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Iran Super Thread- Merged

DBA said:
The question is when they have collapsed and are economically ruined will they follow the USSR to opening up or North Korea into tighter control and misery?

That's where clever planning and preparation come into play. Bigger heads than mine should be working on this angle..
 
Two very insightful articles concerning Iran and its meddling in Iraq.

http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=26865
The terrorists are on the run for one reason only: they fear the United States.

“In Tehran, they are now referring to the United States as mar-rouye domesh vastadeh – the Cobra standing on his tail,” says Shahriar Ahy, an Iranian-born political analyst who helped build the post-war broadcasting network in Iraq.

The sea-change began on January 10, when President George W. Bush announced that the United States would no longer tolerate Iranian and Syrian intelligence officers using Iraq as a playground for their murderous games.

When he announced the troop surge in Iraq, Bush also put Iran and Syria on notice. “Iran is providing material support for attacks on American troops,” he said. “We will disrupt the attacks on our forces. We'll interrupt the flow of support from Iran and Syria. And we will seek out and destroy the networks providing advanced weaponry and training to our enemies in Iraq.”

Ralph Peters:
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=26822
Within two weeks, four choppers go down in Iraq. Shot down. By ene mies who previously couldn't hit the Goodyear Blimp.

Attack helicopters and transport birds, military and contractor aircraft went down. Crews KIA (in one case, executed). Did the bad guys just get lucky?

No. They have new weapons. And new training. And a new strategy.

First, the strategy: In Iraq, helicopters serve as our taxis, moving personnel quickly and - until now - safely above the carnage on the ground. Attack helicopters provide quick-response fire support to the grunts, giving us a huge advantage.

Limit our freedom to fly, and you not only reduce the ability of Apache gun-ships to kill our enemies and save friendly lives, you force us onto the roads. And the roads are where bombs and ambushes can further restrict our movement.
 
Iran is a growing malignant tumour in the region.

They will literally cut their own throat sooner or later, but as in all tumours, its just a matter of time until it either takes the host, or its removed.

I don't know the fate of this radicalised nation, but if they keep travelling the path thye are on, there will be a confrontation sooner or later, and in my view, it will be sooner.

Iran is a uge country, and is in my opinion, one of the strongest in the region. Don't take what they say lightly.

The whole region is rifle with corruption, extremism, and a seething hatred for us all. However, I have come to the conclusion that violence is a way of life in the ME, just like hockey in Canada, so if they can't fight with someone else, they'll fight with each other. Thats just how it is here. A Mars bar is worth more than a life. Too bad the entire region just doesn't implode on itself.

Just remember, Iran is dangerous, more than most people think.

Cheers,

Wes
 
Iran launches three-day war games

Total of 750 missiles and canon munitions will be fired during war games held in 16 provinces.

By Aresu Eqbali – TEHRAN

Iran's ideological army, the elite Revolutionary Guards, launched three days of war games on Monday with a succession of missile tests aimed at improving defensive capabilities.

The "Power Manoeuvre" war games by the elite force in 16 of Iran's 30 provinces come at a time of mounting tension with the United States over Iran's nuclear programme and allegations it is arming militias in Iraq.

"With the firing of short-, medium- and long-range missiles by the Revolutionary Guards, 'Power Manoeuvre' has started," the state news agency IRNA reported.

It is the latest show of force by Iran's elite military in the face of Washington's increasingly tough rhetoric although US officials have been at pains to deny speculation of a planned military strike.


IRNA said a total of 750 missiles and canon munitions would be fired during the exercises, being staged less than two weeks after similar manoeuvres by the Guards' air force and naval units.
http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=19657

      Looks like some more sabre rattling on Iran's part.
 
More and more stories coming out about Iran's poor economy. Another interesting story yesterday was that the Russians stopped work on the nuclear reactor at Bushehr due to non-payment.
 
tomahawk6 said:
More and more stories coming out about Iran's poor economy. Another interesting story yesterday was that the Russians stopped work on the nuclear reactor at Bushehr due to non-payment.
Shows where Russia's true allegiance is, the power of the money bomb.
 
The soft approach:

http://www.victorhanson.com/articles/hanson021907.html

Tapping Ahmadinejad’s Egg
by Victor Davis Hanson
Tribune Media Services

We all know the Iranian M.O. — nuclear proliferation, Holocaust denial, threats to wipe out Israel, vicious anti-Western rhetoric, lavish sponsorship of terrorists at work attacking Israel and destabilizing Lebanon.

