Sunday, July 8, 2007

Iran Countdown: “It is increasingly dangerous.”

Below is the latest Bush policy on Iran: “It is increasingly dangerous”. Note that when Condi Rice is asked if Cheney agrees with her diplomatic approach to Iran’s “threat,” she doesn’t give a straight answer. Why the coyness? We need to know more about precisely what Cheney is arguing and how the internal debate is unfolding. The word in the State Department, as neo-con ideologue and ex-diplomat John Bolton contended recently, is that Rice’s influence is ascendant in the administration’s foreign policy. Cheney is losing influence by the day, including with Bush. As I see it from here, the Veep nonetheless still manages to keep the military option on Bush’s desk. As I blogged recently, the next 18 months are very important to watch. Don’t assume that because Iraq hasn’t gone so well, Bush won’t dream of touching Iran.

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Posted by Editors at 17:46:20 | Permalink | No Comments »

Reformists Sound Alarm About Forthcoming Elections

Tehran-based journalist Mohammad Sadeq Javadihesar told Radio Farda recently that Iranian reformist and centrist political forces are concerned about the country’s upcoming parliamentary elections, scheduled for March 2008. They worry that the conservatives — and especially the government of President Mahmud Ahmadinejad and the Guardians Council, the key electoral supervisory and arbitrating body whose head is an outspoken admirer of the president — will make the participation of reformist aspirants as difficult as possible in order to ensure another conservative-dominated legislature.

These concerns are reinforced by a more belligerent attitude toward government critics by Ahmadinejad’s ministers and supporters in recent weeks. Javadihesar told Radio Farda on July 2 that such concerns were recently voiced by Expediency Council Chairman Ali Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani during a meeting with members of the National Trust Party, of which Javadihesar is a member. Former President Rafsanjani has increasingly become an informal figurehead for a front of reformists, centrists, and government critics over the past two years. Rafsanjani told National Trust members on July 1 that any moves that undermine election participation — meaning extensive disqualifications that ultimately reduce the choice of candidates — would damage the republic, Javadihesar said. Rafsanjani warned against moves he described as illegal or barely legal, referring perhaps to electoral supervisors’ legal interpretations that benefit conservative candidates either directly or by hindering reformists. Javadihesar referred to this selective application of the law in a separate interview with ILNA. He asked why the liberal Freedom Movement of Iran was not allowed to field candidates while the leftist- reformist Militant Clerics Assembly was when both lack formal party permits from the Interior Ministry. He said a “subjective” approach to elections will “seriously harm” public perceptions of Iran’s political processes. Javadihesar said reformists and government critics have no electoral assets other than public support and must make sure election officials respect the law. He added, however, that “conservatives will certainly not agree to healthy elections, and will use all means to realize their goals.” He told ILNA that the pre-election vetting process is not transparent and the right-wing faction controls all stages of the process from examining candidacies to counting the votes. That may be why, he stated, conservatives no longer emphasize competitiveness in elections as they used to. These concerns come at a time when officials, including government spokesman Gholamhussein Elham and Minister of Culture Mohammad Hussein Saffar-Husseini, have engaged in rare, but not unprecedented, verbal attacks on reformists and preceding administrations, accusing them of being inefficient, materialistic, and indifferent to revolutionary values. An editorial in the reformist “Aftab-i Yazd” on July 1 cited Ahmadinejad’s recent comments at a gathering of state officials, when he denounced the “billions” an unnamed politician had amassed in the 27-28 years he had been in office. The daily observed that the president’s tirades against corruption were not unusual but that focusing on one person this way was notable. Aside from Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, only one man had been in office in one form or another throughout the decades since the 1979 revolution — Rafsanjani, and it seems likely that Ahmadinejad was referring to him. Rafsanjani has intermittently faced accusations that he allowed or presided over corruption when president in the 1990s. More disconcerting remarks came during Tehran’s Friday prayers on June 29. Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, the Guardians Council secretary, recalled a conversation a friend had had with a taxi driver during the 2005 presidential election campaign. The taxi driver said his dead mother had told him in a dream that he should vote for Ahmadinejad. The inference was that the forces of “spirituality” or religion favor Ahmadinejad, and this is not the first time the president and the conservatives have linked themselves to religion, or mystical, and pseudo-celestial phenomena. The remarks were not well received by reformists. Former parliament speaker Mehdi Karrubi said on July 1 that the country could not be run on “dreams,” and he asked state officials to keep superstition out of politics. Jannati, reformers must have noted with concern, heads the body whose impartiality is of capital importance in an electoral process it effectively dominates. Such utterances may indicate that the conservatives, especially those sympathizing with the presidential party, have launched a war of words that reformists have said may be intended to discredit government critics and make their later disqualification — as disloyal or suspect elements — easier. Intermittent reports of right-wing disunity and of increasing reformist unity are irrelevant when the main problem reformists could face is mass disqualification before there is any voting. Such fears may explain the reformists’ increasingly moderate political postures and moves toward the “institutional” center and personalities like Rafsanjani and former President Mohammad Khatami, and Karrubi. But the bold statements from the Ahmadinejad camp suggest that even such senior figures are not necessarily protected from the ire and accusations of the radical right, which is now the only faction in Iran unafraid to make such brazen attacks on its rivals. Reformist personalities have been reduced to merely citing instances of political “misconduct, including the public denigration of individual reformists, and asking the Intelligence Ministry to investigate. Reformists recognize that the interpretive prerogatives of the Guardians Council regarding the eligibility of would-be candidates have given that body seemingly impregnable power. As past elections have shown, the council is loath to reverse its decisions — unless directly asked to by Khamenei. When Javadihesar told Radio Farda that reformists and critics must “obligate election authorities to respect the laws,” he expressed more of a wish than a firm intention. he knows that the Guardians Council insists everything it does is legal.

Source: Radio Farda

Posted by Editors at 17:38:22 | Permalink | No Comments »

Iran’s oil output to fall without investment-report

Iran’s oil production capacity will fall by five percent a year without new investment, a senior oil official was quoted on Sunday as saying by the Iran’s student news agency ISNA. Iranian officials have previously put production capacity at a little more than 4 million barrels per day (bpd), with actual output — limited to a quota set by the oil cartel OPEC — running at a little below 4 million bpd.

“At the moment, on average, we produce four million bpd of crude. But without new investment, five percent of this production capacity will be gone every year,” ISNA quoted the managing director of Pars Oil and Gas Company, Akbar Torkan, as saying. Industry experts say sanctions imposed for years by the United States, Iran’s long-time foe, and U.N. sanctions slapped on the country since December in a dispute over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions, are deterring foreign investors. But experts also say that Iran’s windfall earnings as oil prices surge to near record levels have helped it keep production capacity steady using its own resources. A senior Iranian oil official said in May that the world’s fourth biggest oil exporter needed at least $100 billion of foreign cash over the next decade to boost output by 1 million bpd to a target of 5 million bpd.

 

Source: Reuters

Posted by Editors at 16:21:27 | Permalink | No Comments »