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Iran Shahram Amiri Tehran Pakistan Saudi Arabia Washington لیبل والی اشاعتیں دکھا رہا ہے۔ سبھی اشاعتیں دکھائیں
Iran Shahram Amiri Tehran Pakistan Saudi Arabia Washington لیبل والی اشاعتیں دکھا رہا ہے۔ سبھی اشاعتیں دکھائیں

منگل، 26 اکتوبر، 2010

The U.S.-Saudi military deal

The US plan to sell 60 billion $ worth of military equipment to Saudi Arabia will not contribute to peace and security in the Middle East. 

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By Dr. Chandra Muzaffar.

The biggest arms deal ever in history, it provides for the sale of jetfighters and helicopters to oil-rich Saudi Arabia over a period of 15 to 20 years. U.S. officials have stated that it will enhance the security of its key allies in the region, especially in the context of the alleged threat from Iran. The Saudis, according to Pentagon sources, are worried about Iran’s missile arsenal.

Independent political analysts, however, do not regard Iran as a threat to its Arab neighbors. While the rhetoric of some of its leaders may be belligerent, Iran’s diplomatic moves since the late nineties have been aimed at strengthening its ties with states in the Persian Gulf region, including Saudi Arabia.

There are perhaps other motives behind the U.S.-Saudi deal which have not been highlighted in the mainstream media. The sale reinforces U.S. military hegemony in a region that it perceives as vital for its triple interests -- Israel, oil and geopolitical control. Since the sale is huge, it will help to fill the coffers of corporate weapons manufacturers at a time when the U.S. economy is in deep trouble

But the consequences for the Middle East could be dire. It could encourage both friends and foes of the U.S. to increase their military expenditure. This could ignite an arms race in the region. An arms race in turn could intensify tensions in the Middle East which is already a cockpit of conflict. An arms race could also skew national priorities and lead to the subordination of other goals such as the eradication of poverty or the elimination of illiteracy, or the minimization of corruption.

This is why countries in Asia should be careful about expanding their military budget. They should not allow weapons manufacturers and arms merchants -- supported by political leaders -- to dupe them into making unnecessary military purchases. This danger is all the more real today than in the past since some of the countries in the region are rich and maybe the targets of those who are hell-bent on pursuing their business-cum-political agenda.

Indeed, escalating military expenditure is a global challenge. Global military expenditure in December 2009 stood at 1.5 trillion U.S. dollars. This represents a six percent increase in real terms over 2008. Compared to 2000, it is a 49 percent increase!

Worse, the entire UN budget -- the budget of the body charged with maintaining global peace -- in 2009 was only 1.8 percent of global military expenditure in that year.

It is significant that the U.S. alone accounted for 46.5 percent of global military expenditure in 2009. The respected Swedish peace institute, SIPRI, observes that massive U.S. military expenditure is one of the contributory factors to the decline of the U.S. economy since 2001.

For a few years after the end of the Cold War in 1989 and the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, global military expenditure decreased but it has now increased to 2.7 percent of the global gross domestic product (GDP) which translates into 225 dollars per person in the world.

There is no doubt at all that global military expenditure has to be curbed and controlled for the good of humankind. It will be no easy task. For the vested interests that sustain military budgets in most countries are powerful. Nonetheless, we have to persevere. Perhaps for a start, governments with low military budgets and anti-war, pro-peace civil society groups should come together to plan the mass mobilization of public opinion against mammoth military spending.

Dr. Chandra Muzaffar is President of the International Movement for a Just World (JUST) and Professor of Global Studies at Universiti Sains Malaysia.

بدھ، 14 جولائی، 2010

Kidnapped Iranian scientist exposes US government


The Shahran offair has confirmed what some of us knew already:that the US government is a criminal enterprise with no morals,no credibility.


Senior Iranian MP said the latest episode surrounding the abduction of an Iranian nuclear scientist Shahram Amiri totally disgraced the United States of America.

MP Alaeddin Boroujerdi, head of the national security and foreign policy commission in the parliament, expressed outmost repugnance at the United States’ blatant disregard for international norms. In an interview with IRNA on Wednesday, Boroujerdi said the abduction of Amiri totally disgraced America and it’s now expected that based upon a dignified code of conduct, the United States of America shall apologize for the abduction of an Iranian citizen by taking him onto US soil against his free will.

According to Boroujerdi, this is not the first time that Americans conducted such a crime, but one among many similar cases in the past committed by American agents including kidnapping of people, which is a clear case of terrorism. The Iranian nuclear scientist was abducted in Saudi Arabia in June 2009, at gunpoint by at least three CIA agents.

Boroujerdi said, the main objective of the US was a futile attempt at hindering Iran’s successful quest of its peaceful domestic nuclear program. ‘Iran has already achieved remarkable successes in nuclear areas and the US attempt against the country were futile.’ Said Boroujerdi as it was quoted by IRNA. He said the US should try to make up for its misconducts.

Taking the majority of Americans and the rest of the international community as mere simpletons, the US had in mind to use Amiri play the role of a defected Iranian nuclear scientist who supposedly traveled to the land of freedom thus revealing secrets of Iran’s clandestine nuclear activities.

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منگل، 13 جولائی، 2010

Missing Iraninan scientist Seeks Refuge In Pak Embassy

The reports said that ‘Shahram Amiri took refuge at Iran's interest section at the Pakistan embassy in Washington a few hours ago, and has asked for a quick return to Tehran’.
Iran and the US broke diplomatic relations shortly after Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution, and Iran's interests in the United States are managed by the Pakistani embassy.
Iranian officials have long maintained that Amiri was kidnapped by US intelligence agents from Saudi Arabia last year.
Iranian academic Shahram Amiri who was abducted last year by the US has reportedly taken refuge in Iran's interest section in Washington, urging an immediate return to the country.

Amiri took refuge in Iran's interest section in Washington a few hours ago, urging an "immediate return" to Iran, IRIB reported on Tuesday without providing further details.

The Pakistani Embassy in Washington preserves Iran's interests in the United States, since the two countries have no diplomatic relations.

Amiri went missing while on pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia in June 2009. Since then, two videos and one audio message featuring him have emerged.
In the first video, Amiri said that he was abducted "in a joint operation by terror and kidnap teams from the US intelligence service, CIA (Central Intelligence Agency) and Saudi Arabia's Istikhbarat" from Medina.

In the second video, he contradicted his earlier statements, saying that he was in the US of his own free will to further his education, dismissing all rumors about his defection.

However, in the latest audio message obtained by Iran's intelligence sources, Amiri insists that he was offered $10 million to appear on CNN and announce that he had willingly defected to the US.

Iran has held the US accountable for the abduction of the academic in June 2009.

The Iranian Foreign Ministry summoned the Swiss charge d'affaires, whose embassy represents US interests in Iran, earlier this month and handed over new documents related to the abduction of the Iranian national by the CIA.

Tehran has called for Amiri's swift and unconditional release.

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