Iran Blasts Benjamin Netanyahu as ‘Warmonger,’ Plays Tehran as Victim

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Mohammad Javad Zarif, the minister of foreign affairs for Iran, blasted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as a “warmonger” and accused Israel of being the big brother bully to poor victimized Tehran.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

Laughable. But true.

“Iran, a country without nuclear weapons, is threatened with atomic annihilation by a warmonger standing next to an actual nuclear weapons factory,” Zarif tweeted. “Beyond shameless is the gall.”

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Zarif conveniently forgot to mention how Iran would like nothing more than to see Israel blasted off the face of the earth, its people blotted from the history books.

More, from Ynet News:

Iran’s Minister of Foreign Affairs‏, Mohammad Javad Zarif, slammed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Wednesday, calling him a “warmonger,” in reference to the prime minister’s remarks during his speech at the Negev Nuclear Research Center.

“Iran, a country without nuclear weapons, is threatened with atomic annihilation by a warmonger standing next to an actual nuclear weapons factory. Beyond shameless is the gall,” Zarif tweeted.

Earlier on Wednesday, during a ceremony to rename the Negev Nuclear Research Center after the late Israeli statesman Shimon Peres, Netanyahu warned the country’s enemies that Israel has the means to destroy them. “Those who threaten to wipe Israel out, put themselves in a similar danger, and in any event will not achieve their goal.”

“Our enemies know very well what Israel is capable of, they know our policy, and anyone who tries to harm us—we will harm them,” the prime minister added.

Netanyahu stressed the necessity for Israel to stand strong in the face of its enemies. “In the Middle East, and in many parts of the world, there is a simple truth—there is no place for the weak. The weak are collapsing, slaughtered, erased from history, and the strong, for better or for worse, are the ones who survive. The strong are respected, the strong enter into alliances, and ultimately the strong make peace.”

Netanyahu also referred to the agreement between Iran and Syria saying, “the IDF will continue acting with full determination and with full might against Iran’s attempts to station forces and advanced weapons systems in Syria, and no agreement between Syria and Iran will deter us, nor will any threat frighten us.”

In addition, the prime minister addressed the Iranian presence in Syria: “We are working to prevent Iran’s military entrenchment in Syria. We will not let go of this goal, just as we did not let go of the effort to bring about the cancellation of the nuclear deal with Iran, which was perceived as impossible when I first placed it on the international agenda a few years ago.”

Referring to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s comments about Iran’s economic struggles, the prime minister said: “We will continue to apply pressure on the dangerous and extremist regime in Iran. Just yesterday we saw the outcome of this pressure in the words of the Iranian president, who said that many people in Iran have lost their faith in the country’s future and its power because of renewed economic sanctions,” he concluded.

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Suresh
Suresh
5 years ago

Bibi exposed the mullahs ! And they get mad !

Jihadi says in arabic “conquest of America” must for establishing islamic caliphate https://tinyurl.com/y7kuzjdw

And that group is active in EU/Australia/North America !

Nefarious420
Nefarious420
5 years ago
Reply to  Suresh

And they have full support of the Democratic Party, interesting times we live in indeed.

caliroxanne
caliroxanne
5 years ago
Reply to  Suresh

Check out John Guandolo (former Marine and F.B.I. special agent) and his organization

https://www.understandingthethreat.com/

He goes into great detail about this.

Liatris Spicata
Liatris Spicata
5 years ago

Ironic, no, that the government that murdered about 80 Israeli embassy personnel in Argentina some years back accuses Israel of being a war monger.

AFAIAC, Iran should be bombed to the extent necessary to eliminate its military capability and the rule of the mullahs.

caliroxanne
caliroxanne
5 years ago

Don’t forget the Israeli embassy in Argentina as well, and let’s not forget the U.S. embassy bombing in Lebanon, the U.S. Marine barracks (French facility also), the U.S. embassy annex bombing, Khobar towers killing Americans… These are just things that immediately come to mind, but it is just the tip of the iceberg!

felix1999
felix1999
5 years ago

Humor break!

