Bus crashes in Philippines, 18 dead

June 13 (Reuters) – At least 16 Iranian students and two Filipinos were killed when a commuter bus fell in a ravine on a Philippines central island on Sunday, police said.

About 30 Iranians were injured when the bus lost its brakes and plunged 30 metres into a ravine in Balanban on Cebu island, police officer Arden Trocio told reporters.

“We’re trying to piece together what had happened,” Trocio said, adding that the bus had nearly 50 passengers, all Iranian medical and nursing students.

Almost all the fatalities were killed on the spot, Trocio said. One died at the hospital where the injured were taken.

Police said the passengers were on their way to a beach resort when the accident happened around 11:00 a.m. [0300 GMT].

(Reporting by Manuel Mogato)

Iran nuclear weapon is 1-3 years away: U.S.’s Gates

(Reuters) – It could be up to three years before Iran is capable of developing a nuclear weapon, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Friday, adding that there was still time for the world to put pressure on Tehran. Asked how long the United States and its allies were prepared to wait for U.N. sanctions on Iran to bite, Gates said:

World

“I think that everybody agrees we have some more time, including the Israelis, and we will just continue to work it.

“Most people believe that the Iranians could not really have any nuclear weapons for at least another year or two. I would say the intelligence estimates range from one to three years.”

Even if Iran got that far, he said having nuclear weapons material was different to full “weaponization” or having a capable delivery system that could threaten neighbors or enemies further afield.

“But clearly them getting to the threshold of having the weapons is what concerns every body.”

Iran nuclear weapon is 1-3 years away – U.S.’s Gates

June 11 (Reuters) – It could be up to three years before Iran is capable of developing a nuclear weapon, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Friday, adding that there was still time for the world to put pressure on Tehran. Asked how long the United States and its allies were prepared to wait for U.N. sanctions on Iran to bite, Gates said:

“I think that everybody agrees we have some more time, including the Israelis, and we will just continue to work it.

“Most people believe that the Iranians could not really have any nuclear weapons for at least another year or two. I would say the intelligence estimates range from one to three years.”

Even if Iran got that far, he said having nuclear weapons material was different to full “weaponisation” or having a capable delivery system that could threaten neighbours or enemies further afield.

“But clearly them getting to the threshold of having the weapons is what concerns every body.”

Fixing U.S. oil spill is “no feat”, say Iranians

Plugging the oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico is no great challenge compared to what Iran has dealt with in the past, an official at Iran’s drilling company said on Sunday.

A long-standing adversary of the United States, oil producer Iran has offered to help fight the spill — a gesture unlikely to be taken up by Washington which is pushing for new U.N. sanctions against Tehran’s nuclear programme.

Two U.S. cabinet members were to visit the Gulf Coast on Sunday, underscoring serious concerns over what some believe may be the worst oil spill in the United States.

Mehran Alinejad, the head of special drilling operations at the National Iranian Drilling Co., said Iran had successfully dealt with huge oil leaks in the past, particularly when rigs were bombed during a war with Iraq in the 1980s.

“Iranian technical teams have had major achievements in oil well capping compared with which the Gulf of Mexico oil rig is no feat,” he told IRNA news agency.

Alinejad repeated Iran’s offer of help.

“There is at any rate an ecological disaster in the Gulf of Mexico whose negative consequences include everyone. That is why if we receive a suitable response from the officials of that country we can examine the issue and contribute to its resolution.”

(Reporting by Hashem Kalantari; writing by Robin Pomeroy; Editing by Maria Golovnina)

Iran aims to become gasoline exporter – official

Iran seeks to become self-sufficient in gasoline in two years’ time and then to start exporting the fuel, an official said on Sunday, as some traders and international oil firms cease sales to the Islamic state.

The world’s fifth-largest crude exporter imports at least 30 percent of its gasoline needs but says the construction of new refineries will boost domestic output and make it less vulnerable to any future sanctions targeting such trade.

“By building new refineries we will become a gasoline exporter,” ISNA news agency quoted Ali Reza Zeighami, managing director of the National Iranian Refining and Oil Products Distribution Company, as saying.

“The plan is to become self-sufficient in two years’ time … by implementing the scheme to increase gasoline production in refineries,” Zeighami said.

Officials also hope a plan to phase out energy subsidies will slow gasoline demand from Iranians now enjoying some of the world’s cheapest fuel, at 1,000 rials (10 U.S. cents) a litre.

In the 2009-10 year, Iran produced 44.6 million litres of gasoline every day but consumed 64.9 million litres, forcing it to import the difference, according to official figures.

U.S. politicians are working on legislation to penalise fuel suppliers to Iran in an effort to pressure Tehran to stop uranium enrichment.

The West says Iran is using its atomic programme to develop a nuclear bomb, while Iran insists it is for electricity.

