FBI Accuses Iran Of Attempted Terrorist Attacks, Kidnappings, Cyberattacks
Seal of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
The Federal Bureau of Investigation says the Iranian regime and “its terrorist partners” aren’t just a threat to the Middle East, but also a critical risk for the United States.
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In a number of tweets on Monday, the FBI said Iran and its proxy groups “don't just endanger the Middle East -- they also put Americans, US national security, and our country's critical infrastructure at risk.”
Sharing a link to a page on its website about how it is fighting back against the Iranian threat, the bureau added that the risk by the Islamic Republic is not theoretical. “Through intel and law enforcement partnerships, the FBI has countered an array of threats from Iran's government -- such as attempted terrorist attacks and kidnappings, espionage and foreign influence ops, and cyberattacks.”
Reiterating its commitment to identifying and disrupting all Iranian intelligence and military operations that threaten the Americans, the FBI said, “We'll use every tool and authority at our disposal to investigate crimes that Iran’s government and terrorist partners direct.”
“The Iranian regime has used repressive tactics in its wrongful detention of Americans in Iran on unsubstantiated criminal charges. The Iranian regime has also exported its repression through its harassment and lethal targeting of Iranian dissidents worldwide, including Americans living in the United States.”
Alinejad, who was also the target of an international kidnapping plot orchestrated by Iran’s intelligence network last year, has promoted videos of women protesting Iran's compulsory Islamic dress code to her millions of social media followers.
In an odd move unprecedented in the history of Iranian press, the government-owned newspaper, Iran, has published a 16-page special supplement about a eulogist.
The subject of the supplement, Mahmoud Karimi, is one of favorite 'maddahs' or eulogists of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who during three decades of his leadership, has given a special status to religious eulogists. A status some grand ayatollahs sometimes covet.
Under Khamenei, maddahs who used to sing tragic songs in graveyards for families of the deceased or chant tragic stories during the mourning month of Muharram to earn a living, are now the Islamic Republic’s political theoreticians, influential figures in political groups and government offices. They can put anybody’s business on fast track, albeit against a fee, using their influence as individuals close to Khamenei.
Even at election times, associations of eulogists conduct propaganda for candidates for a fee. The closer the eulogist is to Khamenei, the higher are his fees and of course his influence. Karimi enjoying that status is one of the richest and most famous eulogists of Tehran.
In 2005, a hundred maddahs signed a petition calling on the nation to vote for Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for president. Before that, in 1997 Ali Akbar Nategh Nouri used eulogists to help his campaign.
A maddah who can make Khamenei weep during the Muharram mourning ceremonies can do anything during the year.
A maddah kneeling on front of Khamenei tokiss his hand
Islamic Iran’s first leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini once said, “Islam (Shiism) is alive thanks to and because of these two months.” But eulogists do not just eulogize. They organize the Ashura and Arbaeen religious marches in the streets of Tehran and throughout the neighboring country of Iraq where they helped establish the Islamic Republic’s long reach.
Meanwhile, maddahs have been seen during protests since 2009 helping the IRGC to crack down on protesters. Mahmoud Karimi was one of them particularly in 2009. He is also famous for taking advantage of his position. Media reports in the 2010s include a story about him shooting at a driver who wanted to get past his car in one of Tehran’s tunnels.
Eulogists’ associations in downtown Tehran including the Islamic Coalition Party and the Mahdiyeh are famous for their political influence in hardliner circles and for bossing around state officials. Mansour Arazi, a renowned maddah is famous for using swear words against former Presidents Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Hassan Rouhani when he fell out with them, or when they fell out with Khamenei.
The 16-page supplement published by Iran newspaper on the first day of Muharram, was full of praise for Karimi. A singer who is not even the poet of what he sings. He is famous for copying, or as Iranian musicians say “covering” Bollywood movie songs with substandard Persian poetry. Sometimes, his eulogies have turned out to be controversial as he “covered” the famous songs of Los Angeles-based Iranian pop singers and moving to the beats of the music.
The extensive supplement includes an interview with Karimi’s mother as part of the publicity stunt. Meanwhile, the supplement quoted ultra conservative politician Saeed Jalili, the arch enemy of an agreement with the United States, as saying, “Principlists [ultraconservatives] have failed to value their friends. This supplement is a token of appreciation for one of their friends.”
Karimi is known for his verbal attacks on former Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, an advocate of a nuclear deal with the United States.
Most maddahs are rich, thanks to their ties with men of power. In return, they protect politicians against rivals, but their main job is organizing and mobilizing mobs to attack opponents of hardliners or protesters perceived as threats to the regime’s core.
Iran has released Iranian-French academic Fariba Adelkhah on furlough for five days, her lawyer Hojjat Kermani said on Tuesday.
According to Emtedad website, her lawyer has expressed hope that the furlough would be extended.
She is an anthropologist who studied in France, first at Université Strasbourg II and then at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences. In 1990, she finished her PhD thesis on women in Iran, titled "an anthropological approach of post-revolutionary Iran: the case of Islamic women."
Adelkhah was detained by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in the Spring of 2019 and was sentenced to more than six years in prison over vague charges such as collusion against the national security and propaganda against the state.
She was arrested along with Roland Marshall, another French researcher who was visiting Iran to meet with Adelkhah. The two had petitioned prison authorities to allow them to get married. Marshall was released from Evin prison on March 2020 in a prisoner swap with Jalal Ruhollah-Nejad, who was imprisoned in France over helping Iran import military technology in violation of US sanctions.
