. Solar Energy News .




.
NUKEWARS
Iran polling likely to fuel power struggle
by Staff Writers
Tehran (UPI) Mar 1, 2012


Friday's parliamentary elections in Iran are likely to intensify a power struggle between rival hard-line factions led by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and fuel a confrontation with the West over the country's nuclear program.

The voting is also being conducted against a backdrop of a threatened pre-emptive strike by Israel against Iran's nuclear facilities and ever-tightening international sanctions aimed at pressuring Tehran into abandoning its nuclear project.

That's something both factions battling for political supremacy refuse to do, so the result of the nationwide voting is unlikely to produce significant change in the regime's confrontation with the West.

The vote is widely seen as an important test of the leadership's legitimacy and will provide a pointer toward the run-up to the potentially more explosive presidential elections in 2013 that could well decide Iran's future direction.

But with U.S. presidential elections in November, it's unlikely Friday's poll will alter the current standoff.

"My bet at this point is … that until the American elections are over, conditions for any kind of serious negotiations (on the nuclear issue) are low," observed Iran expert Farideh Farhi of the University of Hawaii.

Friday's election for the 290-seat Majlis, or parliament, is the first national ballot since the violence-marred presidential vote in 2009 in which Ahmadinejad, a populist firebrand once favored by Khamenei, was re-elected for a second four-year term amid allegations of massive fraud.

Ahmadinejad, who cannot run for a consecutive third term, is locked in a high-profile power struggle with the powerful religious conservatives headed by Khamenei, a former president who succeeded the Islamic Republic's founder, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, after he died in 1989.

The rival conservative factions are collectively known as "principlists."

The clash within the leadership is the most intense internal political struggle since the bloody aftermath of the 1979 Islamic Revolution that toppled Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi and put the puritanical Khomeini in power.

Khamenei's faction is widely seen as holding most of the cards because he has the backing of the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and the cleric establishment.

He also has the support of the Bazaaris, the highly influential merchant class whose switch of allegiance from the shah to Khomeini in late 1978 ensured the Islamists' victory the following year when the monarch fled into exile.

Ahmadinejad is striving to secure greater powers for the presidency, which since the founding of the Islamic Republic has always been secondary to the religious leadership of Khomeini and later Khamenei.

Political analysts say the 12-member Guardian Council, evenly divided between clerics and jurists who vet all electoral candidates, has excluded many of Ahmadinejad's associates, forcing him to field political unknowns.

Iran's reformists, brutally crushed in the uproar over the legality of the 2009 poll, are no longer a viable political force. Major reformist parties have been banned, key leaders imprisoned and their publications closed.

Ahmadinejad, with some of his closest advisers behind bars or politically disgraced through the machinations of the security services controlled by Khamenei, is likely to lose heavily Friday.

Hanging like an ominous black cloud over these political events are the swelling regional tensions, heightened by military saber rattling on both sides as Iran's all-important oil exports are throttled by U.S. and European sanctions.

But among the political elite at least, such considerations appear to be secondary to the political battle at hand.

"While ordinary Iranians are anxious about the increasingly harsh sanctions … the political class appears more consumed by the parliamentary election," Oxford Analytica observed.

"Concerns over low turnout and electoral maneuvering among the principlist camps have preoccupied the leadership.

"This emphasis on turnout reflects the leadership's reliance on elections as a source of legitimacy … It is concerned that pro-reformist voters may boycott the poll."

This concern was underlined by Revolutionary Guard commander Gen. Mohammad Ali Jafari, who warned that "enemies" intended to "revive sedition" after the elections.

He called on Iranians to counter this through "maximum participation" in Friday's polling.

Amid the political turmoil, the leadership's preoccupation with the power struggle has led to uncertainty over who calls the shots in Tehran, a dangerous proposition given the deepening regional crisis.

"It's a symptom of a headless government," said Vahe Petrossian, an Iran energy specialist. "They're just making things up as they go along."

Related Links
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com
Learn about missile defense at SpaceWar.com
All about missiles at SpaceWar.com
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries


Israel says N. Korea nuclear deal no model for Iran
Jerusalem (AFP) March 1, 2012 - Israel's deputy foreign minister on Thursday said that a North Korean pledge to suspend nuclear tests in exchange for US aid should not be seen as a model for dealing with Iran's nuclear ambitions.

