• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

The Real Purpose of AssAF & Gookas!

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Iran Revolutionary Guards Say They’ll Crush Protests (Update2)


Share | Email | Print | A A A



By Ladane Nasseri and Ali Sheikholeslami
data


June 22 (Bloomberg) -- Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said the security forces will crush further protests over the disputed presidential vote, as the country’s elections supervisory body acknowledged some balloting discrepancies.
“The saboteurs must stop their actions” or face “the decisive and revolutionary action of the children of the nation in the Revolutionary Guards, the Basij, and other security and military forces, to put an end to the chaos,” the state-run Mehr news agency cited the Revolutionary Guards as saying today in a statement.
Police attacked hundreds of protesters with tear gas and fired into the air to disperse a rally in a central Tehran square, the Associated Press said.
The 125,000-strong Guards, tasked by Iran’s clerical rulers with protecting the Islamic Revolution, have their own ground, air and sea forces. Club-wielding members of the Basij volunteer militia, which is linked to the Guards, have played a role in suppressing the protests against President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s June 12 victory. Opponents say the ballot was rigged.
“This shows that it is very serious and can destabilize the regime,” Yossi Mekelberg, director of international relations at Regent’s College London, said in an interview. Without the guards, the protests won’t stop, he said.
Security forces deployed in Tehran to prevent further demonstrations after hundreds of thousands of Iranians took to the streets during more than a week of demonstrations that saw at least 17 people killed, according to the government. Police arrested as many as 457 people during clashes in the city on June 20, state-run Press TV said.
Guardian Council
The clerical Guardian Council, the top election body, acknowledged that the number of ballots cast in 50 districts surpassed the number of eligible voters in those areas, the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency reported today.
Council spokesman Abbas Ali Kadkhodaei said the discrepancies, in areas with a total electorate of about three million, may have sprung from voters being allowed to cast their ballot in cities or provinces other than those where they live.
The Council has refused a call from Mir Hossein Mousavi, the main challenger in the disputed election, for a new vote, offering only a partial recount of ballots.
“Crossing the red lines and pursuing scenarios to agitate the public is an obvious sign of threatening the national security and endangering the interests of the establishment and Iran,” the Guards said in their statement, adding that the protests tell “a story of a big conspiracy against the revolution and the Iranian nation.”
Supreme Leader
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
The Guards, who answer directly to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and act as a counterweight to the army, warned the international community, including the U.S., U.K. and Israel, to stop stirring unrest in the country. Iran has accused foreign nations of provoking the protests, a charge denied by Western diplomats.
The U.S. designated the Revolutionary Guards’ Quds Force a terrorist organization in October 2007, accusing the paramilitary group of supporting attacks on U.S. troops in Iraq. The focus of the Quds Force has been assistance to Islamic militant groups in other countries.
The Guards’ intervention came as splits within Iran’s ruling elite deepened after police arrested relatives of an ex- president and Parliament’s speaker said that most Iranians questioned Ahmadinejad’s electoral victory.
Security forces detained five relatives of former President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, one of the most influential politicians in the country, state media said yesterday. They were released later. Bolstering the opposition, Speaker Ali Larijani, who served as Iran’s nuclear negotiator until 2007, criticized the top election body for siding with Ahmadinejad and said most Iranians don’t accept the results.
Serious Dissatisfaction
“There is some serious dissatisfaction within the ranks,” said Ilan Berman, an analyst with the American Foreign Policy Council in Washington. “Anytime a regime begins to eat its own, it signals significant transformation.”
Rafsanjani is believed to be rallying support within the clerical establishment for former Prime Minister Mousavi, 67, who claims the government rigged the June 12 vote.
“The ball is in the opposition’s court,” said Kaveh-Cyrus Sanandaji, an Iran expert from Oxford University in the U.K. “The supreme leader and Ahmadinejad have proven they are willing to use violence against all dissent.”
Iran’s rial strengthened 0.4 percent to 9,853.15 to the dollar, compared to 9,894.6 at the close of trading on June 19. The currency’s rate is managed by Bank Markazi, the central bank.
OPEC Governor
Iran’s governor at the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, Mohammad Ali Khatibi, said the protests haven’t affected the country’s oil industry or crude exports. Iran is OPEC’s second-biggest producer.