Asia-based industry sources said earlier this month that Iran’s gasoline imports in May were expected to drop by about 20 percent versus the previous month.

In April, senior management at Russia’s No.2 oil company, LUKOIL, verbally instructed traders involved in gasoline sales to Iran to cease business activity with Tehran.

Malaysia’s state oil company also said it had ceased sales to Iran.

But last month state-run ChinaOil sold two gasoline cargoes to Iran, the first known direct sales to the OPEC member. Previously sales from China were mostly done via third parties.

Separately on Sunday, Iran’s ILNA news agency said an Iranian state energy firm would on June 3 launch a new 250 million euro bond offering to help finance development of the giant South Pars natural gas field in the Gulf.

Part of a one-billion euro bond sale, the first two tranches were offered in March and early May, Iranian media reported. It represents a rare bid by Iran, under U.N. and U.S. sanctions over its nuclear work, to raise capital in this way.

(Reporting by Ramin Mostafavi and Hashem Kalantari; writing by Fredrik Dahl; editing by Louise Heavens)

Fixing U.S. oil spill is “no feat”, say Iranians

Plugging the oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico is no great challenge compared to what Iran has dealt with in the past, an official at Iran’s drilling company said on Sunday.

A long-standing adversary of the United States, oil producer Iran has offered to help fight the spill — a gesture unlikely to be taken up by Washington which is pushing for new U.N. sanctions against Tehran’s nuclear programme.

Two U.S. cabinet members were to visit the Gulf Coast on Sunday, underscoring serious concerns over what some believe may be the worst oil spill in the United States.

Mehran Alinejad, the head of special drilling operations at the National Iranian Drilling Co., said Iran had successfully dealt with huge oil leaks in the past, particularly when rigs were bombed during a war with Iraq in the 1980s.

“Iranian technical teams have had major achievements in oil well capping compared with which the Gulf of Mexico oil rig is no feat,” he told IRNA news agency.

Alinejad repeated Iran’s offer of help.

“There is at any rate an ecological disaster in the Gulf of Mexico whose negative consequences include everyone. That is why if we receive a suitable response from the officials of that country we can examine the issue and contribute to its resolution.”

(Reporting by Hashem Kalantari; writing by Robin Pomeroy; Editing by Maria Golovnina)

US sceptical about Iran changing its course

The US has expressed skepticism over Iran providing any ‘serious response’ to concerns raised by the international community about its controversial nuclear programme until the UN security Council imposes sanctions on it.

“I have told my counterparts in many capitals around the world that I believe that we will not get any serious response out of the Iranians until after the (UN) Security Council acts,” Clinton said at a joint news conference with visiting new British Foreign Secretary William Hague.

Clinton said she is not expecting much progress in this weekend’s visit of the Turkish and Brazilian leaders to Tehran, as both the US and Britain believe Iran is determined to pursue its nuclear weapons programme.

External Affairs Minister S M Krishna is also scheduled to pay a visit to Iran.

State Department spokesman P J Crowley separately told reporters that he is not aware if the US has reached out to India on the Iranian issue.

In the past two days, Clinton has made personal telephone calls to the Foreign Ministers of the Turkey and Brazil to tell them that Iran is not meeting its international obligations.

Any attempt by the leaders of Turkey and Brazil to convince Iran to give up its nuclear weapons programme and come to the dialogue table, Clinton observed, would be just like climbing a hill.

“We are making progress every day. This is the highest priority, not only of the United States but of many of our partners and allies like the UK. We believe that the case is being made perhaps most effectively by the Iranians themselves,” she said.

Clinton also pointed out that the Iranians were not responding to the offers of engagement.

The Secretary of State said Brazilians are still hopeful that they would “climb the hill” to convince Iran to join the P5 Plus 1 (US, UK, France, Russia and China plus Germany) negotiation process.

“So the world leadership, as evidenced by the Security Council, has moved in the same direction — some perhaps more quickly than others — but in the direction of reaffirming the authority of the Security Council, of putting some real teeth into the sanctions, of uniting the world in a way that will send an unequivocal message to the Iranian leadership,” she said.

Hague, on his part, said that he had long advocated that the European Union should adopt financial sanctions of the kind the United States has implemented on this issue. “But, of course, we’ll have to get into the specifics of that once the Security Council resolution is passed.”

Observing that there is no magic to this approach, he said it requires persistence and determination and united strength in the international community to tackle this problem.

“And so we will buttress that as, indeed, our predecessors have tried to do. We have never ruled out supporting, in the future, military action, but we’re not calling for it,” Hague said in response to a question.

“It is precisely because we want to see this matter settled peacefully and rapidly that we call for the sanctions, that we support the idea of a Security Council resolution. That is our perspective on it,” he said supporting the US stand on Iran.

