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Iran warships dock in Syria: diplomatic source

Russia planning new Iran arms sales: official
Moscow (AFP) Feb 24, 2011 - Russia will explore ways it can bolster its military cooperation with Iran despite current UN restrictions over its nuclear programme, a top Russian arms export official said Thursday. Mikhail Dmitriyev, the head of the Federal Military-Technical Cooperation Service, told Kommersant that the fourth round of sanctions that the United Nations slapped on Iran in June hurt Russia's defence industry. "But there are lines that we can pursue," Dmitriyev said. "We will continue negotiating with Iran within the framework of these possibilities." The latest UN sanctions resolution bans the sale to Iran of eight new types of heavy weapons to Iran, including the S-300 surface-to-air system whose highly controversial sale Russia was forced to scrap.

But Russia has been able to sell Iran the short-range Tor air defence system, with Dmitriyev saying that Moscow intends to supply Tehran with new missile capabilities allowed under international law. "We have prepared a list of potential areas of cooperation with the Iranian side, and it is quite long," the arms export official said. The S-300's sale remained a major stumbling block in Russia-US relations, with Russian sales to the region also angering Israel. Russia has also completed the construction of Iran's first nuclear power plant at Bushehr, which some Western powers fear may help fuel Iran's nuclear ambitions.
by Staff Writers
Damascus (AFP) Feb 24, 2011
Two Iranian warships, the first to enter the Mediterranean from the Suez Canal since 1979, docked at the Syrian port of Latakia on Thursday, an Iranian diplomatic source told AFP in Damascus.

Israel has put its navy on high alert, denounced the ships' arrival in the region as an Iranian power play and branded their voyage "a provocation."

Iran's main nemesis, the United States, has also said this week it is "watching carefully" the movements of the two ships.

"The two Iranian naval vessels have moored," at Latakia on the Syrian coast, the Iranian source told AFP.

The source said a reception ceremony was scheduled Friday at Latakia in the presence of Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayari, commander of the Iranian navy.

Iranian news agency IRNA quoted Sayari as saying the mission to sail past Israel to Syria had been accomplished without regard for Israeli concerns.

"The Zionist regime may create concern for itself and look at this issue from its own view but we will carry out our plans regardless of this regime and in coordination with the friendly nation in the region," Sayari said.

"The trip of our warships to the Syrian port of Latakia is an ordinary visit of the navy and carried the message of peace and friendship," IRNA quoted Sayari as saying.

Sayari denied media reports that the ships, the first Iranian vessels to transit the Suez Canal since the 1979 Islamic revolution, will be involved in any military drills.

"A number of Iranian navy cadets are present and they are on a long training voyage," he said.

The two ships passed through the Suez Canal into the Mediterranean on Tuesday, prompting Israel to warn it would respond immediately to any "provocation" as it put its navy on alert.

The 1,500-tonne Alvand is normally armed with torpedoes and anti-ship missiles, while the larger 33,000-tonne Kharg has a crew of 250 and facilities for up to three helicopters, Iran's official Fars news agency has said.

Neither ship is carrying chemical or nuclear material, Egypt's state-run MENA news agency has reported.

On Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu denounced the ships' arrival in the region as an Iranian power play, just days after his Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, branded their voyage "a provocation."

An Israeli security source told AFP Israel would "not initiate any action", but vowed an "immediate Israeli response" if the Iranians deviated from international law in any way that could be considered "a provocation".

"We continue to monitor the movements of these ships and their actions," US State Department spokesman Philip Crowley has said. "We will be watching carefully to see where these ships go and the implications of that."

The NATO military alliance too said it was monitoring the ships.

Both ships were built in Britain during the 1970s for Iran, which ordered them before the Islamic revolution.

Their passage into the eastern Mediterranean comes as the Arab world grapples with a vast wave of protests that is radically changing the political landscape, and leaving Israel increasingly concerned about its security.



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NUKEWARS
US: Iran ships must follow international law
Washington (AFP) Feb 23, 2011
The United States called Wednesday for two Iranian ships in the Mediterranean Sea to adhere to international law and said it was keeping a careful eye on their activities. Iranian vessels crossed the Suez Canal for the first time since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, when relations between Tehran and Cairo nosedived. The ships have alarmed nearby Israel, the arch-foe of Iran's Islamic regime. ... read more







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