Iran, Venezuela Presidents Hold Phone Discussion, Call For More Trade

Economic and trade ties between Iran and Venezuela should expand Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi told his counterpart Nicolas Maduro in a phone call on Saturday.

Economic and trade ties between Iran and Venezuela should expand Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi told his counterpart Nicolas Maduro in a phone call on Saturday.
Raisi told Maduro that bilateral relations between the two countries are strategic and emphasized that ties should expand during his administration that came into office in August. He added that bilateral ties should be strengthened specially in trade and economy.
Tehran has established close relations with Caracas in the past 15 years and has defied US sanctions on both countries by shipping fuel across the Atlantic to prop up the beleaguered Maduro government. The Trump administration seized one such large shipment and auctioned off the cargo.
Raisi also emphasized the quest of both countries to defy the United States, saying that “we will continue the path of progress.” He also highlighted the need for more cooperation in the energy sector and congratulated Maduro for the recent elections in his country.
US sanctions have battered the economy of the two countries as they are unable to export oil to global markets and their national currencies have nosedived in recent years.

The chief of air defense at Iran's nuclear facility in Natanz says they tested a missile to check preparedness in the region, after a loud explosion was heard.
Iranian air defenses fired a missile as part of an exercise on Saturday over the central town of Natanz, which houses nuclear installations, state TV reported, after local residents reported hearing a large blast.
The TV said air defense units fired the missile to test a rapid reaction force over Natanz.
Iranian news agencies earlier reported a large explosion in the sky above Natanz, but said there was no official explanation of the incident.
The semi-official Fars news agency quoted its reporter in nearby Badroud as saying a short blast was heard which was accompanied by an intense light in the sky.
Natanz was twice the target of highly destructive sabotage attacks in July 2020 and April 2021, widely attributed to Israel. Amid nuclear talks with Iran, Israel has repeatedly warned that it will not tolerate a nuclear Iran and will take action to stop Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

In the wake of unsuccessful nuclear negotiations in Vienna, some state media in Iran on Saturday tried to put a more positive spin saying talks will continue.
Western media including British newspaper Guardianhave covered the end of the seventh round of nuclear negotiations saying that the talks "were suspended on Friday, with Europe warning that Iran had walked back on all previous diplomatic progress and fast-forwarded its nuclear programme." But some Iranian media including the IRGC-linked newspaper Javan have described the event as "European and US partners of the JCPOA taking Iran's proposals home with them for consultations in their capitals."
At the same time, other media such as proreform website Fararu have opined that "The nuclear talks are not about Iran's nuclear program. They are about a new, emerging world order as the United States' power is declining." Fararu furthermore quoted British journalist Peter Oborne as saying that the nuclear talks mark the beginning of a new Cold War in which instead of the United States and the Soviet Union, now China and the US are facing each other. Fararu quoted him as saying that this new Cold War started as the US hurriedly withdrew from Afghanistan and turned its focus to Asia.
The administration-owned daily newspaper Iran ran an optimistic front-page headline: "Laying the foundations for lifting the sanctions."
But Kar-o-Kargar daily, close to former Rouhani spokesman Ali Rabiei, ran an utterly pessimistic front-page headline: "The shadow of despair on the negotiating table." While Iran believes that the talks are going to be resumed next week, Kar-o-Kargar said that the talks have come to end for good.
Economic daily Asia took a position in between the two and quoted reformist lawmaker Massouid Pezeshkian as saying that negotiations would be meaningless without "give and take" and suggested that if Iran is looking for a solution to its economic problems, its nuclear negotiators should return to the talks next week.
Foreign policy analyst Ali Bigdeli told Setareh Sobh daily that Iran should withdraw its excessive demands and stick to a minimal request for lifting some of the sanctions.
Another economic daily, Jahan-e Sanat discussed the negotiations with several Iranian experts in a series of debates that were primarily focused on the role of China in the nuclear talks. Observers generally said that China appeared to be silent during this round of the negotiations. Experts told Jahan-e Sanat that the suspension of the talks is in China's interest and that China favors a situation where Iran and the West do not reach an agreement.
Jalal Sadatian, a former Iranian diplomat, told the daily that China is worried about any improvement in Iran's ties with the West. He added that both China and Russia benefit from the sanctions on Iran. Particularly China benefits from being the sole customer for Iran's oil.
Another former diplomat, Fereidoun Majlesi, agreed with Sadatian and said that "thanks to the sanctions, China has now monopolized trade with Iran and is using the situation to sell everything at a higher price while buying Iran's oil at unbelievable discounts."
Asked why Iran counts on China and Russia as its supporters in the nuclear negotiations, Majlesi said: "Iran feels committed to enmity with the United States and this brings it close to China from an ideological standpoint." He further said that Iran is isolated in the international community but likes to say that there are countries such as China that are Iran's allies.
Mohammad Marandi, a member of the Iranian negotiating team as well as some Iranian officials in Tehran said on Friday that that Iran will turn to China if the United States refuses to return to the JCPOA.
Ironically, Iranian journalist and historian Hossein Dehbashi revealed on Twitter on Saturday that Marandi is a US citizen and questioned his support for Iran in the negotiations. Marandi in his response posted a picture on Twitter and claimed the photo shows him in Basij militia uniform when he was 16.

Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi will make a televised address to the nation on Sunday, state media reported, a day after nuclear talks in Vienna adjourned amid pessimism.
Raisi who was elected in June and took office in early August delivered two television speeches before his 100 days in office were completed. Critics evaluated his first 100 days negatively, saying he did not manage to address any of the pressing issues facing Iran.
State media in recent days has begun defending Raisi’s first hundred days, specially a speedy Covid-19 vaccination campaign. But the nuclear issue and United States sanctions are the crucial issues impacting the lives of ordinary people.
A high inflation rate of 50 percent, a falling national currency and no positive outlook in the foreseeable future are the most salient issues for hard-pressed working Iranians. A lifting of US sanctions can help alleviate pressure but Raisi’s negotiators sent to Vienna have presented tough demands that United States and its allies are not likely to accept.

The United States 'quietly' renewed a waiver for Iraq to buy Iranian electricity just as Iran’s nuclear talks in Vienna resumed, a conservative website has said.
TheWashinton Beaconreported Friday that it had obtained a ‘non-notification’ provided to Congress signed November 19 that gave Iraq another 120 days to buy electricity from Iran without facing the threat of punitive US action.
The Free Beacon said the waiver was transmitted to Congress ten days later, on the day nuclear negotiations between Iran and world powers resumed in Vienna in an attempt to revive the 2015 deal, the JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action).
‘Goodwill concessions’
Hence the timing had prompted accusations, the Free Beacon continued, that the Biden administration was "offering concessions to Tehran to generate goodwill" as the JCPOA talks resumed.
Richard Goldberg, the former ‘director for countering Iranian weapons of mass destruction’ in Trump's White House National Security Council described Iraq’s electricity waiver as a "dressed-up Chanukah present to" Iran. Chanukah is a Jewish festival.
The Free Beacon was concerned that the Biden administration was responding to calls from Iran for the US to show ‘good will’ over the nuclear talks. “Good deal within reach if the West shows good will," Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian tweeted Friday.
But the renewal of the Iraq’s waivers by both the Trump and Biden administrations has been largely a routine matter in the past.
The Free Beacon did reports that the State Department had justified the waiver, granted "at the secretary [of state's] discretion" (under executive orders passed by Trump), remained "in the national security interest of the United States" and was necessitated by Iraq's failure to reduce reliance on Iranian electricity.
Electricity Shortages
Iraq leans heavily on Iranian electricity and gas. As highlighted by human rights groups, Iraqi hospitals and other public services have in recent years faced electricity shortagesas the health system struggles to recover from years of sanctions and war.
The US sanctions waiver for Iraq to receive electricity and gas exports from Iran has been renewed several times since 2018 when former President Donald Trump withdrew from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal with world powers, Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), and took powers to sanction any third party dealing with Iran.
The Trump administration renewed Iraq’s waiver for 90 days on January 4 before handing the administration over to President Joe Biden. The Biden administration renewed the waiver for 120 days on March 31, ahead of the first round of nuclear talks with the administration of President Hassan Rouhani, and for another 120 days in early August before President Ebrahim Raisi took office.
Iran owed $6bn
Iraq owes over $6 billion to Iran for electricity and gas imports, which has been frozen by Iraqi banks wary of possible US punitive action. Tehran has struggled to access the payments despite both Iranian and Iraqi officials saying they are working for a mechanism to pay the debt.
Repeated suggestions that, with dollar payments blocked, Iran might receive payments in kind, either though using dinars or barter, appear not to have borne fruit.
Citing a "reliable source" in March, an official of the Iran-Iraq Chamber of Commerce, Hamid Hosseini, said Iran had received some payments from funds frozen in Iraq, including the state-owned Trade Bank of Iraq, after Washington’s agreement. Hosseini said the Iraqi government had a variety of explanations, including US sanctions, not to pay Iran for natural gas.
In June the Central Bank of Iran governor Abdolnaser Hemmati said the bank had made progress in talks with Iraqi officials over using frozen Iranian resources to buy humanitarian goods, but Iraqi officials have not confirmed such claims.