"The two cases are completely dissimilar," Danny Ayalon told Israeli public radio, hours before Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was due to leave for talks in Washington with US President Barack Obama, expected to centre on Israeli concerns that Tehran is racing to produce nuclear arms.

"We should congratulate United States foreign policy... but we have to remember that what has happened in North Korea is too little too late," Ayalon added. "They have already crossed the threshold of nuclear capability and that's certainly not what we would want to see happen in Iran."

The Haaretz daily said that the White House argument against an Israeli pre-emptive strike on Iran was bolstered by Wednesday's Washington-Pyongyang accord.

"Reports about the North Korea deal contributed to the Obama administration's full-court press against the possibility of an Israeli military operation targeting Iran," the paper wrote on Thursday.

White House spokesman Jay Carney warned on Wednesday that any military action against Iran would create "greater instability" that could threaten the safety of Americans in Afghanistan and Iraq.

"We continue to ratchet up the pressure on Tehran," Carney said. "And I think it's important to note that, while Tehran does not and has not lived up to its international obligations... we do have visibility into their programmes."

Ayalon, however, said on Thursday that Washington was "absolutely not" pressuring Israel to forego a possible military option.

Iran denies it is seeking nuclear weapons, but Israel -- the Middle East's sole if undeclared nuclear power -- has called for tough sanctions against Tehran to force it to abandon its nuclear activities.

Iran's nuclear programme will be the "main topic" of discussion when Obama and Netanyahu meet at the White House on Monday, according to the Israeli premier.

Netanyahu will fly overnight on Thursday to Canada, where he will spend the weekend in Ottawa and meet Prime Minister Stephen Harper, before travelling to Washington for his first trip to the United States since he met Obama in September.



.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



NUKEWARS
US Air Force prepared if diplomacy with Iran fails: general
Washington (AFP) Feb 29, 2012
The United States has powerful bombs at the ready in the case of possible military action against Iran and work is under way to bolster their firepower, the air force chief said Wednesday. General Norton Schwartz, air force chief of staff, declined to say whether US weapons - including a 30,000-pound massive ordnance penetrator (MOP) bomb - could reach nuclear sites in Iran that were conce ... read more


NUKEWARS
Sapphire Energy to License Earthrise Nutritionals' Spirulina

American Palm Oil Council Discusses Palm Oil Industry's Impact on Malaysian Ecosystem

ZeaChem Signs Contract to Develop "Drop-In" Advanced Biofuels

Cool Planet BioFuels Announces a Major Advance in Renewable Cellulosic Gasoline

NUKEWARS
Humanoid Robot Exhibition Opens Drexel Engineers Week

In new mass-production technique, robotic insects spring to life

A robot sketches portraits

New 'soft' motor made from artificial muscles

NUKEWARS
Mongolia to tap wind power

Yorkshire officials OK Hull turbine plant

Wind farm on hold over bald eagle concerns

Golden eagles found dead at wind farm

NUKEWARS
The world's biggest car makers in 2011

Cheaper battery power heralds electric car

Mechanism Behind Capacitor's High-Speed Energy Storage Discovered

Daimler, Mercedes seal Aussie G-Wagen deal

NUKEWARS
Gazprom 'mulls joining Israel's gas boom'

Canadian oil sands majors form alliance

Kenya launches huge port project

China disputes Philippine's oil blocks

NUKEWARS
Fukushima disaster pushes France's Areva to record loss

NGOs in anti-nuke probe 'diverted' foreign funds: India

India slap cases on aid groups over nuclear row: reports

India freezes aid group funds over nuclear protests

NUKEWARS
Panel backs carbon allowance 'set-asides'

EU urges quicker energy market reforms

Call for tough new targets on European Union energy reduction

Controller Announces Bill to Drive Private Sector Energy Retrofits

NUKEWARS
Paper giant 'pulping protected Indonesian trees'

Penn researcher helps discover and characterize a 300-million-year-old forest

UN recognizes US Girl Scouts for palm oil effort


Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement