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Opinion
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Thursday, 03 January 2008 |
Qods Force's Kosar and Mobin front entities in Iraq By: Reza Shafa Kosar Organization was setup to cover the mullahs' real intention in the country. Since the early 1980s and sudden appearance of an odious method of expanding Islamic fundamentalism by the newly established government in Tehran, the same tactics, as tested positive in the past, was the order of the day for the Qods Force in Iraq.
Since early September 2003, the Qods Force under the pretext of humanitarian aids to the poor and needy in Iraq began a widespread campaign to extend its terrorist network.
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Sunday, 30 December 2007 |
Qods Force's physical presence in Iraq By: Reza Shafa The Qods Force has some 40,000 men in Iraq. In January 2007, in a press conference in London, the Iranian Resistance revealed a detailed list of 32,000 on mullahs' payroll with their account numbers in Iranian banks and their ranks in the IRGC's military hierarchy.
In addition, to pursue its goal in Iraq, the Qods Force has established dozens of terrorist and intelligence networks throughout the country.
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Friday, 28 December 2007 |
Qods Force spreading its wings across Iraq By: Reza Shafa Brigadier General Qassem Soleimani, Qods Forces' top man, was directly briefed by supreme leader Ali Khamenei in late spring 2003 to begin organizing the Iranian regime's sympathizers in a move to execute different phases of covert Iraqi occupation. That of course involved massive transfer of both men and equipment to the country.
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Thursday, 27 December 2007 |
Khamenei behind mullahs' onslaught in Iraq By: Reza Shafa With war breaking out in the winter of 2002 in Iraq, the mullahs in Tehran who had been planning for such opportunities to fulfill their dreams in the neighboring country wasted no time by putting the Qods Force on red alert.
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Tuesday, 25 December 2007 |
The Qods Force and a covert occupation of Iraq By: Reza Shafa On December 22, 2001, in a closed meeting of the regime's Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) and presence of supreme leader Ali Khamenei as well as then president Mohammad Khatamei, they concluded that the US attack on Iraq is imminent. In the same session, for the Islamic Republic to come on the top, it must have a strong voice in Iraq's future government and to achieve that objective the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (SIIC) and its arm the Badr Brigade should be mobilized.
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Monday, 24 December 2007 |
By: Reza Shafa The history of mullah's regime meddling in Iraq goes as far back as the idea of creating an Islamic empire similar to the Ottoman Empire which was dissolved in 1923. In his writings Khomeini vaguely refers to having a united governing entity for "Nation of Islam," and Iran as its epicenter. Not long after the 1979 revolution, with Khomeini and his followers in power, the theoretical idea was revitalized. To embark in the direction of establishing such an empire, Iraq seemed the best first step to take.
History shows that Iran and Iraq had difficulties in their relationship, prior to 1979 upheaval, not because they had so much territorial disputes, while border claims ignited the hostilities from time to time, but much of the problem rested with the geopolitical aspects and the race between the two world superpowers.
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Saturday, 22 December 2007 |
If the PMOI is not popular in Iran, why should the regime pay so much attention to it? NCRI - While there is a growing consensus that the issue of Iran is the most serious crisis facing the world, the lingering question is to find a solution.
The Iranian Resistance has maintained that neither appeasement nor foreign military intervention is the answer. The Resistance has advocated the "third option," i.e. democratic change by the people of Iran and their Resistance.
Yet, many Iran observers and analysts pose the question that does the Iranian Resistance have enough popular support to bring about such a change?
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Saturday, 22 December 2007 |
By Alireza Jafarzadeh Source: FoxNews The short-lived euphoria of Tehran's president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the pro-engagement circles in Washington, over the December 3 bombshell release of the National Intelligence Estimate on Iran's nuclear program, was short-lived.
Ahmadinejad, who had early on hastily described the report as "Iran's greatest victory in the past century," was later on the retreat when many of the regime's officials, who had a more sober reading of the report, sounded alarm.
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Saturday, 15 December 2007 |
By: Reza Shafa IRGC's operations in other regions 6. Only forty days after Khomeini's death on July 13 1989, Abdul-Rahman Qassemlou, the secretary general of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan, was assassinated by a hit squad dispatched from Tehran commanded by Brig. Gen. Mohammad Jafari Sahrarodi, head of Ramadan Garrison of the IRGC and current deputy Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) in Vienna. It is worthy of note that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was the commander of the backup team in the operation.
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