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Feds: Leader of radical Islam group killed in raid
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
Page 2: WoT Background
1 00:00 JosephMendiola [11153]
4 00:00 newc [11136]
6 00:00 swksvolFF [11137]
Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran refuses to send all uranium abroad
[Al Arabiya Latest] Iran said it would not send all its uranium abroad but accepted the broad framework of a United Nations-brokered deal but wants "very important changes" in the plan, a state TV channel reported on Tuesday.

The television quoted a source close to Iran's nuclear negotiating team as saying Tehran will offer its response within the next "48 hours" to the deal, which has already received the backing of Western powers.

It did not give details on what kind of changes Tehran would seek to the draft agreement hammered out by U.N. nuclear agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei in consultations with Iran, Russia, France and the United States in Vienna last week.
Continued on Page 47
Posted by: Fred || 10/28/2009 00:00 || Comments || Link || [11153 views] Top|| File under: Govt of Iran

#1  I know a 7000-KM = future 13,000-KM? ICBM from PAK that Tehran can borrow [one day].

* TOPIX > HIZBOLLAH: WE WILL DEFEND LEBANON FROM ISRAEL [ vee FORCE]; + SYRIA: LEBANON NEEDS TO THE CORE OF THE ARAB WORLD [Arabism].
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 10/28/2009 22:11 Comments || Top||


Iranian regime accused of massive theft
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's administration has been accused of extensive financial fraud after a dispute between government agencies revealed a $35 billion discrepancy in revenues from the country's oil sales.

A report by Iran's State Audit organization found a series of inconsistencies in the amount of revenue recorded by different organs of Ahmadinejad's government. The discrepancies, totaling around $66 billion, are equivalent to Iran's average oil revenues over an entire year.

Ahmadinejad's regime has been accused of misappropriating oil revenues for years. While the gist of the State Audit organization's findings were made public months ago, the extent of the inconsistencies it uncovered were first revealed Monday by Farda, a conservative local media outlet associated with Teheran's mayor Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, frequently cited as a potential future contender for president.

"The amount was really surprising," Hossein Bastani, the co-founder of Rooz, an Iranian dissident journal, told The Media Line. "In the past the Iranian parliament questioned what had happened to $1 billion in the 2006 budget. Until this week, that was the largest amount of money to have disappeared. Now we are talking about $66 billion!"

"We do not think that this money is stolen, not at all," Bastani clarified. "What is important is that the government is using such huge amounts of money in a non-transparent way. Whether it is to assure the re-election of Ahmadinejad or other secret military or intelligence projects doesn't really matter. Every dollar made from oil exports should be sent to the Central Bank."

The largest of the discrepancies centers around $35 billion worth of imported goods. While Iran's Central Bank reported almost $220 billion worth of goods to have been purchased for import into the country between 2005 and 2008, the country's customs administration reports only $185 billion worth of goods to have actually arrived in the country.

The report also found significant inconsistencies between the revenue the government reported as earned through exports of oil and other goods and the amount of money actually deposited in the country's central bank.

While Iran's oil ministry recorded $255 billion in revenue generated from the country's oil sales over the past four years, Iran's Central Bank reported receiving a much larger sum of money, $280 billion, during the aforementioned period.

A further $2.6 billion discrepancy in revenues from non-oil exports was reported and the Central Bank found a $3 billion discrepancy between the amount of money recorded as being in the country's foreign exchange reserves and the amount of money actually there.

Oil constitutes Iran's largest source of revenue, making up 80% of the country's foreign exchange revenues. Heavily dependent on oil, Iran's economy has been badly damaged by the recent fall in oil prices.

Ahmadinejad's regime has been accused of misappropriating oil revenues for years, but some Iranian analysts said the recent issue had been overblown by local media, attributing the dispute to an internal government spat over accounting practices.

"The two organizations at loggerheads over this are the Ministry of Oil and the State Audit organization," Dr Seyyed Mohammad Marandi, a lecturer at the University of Tehran, told The Media Line. "Neither side is accusing the other of fraud and while there are some newspapers who have talked about missing money, that's not what the agencies themselves have said... They just have different ways of carrying out their auditing and I think they are trying to resolve their differences."

Dr Marandi said it was unlikely Iranian officials would be able to steal billions. "You can't manipulate statistics without it being discovered and auditing is not something a major government agency would fool around with," he said. "If you try to make a buck by getting out of a taxi and asking the driver to write you a receipt for $20 when you only paid $15, in any country that form of fraud or theft would be the most easy to discover. So usually if there's corruption, it's would be found at the middleman level in kickbacks or bribes for oil tenders."

Other analysts argued that while the accounting inconsistencies may not point to corruption, they were likely the result of funds appropriated for illicit government initiatives. "Economic mismanagement is a huge issue and one of the most unreported causes of discontent in the country," Dr Emanuele Ottolenghi, an Iran expert and the executive director of the Transatlantic Institute, told The Media Line. "There is liberal use of state revenue to fund activities that are not necessarily audited, such as nuclear procurement, terrorism and funding insurgencies abroad. These things don't appear in the state budget in a transparent fashion."