Pentagon report warns that Iran missile could reach US by 2015

Washington, Apr.20 (ANI): A U.S. Defense Department report has warned that Iran could fire a missile at the United States by 2015, and adds that the Iranians have gone to great lengths to protect their nuclear infrastructure from physical destruction.

“With sufficient foreign assistance, Iran could probably develop and test an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) capable of reaching the United States by 2015,” Fox News quoted the new 12 page unclassified report, as saying.

The report further claims that Iran”s military strategy is designed to defend against external or “hard” threats from the United States and Israel.

“Iran continues being a disruptive force inside Iraq. Iran also offers strategic and operational guidance to militias and terrorist groups to target U.S. Forces in Iraq and undermine U.S. interests,” the report said.

Regarding the effectiveness of Iranian Conventional Forces, the report says: “Iran maintains very sizeable military forces, but they would be relatively ineffective against a direct assault by well trained, sophisticated military such as that of the United States or its allies.”

The report outlines Iran”s nuclear weapons capabilities and developments saying it is “keeping open the option to develop nuclear weapons,” which is consistent with what we”ve heard from a wide range of U.S. officials. (ANI)

Not inevitable Iran gets bomb: Gates

(Reuters) – Iran is not yet “nuclear capable” and the U.S. government has not concluded that it is inevitable that Tehran will get the bomb, Pentagon chief Robert Gates said in remarks aired on Sunday.

Barack Obama

“It is our judgment … they are not nuclear capable, not yet,” Gates, the U.S. defense secretary, said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

Asked if the U.S. government had concluded this was inevitable, Gates said, “No. We have not … drawn that conclusion at all, and in fact we are doing everything we can to try and keep Iran from developing nuclear weapons.”

However, he added that “they (the Iranians) are continuing to make progress on these (nuclear) programs. It is going slower than they anticipated but they are moving in that direction.”

U.S. President Barack Obama is pressing other global powers to agree to a fourth round of U.N. sanctions against Iran over its refusal to halt nuclear work that the West suspects is aimed at making bombs, a charge Iran denies.

But some critics of Obama’s attempts to engage Iran have said they fear his administration may be preparing to shift from a strategy of keeping Iran from getting the bomb to a strategy of containing a nuclear-armed Iran.

“We are probably going to get another U.N. Security Council resolution” of sanctions on Iran, Gates told NBC.

Gates added that the United States and other countries will continue trying to convince the Iranians that they are “headed down the wrong path” by pressuring Iran with sanctions as well as more missile defense and other military cooperation in the Gulf region.

“At the end of the day what has to happen is that the Iranian government has to decide that its own security is better served by not having nuclear weapons than by having them,” Gates said.

(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Will Dunham)

Germany charges two over Iranian missile programme

German federal prosecutors said on Wednesday they had charged two Iranians for attempting to procure technology for Iran’s missile programme.

Acting on the instructions of a senior figure in Iran’s missile programme, prosecutors said the two men, identified as Mohsen A., 52, and Behzad S., 49, had acquired a vacuum sintering furnace for 850,000 euros from a German firm.

In breach of Germany’s foreign trade law, they exported the furnace — which is used to shield warheads from heat — to Iran, then contracted the manufacturer to assemble it for them.

“Both of the accused knew that the machinery was to be used for the Iranian missile programme,” prosecutors said.

Behzad S., who holds German and Iranian citizenship, was used as a go-between in the operation, they added.

As it began assembly in Tehran in 2008, the German firm that made the furnace discovered that a company owned by the 52-year-old was suspected of working for the missile programme. It then stopped the work so the furnace could not be used, prosecutors said.

Western powers suspect Iran of trying to develop nuclear weapons, though prosecutors made no explicit reference to this. Tehran denies it is attempting to develop atomic weapons.

Mohsen A., has been in police custody since October last year, but the younger man is still at large, prosecutors said.

A number of goods with military applications have been subject to Germany’s export ban to Iran since April 2007, among them vacuum sintering furnaces, they added.

(Writing by Dave Graham; editing by Noah Barkin)

ANALYSIS – Leaders turn frequent flyers as weak Iraq forms gov’t

Iraqi leaders, struggling to form a government after an inconclusive March poll, are travelling around the region to set out their political stalls, forge alliances and to enhance their reputations at home.

Despite having almost 100,000 troops in Iraq, Washington has so far been absent from politicians’ travel itineraries.

Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Syria and the United States have their own favourite to become Iraq’s prime minister, Iyad Allawi, a secular Shi’ite Muslim with a cross-sectarian coalition, as they try to limit the influence of neighbouring mainly Shi’ite Iran.

That could mean an Iraq more able to resist Iran, the world’s fifth-biggest oil exporter and locked in a stand-off with the West over its nuclear programme.

Tehran has been a big influence since the 2003 invasion and Shi’ites outnumber Sunnis in Iraq, giving Iran an advantage.

But the ancient rivalry between Iranians and Arabs and Iraqis’ strong nationalism is going to limit how far Tehran can go in shaping a government, at least openly, analysts said.

“I don’t think there is a foreign kingmaker in Iraqi politics,” said David Mack, vice president of the Middle East Institute in Washington.

The Iranians “have their influence, they potentially want a government that will not be threatening to them. But there’s a limit. I don’t think that they are in any sense able to control matters,” Mack told Reuters.

The narrowness of the election as Iraq emerges from years of sectarian fighting, has given foreign players a role in Iraq’s efforts to assemble a government, with some analysts saying this makes politicians vulnerable to pressure from abroad.

“What we’re seeing is symptomatic of the weakness of the Iraqi state,” said Joost Hiltermann, an analyst with the International Crisis Group in Washington.

“The neighbouring states prey on the divisions in Iraqi politics. The situation is very fluid and chaotic because there is no (single) strong player, on either side.”

The fragility of the post-election security situation in Iraq has been emphasised by an upsurge of violence in Baghdad province this month that has killed more than 100 people. Security forces blame the violence on al Qaeda militants.

FREQUENT FLYERS

Complex political talks at home have been supplemented with a whirlwind of foreign visits by political leaders since final election results were announced on March 26.

Allawi’s cross-sectarian Iraqiya coalition finished first with 91 seats in the 325-seat parliament. Iraqiya, which drew substantial support from Sunni Muslims, was two seats ahead of the State of Law coalition of Shi’ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. Forming a government demands 163 seats.

Since the election, Iraqi politicians including Maliki and President Jalal Talabani have visited senior officials in Iran, a bulwark for Shi’ite Muslims.

Leaders have also met there with powerful anti-U.S. cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, head of a leading faction in the Shi’ite Iraqi National Alliance (INA), which has close links to Iran.

Toby Dodge, an Iraq expert at the University of London, said Iran had first tried to boost Shi’ite voters’ participation in the elections. Now Tehran is trying to oversee a merger between Sadrists and State of Law as the core of a new government.

“Clearly it has the most influence of any country in Iraq, much more than the U.S. or Saudi Arabia. Iran has invested a great deal of money and a great deal of time in cultivating their allies in Baghdad,” he said.

In turn, Qusai abd al-Wahab, a Sadrist leader and head of the INA political negotiations committee, said the Sadrists had visited Iran, Jordan, Syria and Saudi Arabia. They also have been invited to Egypt, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates.

“All the neighbouring countries have the same weight for us. We wanted to send a message that we respect them as much as we respect Iran,” he told Reuters.

Allawi, a former prime minister, has visited Turkey and Lebanon. Other stops on politicians’ regional circuit include Syria and the Gulf states.

In one high-level visit, Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi, an Iraqiya leader, went to Qatar on Monday to discuss efforts to form a government, the presidential website said.

Mack, of the Middle East Institute, said politicians were garnering support from foreign capitals as well as boosting their profiles at home as talks to form a government went on.

“We’re at the stage now where the audience is the other political factions, not simply whether a given political leader had popular support … but whether a given political leader can govern the country,” he said.

Although no Iraqi politician has made a flight to Washington, U.S. officials say they are in touch with all the main parties. “We’re prepared to work with whoever emerges,” Ambassador Christopher Hill told reporters last week.

Iran says sanctions not to stop nuclear work-agency

TEHRAN, April 2 (Reuters) – International sanctions will not prevent Iran from pursuing its nuclear activities, said the country’s top nuclear negotiator on Friday, the official IRNA news agency reported.

“Iranians are familiar with sanctions … We consider sanctions as opportunities … We will continue our (nuclear) path more decisively,” Saeed Jalili was quoted by IRNA as saying in China.

The West accuses Iran of covertly trying to build nuclear weapons. Iran says its nuclear power is aimed at generating electricity.

The United States and its European allies want to curb the Islamic state’s nuclear activities and are pushing for new U.N.-backed sanctions against Tehran.

China, a veto-wielding member of the United Nations Security Council, has for months fended off the calls to back sanctions.

Jalili flew to Beijing on Thursday to hold talks with Chinese officials. Iran is a major oil supplier to China. (Writing by Parisa Hafezi; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Iran says sanctions not to stop nuclear work-agency

TEHRAN, April 2 (Reuters) – International sanctions will not prevent Iran from pursuing its nuclear activities, said the country’s top nuclear negotiator on Friday, the official IRNA news agency reported.

“Iranians are familiar with sanctions … We consider sanctions as opportunities … We will continue our (nuclear) path more decisively,” Saeed Jalili was quoted by IRNA as saying in China. (Writing by Parisa Hafezi; Editing by Jon Boyle)

SCENARIOS – Global impact if Israel strikes Iran

If Israel were to strike Iran over its nuclear activities, markets would be watching one thing only – Iran’s response.

