8chan/8kun QResearch Posts (5)
#7750788 at 2020-01-08 13:47:36 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #9919: Hold the Line Edition
>>7750719
On Muh phone. Anyone here match up?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Iranian_officials
Ali Khamenei, Supreme Leader
Hassan Rouhani, President
Ali Larijani, President of Parliament
Ebrahim Raisi, Head of the Judiciary Branch
Ahmad Jannati, Secretary of the Guardian Council and Chairman of the Assembly of Experts
Sadeq Larijani, Chairman of the Expediency Discernment Council
Vice Presidents Edit
Eshaq Jahangiri, First Vice President
Ali Akbar Salehi, Vice President and Head of Atomic Energy Organization
Sorena Sattari, Vice President and Head of National Elites Foundation
Masoumeh Ebtekar, Vice President and Head of Environmental Protection Organization
Council of Ministers Edit
Learn more
This section needs to be updated.
Sadeq Khalilian, Minister of Agriculture
Mehdi Ghazanfari, Minister of Commerce
Reza Taqipour, Minister of Communication and Information Technology
Mohammad Abbasi, Minister of Cooperatives
Mohammad Hosseini, Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance
Ahmad Vahidi, Minister of Defense and Logistics
Hossein Samsami, Minister of Economy and Finance Affairs
Hamid-Reza Haji Babaee, Minister of Education
Majid Namjoo, Minister of Energy
Ali Akbar Salehi, Acting Minister of Foreign Affairs
Marzieh Vahid Dastjerdi, Minister of Health and Medical Education
Abdolreza Sheikholeslami, Minister of Housing and Urban Development
Aliakbar Mehrabian, Minister of Industries and Mines Supervisor
Heyder Moslehi, Minister of Intelligence
Mostafa Mohammad Najjar, Minister of Interior
Morteza Bakhtiari, Minister of Justice
Ali Nikzad, Minister of Labour and Social Affairs
Masoud Mir Kazemi, Minister of Petroleum Supervision
Hamid Behbahani, Minister of Roads and Transportation
Kamran Daneshjoo, Minister of Science, Research, and Technology
Sadeq Mahsouli, Minister of Welfare and Social Security
Other members of cabinet Edit
Mohammad Bagher Nobakht, Government Spokesman
Abdolnaser Hemmati, Governor of the Central Bank of Iran
Other Edit
Mehdi Chamran, Chairman of the City Council of Tehran
Ali Shamkhani, Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council
Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Mayor of Tehran
Abdulali Ali-Asgari, President of IRIB
Gholamali Khoshroo, Representative to the United Nations
See also Edit
List of Iranian ambassadors under President Khatami
List of Iranian provincial governors under President Khatami
List of Iranians
List of mayors of Tehran
List of Presidents of Iran
#6263451 at 2019-04-21 16:06:08 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #8009: Easter Sunday Morning Edition
>>6262983
>definitely a person of interest..
(NK, IranDeal)
She was responsible for the sanctions on NK..but none of them have stopped North Korea's nuclear tests.
Nor have they stopped North Korea's production of bomb fuel.
Nor have they prevented what Obama described Friday as "an unprecedented campaign of ballistic missile launches," including tests of both submarine-launched and intercontinental missiles.
What all the tough and tougher sanctions may well have achieved, however, is to leave North Korea even hungrier than usual for hard currency, and seeking with even more than its usual verve whatever illicit channels and connections might help compensate for the shortfalls.
Which brings us back to one of the world's likeliest customers for Kim's nuclear wares: Iran's regime, North Korea's longtime business partner, on which Obama early this year lavished $1.7 billion in cash for the settlement of a dispute pending for more than 30 years before the Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal in the Hague.
Would Iran dare do anything as over-the-top outrageous as buying warheads from North Korea? It's quite possible there has never been a safer or more enticing moment for it. Obama's passion to preserve the Iran nuclear deal, apparently at all costs, means that should his administration come across any evidence of nuclear traffic between Iran and North Korea, the incentive would be to bury it. Confronting either party, especially if it led to public disclosure, could wreck Obama's legacy Iran nuclear deal while he is still in office – before it becomes the albatross of the next president.
Obama and his team have yet to provide a credible explanation of why Iran wanted the entire $1.7 billion paid in cash, or why, precisely, the administration kept the cash aspect and timing of the deliveries secret until details began to emerge more than six months later in the press.
But this we know: money is fungible, especially cash, which is hard to trace. It's farcical for senior Obama administration officials to suggest, as they now have, that these air-shipped foreign banknotes were used mainly for domestic infrastructure projects. It would be quite odd for Iran to pay its local road-repair workers not in domestic rials, but in euros and Swiss banknotes. As for any badly needed benign imports, Iran's government could more easily pay for those by keeping the hard currency abroad to cover the bills.
