Israel, U.S. sign deal to upgrade Arrow missile shield

(Reuters) – Israel and the United States have signed an agreement to make the Arrow II ballistic shield capable of shooting down missiles at a higher altitude, the Israeli Defense Ministry said on Sunday.

The Arrow III will allow Israel “to deal with the threat of ballistic missiles with long range” and will give it “the ability to shoot down weapons of mass destruction outside the atmosphere,” the ministry said in a statement.

Israel, which describes its Arrow system as a defense against Iran, says the upgraded version will cap off its multi-tier air defenses.

The Arrow is jointly produced by state-owned Israel Aerospace Industries and the American firm Boeing Co. and has absorbed close to $1 billion in direct U.S. funds since its 1988 inception.

The Israeli air force said last year that the Arrow III would take more than four years to complete and that would depend on what resources were made available for the project.

The United States, Western powers and Israel suspect Iran’s civilian nuclear program is designed to produce a nuclear bomb. Tehran denies this.

Israel, which is assumed to have the Middle East’s only atomic arsenal, has hinted it could resort to force to prevent Iran attaining the nuclear means to threaten its existence.

Iran has threatened to retaliate for any attack on its nuclear facilities by firing medium-range missiles at Israel.

(Reporting by Dan Williams; Writing by Joseph Nasr, Editing by Alison Williams)

Clinton says Iran scientist free to come and go

(Reuters) – Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Tuesday that Iranian nuclear scientist Shahram Amiri had been free to come and go from the United States.

“Mr. Amiri has been in the United States of his own free will and he is free to go,” Clinton told reporters. “In fact he was scheduled to travel to Iran yesterday but was unable to make all of the necessary arrangements to reach Iran through a transit country,” she said.

Clinton called on Tehran to release three American hikers being held in Iran and to provide more information on former FBI agent Robert Levinson who disappeared during a business trip to Iran.

Referring to Amiri, Clinton said: “He’s free to go, he was free to come, these decisions are his alone to make.”

(Reporting by Tabassum Zakaria; Editing by Paul Simao)

Iran says scientist seeks refuge in Pakistan embassy in U.S.

July 13 (Reuters) – Iran’s state radio said on Tuesday a missing Iranian nuclear scientist who Tehran says was kidnapped by the CIA, had taken refuge in Pakistan’s embassy in Washington.

“A few hours ago Shahram Amiri took refuge at Iran’s interest section at the Pakistan embassy in Washington, wanting to return to Iran immediately,” state radio said.

Iran and the United States cut diplomatic relations shortly after the country’s 1979 Islamic revolution. The embassy of Pakistan preserves Iran’s interests in the United States.

(Writing by Parisa Hafezi, Editing by Elizabeth Fullerton)

Iran says scientist seeks refuge in Pakistan embassy in U.S.

July 13 (Reuters) – Iran’s state radio said on Tuesday a missing Iranian nuclear scientist who Tehran says was kidnapped by the CIA, had taken refuge in Pakistan’s embassy in Washington.

“A few hours ago Shahram Amiri took refuge at Iran’s interest section at the Pakistan embassy in Washington, wanting to return to Iran immediately,” state radio said.

Iran and the United States cut diplomatic relations shortly after the country’s 1979 Islamic revolution. The embassy of Pakistan preserves Iran’s interests in the United States.

(Writing by Parisa Hafezi, Editing by Elizabeth Fullerton)

UPDATE 1-Gates sees potential in Iran economic sanctions

June 20 (Reuters) – U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Sunday that targeted economic sanctions on Iran had “real potential” to pressure Tehran to halt its nuclear program.

“Targeted economic pressures has real potential,” Gates told the Fox News Sunday program when asked if he saw any signs that Iran’s resolve to push ahead with its nuclear program was weakening in the face of international sanctions.

“I think there is a reasonable chance of getting the Iranian regime to finally come to their senses and realize that their security is probably more in danger by going forward,” Gates said.

He added, however, that all options, including a military strike, were still on the table in dealing with Tehran on the nuclear issue. (Writing by Paul Simao, Americas Desk, Editing by Sandra Maler)

Gates sees potential in Iran economic sanctions

June 20 (Reuters) – U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates told Fox News Sunday that targeted economic sanctions on Iran had “real potential” to pressure Tehran to halt its nuclear program. (Writing by Paul Simao, Americas Desk, Editing by Sandra Maler)

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:

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“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.”

