American country to bypass UN sanctions in order to access the
international financial system and purchase high-tech equipment.
Additionally, flights between Tehran and Caracas provide Iran with
primary access to the continent. A U.S. State Department report in April
warned that these flights “were not subject to immigration and customs
controls.” Their concern is the potential movement of terrorists, such
as Hezbollah, supported by the Iranian and Venezuelan governments. The
lack of visa restrictions with Bolivia creates yet another cause for
unease.
Iran now has an embassy in Bolivia and has promised US
$1 billion in aid and investment to its hosts. In return, Bolivia is
moving its only Middle Eastern embassy to Tehran.
Bolivia,
Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua have all supported Iran’s right to enrich
uranium. Even the continent’s economic powerhouse, Brazil, has defended
the controversial program. During a visit to Iran in November, Celso
Amorim, Brazil’s foreign minister stated that ties between the countries
were “a foreign policy priority.”
But not all of South America
is happy with the arrival of the Iranians. Argentina has formerly
accused Iran of masterminding a bomb attack, blamed on Hezbollah, in
1994, which killed 85 people in a Buenos Aires Jewish centre. Tehran and
Hezbollah have consistently denied any involvement in the incident.
Last week, an Argentine judge seized a property owned by a
former Iranian diplomat, who is a suspect in the bombing.
Much
of Iran’s relationship building is based on oil money and the fall in
oil prices may dampen their ambitions. However, they will continue to
develop alliances in the U.S.’s backyard wherever possible.
Jonathan Stibbs for RT
Iran designs stealth aircraft
Russia Today, December 3, 2008, 0:08
Iran has announced it has designed a radar-evading, or ‘stealth’,
aircraft capable of taking out high-value targets without being detected
by hostile radar systems, Press TV reports.
Chief Air Force
Commander Brigadier General Hassan Shah-Safi is quoted as saying the
“stealth’ aircraft was designed by Iranian aerospace experts, and
military researchers are now working on building a small prototype.
He believes the research will be finished by March next year and
then production will begin.
The ‘stealth’ aircraft employs a
combination of features to reduce visibility in both the visual, audio,
infrared and radio frequency (RF) spectra.
The fighter is to be
carefully coated with a secret, radar-absorbent material, as even an air
bubble or a screw not tightened exactly to specifications could result
in a blip on an enemy's radar screen.
The announcement comes
amidst Iran’s persistent tensions with the West over the Islamic
Republic’s controversial nuclear programme. Tehran insists its nuclear
industry is for energy production rather than the manufacture of atomic
weapons.
Washington has labeled Iran a rogue state and claims it
is developing nuclear weapons.
The U.S., UN and EU have all
imposed sanctions on Iran.
Has Iran joined the space race?
Russia Today, November 26, 2008, 18:23
State television in Iran is reporting that the country has
successfully launched its second space rocket. It claims Kavogashgar 2
spent 40 minutes in the lower regions of space before returning to earth
on a parachute.
In February Tehran unveiled its first home-grown
satellite, called Hope. It also inaugurated its first space centre.
Iran has long held ambitions of joining the elite group of nations
with a space programme.
Today’s alleged launch will
generate some unease among world leaders who are already concerned about
Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.
number of experiments were conducted during Wednesday’s launch,
mainly to check the data retrieval systems the interaction of Iranian
scientists, Iranian sources said.
The Kavoshgar-1 test took
place in February 2008. The rocked allegedly reached an altitude of 200
kilometers, proving that Iran has the technology to reach space.
Iran has always emphasized that its space programme has a peaceful
character.
Despite these affirmations, the U.S. and Israel in
particular have repeatedly expressed concerns over Iranian space
ambitions.
The US cites the alleged Iranian threat as the main
reason it wants a missile defence shield in Eastern Europe.