Iran Says President Will Visit Russia In Early 2022

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi will pay an official state visit to Russia in 2022, upon an invitation by Russian President Vladimir Putin, Iran said Tuesday.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi will pay an official state visit to Russia in 2022, upon an invitation by Russian President Vladimir Putin, Iran said Tuesday.
Government spokesman Ali Bahadori-Jahromi told reporters that the state visit will probably take place in the early days of the new year.
The visit was announced as representatives of Iran and Russia as well as China and three European countries between the Islamic Republic and world powers.
Russia has been a diplomatic and military ally of the Islamic Republic, although it has been cautious not to violate economic sanctions imposed by the United States on Iran.
The two countries have been fighting in Syria to save president Bashar al-Assad's regime, with Iran supplying ground forces and Russia air power.
Successive Iranian presidents have attached great importance to ties with Moscow as a counterbalance to the West.
Earlier in December, Putin said that he invited his Iranian counterpart to visit Russia early next year, addeing, “I hope Iran’s president will accept my invitation”.

Israeli warplanes have fired missiles at the port of the Syrian coastal city of Latakia, causing large explosions and massive material damage, Syria said.
The attack early Tuesday morning was the second Israeli strike on the key facility in a month.
According to the official Syrian Arab News Agency SANA, "a large number of containers" resting in the port caught fire, causing “significant material damage”. It added that the airstrike wrecked the facades of a hospital as well as some residential buildings and shops.
“At around 3:21am (05:21 GMT), the Israeli enemy carried out an aerial aggression with several missiles from the direction of the Mediterranean … targeting the container yard in Latakia port,” the agency quoted an unnamed military source.
Live footage aired by the state television showed flames and smoke in the container storage area of the terminal, but later in the day Syrian media said that the fire was under control.
After the first strike on the port earlier in December, Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett vowed that Israel would continue to push back against what he called "destructive forces" in the region.
Israel says the target of its attacks are Iranian supplies headed for the Lebanese Hezbollah.
Iran reportedly uses the terminal to transport munitions to its proxies in the region.

A British minister says he United Kingdom has included the Islamic Republic in its list of hostile nations along with Russia, China, and North Korea.
In an interview with the Telegraph, UK Minister of State for Security and Borders Damian Hinds cited cyber activity concerns and disinformation campaigns as the reasons behind the decision.
"The three countries that I mentioned to you have physical human capability, they have a big cyber presence, they're able to deploy at scale," Hinds said, referring to Iran, Russia, and China.
He added that it’s not just terrorism that threatens UK security as geopolitical power struggles are on the rise, noting that these countries "are involved in multiple ways" in terms of spies on the ground, cyberattacks, soldiers on standby, and disinformation campaigns.
The triumvirate of Russian, China and Iran was also mentioned by MI6 chief Richard Moore in a BBC interview last month.
“They can run, and do run, information ops and are involved in multiple different ways. I mean, it's difficult to give you a comprehensive list because there are so many potential ways,” Hinds stressed.
He added that North Korea is the fourth hostile state on the radar.
Iran has a strong network of state hackers who regularly target American, Israeli and other government and company computers, both for disruption and for obtaining sensitive information.

Iraq's Supreme Court Monday rejected appeals by Iran-backed Shi'ite factions against the results of the October parliamentary election, the chief judge said.
The decision derails attempts by Iran-backed militia groups and their political candidates to overturn the election result in which they performed poorly.
The Iran-backed factions, including powerful armed groups, had alleged irregularities in the October 10 vote. Judge Jassim Mohammed read out the ruling rejecting their appeal at the court headquarters in Baghdad.
Iran seemed to be endorsing the election results last week when Iraq’s foreign minister visited Tehran and held talks. For the first time, President Ebrahim Raisi described the elections in Iraq as "peaceful and secure."
The biggest winner in the vote was the movement led by Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, an opponent of both Iranian and US influence in Iraq, which won 73 seats, more than any other group in the fractious 329-seat house.
Once the result is confirmed by the Supreme Court, negotiations are expected among Shi'ite, Sunni and Kurdish groups over the formation of a new government to replace the outgoing cabinet led by Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi.
Reporting by Reuters

Iran plans to appoint a new ambassador to Houthi rebels in Yemen after the death of its previous envoy, the foreign ministry spokesman said on Monday.
Tehran said on December 21 that Hassan Irloo (Irlu), its envoy in the Yemeni capital Sanaa that is controlled by the Iran-aligned Houthi group, died of COVID-19 after being repatriated in mid-December. Iran accused Saudi Arabia of having delayed his departure from Sanaa, a charge the Saudi government denied.
"We are in the process of announcing a new ambassador" in Sanaa, Saeed Khatibzadeh told a news conference, once again accusing Riyadh of delaying Irloo’s evacuation. Saudi Arabia has said it acted quickly in response to mediation by Iraq and Oman.
The United States confirmed last week that Irloo was a Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) senior officer. Both Washington and Riyadh have accused Iran and its Lebanese proxy, the Hezbollah of rendering military assistance to Houthi forces.
A Saudi-led coalition that has been battling Houthi forces in support of Yemen's internationally recognized government for more than six years has imposed a sea and air blockade on Houthi-controlled areas.
The coalition intervened in Yemen against the Houthis after they ousted the Yemeni government from Sanaa in north Yemen.

Iran says over nine million liters of fuel is smuggled out of the country every day, citing highly subsidized prices as the main reason for the illicit trade.
Mojtaba Mahfouzi, who represents the oil-rich city of Abadan, said during a TV show on Monday that the subsidized price of diesel fuel in Iran is one US cent per lieter, or 60 times less than bulk rates in the Persian Gulf region.
The spokesman for the anti-trafficking taskforce of Iran’s customs administration, Hamidreza Dehghannia, said during the same TV program that there is no exact data but the daily volume of the total petroleum products that are smuggled from the country is about nine million liters (2.37 million gallons).
Mahfouzi then noted such a high volume of smuggling cannot be done by ordinary traffickers, adding that “undoubtedly” there are mafias behind the scenes to get the fuels to the smugglers.
In 2019, a top anti-smuggling official in Iran had put the daily amount of the trafficked gasoline and diesel at around 11 million liters or close to 3 million gallons.
Iranian authorities never offer any explanation on how such a huge volume of fuel can be smuggled out without being detected.
Also on Monday, Oil Minister Javad Owji denied reports that the government intends to raise the gasoline price.