“The recent developments in the country have had no impact on the oil industry or crude exports,” state-run Press TV cited Khatibi as telling the Iran Daily newspaper yesterday. “The national oil industry is 100 percent normal.”
The protests, the largest since the Islamic Revolution that ousted the shah in 1979, and the divisions within the regime mark an unprecedented challenge to the authority of Khamenei, the successor of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, leader of the Islamic Revolution. The loyalty of the security forces may be tested in the event of major bloodshed.
Mousavi urged his supporters to continue peaceful protests. Opposing lies and fraud is a right, Mousavi said in a statement published yesterday on his Web site.
Assembly of Experts
Rafsanjani, 75, who heads the Assembly of Experts, a clerical body that has the power to appoint or dismiss the supreme leader, is likely to try to dislodge Khamenei, 69, said Anoush Ehteshami, a professor of international relations at Durham University in the U.K.
“Rafsanjani is being forced to come out into the open,” said Ehteshami. “The arrest of his family members is a direct challenge to him.”
The Rafsanjani family members, including his daughter, Faezeh Hashemi, were detained two days ago in connection with the protests.
The relatives were released yesterday, with Rafsanjani’s daughter the last to be freed, late last night, Press TV said. Rafsanjani is a behind-the-scenes supporter of Mousavi.
Former President Mohammad Khatami, 65, who sought to promote more social and political freedoms in the Persian Gulf nation of 73 million during his 1997-2005 administration, warned yesterday of creeping martial law.
Military Rule
“There is still a way out from this situation and no need to create an atmosphere of security and military rule,” said Khatami, who is an ally of Mousavi and campaigned for him.
Ten people were killed on June 20 in Tehran as thousands defied Khamenei’s ban on rallies, state television reported, citing deputy police chief Ahmadreza Radan. Radan said more than 100 people were also injured in rioting. He said security forces didn’t use firearms and “terrorist groups” among the protesters were responsible for the casualties. CNN television, citing workers at a Tehran hospital, said 19 people were killed.
“The first priority of every nation is security,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Hassan Qashqavi said today at a news conference in Tehran. “No country will put other issues before security. It will first ensure security then turn to elections, freedom, human rights and democracy.”
The Iranian government continued its crackdown on foreign media coverage of the crisis. The British Broadcasting Corp. said yesterday that its correspondent in Iran, Jon Leyne, was told by the country’s authorities to leave.
Newsweek Reporter
Newsweek reporter Maziar Bahari was arrested by security forces over the weekend. Security officers seized a laptop and video tapes from the Tehran apartment of Bahari, 41, who has reported for the magazine for more than a decade.
Newsweek called in a statement for the dual Canadian- Iranian citizen’s immediate release.
“The stage may now be set for a violent showdown,” said Michael Eisenstadt of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “Past experience, however, raises questions about whether the security forces can be uniformly relied on to implement an order to violently quash the protests.”
In 1994, army and Revolutionary Guards garrisoned near Qazvin, a town northwest of Tehran, refused to obey orders to fire on rioters, said Eisenstadt.
Rafsanjani, one of the main organizers of the Islamic Revolution, was the most powerful official in Iran at the time of Khomeini’s 1989 death. He remained so for at least four years as Khamenei, who was named to replace Khomeini, built up a power base among the security agencies and the Revolutionary Guards.
Friday Prayers
At Friday prayers in Tehran University on June 19, Khamenei reaffirmed Ahmadinejad’s electoral victory.
Ahmadinejad won 63 percent of the vote to Mousavi’s 34 percent, according to the official tally.
For Rafsanjani, Mousavi and their allies, the democratic legitimacy of the Islamic republic is at stake, said Hooman Majd, the author of “The Ayatollah Begs to Differ: The Paradox of Modern Iran.”
“If they have the chance to seize power and oust the supreme leader, they’ll do it,” Oxford University’s Sanandaji said.
To contact the reporters on this story: Ladane Nasseri in Tehran at [email protected]; Ali Sheikholeslami in London at [email protected].
Last Updated: June 22, 2009 09:46 EDT
 

shelltox

Alfrescian
Loyal
Whoever is in power, the live of the iranians would still be the same whether you like it or not. just like up north, red shirt or yellow shirt, lifes goes on
 

Char_Azn

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
I find the fact that U even try to suggest SAF is like any other army in the world oppressing their own pple as totally ridiculous. Let me put it this way, U are part of the SAF, would U shoot your fellow citizens if PAP tells U to? The fact that the vast majority of the army is a citizen army should give U clue to how impossible it is to actually command them if your government is unpopular and facing a popular uprising. Not to mention even the Police are conscripted
 
Top