The Middle East----Iran???

Shurnuff

5 More Years Bitches!!
OG Investor
MiddleEast98.jpg

Most of the Middle East is in turmoil but not Iran???
I figure that country would be next in line for a Regime change?
Do Mahmoud Ahmadinejad have that much strangle hold on that country??
What happen to the People will to fight?????
There is nothing coming out of this country at all!!! What gives???
Are they behind the upheaval in the Middle East????

:confused::confused::confused::confused::confused::confused:
 
What riots? Syria in denial
officials in Damascus resort to farcical denials, creative accounts after more than 30 people killed in Syria protests; eyewitnesses say security forces mow down stone throwers, fire at protestors after Assad photo ripped

Published: 03.25.11

As protests across Syria continue to grow, prompting increasingly violent clashes and a mounting death toll, local officials insist on dismissing the reports while providing their own creative accounts of the situation.


On Friday, violent clashes were reported in several Syrian cities, with more than 30 protestors shot to death by security forces in Deraa, Damascus, Latakia and Sanamein.

Despite the reports, Syrian officials continued to present their own questionable version for Friday's events.


The situation in the country is calm, al-Arabiya television quoted Syria's information minister as saying on Friday, as the protests spread.


"The situation is completely calm in all parts of the country," the television station quoted Information Minister Muhsin Bilal as saying.


It was not clear when he was speaking.



Meanwhile, an official source claimed that an "armed gang" attacked headquarters of the people's army in the town of Sanamein, south of the capital Damascus, in an attempt to storm it, Syrian news agency Sana reported.



"The headquarters' guards confronted the gang and the clash resulted in the deaths of several attackers, the source said," Sana reported. "He added that security forces will continue pursuing armed gangs that terrorize civilians and inhabitants and try to tamper with the security of the country and citizens."



Troops mow down stone throwers

According to different eyewitness accounts at odds with official Syrian reports troops who opened fire at protestors over ripped photos of President Bashar Assad and the stoning of soldiers.
A resident of Sanamein told al-Jazeera told that more the 20 people died in the southern city after troops opened fire indiscriminately. According to an eyewitness, the clash ensued after protestors approached a military base and stoned it, prompting Syrian forces to open fire at the demonstrators.



Various websites featured difficult images of the bodies of the dead alongside the bleeding wounded.



Several protestors were also killed in Deraa, where an eyewitness said that security forces opened fire in response to a demonstrator ripping Assad's photo and an attempt to break a statue of late President Hafez Assad.



Amnesty: At least 55 dead in week
In sharp contradiction to the official Syrian statements, human rights group Amnesty International said on Friday at least 55 people are believed to have been killed since protests erupted in and around the southern Syrian city of Deraa a week ago.



The figure may not include the most recent deaths in the country.




"Security forces again opened fire on protesters in Sanamein and carried out arrests in Damascus, according to reports on Friday, a day after the authorities pledged to investigate the violence," Amnesty said in a statement.


The United States also seemed to take Syrian denials with a grain of salt, calling on the Syrian government to stop violence against demonstrators and the arrests of human rights activists, White House spokesman Jay Carney said on Friday.



"We strongly condemn the Syrian government's attempts to repress and intimidate demonstrators," he told reporters.







http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4047818,00.html
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Anyone know why Iran is so quite durning this time of upheaval in the Middle East?????

:eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek:

Shurnuff what did they tell you about silent ppl....


LIES

<iframe title="YouTube video player" width="480" height="390" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/YpviWFDGDqY" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
Shurnuff what did they tell you about silent ppl....


LIES

<iframe title="YouTube video player" width="480" height="390" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/YpviWFDGDqY" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>



He was feeding a lot of bullshit!!!
:smh::smh::smh::smh::smh:
 
Iran are Persians and not Arabs, therefore a fundamental difference in outlook, also Iran successfully removed all american involvement in their country, to the cost of some freedoms in their country to its citizens
 
Iran are Persians and not Arabs, therefore a fundamental difference in outlook, also Iran successfully removed all american involvement in their country, to the cost of some freedoms in their country to its citizens

"Loss of SOME FREEDOM"!!?????
Dictators don't allow any type of freedom!!!
 
Where in the world is Ahmedinejad

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:cool:
 
Anyone know why Iran is so quite durning this time of upheaval in the Middle East?????

:eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek:


Iran's supreme leader and president wrestle for power



A dispute between Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ignites
concern inside the nation that the infighting weakens Iran's ability to project
power internationally amid historic instability across the Mideast.

The Iranian president had been skipping Cabinet meetings, apparently over
Khamenei's decision to overrule his firing of the country's intelligence chief.
So Khamenei asked a conservative lawmaker to begin assembling a caretaker
Cabinet, just in case the president resigned or had to be removed, said an
Iranian official close to the politician.

Ahmadinejad eventually returned to work. But he also had a message for
Khamenei: I can still make a big mess.

He recently defied the nation's constitutional watchdog, and Khamenei, by
launching a drastic restructuring of the country's government and naming
himself caretaker minister of the country's vast oil and gas resources,
saying, "The president has the authority to replace ministers and be the
caretaker himself." But on Friday he was overruled again, by the country's
powerful Guardian Council.

The eyebrow-raising dispute between Ahmadinejad's camp and the
conservative clerical and political class is rippling across the world — and
igniting concern inside Iran that it weakens the country's ability to project
power internationally at a moment of historic instability across the region.


FULL ARTICLE




. . . could this be why ? ? ?
 
There were demonstrations in Iran during the same time Egypt was in chaos. The problem was, Egypt took the airtime.
 

Iran's supreme leader and president wrestle for power



A dispute between Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ignites
concern inside the nation that the infighting weakens Iran's ability to project
power internationally amid historic instability across the Mideast.

The Iranian president had been skipping Cabinet meetings, apparently over
Khamenei's decision to overrule his firing of the country's intelligence chief.
So Khamenei asked a conservative lawmaker to begin assembling a caretaker
Cabinet, just in case the president resigned or had to be removed, said an
Iranian official close to the politician.

Ahmadinejad eventually returned to work. But he also had a message for
Khamenei: I can still make a big mess.

He recently defied the nation's constitutional watchdog, and Khamenei, by
launching a drastic restructuring of the country's government and naming
himself caretaker minister of the country's vast oil and gas resources,
saying, "The president has the authority to replace ministers and be the
caretaker himself." But on Friday he was overruled again, by the country's
powerful Guardian Council.

The eyebrow-raising dispute between Ahmadinejad's camp and the
conservative clerical and political class is rippling across the world — and
igniting concern inside Iran that it weakens the country's ability to project
power internationally at a moment of historic instability across the region.


FULL ARTICLE




. . . could this be why ? ? ?

:eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek:
 
According to the French . . .



Ahmadinejad's oil drama
fuels Iran power struggle​


AFP
By Laurent Maillard (AFP)
May 23, 2011


TEHRAN — President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has opened a new front in a power struggle with Iranian conservatives as he insists on retaining the oil ministry duties despite a warning from the constitutional watchdog.

The latest battle is over the ministry responsible for nearly 80 percent of the Islamic republic's annual revenues earned through extraction and export of the nation's vast oil and gas reserves.

Ahmadinejad announced on May 15 that he had taken control of the ministry as a caretaker after dismissing oil minister Masoud Mirkazemi in a reshuffle aimed at merging the oil and energy portfolios.

The move has provoked a political confrontation between Ahmadinejad and the conservative-dominated parliament, forcing the intervention of the Guardians Council, the powerful body responsible for enforcing Iran's constitution.

On Sunday the council, consisting of six clerics and six jurists, ruled the president had overstepped his authority, the reformist Shargh newspaper quoted the body's spokesman Abbas Ali Kadkhodaei as saying.

"According to various articles of the constitution... the president cannot be personally responsible for the supervision of the ministries that do not have a minister," Kadkhodaei said.

The government was quick to dismiss the council's remarks, with Ahmadinejad's top legal adviser insisting the president had no intention of retreating from his decision.

