Sunday, May 31, 2015

IRAN: Molten lead will be poured down throat of nuclear inspectors, IRGC commander says


The United Nations nuclear inspectors would be wrong to dare to want to look at nuclear sites in Iran and if they do so they will be arrested and molten lead would be poured down their throat, a senior commander of the Iranian regime’s Revolutionary Guards says.
IRGC Brigadier General Gholamhossein Qeybparavar, the commander of IRGC forces in the Fars province said on Saturday: “You would be wrong to dare to want to inspect our military centers and whoever does look at IRGC centers we will fill his throat with molten lead.

IRAN- Iran’s IRGC trained Hezbollah member arrested in Cyprus for bombing plot: Reports


cyprus
The 26-year-old Lebanese national who was arrested in Cyprus on Thursday while in possession of an estimated two tons of a compound that can be used for explosives has ties with Lebanon’s Hezbollah and has been trained in Iran, local press reported yesterday.
Citing Cypriot intelligence sources, Daily Phileleftheros reported that the man, who also holds a Canadian passport, is a member of Hezbollah’s military wing with close ties with the group’s leader Hassan Nasrullah. According to the report he received training in Iran by the Iranian regime’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC).

IRAN- Is a robust Iran nuclear deal possible as serious questions remain unanswered on “possible military dimensions” of Tehran’s program?

Parchin military site in Iran
The US Secretary of State, John Kerry and the Iranian regime’s Foreign Minister, Javad Zarif are scheduled to hold another round of talks in Geneva this weekend as part of an ongoing nuclear talks to reach a comprehensive agreement on Tehran’s nuclear program.
Placing inspection and verification mechanisms to prevent the Iranian regime from obtaining nuclear weapons remains to be a key unresolved issue between Iran and P5+1. The Obama administration maintains that nuclear deal blocks the Iranian regime’s path to bomb
The Kerry –Zarif meeting takes place as the U.N. atomic agency on Friday reported that work on a key element — an assessment of allegations that Tehran worked on atomic arms — remains essentially stalled, The Associated Press reported from Vienna.