For quite some time now it has been open knowledge within intelligence circles and the U.S. Department of Defense that Islamic Iran has overt and covert ties with Venezuela and has turned the latter country into a military base for anti-American operations and drug running to finance their terrorist activities.
Iran uses Venezuelan banks to get around the imposed financial sanctions, launder money and obtain forbidden goods covered by the same sanctions, while Venezuela provides Iran with vast raw uranium from mines it has. Cozy win/win.
A significant military base of Iranian Special (Qods) Forces has mushroomed up in Venezuela and as mentioned in the title, re-supplied, re-equipped and re-manned by Iran's national airline, Iran Air, on a regular basis with flights from Tehran to Caracas via Syria!
On arrival in Venezuela, these flights are not handled at the normal terminal but are guided away to a secretive, heavily guarded hangar.
You CANNOT book a seat on these flights, which while always showing no passengers have seats booked on them - have no seat available for anyone trying to make a reservation.
Who flies in and out on them along the Iran, Syrian and Venezuelan air corridor? Iranian security agents and Hezbollah terrorists. What cargo is loaded and off loaded along the way?
Expert analysts point to a variety of weapons and small arms, special military training teams, plus engineers and equipment for Iranian projects to build and improve the national electricity grid, roads and urban planning implementation, which Islamic Iran is perfoming for Venezuela.
Mostly using Iranian funds NOT Venezuela's (with some barter involved) while sectors of the Iranian populace go hungry or often starve and a million homeless children and tens of thousands of abandoned women live on Tehran's streets.
In the same manner where Obama illegally spends our tax dollars to promote his ideologies, pay back those who helped get him elected and keep him in office and import HAMAS/terrorists Palestinians to live in our country free of any expenses AND EVEN PAYING THEM A MONTHLY stipend.
Anti-American Socialist/Communist Venezuela and its close ally Communist Cuba provide Islamic Iran "a within easy reach" launching distance for Iran's missiles on U.S. targets.
Iran already has between six and 12 North Korean engineered nuclear warheads (with somewhat deteriorating Soviet nuclear fission materials) on Shahab missiles in their possession and while they might reserve some to use on Israel, at least one appears to now be inside Venezuela and as some reports indicate some are being fitted onto rust bucket cargo ships to launch from close-by off-shore at Europe or North East USA.
Very probably socially and financially DEVASTATING Electro-Magnetic Pulse (EMP) nuclear explosions which kill nobody but wipe out all electronics within a several mile radius of where they optimally detonate some 40,000 feet off the ground.
No, not just your laptops or cell phones. Traffic lights, car and truck engines, electricity grids and water providing systems, subways. trains, ports and ships and anything using computers. Your TV or your investments, your hospitals and court records.
Think, Wall Street obliterated in a matter of seconds! (Most military circuits have been shielded and should remain unaffected)
The USA has stationed an aircraft carrier group near Venezuela to try to deal with this rising threat.
What is the world to do with the options of how to deal with the combined evil lunacy of a nuclear Iran and a moronic Islamist sitting illegally in the White House and encouraging all this to happen with his stubborn, idiotic, idealogical show of weakness and ignorance to a very determined Islamic jihadi Shia enemy.
Majority Sunni Moslems as opposed to minority Shia's now face Iran becoming the "untouchable" regional power. A religious and social anathema for them.
(Check out a full story on Iran Air here:
http://wtop.com/?nid=25&pid=0&sid=2029721&page=1 )
Here is an article worth perusing:
Is the Iranian Regime Collapsing?
By Menashe Amir
To grasp Iran’s ambitions and foreign policy it is necessary to understand the Islamic Republic’s religious ideology which aspires to establish global Islamic rule – under Shi’ite leadership. This belief lies at the heart of Iran’s foreign policy, including its ambition to acquire nuclear weapons.
Ayatollah Khomeini ruled that a Muslim mustn’t touch infidels, deal with them, or come into contact with them. Jews, in particular, are considered unclean. Iranian leaders call for the annihilation of Israel because these “unclean Jews” occupy the Muslim land of Palestine and hold the keys to the holy Al-Aqsa Mosque.
When Ahmadinejad declared that Israel ought to be wiped off the map, he added that this was merely the first stage of the confrontation with the West, which means Christianity. Indeed, part of the animosity that Iranians express toward Judaism and Israel stems from the fact that they consider Judaism to be a pillar of the Christian faith.
The Revolutionary Guards have taken over most of the economy, most of the political positions, and have infiltrated the judiciary system, though they continue to let Khamenei act as the face of their regime. Unlike the religious leaders of Iran, the Revolutionary Guards lack moral and religious values, with the exception of one very deep religious belief: that they are the messengers of the Mahdi, the vanguard of the messiah.
In one possible scenario, the regime will collapse from the inside. Changes to the system of subsidies can only add to Ahmadinejad’s unpopularity. In this context, international pressure and sanctions on Iran will very much influence the continuation of the struggle against the regime.
