Alliance For democracy In Iran

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IMPERIAL EMBLEM

IMPERIAL EMBLEM
PERSIA

Shahanshah Aryameher

S U N OF P E R S I A

Iranian Freedom Fighters UNITE

Monday, April 28, 2008

Latest News



TELL ME WHY ? - Banned by Islamotube : http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=V-JgZlYfzkw

Why Does Ahmadinejad Want Russian Troops in Iran?

Why is the leadership in Tehran anxious to give Russia the right to land troops in Iran? The question is not fanciful. The Islamic Republic is conducting a devious campaign to prepare public opinion for that eventuality. The message is relayed through deliberately vague terms that diplomats understand immediately while the general public does not.

By W. Christopher Epler (Bill)
What Do We Do About The Millions Of Deadbeat Enablers Of Fascism?
Enablers of fascism would be called scabs in a union. They are the dead weight of human civilization and may finally be dragging our species down for the third time. Fascism is grossly misunderstood as being powerful because of its cleverness and strength, but nothing could be more false. Fascism and Nazism are "default" horrors of the criminal brain deadness of enablers. No deadbeats, no fascism. Just vulnerable humans. Us.

By Dave Lindorff
The Clock Is Ticking For A US Attack On Iran
Step by step, the Bush/Cheney administration has been getting ready to attack Iran. Now even the top general and the Defense Secretary are talking about it as a possibility. Get ready.

By Allen L Roland
15 REASONS WHY AN ATTACK ON IRAN MAY BE IMMINEN
TAs Pandora's box begins to open revealing the full extent of war crimes and abuse of power by the Cheney/Bush administration ~ the danger increases that they will launch a preemptive strike on Iran to falsely justify their failed neocon global agenda: Allen L Roland
By Michael Fox
The Other Costs Of War: An Evening With Scott Ritter And Cole Miller
Meet two American heroes, Scott Ritter speaks truth to power to prevent war, and Cole Miller is helping the most innocent victims - innocent, severely burned Iraqi children. Let their stories inspire you!
Iranian Elections Make Ahmadinejad 'increasingly Vulnerable'
The AP reports that according to final results today, conservatives "consolidated control of Iran's legislature in run-off elections," but at the same time, opponents of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad also gained strength in the Parliament. Reformists in Iran "favor greater democracy, closer ties with the West, and reducing clerical powers in Iran" and made a respectable showing even after most of their candidates were barred.

Leave Taliban Alone, Afghan President Tells West World News The Observer
Karzai says US and British troops are undermining his authority and stopping insurgents from laying down their arms

Joint Chiefs Chairman Says U.S. Preparing Military Options Against Iran
The nation's top military officer said today that the Pentagon is planning for "potential military courses of action" against Iran, criticizing what he called the Tehran government's "increasingly lethal and malign influence" in Iraq.
Ship Hired By U.S. Military Fires Warning Shots In Gulf
According to American defense officials, the Westward Venture cargo ship chartered by the U.S. Defense Department was traveling in international waters when two unidentified small boats approached. After the boats failed to respond to radio queries and a warning flare, the cargo ship's security team fired "a few bursts" of machine gun and rifle warning shots. The small boats left the area a short time later.
U.S. Says New Find Shows Iran Still Sends Arms To Iraq
Officials in Washington and Baghdad said the purported Iranian mortars, rockets and explosives had date stamps indicating they were manufactured in the past two months. The U.S. plans to publicize the weapons caches in coming days. A pair of senior commanders said a presentation was tentatively planned for Monday.
Is An Attack On Iran Imminent?
George W. Bush is poised to order a massive aerial bombardment � possibly including tactical nuclear weapons � of up to 10,000 targets in Iran. Here are some of the indications that a U.S. military attack on Iran is imminent:

Bush Administration Warns Banks Against Iran's 'Deceptive Practices'
6 Nations' Diplomats Meeting to Discuss Further Sanctions Against Iran on Nuclear Issue
2 Congressmen Probe Iranian Links to U.S.-Supported World Bank Fund
U.S. Official: Iran Operating Newer, More Advanced Nuclear Centrifuge
White House Says Iranian Behavior in Strait of Hormuz 'Not Normal'
2 U.S. Fighter Planes Crash in Persian Gulf; No Injuries Reported
U.S. Boats Take Defensive Action Against Iranian Speedboats in Strait of Hormuz