The scale of that response could be the difference between a brief spike in oil prices and pushing the world back to economic crisis.

Below are possible scenarios together with projected potential market reactions suggested by analysts, economists and foreign policy strategists.

NO IMMEDIATE REACTION

Tehran announces that Israel’s military attacked civilian locations but inflicted little damage. It hurls furious rhetoric at Israel but stops short of any military response.

“It may make sense for the Iranians to play the victim,” said IHS Global Insight Middle East analyst Gala Riani. “They may also use it to build the regime’s legitimacy internally.”

– news of the strike would see oil prices spike $10-$20 and wider investor flight to safer assets such as U.S. treasuries, while equities and risky currencies would suffer. But without further action, sentiment would recover.

– relatively used to conflict, Israeli markets might prove more resilient to the initial news. Some analysts suggest that a successful strike that significantly put back an Iranian nuclear programme could be positive for Israeli markets.

Key unknowns:

– assessing the effectiveness of an attack on Iranian facilities could prove almost impossible. The longer-term impact of the strikes on Iran’s internal politics, regional politics and Western support for Israel would be hard to predict.

– can Israel achieve its aims with a single strike, or would it require a more sustained operation potentially lasting several days and hitting markets much harder?

PROXY RETALIATION

Iran steers clear of any overt response, but backs intensifying attacks by Hamas from the Palestinian territories and by Hezbollah from Lebanon. It might also back proxy attacks on Western forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“The most likely response would be to increase their subversive activity across the Middle East,” said IHS’s Riani. “It would most likely be focused in Palestine, Lebanon and to a lesser extent around the Gulf.”

– might have some short-term impact on oil prices — particularly if the attacks included Iraq — but generally global markets would be little affected.

– Israeli markets would likely take initial attacks in their stride, but a prolonged campaign would drag on the economy, driving up defence spending and undermining markets as they did during the Palestinian Intifada.

Key unknowns:

– the duration of increased violence. Proxy violence could escalate to include militant attacks on Western and oil targets.

– If Hezbollah strikes Israel, Israel will retaliate in a way that quickly expands the conflict. Israel has threatened to hold the governments of Lebanon and Syria responsible for any Hezbollah attacks.

MISSILES STRIKE ISRAEL

Iran retaliates by launching ballistic missiles with conventional warheads. While more accurate than the Scuds launched by Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein at Israel during the 1991 Gulf War, damage from each strike would be limited.

“It’s certainly not something you can rule out,” said Metsa Rahimi, intelligence analyst for risk consultancy Janusian. “The Iranians are going to want to retaliate. But they know if they do this, they are going to get hit back again.”

– oil prices would certainly spike higher, although attacks on Israeli cities would not directly have any impact on oil production. Wider global markets would sell off and watch nervously for any further escalation.

– Israeli markets might again prove more resilient. They actually rallied in January 1991 during the missile attacks as it became clear the strikes were not chemical and not causing significant damage. Much would depend on the level of damage and for how long any missile barrage continued.

Key unknowns:

– Israeli and Western reaction. Would there be further retaliation? Would weapons used remain conventional?

– Would Israel strike military targets and civilian infrastructure in Iran, possibly including oil facilities? That would push-up prices and force primary customer China to look for supplies elsewhere.

CLOSING HORMUZ

Iran makes good its threat to close the Straits of Hormuz to traffic, blocking the flow of some 17 million barrels a day of oil, roughly 40 percent of all seaborne oil trade — but likely inviting swift retaliation from United States forces.

“Iran doesn’t even need to be successful in their threat,” said Michael Wittner, global head of energy research at Societe Generale. “Even a credible threat or near miss and insurance rates will spike. Then no one’s going to send any oil through there for a couple of weeks until somebody’s navy can re-establish control.”

– analysts estimate this could push oil prices up towards $150 a barrel. Alternative oil producers such as Russia, Nigeria and Angola might benefit, but rising fuel costs would likely undercut growth everywhere. China, Iran’s main export destination, would have to seek supplies elsewhere.

– Other financial markets would suffer and fall sharply if they believed disruption would be long term.

– Israeli markets are likely to be affected by the wider frenzy, although probably less than volatile emerging markets.

Key unknowns:

– how long could Iran maintain its blockade? Military analysts believe its handful of mine-laying ships, helicopters and submarines might quickly be neutralised by the US military.

SPARKING WIDER CONFLICT

Ultimately, the consequences of an Israeli strike on Iran are hard to predict. At worst, it could fuel an upsurge in wider regional violence.

“I worry a great deal about the unintended consequences of a strike,” Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen said on a recent visit to Israel.

