The Internal Iranian Struggle in the Aftermath of the Geneva Nuclear Agreement
Rouhani’s charm offensive does not add up to a real change in Iran.
Rouhani’s charm offensive does not add up to a real change in Iran.
Iranian leaders are consistent in their anti-Israel rhetoric, clear about their hostile intentions, and certain of their apocalyptic beliefs. Here are their top anti-Israel statements from 2013, with links to the original source in Persian.
Taner Akçam reminds us in his book The Young Turks’ Crime Against Humanity, that six years ago, a Turkish court sentenced two journalists to a year in jail for using the term, “genocide” to describe “events of 1915.”
On June 3, 2010, Iranian television offered a live broadcast of the mass reception that Israeli Arabs gave Sheikh Raed Salah after he was released from a police investigation. Salah was arrested for participating in the Turkish flotilla that sought to breach the Israeli maritime blockade of Gaza – aboard its most problematic vessel, the Mavi Marmara […]
Iran sees itself coming to the nuclear negotiations from a position of strength.
Last weekend, the International Atomic Energy Agency published one of its regular reports on the status of the Iranian nuclear program.
Iran is not entering the nuclear negotiations out of weakness, but, rather, from a position of strength.
Click to hear the debate June 14, 2013 JOHN HUMPHRYS: I’m joined by Jack Straw, former foreign secretary, and by Dr Dore Gold, former foreign policy advisor to the Israeli Prime Minister. Jack Straw, how should we now be treating, dealing with Iran? JACK STRAW: Well, we should obviously wait for the results of the […]
With a few days remaining before the June 14 presidential elections in Iran, the most fraught, sensitive issue in the campaign concerns Iran’s foreign policy – its relations with the West in general and the nuclear talks in particular.
An increasing number of Egyptians are calling on the army to return to the political scene to replace President Morsi.
Tehran increasingly fears that Azerbaijan is turning into a base for a military attack on its nuclear facilities.
Iran sees the civil war in Syria as a war of survival against a radical Sunni uprising that views Iran and the Shiites as infidels to be annihilated.
It does not appear that Iran intends to give up its nuclear activity; instead, it is waiting for the right moment to “break out.”
On the second anniversary of the civil war in Syria, nothing on the horizon foretells a ceasefire.
Shiite communities around the world represent the infrastructure upon which Iran builds its subversive policies worldwide.