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- Kurdish prisoner executed in Evin prison
- Blogger Returned to Prison Two Days After Surgery - Death Sentences Upheld for Kurdish Political Prisoners - Dr. Maleki Summoned to Serve Prison Sentence - Journalists Detained in IRGC's Solitary Cells - Journalist Saeed Razavi Faghih detained at airport
- Gingrich Warns of Iranian Nuclear Attack
- Incoming IAF chief: Iran is our top concern - Raising the stakes on Iran - Iran to place nuclear plate in reactor within month - Peres: Iran is greatest threat to Mideast peace - 'Israel must have credible military option on Iran'
- In the Iranian regime women’s main duty is housework
- Young Iranians with low incomes avoiding marriage - Iran’s “nude revolutionary” Farahani says image is symbolic - Five women suspiciously die in Varamin Prison - Women’s rights activist released from Evin - Iranian police ban boots with jeans
- We Need to Talk to Iran, but How?
- Can a nuclear Iran be deterred? - Is Georgia joining anti-Iran coalition? - Ex-CIA spy: Iran's miscalculation over war - The message we need to send Iran - If sanctions on Iran fail, war may be inevitable
- Nasrallah: Iran is aiding us, but isn't dictating our actions
- Top Iran military official aiding Assad's crackdown - Iran appears to be helping Syrian regime - Syria Importing Iranian Snipers to Murder Protesters - Azerbaijan arrests plot suspects, cites Iran link - How Iran Controls Afghanistan |
Monday 10 August 2009Iran is the problem, not settlements: US lawmakerJERUSALEM (AFP) - - Senior US Republican Congressman Eric Cantor said on Thursday that the world should stop pressuring Israel over settlements and concentrate instead on the threat from a nuclear Iran. "I don't quite know what is driving the focus on the issue of settlements," he told Israeli public radio. "We believe the focus should be on the existential threat to Israel from a nuclear-armed Iran," said Cantor, who is leading a 25-strong delegation of Republican lawmakers on a weeklong visit. Since hawkish Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu won elections in February, Israel has come under increasing pressure from US President Barack Obama to freeze settlement construction in east Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank, considered illegal by the international community. But Netanyahu has tried to shift world attention to Iran, which both Israel and the United States suspect of using a legal civilian nuclear programme to mask illegal designs on a bomb. Cantor insisted Washington should push for tough sanctions on the "terrorist regime" in Iran. "We share the view with Prime Minister Netanyahu that we do not want to see undue pressure placed on Israel." Cantor, the Republican party's only Jewish representative in Congress, said it is up to the Palestinians to make the running in reviving stalled peace talks with Israel. "If we are interested in a two-state solution we have to accept, and the Palestinians have to accept, that Israel is a Jewish state," he said. Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has so far refused to recognise Israel as a "the state of the Jewish people", a key Israeli precondition for talks. |