If that were not enough, we now learn that Iran has been sending agents into Iraq to destroy the fledgling democracy and supplying sophisticated roadside bombs to blow up Americans.

Lunatic state-run media keep boasting that Iran will kidnap American soldiers, shut down the Straits of Hormuz, send out global jihadists and raise the price of oil.

Most international observers agree on two things about this loony theocracy that promises to take the world down with it: We should not yet bomb Iran, and it should not get the bomb. Yet the former forbearance could well ensure the latter reality.

What, then, should the United States do other than keep offering meaningless platitudes about "dialogue" and "talking"?

Imagine that Iran is a hardboiled egg with a thin shell. We should tap it lightly wherever we can — until tiny fissures join and shatter the shell.

We can begin to do this by pushing international accords and doggedly ratcheting up the weak United Nations sanctions. Even if they don't do much to Iran in any significant way, the resolutions seem to enrage Ahmadinejad. And when he rages at the United Nations, he only loses further support, especially in the Third World.

We should start another fissure by prodding the European Union, presently Iran's chief trading partner, to be more vocal and resolute in pressuring Iran. The so-called EU3 — Britain, France and Germany — failed completely to stop Iran's nuclear proliferation. But out of that setback came a growing realization among Europeans that a nuclear-tipped missile from theocratic Iran could soon hit Europe just as easily as it could Israel. Now Europeans should adopt a complete trade embargo to prevent Iranian access to precision machinery and high technology otherwise unobtainable from mischievous Russia and China.

Americans should continue to support Iranian dissidents. We need not encourage dissidents to go into the street, where they could be shot. Instead we can offer them media help and access to the West. Americans can highlight the plight of women, minorities and liberals in Iran — just the groups that so appeal to the elite Western left.

And we should announce in advance that we don't want any bases in Iran, that we don't want its oil, and that we won't send American infantry there. That would preempt the tired charges of imperialism and colonialism.

The United States also must stabilize Iraq and Afghanistan. The last thing Iran wants is a democratic and prosperous Middle East surrounding its borders. The televised sight of Afghans, Iraqis, Kurds, Lebanese and Turks voting and speaking freely could galvanize Iranian popular opinion that in time might overwhelm the mullahs.

At the same time, we need to remind the Gulf monarchies that a nuclear Shiite theocracy is far more dangerous to them than either the United States or Israel — and that America's efforts to contain Iran depend on their own to rein in Wahhabis in Iraq.

We should say nothing much about the presence of two or three U.S. carrier groups in the Persian Gulf and Mediterranean. Iran will soon grasp on its own that the build-up of such forces might presage air strikes that the United States excels in — and not more ground fighting that the American public apparently won't any longer stomach.

We must continue to make clear that Israel is a sovereign nation with a perfect right to protect itself. Sixty years after the Holocaust, no Israeli prime minister will sit still idly while seventh-century theocrats grandstand about wiping out Israel.

Let's also keep our distance and moderate our rhetoric. There's no reason to frighten average Iranians — who may share our antipathy to their country's regime — or to make therapeutic pleas to talk with those leaders in bunkers whom we know are our enemies.

Finally, and most importantly, Americans must conserve energy, gasify coal, diversify fuels, drill more petroleum and invent new energy sources. Only that can collapse the world price of petroleum.

When oil is priced at $60 a barrel, Ahmadinejad is a charismatic Third World benefactor who throws cash to every thug who wants a roadside bomb or shouldered-fired missile — and has plenty of money to buy Pakistani, North Korean or Russian nuclear components. But when oil is $30 a barrel, Ahmadinejad will be despised by his own masses, who will become enraged as state-subsidized food and gas skyrocket, and scarce Iranian petrodollars are wasted on Hezbollah and Hamas.

None of these taps alone will fracture Iran and stop it from going nuclear. But all of them together might well crack Ahmadinejad's thin shell before he gets the bomb.

So let's start tapping.

©2007 Tribune Media Services

If that dosn't work there is always the hard approach, and people who say the US is "overstreached" and unable to carry out military action are talking through their hats.

 
Whats hapend with this missile into space thing? I heard some reports on the CBC news Tuesday morning, that they launched one but nothing else since. Nothing on the Star or CNN.