Gates disappointed by Turkey vote on Iran sanctions

June 11 (Reuters) – U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Friday he was disappointed by Turkey’s decision to vote against a U.N. Security Council resolution on sanctions against Iran but said it would not affect U.S.-Turkish military cooperation.

“I was disappointed by the Turkey vote in the Iranian sanctions. That said, Turkey is a decades-long ally of the United States and other members of NATO,” Gates said after a meeting of NATO defence ministers in Brussels.

“Turkey continues to play a critical part in the alliance,” he said.

Turkey, a key NATO member, joined Brazil in voting against the U.N. resolution on Wednesday, but the resolution still passed and the world powers are moving ahead with tighter sanctions on Tehran.

Nations may block oil, gas investment in Iran-Gates

June 9 (Reuters) – A U.N. Security Council resolution against Iran could clear the way for individual states and the EU to take further steps, including blocking foreign companies from expanding Tehran’s oil and gas exports, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Wednesday.

Gates, in an interview taped before the Security Council voted to impose new sanctions on Iran, said the U.N. resolution, provided a legal platform for individual countries to take “more far-reaching steps individually.”

In an interview with al Jazeera’s “Frost Over the World” programme, Gates said those tougher measures could target front companies for the Iranian Revolutionary Guards including shipping lines and imports. “There are a variety of areas that can be targeted preventing foreign companies from going in to help them maintain or grow their oil or gas export capability or any other business enterprises,” Gates added, according to a transcript of the interview, which was taped on Wednesday in London hours before the U.N. vote. (Reporting by Adam Entous; editing by Tim Pearce)

Turkey wants to pursue diplomacy with Iran-source

June 9 (Reuters) – Turkey voted against U.N. sanctions on Iran for its nuclear programme on Wednesday because it wants to continue diplomatic efforts, a source in Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s office said.

Erdogan travelled to Tehran last month to broker a nuclear fuel swap deal with Iran. Voting for sanctions would have meant Turkey no longer stood behind that deal, the source said. (Reporting by Pinar Aydinli, writing by Ayla Jean Yackley, editing by Tim Pearce)

Russia pursuing independent policy vis-a-vis Iran: Kremlin

Russia is pursuing an independent policy vis-a-vis Iran and its stance on Tehran’s nuclear programme was neither pro-US nor pro-Iranian, according to a top Kremlin official.

Responding to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahemadinejad’s claim that Russia is siding with Tehran’s enemies in the crisis over the Iranian nuclear drive, Kremlin foreign policy aide Sergei Prikhodko said, “Russia is unfailingly guided by its long-term government interests.”

Rejecting Ahmadinejad’s claims Prikhodko said Russia’s position is “specifically Russian, it reflects the interests of all Russia’s people, and therefore can be neither pro-American nor pro-Iranian.”

“Any unpredictability, political extremism, lack of transparency or inconsistency in decision-making…is unacceptable for Russia,” Prikhodko was quoted as saying by RIA Novosti.

“No one has ever managed to retain their authority through political demagoguery,” Prikhodko added.

Russia is building Iran’s first nuclear power plant in Bushehr city, a facility expected to finally come online in August after a series of delays.

Kremlin tells Iran to stop ‘political demagoguery’

The Kremlin’s chief foreign policy adviser on Wednesday told Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to refrain from “political demagoguery” after Tehran admonished Russia for supporting new sanctions.

The public clash came after Ahmadinejad chided Russia for bowing to U.S. pressure over new sanctions against Tehran and bluntly warned Kremlin chief Dmitry Medvedev to be more cautious.

But Medvedev’s top foreign policy advisor, Sergei Prikhodko, dismissed the criticism, saying Russia was neither pro-American nor pro-Iranian and that Moscow’s policy was governed by the national interest.

“No one has ever managed to preserve one’s authority with political demagoguery. I am convinced, the thousand-year history of Iran itself is evidence of this,” Prikhodko said in a statement.

“The Russian Federation is governed by its own long-term state interests. Our position is Russian: it reflects the interests of all the peoples of greater Russia and so it can be neither pro-American nor pro-Iranian,” he said.