Iran’s Ideology
To grasp Iran’s ambitions and foreign policy, one must first understand the Islamic Republic’s religious ideology. The Iranian regime believes that the right religion for humanity is Islam, and the right sect of Islam is Shi’ism. An Iranian’s religious and national duty is to restore Shi’ism to its rightful position of leadership.
To express his enduring respect for Judaism and Christianity, Ayatollah Khomeini used to say, “Moses is my right eye and Jesus is my left.” But in a meeting with Islamic ambassadors in Tehran, he also aired the view that today, given how diluted those faiths have become, there are no authentic Jews or Christians left.
Iran’s ultimate aim is to establish global Islamic rule, a new Islamic empire, but this time under Shi’ite leadership. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad himself endorses the Shi’ite belief that once the Mahdi (“the Guided One”) makes his prophesied return, the whole world will convert to Shi’ism. This belief, strange as it may sound to Western ears, lies at the heart of Iran’s foreign policy, including its ambition to acquire nuclear weapons. It is for this reason that this ambition presents a grave problem not merely for Israel, but for Arab countries, Europe, and the whole world.
Ahmadinejad once visited a painting exhibition in Tehran and remarked that there are two main arts in life: jihad and shahadah (“religious war” and “martyrdom”). That’s the essence of his ideology. During the Iran-Iraq war, the regime was criticized for engaging in a futile conflict that took the lives of half a million Iranians. The reply was that during the eight years of war, some seven million Iranians were born, so why cry over half a million killed “for the sake of Islam”?
In his book Towzihol-Masael (The Explanation of Problems), Khomeini contended that Jews, Christians, Bahais, and Zoroastrians are considered infidels insofar as they refuse to accept Mohammad as a prophet, as are Sunnis, insofar as they don’t accept the twelve Imams of the Shi’ites. Khomeini then ruled that a Muslim mustn’t touch infidels, deal with them, or come into contact with them. Jews, in particular, are considered unclean. In his 1970 book Velayat-e faqih (Islamic Government), he portrayed the Jews as crooks, liars, and enemies of Islam.
Iranian leaders call for the annihilation of Israel because these “unclean Jews” occupy the Muslim land of Palestine and hold the keys to the holy Al-Aqsa Mosque and other Islamic holy places. For tactical reasons, the Iranians take up the banner of the Palestinian cause in order to show the Arab countries that while they are making peace with the Jewish enemy, the Iranians are the only Muslims who uncompromisingly fight on behalf of the Palestinians.
Ahmadinejad denies the Holocaust for tactical considerations, too. By denying the Holocaust, the Iranians deny the legitimacy of the State of Israel and thereby gain respect in the Islamic world.
When Ahmadinejad declared that Israel ought to be wiped off the map, he added that this was merely the first stage of the confrontation with the West, which, for all intents and purposes, means Christianity. Indeed, part of the animosity that Iranians express toward Judaism and Israel stems from the fact that they consider Judaism to be a pillar of the Christian faith.
A Five-Point Plan to Foster Regime Change
Ahmadinejad contends repeatedly that: “Nuclear development is the inalienable right of the Iranian people.” He has attempted to make Iran’s nuclear policy into a matter of national pride. So is the prevention of Iran acquiring nuclear weapons a lost cause?
At a meeting with the heads of the Canadian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, I presented a five-point plan for eliminating the Iranian nuclear threat which, despite all the risks in its implementation, appears to me to be the sole way to eliminate the danger.
Create a very real military threat by concentrating naval forces in the Persian Gulf and voicing threats of war at the Iranian regime.
Widen international sanctions that will paralyze the Iranian economy in the same manner as Gaddafi’s Libya.
Encourage ethnic minorities in Iran to launch guerrilla warfare against the regime. The Baluchis in the southeast, Turkmen in the northeast, Azaris in the northwest, Kurds in the west, and Arabic-speaking tribes in the southwest are each discriminated against and each has a history of guerrilla actions.
Transfer funds to opposition bodies inside Iran to finance strikes, demonstrations, and other resistance activities.
Rally three million Iranian exiles to lobby leaders in the countries where they now reside to join the international effort to effect regime change in Iran.
In the Wake of the June 2009 Elections
Since the elections, some figures from inside the regime, such as Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mahdi Karroubi, have turned against the regime’s leaders, with the result that the leadership is divided. Mousavi and Karroubi did not want to overthrow the regime, they just want to make some reforms. But the Green movement, which began as a protest against the fraudulent election results, today chants “death to the dictator,” which amounts to a call for regime change and not merely the cancellation of the elections. Whereas Khomeini had always tried to balance the radicals and the so-called reformists, Khamenei today has put all his eggs in the basket of Ahmadinejad and the Revolutionary Guards.
At the same time, the fear of voicing opposition to the regime has evaporated. Seven months after the elections, we still see widespread demonstrations. As someone who closely follows Iranian political affairs, I would say that at least 60 percent of Iranians are very much against the regime. (Others say the figure is 70-80 percent.) Two groups still support the regime: deeply religious people in poor, rural areas, and those who depend on the salary, pension, and other economic advantages the regime affords them. The big question is whether the regime will succeed in stifling the protest movement through suppression and arrests.