"The president has already announced his reading of the constitution" when it comes to the supervision of ministries, Fatemeh Bodaghi, vice president for legal affairs, said after a Sunday cabinet meeting.

"The issue has been settled and the president is the caretaker of the oil ministry," she said.

Media reported that Ahmadinejad is scheduled to inaugurate a major refinery in the southwestern city of Abadan on Tuesday, but stopped short of saying whether he would attend as the president or caretaker oil minister.

Ahmadinejad's decision also fuelled speculations that he could chair the 159th meeting of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries in Vienna on June 8.

But Shojaoddin Bazargani, a top official at the oil ministry, said on state television's website on Monday that the president would not attend but send "one of his cabinet ministers."

Iran, OPEC's second biggest crude producer, currently holds the rotating presidency of the oil cartel for the first time since its 1979 Islamic revolution.

Ahmadinejad's political rivals had argued it would be inappropriate for a president to attend a summit of ministers, while some MPs have expressed reservations that his heading such a key ministry could raise a conflict of interests.

The fresh struggle over the control of the oil ministry comes less than a month after Ahmadinejad's dismissal of intelligence minister Heydar Moslehi was promptly vetoed by the all-powerful supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The president responded to Khamenei's intervention by disappearing from public view and abandoning cabinet meetings and official visits for more than 10 days in late April.

He was accused of seeking to procure more power ahead of the parliamentary election in 2012, during which his supporters plan to back their own candidates against the ruling conservatives and religious factions.

The row also prompted his political rivals to intensify their criticism of Ahmadinejad's chief of staff and key adviser Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie, who himself is accused of leading "a current of deviation" to destroy the Islamic regime.

In mid-May, Ahmadinejad was involved in another showdown with the parliament over his plan to streamline the government through dismissing two other ministers without seeking the approval of the lawmakers in advance.

Copyright © 2011 AFP





http://www.google.com/hostednews/af...ocId=CNG.df2d0d897729d2022d9a91dff72956f8.1a1
 
According to the French . . .



Ahmadinejad's oil drama
fuels Iran power struggle​


AFP
By Laurent Maillard (AFP)
May 23, 2011


TEHRAN — President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has opened a new front in a power struggle with Iranian conservatives as he insists on retaining the oil ministry duties despite a warning from the constitutional watchdog.

The latest battle is over the ministry responsible for nearly 80 percent of the Islamic republic's annual revenues earned through extraction and export of the nation's vast oil and gas reserves.

Ahmadinejad announced on May 15 that he had taken control of the ministry as a caretaker after dismissing oil minister Masoud Mirkazemi in a reshuffle aimed at merging the oil and energy portfolios.

The move has provoked a political confrontation between Ahmadinejad and the conservative-dominated parliament, forcing the intervention of the Guardians Council, the powerful body responsible for enforcing Iran's constitution.

On Sunday the council, consisting of six clerics and six jurists, ruled the president had overstepped his authority, the reformist Shargh newspaper quoted the body's spokesman Abbas Ali Kadkhodaei as saying.

"According to various articles of the constitution... the president cannot be personally responsible for the supervision of the ministries that do not have a minister," Kadkhodaei said.

The government was quick to dismiss the council's remarks, with Ahmadinejad's top legal adviser insisting the president had no intention of retreating from his decision.

"The president has already announced his reading of the constitution" when it comes to the supervision of ministries, Fatemeh Bodaghi, vice president for legal affairs, said after a Sunday cabinet meeting.

"The issue has been settled and the president is the caretaker of the oil ministry," she said.

Media reported that Ahmadinejad is scheduled to inaugurate a major refinery in the southwestern city of Abadan on Tuesday, but stopped short of saying whether he would attend as the president or caretaker oil minister.

Ahmadinejad's decision also fuelled speculations that he could chair the 159th meeting of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries in Vienna on June 8.

But Shojaoddin Bazargani, a top official at the oil ministry, said on state television's website on Monday that the president would not attend but send "one of his cabinet ministers."

Iran, OPEC's second biggest crude producer, currently holds the rotating presidency of the oil cartel for the first time since its 1979 Islamic revolution.

