الثلاثاء، 19 مايو 2015

Iran Terror against America



Iran Revolutionary Guard Deputy Commander Hossein Salami

We Welcome War with the Americans


Iran's Revolutionary Guard conducts military drill against replica US carrier




Iran Terror Plot Uncovered: Why Was the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Targeting Saudi Arabia?


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#Iran IRGC commander: "We will not rest until we make the #US an Islamic Republic"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxbCUEFgCpA




From the Middle East to the U.S. Homeland: The Iranian Qods Force's Growing Ambitions


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IcGT6qPa4Ww

Iran is paying Taliban fighters $1,000 for each U.S. soldier they kill in Afghanistan, according to a report in a British newspaper.

http://www.nbcnews.com/id/39014669/ns/world_news-south_and_central_asia/t/report-iran-pays-each-us-soldier-killed-taliban/#.VgSWpdKqqko

US officials name 3 Iraqi militias armed by Iran to kill Yanks

http://iran-times.com/us-officials-name-3-iraqi-militias-armed-by-iran-to-kill-yanks/

How Many US Troops Were Killed By Iranian IEDs in Iraq?

http://www.defenseone.com/news/2015/09/how-many-us-troops-were-killed-iranian-ieds-iraq/120524/

The Bin Laden Papers
Release the captured files on al Qaeda’s secret deals with Iran.

http://www.wsj.com/articles/the-bin-laden-papers-1442272895

Iran support  Al Qaeda 
  http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/137061/seth-g-jones/al-qaeda-in-iran  
INCOMING CHAIRMAN OF JOINT CHIEFS: IRAN KILLED 500 U.S. SOLDIERS IN IRAQ, AFGHANISTAN

http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2015/07/15/incoming-chairman-of-joint-chiefs-iran-killed-500-u-s-soldiers-in-iraq-afghanistan/

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David Plouffe, Obama's most trusted advisor took piles of cash from the joint venture partner of Irancell,
 which has been described by the US Government as "fully owned" by Iran's Revolutionary Guard. If this is who Obama trusts, 
can you trust Obama? Make David Plouffe resign - 

http://www.secureamericanow.org/plouffe/

Make Plouffe Resign.. BO's most trusted advisor took piles of cash from Irancell, owned" by Iran's Revolutionary Guard
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5MvGtLbUSFQ



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Israel


IRGC Deputy Commander: We Are Ready to Annihilate Israel in the Future


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 في 19‏/01‏/2013
The 2010 cyber-attack on an Iranian uranium enrichment facility, which destroyed more than 1,000 centrifuges, has sparked a buildup of Tehran's hacking capabilities, a US cyberwarfare commander said. Tehran may soon be a formidable foe in cyberspace.
While no government has officially claimed responsibility for the Stuxnet virus that targeted Iran's Natanz facility, the US and Israel are widely believed to be behind the attack. The sophisticated cyberweapon infected industrial computers and interfered with centrifuge operations, causing damage to the equipment.
"It's clear that the Natanz situation generated a reaction by them. They are going to be a force to be reckoned with, with the potential capabilities that they will develop over the years and the potential threat that will represent to the United States," General William Shelton told journalists. Shelton heads the US Air Force's Space Command, and also oversees the Air Force's cyber operations.
General Shelton declined to elaborate on Iran's offensive hacking capabilities, or the damage that Tehran could inflict on US computer networks. Earlier, a newsletter from the Department of Homeland Security's cyber unit warned that critical US infrastructure is becoming increasingly vulnerable to hacker attacks.
Tehran has denied several accusations it was involved hacking operations; the latest such incident was a hacking attack on nine US banks and financial institutions last week, which cost the firms millions of dollars.
A hacker group claimed responsibility for the denial-of-service onslaught against the financial websites, saying it was retaliation for an amateur video deemed offensive to Islam's Prophet Muhammad. But US media cited a number of officials and experts who said that Washington is certain Tehran was behind the attack. Tehran denied any involvement, saying in a statement that it "denounces such methods, which are a violation of the sovereignty of nations."
Another alleged Iranian cyberwarfare operation was last year's attack on Saudi oil giant Aramco. A virus uploaded to the state-owned firm's computer networks damaged files on some 30,000 computers. At the time, US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta called the incident "a significant escalation of the cyber threat," and warned that a "cyber Pearl Harbor" could soon hit America.
Iran has recently grappled with a number of cyber-attacks. In December 2012, Tehran complained that a number of hacking attacks aimed at disrupting the networks of Iranian industrial facilities -- including a power plant -- took place over the course of several months.
Iran is currently under crippling financial sanctions championed by the US that have significantly cut its oil revenues and damaged its economy. Washington and its allies have stepped up pressure on Tehran in a bid to halt its uranium enrichment program, and have accused Iran of trying to build a nuclear weapon.
The Islamic Republic has for years denied allegations it is weaponizing its nuclear industry, arguing that its enrichment capabilities are needed to produce fuel for nuclear power plants and radioactive isotopes for medical applications.