One day after the inconclusive end of nuclear talks in Vienna Iran’s currency rial fell against the US dollar to the psychologically important level of 300,000.
Iranian authorities in recent days devised ways to show that the national currency was actually rising against major currencies as its diplomats met representatives of major powers to discuss a possible revival of the 2015 nuclear deal, the JCPOA. However, talks adjourned on Friday with no results except pessimism among European negotiators and disappointment on the part of the United States.
"Iran right now does not seem to be serious about doing what's necessary to return to compliance, which is why we ended this round of talks in Vienna," US Secretary of State Antony Blinken told the Reuters Next Conference on Friday.
The Iranian currency has fallen more than ninefold since early 2018, when it became apparent that then-president Donald Trump was inclined to leave the JCPOA and impose sanctions on Iran. He did so in May of that year and the rial has kept falling ever since.
US sanctions on oil exports and international banking has deprived Tehran of its main foreign currency revenues that financed half its government budget. The solution for officials was to print money, short of negotiations and a new agreement with Washington. Liquidity more than quadrupled in the past three years, pushing inflation rate to 50 percent and the rial down to Saturday’s level against the dollar and other major currencies.
A week ago, Iran tried to protect its currency by limiting legal purchases by small buyers. According to the law, every Iranian citizen can get $2,000 a year with a slightly favorable dollar rate for travel abroad and other needs such as medical care or wire transfers for students abroad.
Some people sold this right to others who needed more dollars, by using their national ID card to buy the currency. The government clamed down on the practice by tightening the requirements, demanding firm evidence of impending travel, such as the original copy of an air ticket. Buyers flocked to street dealers, instead of official bank exchange offices and the dollar rose to more than 300,000 rials.
Only once before the rial has lost so much value and that was before US presidential election last year, when people were nervous that Trump would be reelected and would increase pressure on the Islamic Republic. Once Joe Biden got elected, the pressure on rial declined somewhat, as he has already announced his intention to revive the JCPOA.
State-controlled media has begun blaming conspirators for the fall of the rial, as they have done on previous occasions, but the reason for having a battered currency and an economic crisis is obvious to most Iranians.
Noor News, a website close to the national security council said Friday that the fall of the rial “is a fully planned” conspiracy and blamed neighboring countries, in a clear reference to the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, who see Iran’s nuclear program and regional expansion as a serious threat to their security.
The government’s official IRNA news website blamed “greedy traders” and enemies who spread “fake news” about the lack of prospects for the success of nuclear talks.