 
Missile into space? You may be thinking about the Chinese ASAT test.......

From the Jeruselum Post:

jpost.com

Lieberman: We are capable of facing the Iranian threat alone
By JPOST.COM STAFF AND AP

"This government is doing more than any other government to deal with the Iranian nuclear issue. Even if we will have to face the Iranian threat alone, we will be able to," Minister of Strategic Affairs Avigdor Lieberman (read his JPost blog), told members of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee on Wednesday.

According to the Israel Beiteinu leader, "If Iran manages to attain nuclear capabilities the entire region will enter a mad race to achieve similar capacities."

# US inviting Iran, Syria for Iraq talks

Meanwhile, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad arrived in Sudan Wednesday for talks between two leaders who face strong UN Security Council pressure, Iran for its nuclear program and Sudan for the conflict in Darfur.

Ahmadinejad was met at Khartoum airport by Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, a day after the International Criminal Court's chief prosecutor accused a junior member of al-Bashir's cabinet of committing war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur.

During his two-day visit, Ahmadinejad will deliver a lecture at a private institution in Khartoum and witness the signing of several bilateral agreements, according to Sudan's Information Ministry.

On Tuesday, the ICC chief prosecutor accused Sudan's minister of state for humanitarian affairs, Ahmed Muhammed Harun, of paying and recruiting militias responsible for murder, rape and torture in Darfur.

Harun, who is known to be a member of al-Bashir's inner circle, is alleged to have committed the crimes while a junior interior minister.
 
Found it,
Looks like the storey has changed slightly from yesterday. It was reported as being a launch, and reaching sub-orbit.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6394387.stm

Iran rocket claim raises tension 
 
Iranian media say the country has successfully launched its first rocket capable of reaching space.
But officials later said it was for research and would not go into orbit.

Experts say if Iran has fired a rocket into space it would cause alarm abroad as it would mean scientists had crossed important technological barriers.

Iran has made little secret of its desire to become a space power and already has a satellite in orbit launched by the Russians.

The latest launch - if confirmed - comes at a time of mounting tension between Tehran and the West over Iran's controversial nuclear programme.

The five permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany are due to meet on Monday to discuss the possibility of more sanctions over the nuclear issue.

On Sunday, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad delivered another defiant speech insisting there is no going back on Iran's nuclear programme.

  Iran's potential nuclear military programme, combined with an advanced missile capability, would destabilise the region

Sir Richard Dalton, former UK ambassador to Iran
In a speech in Tehran, he likened his country's nuclear programme to a train with no brakes and no reverse gear.

One of his deputy foreign ministers, Manouchehr Mohammadi, said they had prepared themselves for any situation arising from the issue, even for war.

Meanwhile, foreign ministers from seven Muslim states meeting in Pakistan have called for a diplomatic solution to the "dangerous" stand-off.

"It is vital that all issues must be resolved through diplomacy and there must be no resort to use of force," said a statement issued after talks involving ministers from Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, Malaysia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

Missile technology

Iranian TV broke the news of the reported test saying: "The first space rocket has been successfully launched into space."


Ahmadinejad has claimed Iran's right to nuclear technology

It quoted the head of Iran's aerospace research centre, Mohsen Bahrami, as saying that "the rocket was carrying material intended for research created by the ministries of science and defence".

However, Ali Akbar Golrou, executive director of the same facility, was later quoted by Fars news agency as saying the craft launched by was a sub-orbital rocket for scientific research.

"What was announced by the head of the research centre was the news of launching this sounding rocket," Mr Golrou said.

It would not remain in orbit but could rise to about 150km (94 miles) before a parachute-assisted descent to Earth.

No pictures of the reported launch have been shown on Iranian state TV, and no Western countries have confirmed tracking any such test-firing.

Some Western diplomats suspect Iran may have backtracked on the announcement when it realised what negative publicity this would bring at a sensitive time, says the BBC's Frances Harrison in Tehran.

The reports come a day after Iran's Defence Minister spoke of plans to build a satellite launcher and join the space club. Also, an Iranian official quoted in Aviation Week earlier this month said Iran would soon test a new satellite launcher.

Britain's former ambassador to Iran, Sir Richard Dalton, told the BBC that, if confirmed, such a launch could destabilise the Middle East.