Revolutionary Cyber Guard Iran boosts Web warfare capabilities after centrifuge virus attack



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Given at GovSecWest in Dallas, this discussion on Iranian Cyber Capabilities covers their physical history. The video taks a look at the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corp (Pasdaran), the Basij, al-Quds Force, Cyber Hizbullah and Ashiyane as well as the Iranian methods of Mosaic Defense and Unrestricted Warfare.

Iranian Cyber Capabilities Treadstone 71


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Syria




Our World investigates the clandestine role of Iran in Syria's civil war. Rare access to secret footage of military advisors from Iran's Revolutionary Guard, shows training and fighting alongside Syria's pro-government militias near Aleppo. This film provides a dramatic insight into Tehran's support for the Assad regime on the ground. Yalda Hakim reports.


BBC's "Iran Secret Army" investigates the clandestine role of Iran in Syria's civil war. Unique access shows secret footage of military advisors from Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, training and fighting alongside Syria’s pro-government militias near Aleppo. This film provides a dramatic insight into what Tehran's support for the Assad regime means on the ground.


Iran's Secret Army 







Confirmed: Iran's Revolutionary Guard in Syria?



Iranian Revolutionary Guard Transport IL76 TD at Palmyra Airport Syria




#FSA detain Iranian Revolutionary Guard fighter in #Aleppo #Syria 



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يتم في ايران معالجة المخدرات في معامل خاصة وكشف عن 

الحرس الثوري الايراني في تجارة المخدارت 
Iran's Drug Problem

Emanuele Ottolenghi

February 22, 2013 3:44 PM

For years, Iran has marketed itself as a frontline state in the war against the drug lords. Recently the New York Times even described the regime in Tehran as the “West’s stalwart ally in the War on Drugs.” The problem is that while the Iranian regime is fighting drug lords on its eastern borders, much of the drugs it seizes are being sold by the Revolutionary Guards to the same people they are asking for additional funding to fight the drug trade—the Europeans.
Moved by Iran’s catastrophic drug situation, Europeans have assisted Iran over the years with weapons, training, and equipment. In 2004, Austria’s ministry of defense approved the sale of 800 HS50 12.7mm (.50 caliber) Steyr-Mannlicher sniper rifles for Iran’s drug-fighting police units. Even though the United States sanctioned Steyr-Mannlicher, the Austrian defense ministry defended the licensed sale as “unimpeachable.” But, sold to kill drug traffickers, the rifles were reverse-engineered to murder Americans. In February 2007, American troops seized copies of the weapon from Iraqi Shi’a insurgents in Baghdad.
According to a 2012 Human Rights Watch report, from 2000 to 2009, the UK gave Iran more than $4.7 million as part of its anti-drug assistance programs. From 2007 and 2011, “Belgium, France, Ireland, Japan, and the United Kingdom provided $3.4 million through UNODC [United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime] to establish border liaison offices as well as for body scanners and sniffer dogs to be used at checkpoints, major airports, and the Iran-Afghanistan border.” But, supplied to fight drugs, the equipment was diverted to kill Israelis. The Europeans provided night-vision equipment, which Israeli troops later found in abandoned Hezbollah bunkers during their July 2006 war with the Shiite militia.
And now there is growing evidence that Iran is playing both sides of the war between civilized nations and drug cartels.
Two cables from the U.S. embassy in Baku, made public by WikiLeaks in late 2010, revealed a significant increase of processed heroin from Iran-based labs into Azerbaijan, en route to their final destinations in Europe. According to the first cable, under the guidance of IRGC Chief Commander Ali Ja’afari, the IRGC was responsible for running the refining activities and benefiting from the profits. As the second cable, from March 2009, notes:
Iranians’ formal businesses in Azerbaijan include factories, construction companies, trading companies, and shops, some of which may be hollow companies hiding illicit or semi-licit activities. Some are also said to be significant actors in obtaining spare parts and equipment for the Revolutionary Guard, raising revenues and managing money for it and/or regime figures, or managing Iran-origin narcotics trafficking.
Iran has connections to the drug trade that span the globe. The Qods Force plot in October 2011 to kill the Saudi ambassador in Washington revealed a link between the QF and a Mexican drug cartel. And last March, Treasury designated Qods Force general Gholamreza Baghbani for allowing “Afghan narcotics traffickers to smuggle opiates through Iran.”
Iran has a serious drug problem. According to the 2010 UN. .Drug World Report, 42 percent of world opium not converted into heroin is used in Iran. But much of it just transits onto European markets, under the helpful supervision of the IRGC. Of the opium that is converted to heroin for world markets, 35 tons cross into Iran annually, about half of which are in transit for the European market and the rest is destined for local consumption. Iran has almost 400,000 heroin users and more than 500,000 opium users according to official statistics. Witnessing the degradation of its own society caused by drugs, Iran has no qualms inflicting the same plague onto others—even those whom it asks for help.