A large balloon of London Mayor Sadiq Khan wearing a yellow bikini has been given the green light to fly over the city on September 1, 2018. (Yanny Bruere/Make London Safe Again) Kahn job gets a taste of his own medicine. Campaigners raised more than $75,000 to fund the 29-foot balloon which is slated to fly over Parliament Square in Westminster on Sept. 1, the BBC reported. More than 3,400 donated to the campaign that said its goal was to vote Khan out due to the increasing crime levels in London.

http://a57.foxnews.com/images.foxnews.com/content/fox-news/world/2018/08/30/balloon-london-mayor-wearing-yellow-bikini-to-fly-over-city-in-response-to-trump-baby-blimp/_jcr_content/par/featured_image/media-0.img.jpg/931/524/1535633829015.jpg?ve=1&tl=1

caliroxanne
caliroxanne
5 years ago

Hmmm. Sounds just like the Ron Paul and Infowars crowd. Even Michael Savage has jumped in on that, i guess trying gain popularity with the Ron Paul and Infowars gang, which cracks me up because Savage IS what they hate, but he just doesn’t realize it.

Jeff Moffitt
Jeff Moffitt
5 years ago

Should have never let Iran depose the Shah!

1984  George Orwellesque
1984 George Orwellesque
5 years ago
Reply to  Jeff Moffitt

Thank Carter.

1984  George Orwellesque
1984 George Orwellesque
5 years ago

FROM IRAN, WITH LOVE: 3,500 DEAD AMERICANS
https://dailycaller.com/2018/08/30/from-iran-with-love/

The U.S. State Department reports that Iran funds and arms more terror groups in the world than any other country.

And since 1979, when the Mullahs seized power, Iran has killed more Americans in five major terror attacks between 1983-2001 than American soldiers were killed in Afghanistan.

Put another way, Iranian sponsored and financed terror has killed 3,543 Americans, slightly more than half of all the American deaths suffered by the United States in the nearly two decades-long wars, primarily in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Specifically, Iranian sponsored and financed major terror attacks by date, location and deaths include the following:

September 11, 2001, World Trade Center; 2996 dead

April 18, 1983, Beirut U.S. Embassy; 63 dead
October 23, 1983, Marine Barracks, Beirut; 241 dead
June 25, 1996, Khobar Towers; 19 dead
April 7, 1998, U.S. Embassies in Tanzania and Kenya; 224 dead
Just as we would not trade with Al Qaeda or Hezbollah, Iran’s accomplices in these attacks, it seems reasonable to argue that we should not have any financial relationship with Iran either. Although Americans overwhelmingly opposed the nuclear deal with Iran, (and by implication trading with Iran), not so some of our European and Asian allies, and definitely not the leaderships of Russia and China.

Even RT, the state-owned Russian Television network, got into the act with disinformation, claiming that it is because Americans do not want to go to war with Iran that they oppose the administration’s Iran policies.

RT followed up with the fantastic claim that only since the United States withdrew from the 2015 nuclear agreement known as the Joint Comprehensive Program of Action (JCPOA) with Iran have relations between the two countries deteriorated.

It is true that after exiting the JCPOA the Trump administration put back in place the economic sanctions against Iran that had been undone by virtue of the JCPOA. The administration also sought to stop all Iranian oil exports with additional sanctions that would go into effect in November 2018.

Some “experts” warned that this would cause oil prices to skyrocket and thus would not be popular with other countries or companies. At the time of the State Department announcement of the sanctions strategy, oil prices ranged from $71–76 a barrel.

As one analyst predicted, “If the State Department sticks to this strategy, Europe, South Korea and Japan will comply. India will likely at least partially comply. China is the wild card.” Today, oil is trading between $69-$76 a barrel, hardly evidence of a price spike from anticipated sanctions against Iran.

What America is doing is quite simple. The US sanctions are what is known as “extraterritorial,” which means companies from regions other than the US, like Europe, that do business with Iran can be barred from doing business with the United States. This also applies to banks and other financial institutions.

As German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas appeared to concede in May, “I don’t see any simple solution to shield companies from all the risks of American sanctions.”

Fortunately, many companies are already siding with the morally correct American position and are ending commercial relations with Iran. Unfortunately, some European countries are still trying to skirt sanctions and set up separate financing and trading relationships with Iran, notably the EU led by elements within the German government.

The good news is that more than 50 international companies “have indicated they will withdraw from Iran” including Total, the French energy company, and car manufacturers Peugeot, Daimler and PSA. German industrial conglomerate Siemens, and major airlines such a British Airways, Airbus SE and Air France, are doing the same

In early June, additional companies of all types announced they would also cease business with Iran despite assurances from several European leaders that the U.S. economic sanctions regime would not be followed.

