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No snap checks of atomic units: Iran nuclear chief
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) Sept 6, 2011

Iran launches 'offensive' air drills: report
Tehran (AFP) Sept 6, 2011 - Iran on Tuesday launched 10 days of aerial manoeuvres in its northwest, media reports said, with a top air force commander describing the drills as "offensive."

"The first phase of the air force drills started today," and the main phase beginning on September 13, deputy air force commander Brigadier General Mohsen Darehbaghi said, quoted by Fars news agency.

The deputy commander in charge of the operations, Brigadier General Mohammad Alavi, separately described the drills as "offensive," although he did not elaborate.

"In these manoeuvres, we have designed a real war zone for the pilots," as opposed to previous aerial "competitions," Alavi said.

Iran's armed forces regularly conduct such exercises to show off the country's military prowess and test-fire what they boast are home-made missiles.

"In this offensive drill we will show the world that the air force is always ready to defend the country's space," the state television website quoted Alavi as saying.

The air drills, which are to be staged over four phases, were "unprecedented since they will showcase numerous fighter sorties and tactical missions," Fars quoted Alavi as saying.

Tehran is under mounting international pressure over its controversial nuclear programme, which the West fears masks a drive to acquire atomic weapons capability -- a charge the Islamic republic persistently denies.

The United States and Israel have not ruled out a military strike to curb Iran's nuclear drive, prompting Tehran to threaten a crushing response.

Iran clarified on Tuesday that its offer of allowing "full supervision" of its atomic programme in return for lifting of sanctions does not include snap checks by UN inspectors of its nuclear units.

On Monday, Iran nuclear chief Fereydoun Abbasi Davani, told the ISNA news agency that Tehran was prepared to give the International Atomic Energy Agency "full supervision" of its controversial nuclear programme for five years if UN sanctions are lifted.

On Tuesday ISNA asked him whether this offer includes the implementation of the additional protocol of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which calls for tougher and snap inspections of atomic activities of its signatories.

Abbasi Davani said the offer does not include such inspections of Iran's nuclear facilities.

"We will not accept any more obligations," he told ISNA.

"We have always had full cooperation with the agency," Abbasi Davani said, adding that Iran's cooperation is "within the standards and regulations" of the UN nuclear watchdog.

The Iranian proposal was immediately rejected Monday as insufficient by the European Union, which said the Islamic republic must first re-establish confidence for any sanctions to be lifted.

"Iran still has to comply with its international obligations, despite today's announcement," Michael Mann, spokesman for EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, told AFP.

Ashton has made a "concrete proposal" to Iran aimed at building confidence over the aims of its atomic programme, Mann said. "Unfortunately, so far, Iran has not taken up this offer to enter into meaningful talks."

"Existing UNSC (UN Security Council) resolutions foresee the lifting of sanctions once confidence has been re-established," he said.

Iran is targeted by four sets of UN Security Council sanctions over its refusal to suspend uranium enrichment amid fears in the West that it seeks to build a nuclear bomb -- a charge it vehemently denies.

Much of Iran's nuclear activities are already under the control of the IAEA, including uranium enrichment -- a process which can produce the fuel for a nuclear reactor and also the fissile material for an atomic warhead.

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Dutch launch Iran IT hacking probe
The Hague (AFP) Sept 6, 2011 - The Dutch secret service has opened an investigation to determine who falsified 531 Internet security certificates in order to snoop on users in Iran, the Dutch Interior Ministry said Tuesday.

"The secret service has opened an investigation," its spokesman Vincent van Steen told AFP, adding "it is specifically to find out who hacked the certificates."

The ministry said Monday that Internet security specialist company Fox-IT released a report noting that hackers in July falsified 531 Internet security certificates, also known as SSLs, through Dutch company DigiNotar.

The hackers tried to intercept private communications in Iran, Fox-IT said.

SSL certificates are used to verify to visitors that a particular website is authentic and are issued by DigiNotar and other firms known as Certification Authorities. Internet users whose browsers are fooled by a false certificate could unwittingly reveal their activity to another party in what is known as a "man-in-the-middle attack."

According to Fox-IT, a number of the DigiNotar's servers were hacked and false certificates issued to websites not only that of Skype, Google, Twitter and Facebook, but also websites belonging to spy agencies the Central Intelligence Agency and and Israel's Mossad.

"It wouldn't surprise me in the end if it turns out that the Iranian government is behind it and is trying to get information it normally couldn't have, such as that from dissidents," Hans van de Looy, an expert at computer security specialist Madison Gurkha, told AFP.

Fox-IT said 99 percent of users targeted by cyber attacks were in Iran.





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Iran offers 'full' nuclear supervision if sanctions lifted
Tehran (AFP) Sept 5, 2011
Iran offered on Monday to grant the UN nuclear watchdog "full supervision" of its atomic programme for five years if sanctions are lifted, as the EU insisted Tehran first meet its international obligations. "We have proposed that the agency keep Iran's activities and nuclear programme under full supervision for five years, providing the sanctions are lifted," Iranian nuclear chief Fereydoun ... read more


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