Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
http://www.amnesty.org/en/death-penalty ... rs-in-2011
China
The state eliminated the death penalty for 13 crimes in 2011, but people were still put to death for non-violent crimes like corruption and drug-trafficking. The scope of the death penalty was even expanded in other areas to include additional crimes, such as forcing someone to donate an organ. All trials in China are fundamentally flawed – with courts routinely relying on evidence extracted through torture or other ill-treatment, and defendants frequently denied the right to choose their own lawyers.
Syed Zahid Hussain Shah of Pakistan, aged 36, was executed by lethal injection on 21 September 2011. He had been sentenced to death in Shanghai in March 2010 for drug trafficking.
Iran
Iran was the only other country, apart from China, to execute hundreds of people in 2011. Like China, the true number is thought to be much higher as credible reports suggest hundreds of additional executions, which are not officially acknowledged. Of the 360 executions acknowledged by official sources, at least three were teenagers at the time of the alleged crime. Executing people for crimes committed when they were under the age of 18 is strictly prohibited under international law.
On 21 September, 17-year old Ali Reza Molla-Soltani was publicly hanged at 4:44am in Golshahr Square, Karaj, near Tehran. He had been sentenced to death in August for stabbing a popular athlete – dubbed “Iran’s strongest man” – during a driving dispute in July. He reportedly said he panicked and stabbed the victim in self-defence after the athlete attacked him in the dark.
Saudi Arabia
Overall, executions in Saudi Arabia more than tripled in 2011. At least 82 people – compared to 27 in 2010 – were executed. At least one of those put to death was officially described as a “juvenile”. Saudi Arabia was one of the few countries to show a sharp increase in the use of capital punishment, after four years of steady decline. Many of those executed over the past years were foreign nationals, mostly migrant workers from developing countries in Africa and Asia. They are disproportionately affected by the secretive and summary nature of the criminal justice process.
Sudanese national Abdul Hamid bin Hussain bin Moustafa al-Fakki was beheaded in Medina on 19 September after being convicted on “sorcery” charges.
Iraq
Most of the at least 68 people executed in 2011 were convicted of belonging to armed groups or involvement in attacks by these groups, which included murder, kidnapping, rape or other violent crimes. The accused were often condemned to death after trials lasting just a few minutes.
Twelve alleged members of armed opposition groups were hanged in Iraq on 24 November 2011. They included Firas Hassan Fleih al-Juburi, Fadhel Ibrahim al-Juburi, and Haydar Mut’eb ‘Abdel-Qader. The 12 men were reported to have been convicted under Iraq’s anti-terrorism law and sentenced to death by a Baghdad court. An official claimed that some of the men had been responsible for killings in a village north of Baghdad in 2006.
USA
The USA was the only country in the G8 group of leading global economies to carry out executions in 2011. However, waning public support for the death penalty contributed to a decline in its use.
Humberto Leal, a Mexican man, was executed in July 2011 in Texas, despite a binding ruling by an international court that he had been denied the right to seek consular assistance following his arrest.
China
The state eliminated the death penalty for 13 crimes in 2011, but people were still put to death for non-violent crimes like corruption and drug-trafficking. The scope of the death penalty was even expanded in other areas to include additional crimes, such as forcing someone to donate an organ. All trials in China are fundamentally flawed – with courts routinely relying on evidence extracted through torture or other ill-treatment, and defendants frequently denied the right to choose their own lawyers.
Syed Zahid Hussain Shah of Pakistan, aged 36, was executed by lethal injection on 21 September 2011. He had been sentenced to death in Shanghai in March 2010 for drug trafficking.
Iran
Iran was the only other country, apart from China, to execute hundreds of people in 2011. Like China, the true number is thought to be much higher as credible reports suggest hundreds of additional executions, which are not officially acknowledged. Of the 360 executions acknowledged by official sources, at least three were teenagers at the time of the alleged crime. Executing people for crimes committed when they were under the age of 18 is strictly prohibited under international law.
On 21 September, 17-year old Ali Reza Molla-Soltani was publicly hanged at 4:44am in Golshahr Square, Karaj, near Tehran. He had been sentenced to death in August for stabbing a popular athlete – dubbed “Iran’s strongest man” – during a driving dispute in July. He reportedly said he panicked and stabbed the victim in self-defence after the athlete attacked him in the dark.
Saudi Arabia
Overall, executions in Saudi Arabia more than tripled in 2011. At least 82 people – compared to 27 in 2010 – were executed. At least one of those put to death was officially described as a “juvenile”. Saudi Arabia was one of the few countries to show a sharp increase in the use of capital punishment, after four years of steady decline. Many of those executed over the past years were foreign nationals, mostly migrant workers from developing countries in Africa and Asia. They are disproportionately affected by the secretive and summary nature of the criminal justice process.
Sudanese national Abdul Hamid bin Hussain bin Moustafa al-Fakki was beheaded in Medina on 19 September after being convicted on “sorcery” charges.
Iraq
Most of the at least 68 people executed in 2011 were convicted of belonging to armed groups or involvement in attacks by these groups, which included murder, kidnapping, rape or other violent crimes. The accused were often condemned to death after trials lasting just a few minutes.
