Election
mandate in hand, Obama readies more Iran sanctions
Only
days after President Obama won reelection, the US rolled out a new
round of sanctions against Iran and accused it of attempting to shoot
down an American drone in international airspace.
RT,
9
November, 2012
The
US State Department and Treasury announced on Thursday that the
sanctions are aimed at senior Iranian officials and several related
entities. US State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland said they
are “responsible for the abuses carried out against their own
citizens.”
The
alleged abuses include the jamming of international satellite
broadcasts, blocking Internet access to services like YouTube, eBay,
Facebook and Gmail, and monitoring online activities to identify
“users who published material insulting government officials,” a
US Treasury statement said. Tehran is also accused of attacking
foreign websites, shutting down newspapers in Iran and detaining
journalists.
Other
countries in the region, including US allies, have blocked Internet
users from accessing services and materials they deemed impropriate.
Turkey blocked YouTube over videos insulting its first president,
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. Pakistan blocked YouTube for “blasphemous
web content.” The United Arab Emirates did the same, taking offense
at ‘adult content’ on the video-sharing site.
The
four individuals targeted by the sanctions include Tehran’s
Communication and Information Technology Minister Reza Taghipour,
deputy commander of the Basij militia Ali Fazli and Iranian police
chief Esmail Ahmadi Moghaddam. The five entities include the
country’s Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance, the Press
Supervisory Board and the Center to Investigate Organized Crime.
Iranian
software companies AmnAfzar Gostar-e Sharif and PeykAsa – which are
involved in monitoring and blocking Internet traffic – and the
companies’ founder Rasool Jalili were also targeted by the
sanctions.
Tehran
is engaged in a campaign to curtail freedoms and “prevent the free
flow of information both into and out of Iran,” Nuland said.
“Countless activists, journalists, lawyers, students and artists
have been detained, censured, tortured or forcibly prevented from
exercising their human rights.”
The
US and some of its allies have leveled increasingly harsh sanctions
against Iran. The restrictions have crippled Iranian oil exports, a
major source of income for the country, by targeting any
organizations worldwide that buy crude from the Islamic Republic.
Western
countries are pressuring Iran in a bid to force it to stop enriching
uranium. They allege that Tehran is trying to stockpile the material
to produce a nuclear weapon. Tehran insists that it produces enriched
uranium for civilian purposes only.
Drone
debacle
On
Tuesday, the Pentagon said that Iranian warplanes shot at a US
Predator drone over the Gulf region, but failed to take it down. The
encounter reportedly took place on November 1, about 16 nautical
miles off the Iranian coast and in international airspace.
Pentagon
spokesperson George Little said that this was the fist time the
Iranian military had fired on a US drone. The incident initially went
undisclosed because the US military does not discuss classified
surveillance missions, he explained. The attack was officially
confirmed only after it was reported in the US media
.
Two
Iranian Sukhoi Su-25 jets intercepted the unarmed drone as it was
performing a routine – but classified – patrol over Persian Gulf
waters.
The
aircraft shot “multiple rounds” at the Predator, and after it
moved away from the Iranian border they shadowed it “for some
period of time before letting it return to base,” Little said.
The
American military claimed the Iranian pilots intended to shoot down
the drone.
"Our
working assumption is that they fired to take it down. You'll have to
ask the Iranians why they engaged in this action," Little said.
He did not explain why the Iranian jets failed to hit their target,
as drones are incapable of performing elaborate evasive maneuvers.
He
said that the American drone “was never in Iranian air space,”
which begins 12 nautical miles from the country’s coastline.
In
December 2011, a CIA RQ-170 Sentinel stealth done was monitoring
Iranian nuclear and military facilities when it was brought down and
captured in eastern Iran. The US said it malfunctioned, while Tehran
claimed they had downed the aircraft. The Iranian government later
published photos of the captured drone, which appeared undamaged.
“The
United States has communicated to the Iranians that we will continue
to conduct surveillance flights over international waters over the
Arabian Gulf, consistent with longstanding practice and our
commitment to the security of the region,” Little said.
Chief
of Staff Brigadier General Massoud Jazayeri, the Deputy Chair of the
Iranian Armed Forces, said there would be a “firm response” to
any air, ground and sea aggression against Iran. He vowed to confront
any foreign aircraft that violated the country’s airspace, Iranian
news channel Press TV reported.
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