In a clear rebuke to Tehran over its failure to allay fears about its nuclear programme, Prikhodko said that Russia could not accept inconsistency and a lack of transparency in resolving major world issues.

“Any unpredictability, any political extremism, lack of transparency or inconsistency in taking decisions that affect and concern the entire world community is unacceptable for us,” he said.

“It would be good if those who are now speaking in the name of the wise people of Iran… would remember this,” Prikhodko said.

(Reporting by Denis Dyomkin, writing by Guy Faulconbridge, editing by Conor Humphries)

Ahmadinejad urges Obama to accept nuke swap deal

Iran’s president Wednesday urged Barack Obama to accept a nuclear fuel swap deal, warning the US leader will miss a historic opportunity for improved cooperation from Tehran if the offer is rejected.

Mahmoud Ahamdinejad also issued a stern warning to Russia, saying Moscow’s support for the US-led push for a new round of UN sanctions against Iran was contrary to the two countries’ neighbourly and friendly relations.

Washington has denounced the Iranian offer, brokered last week by Brazil and Turkey, as a ploy by Tehran to avoid a new round of UN sanctions over its controversial nuclear program, which the West fears is geared toward nuclear weapons.

“There are people in the world who want to pit Mr Obama against the Iranian nation and bring him to the point of no return, where the path to his friendship with Iran will be blocked forever,” Ahmadinejad said during a rally in the southern town of Kerman.

Iran proposed last week to ship much of its low-enriched uranium to Turkey in return for nuclear fuel rods needed for a Tehran medical research reactor.

The fuel swap would diminish Iran’s stockpile of low-enriched uranium that can possibly be used in making atomic bombs, if the uranium is enriched to a higher, weapons-grade level.

Iran says to reconsider fuel swap if sanctions imposed

Iran will reconsider a nuclear fuel swap deal if world powers agree to impose further sanctions on the Islamic Republic, Interfax news agency quoted Tehran’s ambassador to Moscow as saying on Tuesday.

“If there are new sanctions, it will become obvious to the Iranian public that the “5 + 1″ group is hiding evil intentions and pursuing political objectives. This would force us to revise the Tehran accords,” Mahmoud Reza Sadjadi was quoted as saying.

Under the deal, agreed with Turkey and Brazil, Iran would send 1,200 kg of its low-enriched uranium (LEU) to Turkey in return for fuel rods to keep a Tehran medical research reactor running.

Western critics say the deal would still leave Iran with enough uranium for one bomb, as it has stockpiled more LEU since the idea was first proposed last year.

“We believe that by this (deal) Iran has demonstrated its goodwill,” Sadjadi said. “After all that lobbying by Brazil, Turkey and other countries, we believe that it makes no sense to talk about new sanctions.”

(Writing by Dmitry Solovyov, editing by Guy Faulconbridge)

Iran starts meeting with IAEA on nuclear fuel deal

Iranian officials met the U.N. nuclear watchdog chief for talks on Monday at which they were expected to hand over a letter outlining a deal to send some of Tehran’s enriched uranium abroad.

The deal to swap low-enriched uranium for fuel to run an Iranian medical research reactor, aimed at allaying fears Iran is trying to amass enough fissile material for nuclear weapons, was agreed last week by Tehran with Turkey and Brazil.

Under the plan, Iran would transfer 1,200 kg (2,646 lb) of its low-enriched uranium (LEU) — enough for an atom bomb if enriched to high purity — to Turkey in return for special fuel rods to replenish the stocks of its medical isotope reactor.

World powers have voiced doubt about the value of this offer — based on a seven-month-old, IAEA-backed proposal — since Iran’s LEU stockpile has grown significantly since then, meaning it could still be left with enough for a nuclear warhead.

Iran has also started refining uranium to a higher level.

(Reporting by Sylvia Westall; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Terrorism will be a key issue discussed with Qureshi: Krishna

Tehran, May 18 (ANI): Before emplaning for New Delhi after attending the Group of Fifteen Summit here, Indian External Affairs Minister S.M.Krishna on Tuesday told ANI in an interview that during his visit to Pakistan from July 15, terrorism would be one of the important issues covered in talks with Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi

Krishna”s comment assumes significance in the wake of reports that hundreds of militants are regrouping in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (POK) and waiting to cross the border into India.

