Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad brags that his country's nuclear program is "irreversible"

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad bragged that his country's nuclear program is "irreversible," in a nationally-televised speech on Wednesday... "Today, we've reached 3,000 centrifuges," he said - two months after announcing that his country had "more than 3,000 centrifuges working... with more being installed every week." Maariv's NRG website reports that the latest reference is to "full-time" activation of the centrifuges...
Read this story in full at IsraelNationalNews.com
IRNA Photo
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More news worth knowing at links below...
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TheAge.com.au...
Former United Nations chief weapons inspector Hans Blix has warned that Iran's nuclear ambition is more serious than was the case with Iraq in 2003... Dr Blix delivered the Sydney Peace Prize Lecture last night, saying he was still optimistic the international community could escape the threat posed by nuclear weapons.
Blix: Iran greater nuclear threat than Iraq was
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Telegraph.co.uk...
America is to release nine Iranians it is holding in Iraq amid signs that Teheran has begun to comply with demands that it stems its flow of weapons across the border... The announcement of the releases, which will include two officials controversially arrested earlier this year in a raid in northern Iraq, coincided with a major expansion of Iran's diplomatic presence in the country...
US to release Iranians detainees held in Iraq
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SmallGovTimes.com...
The U.S. military will release nine Iranian prisoners because they no longer threaten Iraq’s security, a U.S. military official said today. Meanwhile, recent evidence reveals a decline in the number of Iranian-supplied munitions in Iraq...
U.S. to release nine Iranian detainees
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U.S. to Release Iranian Detainees...
Evidence Shows Declining Influence
Wednesday
, November 07, 2007

The U.S. military will release nine Iranian prisoners because they no longer threaten Iraq's security, a U.S. military official said today. Meanwhile, recent evidence reveals a decline in the number of Iranian-supplied munitions in Iraq.

During a news conference in Baghdad, Navy Rear Adm. Gregory Smith, a Multinational Force Iraq spokesman, said the U.S. began the multiparty detainee-release process today and intends to release the nine Iranians in coming days.

"These individuals have been assessed to be of no continuing value," he said. "Nor do they pose a further threat to Iraqi security."

Two of the prisoners to be released were captured by coalition forces Jan. 11 in Irbil, Iraq, along with three other Iranians. Smith did not indicate if or when the three others would be released from U.S. custody.

Days after the arrests in Irbil, a city in Iraq's northern Kurdish region, military officials reported that the five detainees were connected to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force, according to a Multinational Force Iraq news release. The Quds Force is an organization known to provide funds, weapons, improvised explosive device technology and training to extremist groups attempting to destabilize the Iraqi government and attack coalition forces.

Among other forms of support, Iran has been accused by U.S. military officials of providing materials for making explosively formed penetrators, a highly lethal version of improvised explosive devices responsible for maiming and killing scores of coalition troops.

But in a related development meanwhile, Smith today said the number of Iranian-made explosives in Iraq has declined.

Last month, coalition forces found a cache of weapons in Sada village that included one of the largest explosively formed projectile stockpiles discovered to date, Smith said. The cache contained 120 fully-assembled EFPs and scores of components used to fashion the homemade deadly charges, including some 150 copper discs, 600 pounds of C4 explosives, 100 mortar rounds, and 30 107 mm rockets.

In Husseiniyah last week, a citizen led coalition forces to a building being used by insurgents as an EFP factory, where troops found roughly 10 fully prepared projectiles of various sizes, including a 12-inch EFP -- among the largest found in Iraq. Coalition forces also seized some 90 copper plates, more than 200 pounds of C4, and other explosive-making materials including TNT, Smith said.

The admiral noted that coalition military officials had spoken previously of Iran's influence in Iraq "through supplying terrorists and criminals with rockets and EFPs."

"However," he added, "the EFPs we have found ... do not appear to have arrived in Iraq after the Iranians made their pledge to stop arming, funding and training extremists."

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki secured a pledge in September from Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to stem weapons and other support Iran was providing militiamen in Iraq. "We hope in the coming weeks and months to confirm that Iran has indeed honored its pledge through further verification that the flow of munitions and other lethal aide has stopped," Smith said.

(From news article by DoD’s American Forces Press Service - Written by John J. Kruzel)

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