"It is a matter of concern," he said. "Iran's potential nuclear military programme, combined with an advanced missile capability, would destabilise the region, and of course if there were a bomb that could be placed on the end of this missile, it would be in breach of Iran's obligations under the non-proliferation treaty."

Military experts believe that if Iran has sent a rocket into space it means scientists have mastered the technology needed to cross the atmospheric barrier.

In practice, they say, that means there is no technological block to Iran building longer range missiles now, something that will be of great international concern.

In 2005, Iran's Russian-made satellite was put into orbit by a Russian rocket.

But shortly afterwards Iranian military officials said they were preparing a satellite launch vehicle of their own, and last month they announced they were ready to test it soon.
 
A missing Iranian intelligence General appears to have defected to the Great satan. :)

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,21344278-2703,00.html
Iranian general 'seeking asylum in US'
Abraham Rabinovich, Jerusalem
March 08, 2007

A RETIRED Iranian general who went missing in Turkey last month has defected and sought asylum in the US, according to a well-connected Arabic newspaper published in London.
The newspaper, al-Shark al-Awsat, cited "high-profile" sources saying former Iranian deputy defence minister and Revolutionary Guard commander Ali Reza Asghari had gone over to the West.

Reports from Istanbul that General Asghari's family had also disappeared in Turkey support the likelihood that he defected rather than was kidnapped by either the CIA or by Israel's Mossad, as has been speculated. The general went missing from his Istanbul hotel a month ago.

Iranian authorities, who have been silent on the disappearance until this week, claim he has been abducted. "It is likely Asghari has been abducted by Western intelligence services," said Iran's top police officer, General Esmaeil Ahmadi Moghaddam.

Defection of such a high-ranking figure would leave no external enemy to blame and would be seen as a rejection of the Islamic state by someone who well knows its inner workings.

General Asghari's crossing of the line, whether voluntary or not, is a resounding blow for the Iranian Government since he is privy to its most intimate secrets, particularly those concerning its nuclear capabilities and plans.

He served until two years ago as deputy defence minister, a post he held for eight years and which presumably offered an uninhibited view of virtually every aspect of Iran's security apparatus.

He was reportedly closely associated with Iran's activities in support of the Shi'ites in Iraq.

US intelligence analysts contend that Iran has been providing armaments to Iraqi Shia fighters that have been used with deadly effect against coalition forces, particularly highly lethal roadside bombs.

General Asghari would presumably be able to address the question of whether these shipments have been made with "approval from top leaders in Iran", as a senior US intelligence officer has claimed.

Israel's Shin Bet security service, which is responsible for protecting Israeli diplomatic missions abroad and senior Israeli officials on their travels, has reportedly boosted its activity abroad in anticipation of a possible Iranian attempt to kidnap an Israeli official.

"We formulate our security arrangements according to developments in the field and intelligence information," said a Shin Bet spokesman yesterday.

Israel has denied any connection to the missing general. Israeli officials, however, would clearly like to hear what General Asghari has to say about the disappearance of a downed Israeli navigator, Ron Arad, who was reportedly transferred by Lebanese Shi'ites to Iran in the 1980s when General Asghari was commander of an Iranian Revolutionary Guard detachment posted in Lebanon to liaise with Hezbollah.
 
Here's more on the Iranian Tomahawk 6 was talking about....an article by Amir Taheri

http://www.nypost.com/php/pfriendly/print.php?url=http://www.nypost.com/seven/03092007/postopinion/opedcolumnists/iran__big_fish_gone_missing_opedcolumnists_amir_taheri.htm

....Always in the shadows, Askari was in charge of a program to train foreign Islamist militants as part of Tehran's strategy of "exporting" the Khomeinist revolution.

In 1982-83, Askari (along with Ayatollah Ali-Akbar Mohatashami-Pour) founded the Lebanese branch of Hezbollah and helped set up its first military units. The two men supervised the 1983 suicide attacks on the U.S. Embassy and on the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut - killing more than 300 Americans, including 241 Marines. Iranian sources say Askari was part of a triumvirate of Revolutionary Guard officers that controlled Hezbollah's armed units until the end of the '90s.

Askari led the 500-man Iranian military mission in Beirut from 1998 to 2000 before returning home to work for the Strategic Defense Procurement Committee. In that capacity, he often traveled abroad to negotiate arms deals.