He said that Pakistan should take serious note of terrorists regrouping under different names

He further claimed that terrorist groups regroup if one terrorist outfit is banned. Sometimes, a same group changes its name, but its intent remains constant and unchanged, he added.

He said that this should be taken serious note of by Pakistan because it is happening on their soil.

Last week, Krishna said he hoped his proposed visit to Islamabad would help reduce the trust deficit between the two nations.

“I hope that my visit, when I go there and then I certainly would be extending an invitation to Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi to visit India. So these high-level visits will only act as some kind of panacea to reduce the trust deficit,” he said.

“We can talk to each other with a little more confidence in each other, and that certainly would create the right kind of atmosphere for very productive talks between our two countries,” he added on his way to New Delhi after a three-day visit to Kazakhstan.

Relations between the two Asian neighbours went into a diplomatic freeze after India blamed Pakistan-based militants for the 26/11-Mumbai terror attacks.

The call for resuming talks at the foreign ministers level came from Qureshi on May 11.

Addressing the media then in Islamabad, Qureshi said all issues would be discussed with Krishna, and Islamabad would not hesitate to present its stated positions on all issues bedevilling bilateral ties.

“Don””t expect miracles overnight. It is an uphill task. The two foreign secretaries will meet on the sidelines of the SAARC conference to do the ground work for the foreign ministers meeting which will take place on July 15. I will be visiting New Delhi after the Islamabad meeting at a mutually convenient date for the next round of talks,” he said.

“Recognising that this is a very important engagement and step forward in our bilateral relations, I have decided to undertake a number of steps for preparation, consultations and national consensus building on some very sensitive issues that are outstanding between India and Pakistan,” he added. (ANI)

French woman flying home after Iran trial – France

French teaching assistant Clotilde Reiss is being flown back to France on Sunday after the end of her trial in Iran on spying charges, President Nicolas Sarkozy’s office said in a statement.

In Tehran on Saturday, Reiss’s lawyer said she would be allowed to leave Iran after her jail sentence was commuted to a fine of $285,000.

French woman to be cleared of spying-Iran lawyer

The lawyer for a French teaching assistant who was arrested on spying charges after Iran’s disputed June election said on Saturday she would be acquitted by Sunday.

“The case of Clotilde Reiss is finished. The court will acquit my client of charges by Sunday,” Mohammad Ali Mahdavi-Sabet told Reuters.

Reiss, who has been out of jail on bail and staying at the French embassy, was accused of taking part in a Western plot to destabilise the Iranian government after the June 12 vote in which President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was re-elected.

Her case has raised tensions between France and Iran, already at odds over Tehran’s nuclear programme. France says Reiss is innocent and has demanded her immediate release.

She was arrested in Tehran in July when preparing to leave the Islamic state after a five-month stint working at the University of Isfahan.

She was among thousands of people detained over widespread post-election unrest. Most of them have been freed.

Defeated moderate candidates say the election was rigged to secure Ahmadinejad’s re-election. The authorities deny this.

(Reporting by Hossein Jaseb, Writing by Parisa Hafezi; Editing by Charles Dick)

US closely watching Krishna visit to Iran

Washington, May 15 (IANS) The United States would be watching closely Indian External Affairs Minister S. M. Krishna’s visit to Iran over the weekend, but does not expect Tehran to change course on its nuclear programme.

So ‘We believe that it is time to apply more pressure to Iran and that, we think, is the best way to get them to engage more seriously,’ State Department spokesman Phillip Crowley told reporters Friday.

Asked if the US had reached out to India at any level on the issue as it did with the visiting British Foreign Secretary William Hague ‘on the need to send a strong and united signal about Iran’s nuclear programme,’ he said ‘Not to my knowledge.’

‘I mean, Iran did come up in the context of the discussion that we had this week with (Afghan) President (Hamid) Karzai since, obviously, Afghanistan is a neighbour of Iran. I mean, we are touching in a wide range of discussions with a wide range of countries,’ Crowley said.

‘And we’ll be watching closely to meetings that occur in Tehran this weekend,’ he said when asked to comment on Krishna’s visit to Tehran. ‘But as the Secretary (of State Hillary Clinton) said, we are sceptical that Iran is going to change course.’

Clinton, he recalled, had also said… ‘we believe that it is time to apply more pressure to Iran and that, we think, is the best way to get them to engage more seriously.’