Suicide Is Painless, It Brings On Many Changes

April 26, 2008:

Government leaders make the most of the one thing they are popular for; the nuclear program. Atomic bombs are rarely mentioned, the emphasis is on "nuclear technology". That's a code word for nuclear weapons, which are immensely popular in Iran. Political and religious leaders openly boast of how clever they are in obtaining nuclear technology despite the efforts of the UN, and the world, to deny Iran access. Iranian leaders need all the popular acclaim they can get, because the religious police have not relented in their campaign to punish women who do not dress properly. Now the religious police will visit work places and restaurants to insure that women found there are properly covered up. Those who fail inspection are issued a warning or hauled off to a police station, where they must wait for a family member shows up with proper clothing (that is not too tight, too short, to skimpy or too revealing in general). The clerics who run the country and mismanage the economy are also trying to distract the public from the shortages and 20 percent a year inflation. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has recommended greater use of the "culture of martyrdom", to solve the country's economic problem. He did not elaborate. One subject the Iranians do not want to discuss is the continued persecutions of the Arab minority in the west, along the Iraqi border. The Iranians don't trust their Arabs, and keep lots of secret police and Revolutionary Guards in the area, with orders to be active in the pursuit of real or imagined traitors. The government is a little more outspoken about unruly Kurds up north. In response, separatist minded Kurds openly threaten the Iranian government, something the Iranian Arabs are much more circumspect about. The most invisible victims in Iran are the three million refugees. Over 90 percent of these are from Afghanistan, and they are a major problem along the Afghan border. The refugees find the religious dictatorship in Iran more hospitable than the warlords and Taliban back in Afghanistan. Then there is the drug business. The Afghan refugees are deeply involved with the smuggling and distribution of Afghan opium and heroin. There are several million addicts in Iran, and the Afghan refugees help keep them all high and broke. Iranian politicians also are quick to deny any Iranian involvement in the violence that still troubles neighboring Iraq. But the U.S. has a growing pile of evidence that says otherwise. Documents, equipment and interrogation transcripts all detail Iranian efforts to, well, that's where it gets murky. There are several Iranian factions meddling in Iraq. Some are most interested in establishing a religious dictatorship, as Iran has, in Iraq. Others just want to support those who are willing to kill American soldiers. Others only want to make money, any way possible. U.S. troops have killed or captured hundreds of Iranians and Iraqis who are working for various Iranian government factions, plus some private Iranian groups that could best be described as "armed entrepreneurs." Iran has gotten itself involved in a public feud with al Qaeda. It began when Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad publically claimed that the September 11, 2001 attacks were a ploy by Israel or the CIA, to justify a war on Islam. A few days later, an al Qaeda leader, Ayman al Zawahri, rushed out an audio tape, denouncing the Iranians for casting doubt on the fact that al Qaeda had planned and carried out those attacks. Although Shia Iran and Sunni al Qaeda occasionally cooperate, they are, in fact, bitter enemies. Commercial photo satellite pictures have revealed a ballistic missile assembly and test facility 230 kilometers southeast of the capital. Layout is similar to such facilities in North Korea. Iran is not particularly upset with this kind of exposure, and officials openly boast of getting around UN and European sanctions by getting what they need from "East Asia" (code word for North Korea and China.) Iran even tries to export its weapons, but was recently expelled from a Malaysian weapons trade show because UN sanctions prohibit Iran from exporting weapons. At first, Malaysia allowed Iran to exhibit, but then the UN intervened and the Iranian exhibit and salesmen were gone.
Twice in the last two weeks, armed Iranian speedboats (the favorite ride of the seagoing Revolutionary Guards) have come too close (a few hundred meters) to U.S. ships in the Persian Gulf, and warning shots were fired by the Americans. Interestingly, the Iranian government denied both incidents. That's not unusual. The government is a collection of factions that don't communicate well. The Revolutionary Guards are often out of control, and make everyone in the government nervous.
April 12, 2008: A bomb went off in a southern Iraq mosque, leaving a dozen dead and nearly 200 wounded. Police later denied it was a bomb, and blamed the explosion on an accident involving weapons left in the mosque after a military exhibition. Mosques are frequently used to store and show off weapons. Islam considers itself a "militant" religion, so weapons are welcome in mosques.

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