Tehran sources claim that Askari was also involved in Iran's controversial nuclear program, which, although presented as a civilian project, is controlled by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard. They also say that last November he was appointed a member of the Strategic Defense Planning Commission set up by Ali Khamenei, the "Supreme Guide."


He apparently was in Turkey on his way back from Syria

....The Iranian mission's task was to lay the foundations for a Syrian armament industry, licensed to manufacture Iranian-designed weapons. The 30 or so experts that had accompanied Askari remained in Syria to work out the technical details.

According to some reports, Askari had stopped over in Istanbul to meet with an unidentified Syrian arms dealer who lives in Paris.

That is interesting because it suggests that Iran may be coming to terms with a change in its supply lines.  It now finds that is cannot supply its markets in Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon and Syria.  That prompts two further suggestions:

1. They are now concerned that Iraq is lost to them as a conduit because of either the US or Iraqi Government

2. That Iraq has been a reliable conduit in the past, both during the current period of instability since the fall of Saddam, and notably previously, during the build-up of Hezbollah in South Lebanon from 1980.   This further prompts notice that that would have happened while Saddam was fighting Iran but that when the US liberated Kuwait Saddam flew his Air Force to refuge in Iran.  Some very convoluted state-craft going on in that part of the world.

Finally:

Askari's disappearance fits an emerging pattern. Since December, the United States and its allies appear to have moved onto the offensive against the Islamic Republic's networks of influence in the Middle East:

* Jordan has seized 17 Iranian agents, accused of trying to smuggle arms to Hamas, and deported them quietly after routine debriefing.

* A number of Islamic Republic agents have been identified and deported in Pakistan and Tunisia.

* At least six other Iranian agents have been picked up in Gaza, where they were helping Hamas set up armament factories.

* In the past three months, some 30 senior Iranian officials, including at least two generals of Revolutionary Guards, have been captured in Iraq.

All but five of the Islamic Republic agents seized in Iraq appear to have been released. One of those released was Hassan Abbasi, nicknamed "the Kissinger of Islam," who is believed to be President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's strategic advisor.

Among those still held by the Americans is one Muhammad Jaafari Sahraroudi, a senior Revolutionary Guard commander wanted by the Austrian police in connection with the murder of three Iranian Kurdish leaders in Vienna in 1989.

All this looks like a message to Tehran that its opponents may be moving on to the offensive in what looks like a revival of tactics used in the Cold War.

If it is a revival of Cold War tactics it can only be possible because the US has finally developed a critical mass of trusted personnel that can operate in the middle eastern environment.  With that mass in place Iran and the other regimes are in much more fragile circumstances than the old Soviet Union ever was.  It had the means to control its borders and people and isolate the people from both the physical presence of foreigners and their message.  In addition, for the longest while it offered its people the prospect of the western material culture by different means.  It fell when it failed to deliver.

The middle east can't control its borders or its people.  That is its single defining historical character.  The Arabs in particular with their raiding and trading culture of nomadic pastoralism cheerfully ignore borders.  Just take a look at the Clan affiliations in Western Iraq and Eastern Syria.  As well, despite their "abhorrence" for the west,  middle easterners show a remarkable affinity for western products - including pick-ups, complete with gun-racks, for their camels, lacy undies and cosmetics for the women, and a good bottle of Scotch. 

It suggests to me an environment reminiscent of the US in the 1920s or possibly even the 1950s.  Good church going people recovering in the pews from the hangovers inflicted the night before at the local "speak-easy" in the 1920s.  The children of those same church-goers in the 1950s going to the same churches as their parents while contributing to making Hugh Hefner rich and making Las Vegas very profitable as "Sin City".  Dubai and Kuwait City, amongst others, seem to be vying to be a combination of Las Vegas and Disneyworld.

It is an environment that can be very easily penetrated and with a population that is susceptible to rumour-mongering.  The right message by the right people could cause the governments' no end of problems.   

Iran is in a lot weaker position than the USSR ever was and will not survive 40 years of that kind of pressure.

And in a PS - to further cement the tendency to wander that Old Sweat identified - Iran is still likely to lose even if the Democrats win in 2008. 

The Democrats are arguing for a change in strategy, to pull combat troops out of Iraq and relocate them in Afghanistan.

President Bush is arguing to stay the course and veto any precipitous move.