This February, President Hassan Rouhani's vice president for planning and budget, Mohammad Bagher Nobakht Haghighi, told the Financial Times that Iran preferred to keep most of its newly unfrozen $100 billion abroad - specifically to help maintain a stable rial while paying Iran's foreign bills. That story ran on Feb. 8, just three days after the last of the Obama administration's $1.7 billion worth of cash shipments was airlifted to Iran.
It all makes a lot more sense if Iran's aim was to parcel out the cash on its own turf, to be shipped back out for purposes Tehran might want to keep below the global radar. The question is not only whether this $1.7 billion, including some $1.3 billion taken from the pockets of American taxpayers, ended up in the hands of terrorists, but did any of it go to nuclear-testing North Korea?
https:// www.forbes.com/sites/claudiarosett/2016/09/10/could-iran-uses-its-1-7-billion-cash-jackpot-to-buy-north-korean-nukes/#668943573850
#1824907 at 2018-06-20 04:31:21 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #2299: Devine Between The Lines Edition
Iran says no plans to increase missile range, rejects talks with Trump
LONDON (Reuters) - Iran has no plans to extend the range of its missiles since their 2,000-km (1,240-mile) reach is enough to protect the country, the Revolutionary Guards commander said on Tuesday, amid mounting U.S. pressure over Tehran's missile program.
Iran's government again ruled out negotiations with U.S. President Donald Trump over Tehran's military capabilities and regional influence, saying such talks would be against the values of the Islamic Republic. Trump withdrew the United States last month from the 2015 accord between Iran and world powers that curbed Tehran's nuclear activity in exchange for sanctions relief. He said the deal was deeply flawed as it had not curbed Iran's ballistic missile programme or reined in its support for proxies in conflicts in Syria, Iraq and Yemen, and said Washington would reimpose tough sanctions on Tehran.
"We have the scientific ability to increase our missile range but it is not our current policy since most of the enemies' strategic targets are already within this 2,000-km range. This range is enough to protect the Islamic Republic," Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari was quoted as saying by Tasnim news agency. Jafari said on Tuesday that previous negotiations with the United States about Iran's nuclear programme were "an exception," and called Iranian politicians and activists who have favoured fresh talks with Trump "traitors and anti-revolutionaries". On Saturday, over 100 activists associated with the moderate and reformist camps in Iranian politics welcomed Trump's deal with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un envisaging a complete denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula.
In a statement published by Iranian media, the activists urged Tehran to start direct negotiations with Washington "with no preconditions" to resolve decades of enmity between the two countries dating to Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution. Jafari rejected their call. "The North Korean leader was a revolutionary but a communist, not an Islamic one. That is why he surrendered, but we will not do the same," he was quoted by the semi-official Fars news agency as saying. Iranian government spokesman Mohammad Bagher Nobakht echoed Jafari's remarks. "There are no grounds or logic to talk to such a person (Trump). Public opinion would not welcome that either," Nobakht was quoted as saying by ISNA news agency.
Since U.S. withdrawal from the deal, European signatories France, Britain and Germany have been scrambling to ensure Iran retains enough economic benefits to persuade it not to pull out. Iran's nuclear chief said on Tuesday that Europe's proposals to salvage the deal were not satisfying for Tehran.
IRNA reported that the head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation, Ali Akbar Salehi, had met with United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and made clear Iran's dissatisfaction with European proposals to save the nuclear deal. Referring to Iran's regional role, Salehi was quoted as saying, "If it continues like this, all sides will lose."
https:// uk.reuters.com/article/uk-iran-missiles-range/iran-says-no-plans-to-increase-missile-range-rejects-talks-with-trump-idUKKBN1JF0RL
#1716837 at 2018-06-12 19:44:28 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #2160: "Hi Kim, it's Hussein. Wrong Number? Ah, sorry." Edition
>>1716522
>Mohammad Bagher Nobakht
he is a member of this org https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_Consultative_Assembly#Functions
ICA?????? Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm their need for symbology.
#1716802 at 2018-06-12 19:41:23 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #2160: "Hi Kim, it's Hussein. Wrong Number? Ah, sorry." Edition
>>1716522
>https://uk.mobile.reuters.com/article/amp/idUKKBN1J816D
Put Mohammad Bagher Nobakht
on the list of comped clownfag shills in Iran. Do we have any Journofags on here that can do background on this guy, connect him to the clowns and write a nice quick article?
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