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IRAN: New Budget May Add to Uncertainties, Political Strains
Analysis by Farideh Farhi*
HONOLULU, Hawaii - Iran's 347-billion-dollar budget for the 2010-11 fiscal year, finally approved by the Guardian Council in Tehran Tuesday - just days before its scheduled implementation on the Iranian New Year Mar. 21 - appears likely to add to the tensions and uncertainty that have bedeviled the country since the disputed June 2009 elections.
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Q&A: Equality Is Feminism
Sabina Zaccaro interviews Nobel Peace Laureate SHIRIN EBADI*
UNITED NATIONS - "I think that Islam has been misinterpreted. No Islamic law says violate women's rights and repress women," says Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi. "Democracy, human rights and women leadership are absolutely not hostile to the Islamic doctrine." And women in Iran are well aware of that, she says.
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MIDEAST: Iran, Israel Spoiling for a Fight?
Analysis by Mel Frykberg
RAMALLAH - Iran and Israel appear to be spoiling for a fight, going by recent belligerent statements emanating from several regional capitals.
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US-TURKEY: Armenian Genocide Vote Threatens Ties at Key Moment
By Jim Lobe*
WASHINGTON - Thursday's vote by a Congressional committee condemning the deaths of up to 1.5 million Armenians during World War I as "genocide" is almost certain to complicate U.S. ties with Turkey, a long-time strategic ally and increasingly influential player in the Middle East and central and southwest Asia.
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US-IRAN: Debate Over Military Action Against Iran Gains Steam
By Jim Lobe*
WASHINGTON - While the ongoing U.S. military "surge" in Afghanistan continues to capture the headlines, Iran's nuclear programme – and how best to deal with it – is rapidly emerging here as this year's biggest foreign policy challenge.
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US-IRAN: Looming Sanctions Could Hit Major Oil Firms
By Sananda Sahoo
WASHINGTON - Earlier this month, Iran's ambassador to India said that his country continues to import gasoline from a private Indian oil refinery, even though the firm, Reliance Industries Ltd., had promised last year that it would stop gasoline exports to Iran, fearing U.S. sanctions.
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US-IRAN: How Was Rigi Arrested?
By Mohammed A. Salih
WASHINGTON - New details of the arrest of the Jundullah leader, Abdolmalek Rigi, partly corroborate and partly contradict the initial narrative given by Iranian officials for his arrest.
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POLITICS: What Will China Do With Its Veto?
By Mohammed A. Salih and Eli Clifton
WASHINGTON - With relations between China and the U.S. taking some bitter turns in recent months, how China responds to mounting pressure from the U.S. and its European allies for tougher sanctions on Iran is being viewed as a major test of the current relations and a determinant of the future shape of bilateral ties between Washington and Beijing.
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SYRIA: U.S. Starts Normalisation Process in Earnest
By Charles Fromm and Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON - After months of delay, the administration of President Barack Obama is taking major steps engage the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad as part of a broader regional strategy designed in major part to isolate Iran, escalate the fight against al Qaeda and other radical Sunni groups, and encourage peace talks with Israel.
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RIGHTS: Iran Rebuffs U.N. Criticism, Denies Abuses
By Omid Memarian
GENEVA - International human rights groups and Iranian activists say Iran's decision to reject major recommendations made by the 47-member U.N. Human Rights Council on Wednesday is disappointing and signals that Tehran has no intention of easing the crackdown on dissent in the country.
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POLITICS: U.S. Ambassador Accuses Iran of Role in Iraq Election Ban
By Mohammed A. Salih
WASHINGTON - Reiterating accusations of Iranian interference in Iraq's internal affairs, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq said Wednesday that he was in "100 percent agreement" with remarks by the top U.S. commander in Iraq regarding Iran's involvement in a highly controversial decision that eventually barred over 140 candidates from running in Iraq's parliamentary elections next month.
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POLITICS: Iran's "Now What" Moment
Analysis by Farideh Farhi*
HONOLULU, Hawaii - After eight tumultuous months, during which attention from all sides of Iran's political spectrum as well as anxious watchers around the world focused on a series of street clashes between protesters and the government's security forces, an eerie calm has taken hold in Iran.
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RIGHTS: Mideast and North Africa Cited for Press Abuses
By Mohammed A. Salih and Charles Fromm
WASHINGTON - A report by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) on press freedom around the world in 2009 depicts an especially gloomy situation in the Middle East and North Africa, where authorities continue to use repressive measures to muzzle journalists.
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POLITICS: U.S. Steps Up Sanctions Diplomacy Against Iran
By Mohammed A. Salih
WASHINGTON - Faced with an increasingly impatient Congress and a defiant government in Tehran, the administration of U.S. President Barack Obama is currently stepping up its diplomatic efforts in the Middle East as it seeks to prepare the ground for tougher sanctions on Iran.
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US-IRAN: Journalists Call for Release of Jailed Colleagues
By Charles Fromm
WASHINGTON - On Thursday, the 31st anniversary of the Islamic Revolution in Iran, a coalition of international journalists, writers and publishers launched a campaign calling for the release of their colleagues imprisoned following disputed presidential elections last year in Iran.
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IRAN: Revolution's Anniversary Ratchets Up Tensions
By Mohammed A. Salih
WASHINGTON - One day before the 31st anniversary of the Islamic Revolution, Iran is a country divided, with pro-government groups and Green Movement supporters each presenting their own narratives of what the highly symbolic day means and whom they represent.
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News in RSS Following Iran's Jun. 12 election, the country remains in a state of shock and turmoil, attempting to come to grips with what happened.

The conviction held by a significant part of the electorate that the vote was stolen has led to protests and demonstrations in the streets, while the harsh response and clampdown by riot police and vigilante forces, particularly against university students, have created an atmosphere reminiscent of revolutionary days.

Already brewing fissures among the Iranian political elite have turned into irreconcilable differences, confronting the Islamic Republic of Iran with its most serious crisis since the early post-1979 period.

Roxana Saberi Charged With Spying
U.S. & Iran:
Foes Forever?
Special Reports from Tehran
Iran's Regional Power Rooted in Shi'a Ties
Is a U.S.-Iran Deal on the Middle East Possible?
Economy, Ties with West Are Key to Iran Polls
Iranian Leaders Debate Obama's Policy Freedom
Analysts Urge Obama Not to Delay Action on Talks
Gareth Porter, an investigative journalist and historian specialising in U.S. national security policy, has just completed a 12-day visit to Tehran to find out how Iranian officials, analysts and political figures view possible negotiations between the Obama administration and Iran.


Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
Credit: UN Photo/Marco Castro.
US, Iran and the Strait of Hormuz Incident
How the Pentagon Planted a False Hormuz Story
   Analysis by Gareth Porter
MIDEAST: Iran Looms Large in Bush's 11th Hour Tour
   By Ali Gharib
Official Version of Naval Incident Starts to Unravel
   Analysis by Gareth Porter
Will Naval Incident Undermine Bush's Iran Message?
   Analysis by Trita Parsi
Democracy Now! Interviews IPS's Gareth Porter

The Iran NGO Initiative
Centre for Women's Studies
UNDP Statistics - Iran
UNICEF Statistics - Iran
National Iranian American Council

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