Iran warships 'dock in Syria's Tartous port' | |||
Iran state media says two vessels have crossed Suez Canal and arrived in Syria, provoking angry response from Israel. Last Modified: 19 Feb 2012 09:27 | |||
Iranian warships have crossed the Suez Canal and docked in Syria's port city of Tartous, Iranian state media has reported. The Mehr news agency said on Sunday that Tehran's show of support has caused "extreme worry for zionist forces". Youcef Bouandel, professor of international affairs at Qatar University, told Al Jazeera that Iran's deployment has to be viewed as part of a "broader picture" - that it to say that the Iranian government feels that "Syria is the first step towards putting Iran in the corner". "Iran has been having a few standoffs with the West in general over its nuclear programme and over its oil emabrgo," said Bouandel, who said that the docking of the ships on the Syrian coast had two largely symbolic meanings. "Iran has been threatening to close the Strait of Hormuz and has been a strong ally of Syria over the last year in particular... the two ships... crossed the Suez Canal without being stopped or searched [which] suggests that they do not carry any weapons," he said. Tensions over the nature of Iran's nuclear programme have lead to ever-tightening sanctions on the country's oil exports, prompting Iran to threaten to close the strait, the world's most important chokepoint for oil transport. Move a 'provocation' Reacting to the news on Saturday, Israel's foreign ministry denounced the deployment as a "provocation" and a "power play". Israel said it will be watching the ships' movements closely to ensure they do not approach its coast. Tom Donilon, the US national security advisor is due to meet Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, in Jerusalam on Sunday where the deployment is expected to be discussed. "The strategic navy of the Islamic Republic of Iran has passed through the Suez Canal for the second time since the [1979] Islamic Revolution," Admiral Habibollah Sayari said in remarks quoted by the official IRNA news agency. Sayari did not say how many vessels had crossed the canal, or what missions they were planning to carry out in the Mediterranean, but said the flotilla had previously docked in the Saudi port city of Jeddah. Two Iranian ships, the destroyer Shahid Qandi and supply vessel Kharg, had docked in the Red Sea port on February 4, according to Iranian media. Sayari said the naval deployment to the Mediterranean would carry a "message of peace" but also put on display "the might" of Iran's military. "It will prove to the world that despite increasing enemy sanctions over the past 33 years, our manpower, obedient to the orders of the leader Imam Khamenei, continue to add to their academic and military abilities," Sayari said. The first Iranian presence in the Mediterranean in February 2011 provoked strong reactions from Israel and the US. During the 2011 deployment, two Iranian vessels, a destroyer and a supply ship, sailed past the coast of Israel and docked at the port of Latakia in Syria before returning to Iran via the Red Sea. Russia, who has close relations with Iran and has at every turn opposed military action against Syria, also has a base in Tartous.
and.... http://rt.com/news/us-al-qaeda-syria-otrakji-635/ |
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Sunday, February 19, 2012
As The Looming Default Of Greece , Scripted Or Otherwise Looms , Iran and Syria Theatre Keeps Developing !
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IAEA visit to Iran 'last chance,' but little hope of results
ReplyDelete19 February 2012 | 16:27 | FOCUS News Agency
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Vienna. The UN atomic agency's second visit to Iran in a month next week could be Tehran's "last chance" to show goodwill on its nuclear programme and avoid sanctions, but analysts and diplomats are less than hopeful, AFP reported.
After a first visit on January 29-31 produced few results, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) announced it would return to Tehran on February 20-21.
"I'm not optimistic that Iran will provide much more information because I think any honest answers to the IAEA's questions would confirm that Iran had been involved in weapons-related development work and Iran wouldn't want to admit that for fear of being penalised," Mark Fitzpatrick of the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies told AFP.