Ahmadinejad's political rivals had argued it would be inappropriate for a president to attend a summit of ministers, while some MPs have expressed reservations that his heading such a key ministry could raise a conflict of interests.

The fresh struggle over the control of the oil ministry comes less than a month after Ahmadinejad's dismissal of intelligence minister Heydar Moslehi was promptly vetoed by the all-powerful supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The president responded to Khamenei's intervention by disappearing from public view and abandoning cabinet meetings and official visits for more than 10 days in late April.

He was accused of seeking to procure more power ahead of the parliamentary election in 2012, during which his supporters plan to back their own candidates against the ruling conservatives and religious factions.

The row also prompted his political rivals to intensify their criticism of Ahmadinejad's chief of staff and key adviser Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie, who himself is accused of leading "a current of deviation" to destroy the Islamic regime.

In mid-May, Ahmadinejad was involved in another showdown with the parliament over his plan to streamline the government through dismissing two other ministers without seeking the approval of the lawmakers in advance.

Copyright © 2011 AFP





http://www.google.com/hostednews/af...ocId=CNG.df2d0d897729d2022d9a91dff72956f8.1a1

Caught something about this on the Chris Matthews show
:eek::eek::eek:
 
Anyone know why Iran is so quite durning this time of upheaval in the Middle East?????

:eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek:



Iran's supreme leader and president wrestle for power



A dispute between Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ignites
concern inside the nation that the infighting weakens Iran's ability to project
power internationally amid historic instability across the Mideast.




Enfeebling Ahmadinejad: Iran's President
Downsized for Challenging the Ayatullah​


TIME
by Tony Karon
Wednesday, June 22, 2011



How do you say "lame duck" in Farsi? (According to Google's translation service, the answer would be: علیل وناتوان) And in a twist worthy of Game of Thrones, less than two years after his disputed reelection and the brutal crackdown on opponents that followed, Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has been reduced to a علیل وناتوان. And that's just about where the clerical Supreme Leader Ayatullah Ali Khamenei -- who abandoned the political neutrality required of his office in 2009 to hail Ahmadinejad as the candidate whose views were closest to his own -- wants the president.

On Tuesday, Iran's parliament moved closer to impeaching Ahmadinejad, after striking down the appointment of one of his allies to the post of Deputy Foreign Minister, and opening impeachment proceedings against the President's handpicked foreign minister, Ali Akhbar Salehi. And that's just the latest barrage of slings and arrows Ahmadinejad has suffered in the legislature, which just this week included canceling his merging of the ministries of transportation and housing, and forbidding his merging of the oil and energy ministries. Similar attacks have been coming for months in what has become open season on the controversial president within the corridors of power -- even while those that opposed him on the streets, and even at the hustings, remain on lock down.​


FULL STORY


 

Enfeebling Ahmadinejad: Iran's President
Downsized for Challenging the Ayatullah​


TIME
by Tony Karon
Wednesday, June 22, 2011



How do you say "lame duck" in Farsi? (According to Google's translation service, the answer would be: علیل وناتوان) And in a twist worthy of Game of Thrones, less than two years after his disputed reelection and the brutal crackdown on opponents that followed, Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has been reduced to a علیل وناتوان. And that's just about where the clerical Supreme Leader Ayatullah Ali Khamenei -- who abandoned the political neutrality required of his office in 2009 to hail Ahmadinejad as the candidate whose views were closest to his own -- wants the president.

On Tuesday, Iran's parliament moved closer to impeaching Ahmadinejad, after striking down the appointment of one of his allies to the post of Deputy Foreign Minister, and opening impeachment proceedings against the President's handpicked foreign minister, Ali Akhbar Salehi. And that's just the latest barrage of slings and arrows Ahmadinejad has suffered in the legislature, which just this week included canceling his merging of the ministries of transportation and housing, and forbidding his merging of the oil and energy ministries. Similar attacks have been coming for months in what has become open season on the controversial president within the corridors of power -- even while those that opposed him on the streets, and even at the hustings, remain on lock down.​


FULL STORY



Wow!!!! Thank for that update
:cool:
 
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