For example, Maersk, the shipping giant, will no longer ship oil to Iran. General Electric will no longer provide Iran oil and gas infrastructure equipment, and Honeywell will also end its work with Iranian petrochemical company Tabriz. As well, Boeing announced that it would cancel a $20 billion airplane contract with Tehran.

Surprisingly, Lukoil, the second largest Russian oil company, announced it would also no longer pursue joint oil ventures with Iran. India’s Reliance Industries, owner of the world largest oil refining complex, will no longer accept crude oil imports from Iran, and a manufacturer of oil pumps, Dover, will also end all business with Iran.

Swift Disconnect:

Nevertheless, some American business entities are not completely following the administration’s lead. Although not doing business in Iran, both J.P Morgan and Citibank are both remaining non-committal as to whether they will disconnect Iran from the SWIFT financial network on whose board the two banks have seats.

In a strongly worded letter, sixteen top Capitol Hill leaders have urged the banks to disconnect Iran from SWIFT, an act that would effectively “choke Iran’s global financial access”, a move Secretary of Treasury Munnchin says is critical to the success of the administration’s “maximum pressure campaign.”

Richard Goldberg of FDD was highly critical of the banks, saying they should be taking such action “under their own corporate rules.” The banks in Japan have got the message, and Mitsubishi UFG Bank and Mizuho Bank have halted all transactions with Iran.

While many analysts see the reduction of commercial ties with Iran as primarily impacting the consuming and working public in Iran and so do not go directly after the regime’s leaders, that is not so.

The owner of many businesses in Iran, including ports management and telecommunications, is the IRGC, the Revolutionary Guard Corps that finances and manages terror attacks sponsored by Iran. Reducing Iran’s financial ties with the West dramatically curtails the income of the IRGC and, as a result, reduces its ability to conduct terrorism.

In a recent move, the United States sanctioned a ship in the Iranian commercial fleet. According to the Washington Beacon, the “Trump administration will take action against an Iranian ship that has been stationed at a key choke point in the Red Sea for months and is believed to be providing significant military aid to terrorist forces in Yemen” including “providing targeting information for Houthi anti-ship attacks” including an attack on a Saudi oil tanker.

As the Beacon notes, the ship, “identified as the Saviz, was delisted from U.S. sanctions by the Obama administration,” but will now be sanctioned as part of a broader “package of sanctions that will “target Iran’s port operations, shipping and shipbuilding sectors.”

The story concludes:

“The Obama administration enabled the Saviz to sail globally. President Trump will put a stop to that…a ship like Saviz could carry [Iranian military] Qods Force command and control elements and host berthing and logistics while controlling the activities of smaller, lower-profile craft. The maritime problem is in a chokepoint is short-legged but very multifaceted. It’s time to get the sanctions game face back on and pay Saviz or her sister ships a visit with a U.S. cruiser or destroyer.”

Can Sanctions Bring Down The Mullahs?

Although Michael Ledeen argues recently, “I don’t believe that sanctions are good enough,” he does acknowledge that “the Iranian regime is so hollow it could crash at any time.” He concludes, “I still don’t believe I have seen an oppressive regime fall because life in its land had become unbearable.”

On the other hand, he does ask, “So what does it take to produce serious, successful, viable regime change?”

At the top of the list would be the perquisites of power. If taken away from the Mullahs by seizing their overseas assets, an option to which a British court has recently opened the door for victims of Iranian terrorism, then the Iranian nomenklatura bank accounts will dry up and they will bail out. Or be thrown out.

What more can we do, short of going to war? We could communicate with the Iranians seeking regime change through speeches from Washington and through U.S. policy and actions, like standing up a far better information warfare program. We could provide satellite phones and other communications gear for the Iranian “resistance,” and strike funds for the truckers as we did for Solidarity in Poland for almost a decade prior to the fall of the Soviet empire.

As Secretary of Defense Mattis warned, Iran is a creator of “mayhem” in the Middle East and beyond. Neither stability nor peace can exist in the region until the mullahs and their Islamic totalitarian ideology of conquest are gone. The combination of policies that will do the job are: maximum sanctions, a shut-off of Iranian oil exports and serious assistance and support for the resistance.

Peter Huessy is the director for strategic deterrent studies at the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies.

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