– a more violent Middle East would put an inherently higher risk premium on oil, pushing up prices and possibly undermining global recovery from the financial crisis. It might also drive consuming nations towards non-Middle Eastern suppliers and alternative technologies.

– investors would also view Israel as much higher risk, while much higher defence spending would weigh on the economy.

Key unknowns:

– duration and severity of any conflict. Would the world’s wider powers – China, Russia, the United States and European Union in particular – move towards a consensus on the Middle East or would the conflict exacerbate their differences further?

(Editing by Samia Nakhoul/Janet McBride)

Global impact if Israel strikes Iran

Mon, Mar 29 05:17 PM

If Israel were to strike Iran over its nuclear activities, markets would be watching one thing only – Iran’s response.

The scale of that response could be the difference between a brief spike in oil prices and pushing the world back to economic crisis.

Below are possible scenarios together with projected potential market reactions suggested by analysts, economists and foreign policy strategists.

NO IMMEDIATE REACTION

Tehran announces that Israel’s military attacked civilian locations but inflicted little damage. It hurls furious rhetoric at Israel but stops short of any military response.

It may make sense for the Iranians to play the victim, said IHS Global Insight Middle East analyst Gala Riani. They may also use it to build the regime’s legitimacy internally.

* News of the strike would see oil prices spike $10-$20 and wider investor flight to safer assets such as U.S. treasuries, while equities and risky currencies would suffer. But without further action, sentiment would recover.

-* Relatively used to conflict, Israeli markets might prove more resilient to the initial news. Some analysts suggest that a successful strike that significantly put back an Iranian nuclear programme could be positive for Israeli markets.

Key unknowns:

* Assessing the effectiveness of an attack on Iranian facilities could prove almost impossible. The longer-term impact of the strikes on Iran’s internal politics, regional politics and Western support for Israel would be hard to predict.

* Can Israel achieve its aims with a single strike, or would it require a more sustained operation potentially lasting several days and hitting markets much harder?

PROXY RETALIATION

Iran steers clear of any overt response, but backs intensifying attacks by Hamas from the Palestinian territories and by Hezbollah from Lebanon. It might also back proxy attacks on Western forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The most likely response would be to increase their subversive activity across the Middle East, said IHS’s Riani. It would most likely be focused in Palestine, Lebanon and to a lesser extent around the Gulf.

* Might have some short-term impact on oil prices — particularly if the attacks included Iraq — but generally global markets would be little affected.

* Israeli markets would likely take initial attacks in their stride, but a prolonged campaign would drag on the economy, driving up defence spending and undermining markets as they did during the Palestinian Intifada.

Key unknowns:

* The duration of increased violence. Proxy violence could escalate to include militant attacks on Western and oil targets.

* If Hezbollah strikes Israel, Israel will retaliate in a way that quickly expands the conflict. Israel has threatened to hold the governments of Lebanon and Syria responsible for any Hezbollah attacks.

MISSILES STRIKE ISRAEL

Iran retaliates by launching ballistic missiles with conventional warheads. While more accurate than the Scuds launched by Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein at Israel during the 1991 Gulf War, damage from each strike would be limited.

It’s certainly not something you can rule out, said Metsa Rahimi, intelligence analyst for risk consultancy Janusian. The Iranians are going to want to retaliate. But they know if they do this, they are going to get hit back again.

* oil prices would certainly spike higher, although attacks on Israeli cities would not directly have any impact on oil production. Wider global markets would sell off and watch nervously for any further escalation.

* Israeli markets might again prove more resilient. They actually rallied in January 1991 during the missile attacks as it became clear the strikes were not chemical and not causing significant damage. Much would depend on the level of damage and for how long any missile barrage continued.

Key unknowns:

* Israeli and Western reaction. Would there be further retaliation? Would weapons used remain conventional?

* Would Israel strike military targets and civilian infrastructure in Iran, possibly including oil facilities? That would push-up prices and force primary customer China to look for supplies elsewhere.

CLOSING HORMUZ

Iran makes good its threat to close the Straits of Hormuz to traffic, blocking the flow of some 17 million barrels a day of oil, roughly 40 percent of all seaborne oil trade — but likely inviting swift retaliation from United States forces.

Iran doesn’t even need to be successful in their threat, said Michael Wittner, global head of energy research at Societe Generale. Even a credible threat or near miss and insurance rates will spike. Then no one’s going to send any oil through there for a couple of weeks until somebody’s navy can re-establish control.

* Analysts estimate this could push oil prices up towards $150 a barrel. Alternative oil producers such as Russia, Nigeria and Angola might benefit, but rising fuel costs would likely undercut growth everywhere. China, Iran’s main export destination, would have to seek supplies elsewhere.

* Other financial markets would suffer and fall sharply if they believed disruption would be long term.

* Israeli markets are likely to be affected by the wider frenzy, although probably less than volatile emerging markets.