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Iran Lobby Attempts to Silence the Truth




Some of terrorist crimes launched by Iran and Hezbollah in the world  



 Leading Iranian ayatollah: Islamic messiah ‘will behead Western leaders’




 Iran has established terrorist networks throughout Latin America







List of terror crimes committed by Iran






Get Tough with Tehran 


 Michael Doran 


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Will Iran adhere to its part of a nuclear deal?



As on Monday in Geneva Iran’s delegation entered talks with world powers to hammer out a lasting nuclear deal ahead of a deadline of 24 November, the commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, Brigadier Mohammad Ali Jaffari declared that “despite the incompetence of our nuclear negotiating team, we have managed to humiliate the Americans at the talks as we always face them as our sworn enemy”.
Last week the Guard’s Central Command had issued a statement that said the U.S. remains the Islamic republic’s main adversary and that Tehran’s long-term regional foreign policy is to throw the American forces out of the Middle East region.
The apparently uncompromising statements coincided with a Reuters report on a leaked document from the UN Atomic Energy Agency that Iran has actually stepped up its nuclear enrichment activities while supposedly under an interim agreement not to do so.
It may have been the combination of these worrying developments that made President Obama dampen hopes of reaching a historic deal over Iran’s nuclear program when he warned that “we may not be able to get there as big gaps still remained between the negotiating teams”.
In their current negotiations with Iran about its nuclear ambitions, world powers, led by the Obama administration, ignore a crucial fact that Iran’s political decision-makings are not run from the office of its president, but the household of the supreme leader ayatollah Ali Khamenei (Beite Rahbari), who in turn is ruled over by the Revolutionary Guard or Pasdaran in Persian language.
Born as a ¬volunteer militia in the heat of the 1979 revolution, the Guard has gradually turned into a military and business conglomerate that with many of its members as “soldiers turned politicians” in key ministries and the Majles (parliament) effectively controls Iran’s economy, industries, intelligence communities and foreign policy.
In an interview with the Guardian, Mohsen Sazegara, an exiled Iranian dissident who helped found the Pasdaran, calls it “an Iranian version of the Soviet-era KGB”.
When in 2012 Hillary Clinton said that Iran “was heading to military dictatorship” she was rather late to realise that the process had already taken place years earlier when the Pasdaran became close business and ideological partners of the Russian and Chinese military and nuclear industries and that today they have the last say on these issues in Iran.
It is within these circumstances that the Rouhani government entered this latest phase of nuclear negotiations immediately after assuming power in 2013.
While Rouhani has tied up the success of his administration to ending the paralyzing international sanctions on Iran through a nuclear deal, the stakes are even greater for the Guards as Iran’s “reformists” seek to use the rewarding economic and political outcome of such deal to strengthen their position within the political leadership structure to the extent of breaking the taboo of re-establishing diplomatic links with the U.S.
Despite the many economic and social calamities that the sanctions have brought upon the masses of Iranian people, ayatollah Khamenei has described them as “God’s blessing”. The vile comment should not come as a surprise when one looks at how his close associates among the top commanders of the Revolutionary Guard have hugely benefitted from years of illicit trading as middlemen and running the back markets of the country that they control through hundreds of illegal ports of entry.
However, with the latest much publicized reports on the deteriorating health of Khamenei the question of who would succeed him has inevitably come to the fore, with the Guard vying to secure their power bases in the post-Khamenei era.
While the names of a few potential successors have been circulating in private in Iran, however, as with all authoritarian regimes, Khamenei clearly displayed his own candidate last week when Qassem Suleimani, the elusive commander of the Guard’s Quds Brigade, for the first time ever sat next to the supreme leader in a televised ceremony commemorating the religious mourning day of Ashura.
The Obama administration and other world powers may be negotiating with the civilian diplomats of the Islamic republic regime to arrive at a nuclear deal on paper, but they will have to deal with the Pasdaran to make it work.
The comments of their commander General Jaffari should give an indication of what the Iranians and the world can expect from them in that respect.

Behrooz Behbudi
Vancouver
22 November 2014

Email: contact@bbehbudi.com

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اعتراف امر الحرس الثوري عن تدخلات ايران في الدول العربية و دول العالم

confession Revolutionary Guards of Iran interference in Arab countries and countries of the world

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