Possible Future Scenarios
In effect, two possibilities now confront Iran. In the first scenario, the regime will collapse from the inside, buckling under the pressure of the protest movement, much as the Shah’s regime collapsed 31 years ago. Changes to the system of subsidies will yield much higher prices for consumer goods such as fuel, rice, and bread, which can only add to Ahmadinejad’s unpopularity. In this context, international pressure and sanctions on Iran will very much influence the continuation of the struggle against the regime.
The second possible scenario would see the Revolutionary Guards take over the leadership of Iran more and more. In fact, they have already begun to do so by shunting aside most of the prominent ayatollahs. The Revolutionary Guards have taken over most of the economy, most of the political positions, and have infiltrated the judiciary system, though they continue to let Khamenei act as the face of their regime. Unlike the religious leaders of Iran, the Revolutionary Guards lack moral and religious values, with the exception of one very deep religious belief: that they are the messengers of the Mahdi, the vanguard of the messiah. Indeed, most of the commanders of the Revolutionary Guards are uneducated. Most have never visited a Western country.
Either way, in the end this regime will collapse. Whether it will happen next year or in two years or five years or even ten years, nobody can know. But I believe that the Iranians will eventually achieve a kind of democratic regime which will be more friendly toward its neighbors. I come from Iran, I am an Iranian, and I believe that the Iranians are like most other people. They seek the good life and they want democracy. That’s what gives me hope that they will manage to create a free society.
* * *
Menashe Amir, one of Israel’s leading experts on Iran, is the chief editor of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ Persian-language website and former head of the Israel Broadcasting Authority’s Persian-language division. Since 1960 he has been a senior member of Israel Radio’s internationally acclaimed Persian-language service that reaches millions of Iranian listeners, and for many years was one of the Iranian people’s only outlets to the free world. He has also served as Iranian Affairs advisor for ABC News. This Jerusalem Issue Brief is based on his presentation at the Institute for Contemporary Affairs in Jerusalem on January 21, 2010.
Check out this site for a plethora of related articles
http://www.jcpa.org/
I'm not a supporter of MICO MANDANTE (this is spanish for the "ruling monkey" wordplay with "MY-co mmander") and certainly hate the mullahs, because I have to suffer myself all the tragedy the iranian families have to go through because of their narcissistic backwards regime.
ReplyDeleteHowever, I'm Venezuelan and I live here, I don’t want people to misunderstand what's happening in my country... an Iraq kind of misunderstanding.
I can tell a couple of things about this issue... ABSOLUTELY FIRST HAND, I mean, really FIRST HAND...
1.- The flights are by the Venezuelan CONVIASA because Iran Air craft were never approved the route even though they really wanted to use it or at least cover it for 6 months a year, but international organizations simply did not allow Iran Air do it. However they did fly the first two or three months -some 8 or 10 Caracas-Tehran-Caracas flights about 4 years ago, when CONVIASA's fleet was not yet complete.
2.- The operation has given losses since the beginning, about $11 million in both 2007 and 2008, shared 50/50 between the two governments. In 2009, it was a little bit less (some 8 million) because now they're flying every-other-week (they used to fly weekly) and Iran Air closed its office in Caracas. CONVIASA runs the whole operation in Venezuela and they have a couple of people in Tehran, Iran Air's part of the deal is mostly commercial providing tickets to officials and businessmen coming from and to Iran.
3.- The problem with the tickets is that there is a large and prosperous Syrian community in Venezuela (most of them maronite christians - catholics who follow the eastern rite), in the past they had to go a true via crucis to visit their country, because they had to stop in Europe and the experience was not good at all (especially after 9/11), moreover it needed planning, visas, etc, and last but not least, it was very expensive (they are well-known here for being very, very skimpy with the money). Flying with European airlines they also had to deal with the language problem (too many of them especially the syrian-born members of their families NEVER learned Spanish well); so the CONVIASA flight is crowded to the top from Caracas to Damascus, but almost empty from Damascus to Tehran.
There is no special hangar or gate or anything like that... come on this is Venezuela, the Wild Wild West, and Chavez is THE LAW, the only one, EL PRESIDENTE; they don't need to hide that kind of stuff they're doing, not here. Free press in Venezuela is seriously limited in resources, reach and access to "security areas" like... any place where there's an armed officer… they can do as they please in any airport. Even when they do, Chavez just says it’s a lie, a fabrication by the evil empire, a judge puts a couple of the newspaper’s or TV channel’s owners in jail and end of the story.
The mullahs did try to start some kind of Hezbollah cell a couple of years ago, but, Do you really think people in the Caribbean with sun, beach, rum, willing hot women, party, etc. were going to embrace islam THAT easy? Are you kidding? THEY FAILED, it was a tremendous fail, by the way... again, FIRST HAND, they've abandoned any further attempts... people here are like wild animals, much more than they can handle. Iranians here, even though they're mostly hezbollaí on a mission, are disgusted by people (you know they're not precisely very racially open or tolerant) and treat everybody with despise and disrespect... the sad thing is that our stupid, narcissistic Chavez lets them treat us like that.