President Bush will stay the course until he leaves office in 22 months.  That gives him ample time to continue disruption of  the ACMs in Iraq, build a stronger Iraqi internal security apparatus and realign Iraqi politics.
At the same time 'agents provocateurs' can become more numerous in Iran creating problems with minorities, students and labour - all the usual suspects.

When Bush leaves the Democrats  will come in and declare a change in strategy - shift troops to Iran's eastern front in Afghanistan and Baluchistan, pursue a policy of Hot Trod in Baluchistan and Pashtunistan to get the terrorists, announce a containment policy with respect to Iran and shift the remainder of American troops from the internal security role in Iraq to the borders, with particular attention being paid to the Iranian border.

Thus US domestic politics are satisfied while US foreign policy, as it has done over the years, survives largely intact.  I believe that Vietnam was a salutory lesson to the American political establishment on the dangers of a "discontinuous" foreign policy.  Parties change, and they need to present new policies to win elections, but the interests of the state don't change.

Afghanistan was right to the jaw of Iran to get their attention.  Iraq has been a series of jabs with the left as the US and Iraq spar during the wearing down phase.  By 2009, a nice strong body blow from the right might just be enough to finish the match.  Coincidental timing as far as Canadian involvement in Afghanistan is concerned.













 
The US ran into this problem in the 70's but we were able to pull out of the stagflation with the free market,something the mullah's dont have.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/03/11/wiran11.xml

Iran votes to impose petrol rationing
By Gethin Chamberlain and Kay Biouki in Teheran, Sunday Telegraph
Last Updated: 12:24am GMT 11/03/2007


Iranians are bracing themselves for a fresh round of belt tightening after their government voted to impose petrol rationing coupled with sharp rises in the price of fuel.

The rationing system will limit Iranians to 22 gallons (100 litres) of petrol a month, two full tanks for a typical family car. It is a direct result of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's adherence to an economic model, based on Iranian self-sufficiency, that has caused housing and other living costs to soar.

The basic price of petrol will rise by 25 per cent, but Iranians who need to use more than the permitted amount will be hit by rises of up to 450 per cent.

Economists predict that the knock-on effect on the average Iranian will be dramatic, with retailers expected to pass on the additional costs to consumers.

Iran is the second largest producer of oil in the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries but it imports 40 per cent of its petrol - worth about $3 billion a year - after its refining capacity was wrecked in the war with Iraq. It currently sells the petrol at subsidised prices.

Mr Ahmadinejad had publicly argued against the abolition of subsidies and advocated persuading consumers to switch to other fuel sources such as natural gas, which do not rely on foreign imports. But critics say his opposition was manufactured for public consumption. They point out that the price increases had already been factored into his government's budget.

Some Iranians suspect that the move is also a precautionary measure against further possible sanctions which may be imposed on Iran for pressing ahead with its nuclear programme in defiance of the United Nations security council.

Under the new rules, which will take effect in late spring, motorists will be given coupons entitling them to 100 litres of petrol a month at the increased price of 1,000 rial (about 5p) per litre. Additional petrol will have to be bought at open market prices of between 14p and 22p per litre.

The plan was due to be introduced on March 21 but has been delayed for three months to allow time for the distribution of ration cards. Some drivers have been issued with the cards but at least half are still waiting to receive them. Work to fit the nation's petrol pumps with card readers is not yet complete.

Iranian consumers said the changes would push up inflation. Djamile Ershadi, 70, a retired government clerk, said: "Everything has gone up. You cannot live on an ordinary salary any more. Life has become much harder."
 
http://newsblaze.com/story/20070314191923payn.nb/newsblaze/IRAN0001/Iran.html

Sooo.... taking bets on how long before that/those facility/ies are a burning pile of rubble?
 
Will, I've that news at more sites(like normal sites from AP and reuters, that Russian expertshave left Iran), and given Iran's "expert" care of assets like the F-14, which are much simpler and smaller then Nuclear reactors, I give them less then a year before their Nuclear facilities are beyond use.
 
It sure sends off alarm bells in my ears.  Thanks for the intresting post.

Regards,
TN2IC
 
sober_ruski said:
taking bets on how long before that/those facility/ies are a burning pile of rubble?
5 to 15 months. Perhaps it will be a lot longer, or perhaps it will be in a few hours time.
 
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