Foreign governments and human rights organizations have accused Iran of detaining foreigners and dual nationals on trumped up charges to use them for getting concessions from Western countries. Iran also holds citizens of several countries, including the US, France, Germany, Austria, and Sweden, on such charges as de facto hostages.
Sweden has expressed concerns about the reduction of monitoring by the UN watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) over Iran's nuclear activities.
In a Monday statement at the United Nations’ 10th conference to review the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) in New York, Sweden said, “The situation with regard to Iran’s safeguards agreement remains a matter of grave concern. Iran is pursuing highly proliferation-sensitive activities with no credible civilian use, and IAEA verification is circumscribed since Iran stopped implementing the Additional Protocol last year.”
Referring to the latest report by the IAEA director general, the statement said there are signs of nuclear material and related equipment having been shipped off to locations unknown and the agency is no longer able to verify the correctness and completeness of Iran’s nuclear material reporting, unless Iran engages seriously in helping the agency determine the fate of such material and equipment.
Urging Iran to provide the IAEA with all the information it requires, and to implement the resolution adopted by the IAEA Board of Governors in June, it added that the full and effective implementation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action is urgently needed in order to strengthen the NPT as well as international peace and security.
“Sweden is deeply concerned about Iran’s continuing contravention of the JCPOA and the proliferation consequences they bring,” it said calling for an immediate reapplication of the Additional Protocol as well as the voluntary verification measures foreseen in the JCPOA and commends the IAEA’s crucial verification work in Iran.
Foreign based broadcasters dominate the news and information market in Iran, with Iran International TV leading the way, a newspaper in Tehran said Monday.
Shargh Daily, a reformist and relatively independent newspaper in an article urging the government to be more tolerantof media and criticism pointed out that currently four major international broadcasters are the most popular sources of news and information for the people in Iran.
The BBC Persian Service, Iran International, Manoto and the Voice of America are influential the article said, “with Iran International getting ahead by employing anchors and journalists who left Iran and having an impact on public opinion in the country.”
The article, penned by Ghader Bastani and coinciding with Iran’s ‘Journalist Day’ has urged the government to give freedom to media “as the most effective way to fight corruption and improve government efficiency.” Increasing pressures on journalists and the closure of many independent publications have pushed many talented reporters to leave Iran, Shargh has argued. These journalists have gone to work for foreign-based Persian media and have become opponents of the Islamic Republic, it said.
In fact, government media outlets and those controlled by pro-government conservative groups are not considered as reliable sources of news and foreign-based media have stolen the spot, Shargh said, and urged the government to encourage and help “professional journalism.”
Iran International is the newest member of foreign-based Persian broadcasters. It was established in May 2017 and last year an opinion survey conducted among Iranians showed that it has gained the largest percentage of news audience in Iran.
A poll conducted by Gamaan polling agency in the Netherlands in 2021 found Iran International TV (33% audience) and Manoto TV (30%), both based in London, as the most popular media outlets in Iran.
The poll with a representative sample of over 27,000 individuals, 92 percent of those who took part said they get their news and information about Iran and the world from social media, 41% from satellite television stations, 32% from news websites and 14% from the Iranian state television on a daily basis.
Iran has one of the world’s worst media and internet censorships, with tens of thousands of websites blocked since the early 2000s and most social media platforms banned. In the absence of free media and the very high level of censorship, many Iranians turn to social media for political news and information.
Some 60 percent of those contacted by Gamaan said they never watch the news on the Iranian state-run television, the agency said, adding that generalization of the results of the survey to the general public are valid by a 95% coefficient.
Those taking part in the survey were literate Iranians over 19 years of age, representative of 85 percent of the adult population in Iran.
According to the findings of the survey, 33% respondents in the poll said they watch the Iran International TV daily. This makes the network the most popular Persian speaking foreign based news channel in Iran.
Next on the popularity ladder were Manoto TV with 30%, BBC Persian TV with 17%, both London-Based, as well as Jam TV, based in Turkey, with 16.5%, followed by the Iranian state TV at 16 percent, the Washington-based VOA TV also known as PNN with 11 percent popularity.
Iranian pensioners held nationwide demonstrations on Tuesday in protest to the government’s decision to a 10-percent increase in payments while the inflation rate stands at 55 percent.
Retirees in several cities, including Esfahan and Arak in central Iran as well as southern cities of Shush, Shushtar, Hafttapeh, and Ahvaz, gathered outside governors' offices or provincial offices of Iran’s Social Security Organization to denounce the government's move to ignore decrees by the Supreme Labor Council, which had stipulated a 38-percent increase in the minimum wage. They are demanding pension increases on par with rising prices of essential foods.
The protests took place as temperature has risen to more than 50 degrees Celsius – about 122 in Fahrenheit scale – in many cities across the southwestern oil-rich Khuzestan province.
A union for contract workers of the oil sector said on August 6, that 35 workers of Abadan refinery in southern Iran passed out due to the heat, and were taken to hospital.
Amid a dire economic situation in Iran that has been worsening in recent months, at least 10 workers have committed suicide in the last three months due to dismissal from their jobs and "livelihood problems".
During the past weeks, widespread protests by workers,shop owners, and teachers protesting against poverty, inflation, and low wages, have been met with heavy-handed crackdown and numerous arrests by the security forces.