Key unknowns:

* How long could Iran maintain its blockade? Military analysts believe its handful of mine-laying ships, helicopters and submarines might quickly be neutralised by the US military.

SPARKING WIDER CONFLICT

Ultimately, the consequences of an Israeli strike on Iran are hard to predict. At worst, it could fuel an upsurge in wider regional violence.

I worry a great deal about the unintended consequences of a strike, Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen said on a recent visit to Israel.

* a more violent Middle East would put an inherently higher risk premium on oil, pushing up prices and possibly undermining global recovery from the financial crisis. It might also drive consuming nations towards non-Middle Eastern suppliers and alternative technologies.

* Investors would also view Israel as much higher risk, while much higher defence spending would weigh on the economy.

Key unknowns:

* Duration and severity of any conflict. Would the world’s wider powers – China, Russia, the United States and European Union in particular – move towards a consensus on the Middle East or would the conflict exacerbate their differences further?
Reuters

ANALYSIS – Iran ignores Obama message, dialogue still far off

Iran has shrugged off a second New Year message from U.S. President Barack Obama to Iranians, underlining how far the countries are from starting any meaningful dialogue.

At his inauguration last year, Obama offered an outstretched hand if Iran would “unclench its fist”. Two months later at Nowruz, the Persian new year, he offered a “new beginning”.

Obama tried the tactic again at Nowruz last week, saying he still wanted to talk. But he tied the to U.S. efforts to hold Iran “accountable” — a reference to potential new U.N. sanctions over Iran’s nuclear programme — and attacked Iran’s handling of opposition protests.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei made no reference to the appeal in two Nowruz speeches this weekend, but suggested Washington had proved that its talk of normalising relations was hollow since U.S. policies towards Iran had not changed.

He focused heavily on the protests, which often turned violent: “Eight months after the elections they took the worst possible stance. The president called those rioters and saboteurs ‘civil rights activists’,” Khamenei said.

Abdulkhaleq Abdullah, a politics professor in the United Arab Emirates, said the contrast to last year’s response was stark.

“If you compare this year’s Obama message to last year’s and compare the reactions, we are definitely in for a setback,” he said. “The dialogue has not moved one step forward.”

Obama’s overture last year was welcomed by some senior officials in Tehran, who praised the desire to resolve differences that stretch back to the 1979 Islamic revolution, though Khamenei dismissed it as a slogan that needed to be backed up with new policies.

But this year’s address was roundly ignored by Iran’s state-dominated media, though many were able to access it through some Farsi- and English-language radio and websites.

ANGER OVER PROTESTS

A Western diplomat in the Gulf said Khamenei, the final arbiter in major policies of state, was sticking to his position of the past year that Iran could not change its approach based on a “change of tone” in an American presidential address.

Khamenei’s speech made clear his view that Washington’s sympathy for the protest movement over the past year — sparked by anger at President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s re-election in June — showed the new rhetoric was only tactical, the diplomat said.

Iran has accused Western powers of fomenting the unrest.

Shafiq Ghabra, a professor at Kuwait University, also said Khamenei and his allies in the ruling establishment did not see a clear enough direction from Washington to open up dialogue.

“Iran is not sure what to believe and not to believe in what is coming out of the United States. Who is calling the shots in Washington? Obama, Congress, the pro-Israel lobby?” he said.

“There is no clarity that the U.S. administration will be able to deliver, not least after their failure on Israeli settlements.”

Washington’s credibility in the region has suffered over its failure to persuade Israel’s right-wing government to halt all settlement activity in the occupied territories, which the Palestinians have made a condition for restarting peace talks.

The U.S. administration is trying to win key Chinese support for a new round of U.N. sanctions on Iran for failing to reach an agreement with major powers on enriching uranium for its nuclear energy programme abroad.

Washington fears the programme is aimed at acquiring nuclear weapons. Analysts say Israel, which is widely believed to have nuclear weapons but sees a nuclear Iran as a threat, could launch a strike against Iranian facilities with U.S. support.

Hawkish pro-Israeli members of Congress could favour a direct U.S. strike and Obama’s administration has said it will do whatever it takes to stop Iran getting nuclear weapons.

ARAB CONCERNS

Saudi Arabia and smaller Gulf Arab countries that host U.S. forces or provide facilities share U.S. concerns about a nuclear-armed Iran and its ambitions for regional dominance.

A Western diplomat in Riyadh said Saudi Arabia, which might feel obliged to develop an arsenal to match a nuclear Iran, hoped to use its status as China’s top oil supplier to persuade the Security Council veto-holder to get tougher with Iran.

“They are concerned about Iranian influence and ability to have a bomb and are trying to get the Americans to apply more pressure. They always thought sanctions wouldn’t work,” he said.

Many Iranians who support the reform movement are disappointed that Obama has not taken a tougher line with the authorities, as his administration reads the runes to see if a moderate voice emerges in Tehran.

