News Briefs

August 31, 2017
The International Atomic Energy Agency published its quarterly report on Thursday verifying that Iran is in compliance with the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action and has kept its uranium stockpile and enrichment capacity below set thresholds. Iran's stockpile of 3.7 percent low-enriched uranium stood at 88.4 kilograms as of August 21, 2017, below the 300 kilogram limit set by the agreement, while its number of operating centrifuges was below the 5,060 limit set by the accord. 
-- Bloomberg
August 28, 2017
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused Iran of building missile production sites in Syria and Lebanon during a meeting in Israel with U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres. Netanyahu claimed that Iran was building the sites as part of a strategy to turn Syria into a "base of military entrenchment as part of its declared goal to eradicate Israel." 
-- The Guardian
August 1, 2017
Western and regional sources claimed that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has been covertly transferring arms, cash, and drugs to Houthi rebels in Yemen for the past six months, using smaller craft and routes further up the Gulf of Oman between Kuwait and Iraq to avoid scrutiny from international naval vessels on patrol. Western sources said that since March there has been an increase in suspicious activity involving Iranian-flagged ships in waters near Kuwait, and that these vessels often switch off their identification transponders in order to avoid detection, then rendezvous with other ships to transfer supplies. Iranian officials have confirmed the activity and acknowledge that it could not occur without IRGC involvement, while Kuwait has denied that Iran was using its waters to smuggle equipment to Houthi forces. 
-- Reuters
July 27, 2017
Iran’s Imam Khomeini Space Center successfully launched the Simorgh carrier rocket, with a mission of placing Iranian satellites into low orbit. The Simorgh is capable of delivering satellites weighing as much as 250 kilograms to an orbit of 500 kilometers above the Earth. The launch signals the official inauguration of the Imam Khomeini Space Center, which will be responsible for all operations related to satellite carriers, including preparation, launch, control, and guidance.
-- PressTV
July 22, 2017
Iran inaugurated a mass production line for the Sayyad (Hunter) 3 air defense missile.  The Sayyad 3 has a maximum range of 120 kilometers and was designed by the Defense Ministry’s Aerospace Industries Organization (AIO).  Defense Minister Brigadier General Hossein Dehqan and Brigadier General Farzad Esmaili, commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya Air Defense Base, attended the inauguration.  The Sayyad 3 has infrared capability and features to counter electronic warfare tactics, according to the Defense Minister.
-- Press TV
July 19, 2017
The Abu Dhabi Federal Appeals Court adjourned a hearing in the case of an Iranian oilfield services manager accused of exporting U.S.-origin dual-use technology via China to Iran, without the required license. The man, identified as H.M.R.H., was denied a license but re-exported the equipment to Iran anyway. The defendant’s lawyer argued that the equipment was intended for oilfield maintenance, not the manufacturing of weapons of mass destruction. A ruling in the case is expected on August 9, 2017.
-- Gulf News
July 17, 2017
The Trump administration notified Congress that Iran is in compliance with the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), allowing for the continued suspension of nuclear-related sanctions. The administration is required to notify Congress of Iran's compliance every 90 days and this marks the second time that the Trump administration has done so. In certifying Iran's compliance, administration officials emphasized that they intend to toughen JCPOA enforcement and apply new sanctions on Iran for its support of terrorism and other destabilizing activities. The president told his security team that he would not certify Iran's compliance with the JCPOA indefinitely.
-- New York Times
July 7, 2017
Three German intelligence reports indicate that Iran continues efforts to illegally obtain technology for its weapons of mass destruction programs. According to a report from the state of Hamburg, "Iran sought missile carrier technology necessary for its rocket program," and procured 51 special valves for its Arak heavy water reactor from German citizens. A report from the state of Baden-Wurttemberg highlights Iran’s efforts to procure "complex metal producing machines" from a German manufacturer via a Chinese front company. A third intelligence report noted that Iran was among several countries that contacted German firms located in Rhineland-Palatinate in an effort to procure controlled items.
-- The Weekly Standard
July 3, 2017
Iran’s Petropars signed a $2 billion deal with French oil firm Total and Chinese state oil company CNPC to develop Iran’s South Pars gas field. The agreement marks the first major investment in Iran by a Western firm since sanctions were eased in early 2016. Total is taking a 50.1% stake in the project, while CNPC and Petropars will own 30% and 19.9% respectively. Iran’s energy ministry predicts the project will produce $54 billion worth of gas products beginning in 2021 based on current prices.
-- CNN
June 29, 2017
A New York jury found that the U.S. government can seize a Manhattan office building perhaps worth nearly $1 billion from the Alavi Foundation because the property was involved in money laundering. In 1989, the Alavi Foundation entered into a partnership with Iran's Bank Melli, in which the Bank took on a minority share of the building through a subsidiary, Assa Corp. U.S. lawyers argued that Alavi knowingly distributed rental income to Assa Corp after 1995, in violation of U.S. sanctions enacted that year.
-- Reuters

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