"There is growing resentment among workers over state money being used to fund the Palestinians or similar causes rather than for infrastructure that would help the Iranian population," Dr Ottolenghi said. "So the fact that there is profound economic mismanagement, corruption and vast disparities in accounting is neither new nor surprising. What's significant is that somebody in the political system is using it as a tool to criticize the government."

Continued on Page 47
Posted by: Fred || 10/28/2009 00:00 || Comments || Link || [11136 views] Top|| File under: Govt of Iran

#1  They have to fund their nuclear agenda as covertly as possible ...
Posted by: Oscar || 10/28/2009 7:40 Comments || Top||

#2  And they have to fund Hamas, Hezbollah, Syria and sundry terrorists throughout the House of Islam.

What's the Generally Accepted Accounting practice for calculating Return on Investment for a homicide bomber?
Posted by: Bertie Cromomp7039 || 10/28/2009 14:33 Comments || Top||

#3  I wouldn't have thought the Iranians would have some of the same problems we do.
Posted by: JohnQC || 10/28/2009 16:54 Comments || Top||

#4  They all naturally pack the wealth into offshore bank accounts. Always has been like that under the mullahs, always will be.
Posted by: newc || 10/28/2009 17:42 Comments || Top||


Precision of Irans missiles close to 100%
[Iran Press TV Latest] A senior Iranian commander of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps says the precision of Iranian missiles has been increased to nearly "100 percent".

Iranian experts have broken the monopoly of the major powers over modern defense and military technologies, the deputy commander of the IRGC Navy, Rear Admiral Ali Fadavi, said, noting that such advances have increased the accuracy of the Iranian "vessel and missile equipment".

"Iran's modern technologies have increased the precision of the equipment to near 100 percent," IRNA quoted Fadavi as saying on Tuesday.

Fadavi stated that the IRGC has put programs on its agenda that will make Iran the leading country in the world as far as navy speedboats are concerned.

The Iranian commander said that Iran is among the few countries that have the capability to launch missiles from speedboats with very high precision.

Continued on Page 47
Posted by: Fred || 10/28/2009 00:00 || Comments || Link || [11137 views] Top|| File under: Govt of Iran

#1 

Fell over? Not possible.
Posted by: KBK || 10/28/2009 0:11 Comments || Top||

#2  ... as long as the target is perfectly still, as big as a soccerfield, and has no countermeasures or defenses.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 10/28/2009 0:41 Comments || Top||

#3  Versus, oh I dunno, CHINA'S SO-CALLED
"CARRIER-KILLER" DF MISSLE???

"As far as NAVY SPEEDBOATS are concerned" > and we all know how well that stopped the USN in its tracks [NOT], as per the GHOSTS OF IRAN'S NAVY = KUWAITI REFLAGGED TANKERS PAST.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 10/28/2009 2:48 Comments || Top||

#4  Wake me up when they hit 200%....
Posted by: Uncle Phester || 10/28/2009 8:49 Comments || Top||

#5  100% chance they'll hit the ground. Or that at least pieces of them will.
Posted by: Glenmore || 10/28/2009 8:54 Comments || Top||

#6  Nice to know the masters of missiles and nukes cannot convey the difference between precision and accuracy.

But in case something was lost in translation, I also agree that changing the setting to Brush Size does indeed prevent the Z from wearing out.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 10/28/2009 10:59 Comments || Top||



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1Govt of Pakistan
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1Islamic State of Iraq
1Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh
1Global Jihad

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Two weeks of WOT
Wed 2009-10-28
  Feds: Leader of radical Islam group killed in raid
Tue 2009-10-27
  Troops advance on Sararogha
Mon 2009-10-26
  Afghans accuse US troops of burning Koran. Again.
Sun 2009-10-25
  Talibs said already shaving beards to flee South Wazoo
Sat 2009-10-24
  Faqir Mohammad eludes dronezap
Fri 2009-10-23
  Bangla bans Hizb-ut-Tahrir
Thu 2009-10-22
  Mustafa al-Yazid reported titzup
Wed 2009-10-21
  20 deaders in battle for Kotkai
Tue 2009-10-20
  Algerian forces kill AQIM communications chief
Mon 2009-10-19
  South Waziristan clashes kill 60 militants
Sun 2009-10-18
  Battle for South Waziristan begins
Sat 2009-10-17
  Pakistan imposes indefinite curfew in S. Waziristan
Fri 2009-10-16
  Turkish police detain 50 Qaeda suspects
Thu 2009-10-15
  Pakistani Police Attacked in Two Cities; 15 Killed
Wed 2009-10-14
  Italy: Attempted terror attack against army barracks injures soldier


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