Diplomats and analysts say the ruling establishment remains split over dialogue with Washington, which Ahmadinejad might have favoured in recent months, before he was drowned out.

“At this stage it is the Iranians who are being difficult, who are not taking advantage,” said Emirati politics professor Abdullah. “I think there are more problems in Tehran at this moment than there are in Washington.”

(Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Pakistani woman held with fake currency

Amritsar (Punjab), Mar 20 (ANI): Custom officials seized over Rs 45,000 in fake currency from a Pakistani woman at the Attari railway station.

Begum Mehtab was nabbed after disembarking from the Samjhauta Express on Thursday night. She is being interrogated.

Custom officials said Mehtab revealed during her interrogation that her Lahore-based cousin had given her the fake currency to deliver it to a person at the New Delhi Railway station.

“We kept surveillance because of her suspicious movements. When she came to the counter we checked her luggage and frisked her. We recovered fake currency hidden in undergarments. Total amount recovered is worth rupees 450,000,” said Customs Assistant Commissioner V. K. Mahajan.

Earlier on Friday, three Iranians were arrested in Pune with fake currency. One of them was attempting to deposit Rs 40,000 in fake currency in the bank, while the other two were caught smuggling notes into India from Iran. (ANI)

Iranian student to be executed for stone-throwing during demonstration

Tehran, Mar. 17 (ANI): The Iranian Government has decided to execute a 20-year-old Iranian student, who was arrested for throwing a stone during the pro-democracy mass protests against the country’s alleged rigged presidential elections.

Islamic studies student Mohammad-Amin Valian was arrested on the basis of a photograph taken at a mass demonstration against the rigged presidential election last year.

He was among six people convicted of the Islamic crime of moharebeh, for waging war against God, The Telegraph reports.

Their sentences were announced in an apparent attempt to forestall fresh demonstrations to coincide with Tuesday’s annual festival of fire.

Valian”s plight – especially the combination of his young age and the flimsy nature of his offence – has spurred condemnation of the severity of the sentence.

Meanwhile, clashes were reported last night as Iranians celebrated Charshanbe Soori, a pre-Islamic bonfire night.

Leading opposition figures renewed their opposition to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in messages to mark the festival.

“Unfortunately the current republic is plagued with despotism and elections have become meaningless. This government has not been formed upon the people”s votes, and the result has been social unrest,” Mehdi Karoubi, one of the losing candidates in the election, said

State media had warned people to stay away from the traditional celebrations and said that thousands of extra police and security forces had been deployed to handle trouble makers. (ANI)

Iran is a despotic republic, opposition leader says

(Reuters) – Iranian opposition leader Mehdi Karoubi, defying government warnings, said the Islamic republic was “plagued with despotism,” in remarks published ahead of a national celebration that could trigger more protests.

World

“Unfortunately the current republic is plagued with despotism and elections have become meaningless,” Karoubi, a moderate cleric and former parliament speaker, said in comments to a group of students carried on his website on Tuesday.

“This government has not been formed upon the people’s votes, and the result has been social unrest.”

Iran has experienced the worst domestic strife since the 1979 revolution after supporters of Karoubi and opposition candidate Mirhossein Mousavi took to the streets to protest against the victory of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad last June.

The opposition says the vote was rigged to secure the re-election of the hardline president. The authorities deny the charge of vote fraud and say it was the healthiest election the country has had in three decades.

A crackdown on the opposition was expected on Tuesday when Iranians hold celebrations a few days before the country’s New Year which starts on March 21.

Police chiefs have strongly warned the opposition against using the occasion to organize fresh protests and, in an attempt at deterrence, have said that anyone arrested on that day will be held until the end of the Iranian new year holidays.

Most of those detained after the election have since been released, though more than 80 have received jail sentences of up to 15 years. Two people who were put on trial after the election have been executed.

(Writing by Andrew Hammond, editing by Paul Taylor)

Chinese firm angers Iranians by creating jeans line with Islamic expression

London, Sep.16 (ANI): A Chinese clothing company has angered Iranians by creating a line of jeans bearing the Islamic expression “In the name of God, the compassionate, the merciful”.

The marketing ploy backfired because the phrase “Bismillah-ir-Rahman-ir-Rahim” was prominently displayed on the pockets of the jeans’ backsides, something likely to be seen as disrespectful by devout Muslims.

The perceived slight, first reported in the Iranian media, prompted a firm response from the police who announced they had seized the garments and arrested three businessmen said to have imported them, The Guardian reports.

“In Islam, Allah is a respected word that you need to have ablutions before saying. Now it is embroidered on the sitting place of these jeans. Worse, they are sold in Tehran, which many would like to call the heart of the Islamic world,” a pro-Iranian government body said. (ANI)