Twelve alleged members of armed opposition groups were hanged in Iraq on 24 November 2011. They included Firas Hassan Fleih al-Juburi, Fadhel Ibrahim al-Juburi, and Haydar Mut’eb ‘Abdel-Qader. The 12 men were reported to have been convicted under Iraq’s anti-terrorism law and sentenced to death by a Baghdad court. An official claimed that some of the men had been responsible for killings in a village north of Baghdad in 2006.
USA
The USA was the only country in the G8 group of leading global economies to carry out executions in 2011. However, waning public support for the death penalty contributed to a decline in its use.
Humberto Leal, a Mexican man, was executed in July 2011 in Texas, despite a binding ruling by an international court that he had been denied the right to seek consular assistance following his arrest.
"If the people who marched actually voted, we wouldn’t have to march in the first place".
"(Poor) countries are poor because those who have power make choices that create poverty".
ubi solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant
"(Poor) countries are poor because those who have power make choices that create poverty".
ubi solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant
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- romeo
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
Israel poderia usar base no Arzebaijão para evitar reabastecimento após atacar o Irã.
Link em inglês :
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2 ... ing_ground
Link em "googlês"
http://translate.googleusercontent.com/ ... z60OS_NzFw
Link em inglês :
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2 ... ing_ground
Link em "googlês"
http://translate.googleusercontent.com/ ... z60OS_NzFw
- rodrigo
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
Security and Defense: The sky's the limit
With Iran's nuclear program racing ahead, the IAF's aerial refueling squadron is revving up its engines.
They are called the pilots of the Israel Air Force's "International Squadron" - not due to their diverse backgrounds, but to their having crisscrossed the globe and flown missions to more than 100 different countries. They flew prime minister Yitzhak Rabin's armored limousine to Morocco in 1993; airlifted 5,000 of the 15,000 Ethiopian Jews brought to Israel during Operation Solomon in 1991; and transported ammunition from the United States - and a chemical agent from France for fire extinguishing - during the Second Lebanon War last summer. Alongside these missions however, the International Squadron, also known as Squadron 120, is mainly responsible for the midair refueling of the IAF's wide array of F-15 and F-16 fighter jets. With Iran racing toward nuclear power and estimations that a military strike is a possible option to stop its nuclear program, this capability is turning into a strategic asset. "While the fighter jets do the work, it is up to the fuel tankers to get them to where they need to go," Lt.-Col. A. told The Jerusalem Post during a recent visit to squadron headquarters near Tel Aviv.
Established in 1963 by then-OC air force Ezer Weizman, the IAF's aerial refueling squadron has participated in some of the most fascinating and sensitive operations in the country's history, some of them still classified. Its first aircraft were Hercules and Dakotas but in 1972, the IAF received its current fleet of Boeing 707s, called Re'em (antelope) in Hebrew. The fleet also consists of a number of KC-130 tankers. In recent years, due to developments in the region, the squadron has increased its training regimen, A. revealed. Last September, Time magazine reported that IAF fighters were conducting "a lot of refueling training." Over the last year, the squadron's pilots have clocked in more than 1,000 flight hours. "We are prepared for every mission at any possible range and we are essentially the IAF's long arm," A. explained, without mentioning Iran. "Our business is aerial refueling at any altitude, in any weather, at night and during the day." He said the squadron has trained and drawn up plans for a wide range of missions, including those requiring midair refueling on the way to the target and again on return. In such missions, the tankers - large planes that make easy targets for enemy anti-aircraft missiles - would deploy at a standoff point outside range. "We are prepared to refuel planes any place in the world," A. said. "Our preference always is to get the plane the closest we can to its target."
While Israel is still far away from deciding to launch a strike against Iran, according to Brig.-Gen. (ret.) Shlomo Brom, a senior researcher with the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University, the IAF's tankers would play a crucial role in any such operation. IAF fighters have carried out long-range missions, some with refueling support and some without. In 1981, F-16s bombed the Osirak reactor near Baghdad and returned on their last drops of fuel and, without midair refueling. In 1985, however, Squadron 120 was activated for the IAF's longest-range air strike, when fighters flew more than 2,000 kilometers to bomb PLO headquarters in Tunis. WHETHER TANKERS would be used during a hypothetical strike on Iran would depend on the route used by the air force. The quickest and most convenient route would be over Jordan and Iraq, although it would not be simple. According to Brom, the IAF would be best off flying the longer route over the Indian Ocean, with minimal penetration of any other state's air space. "Flying through Jordan without the explicit or implicit permission of the Jordanians would hurt relations with a friendly Arab state," Brom wrote in a recent article in the book Getting Ready for a Nuclear Iran. "Flying over Iraq without coordination with the United States would lead to a clash with US interceptors." According to Brom, the jets would need to fly low to avoid radar detection, and as a result they would burn more fuel. "It means that the attack aircraft would need to be refueled at least twice, on their way to the targets and from the targets," he wrote. Squadron 120 saw action in Lebanon last summer, when its pilots clocked in 400 flying hours, refueling fighters that were hunting for Katyusha rocket launchers. Tragedy has also struck the squadron. In September 1971, an airplane was hit by an Egyptian SA-2 anti-aircraft missile and exploded. Seven airmen were killed and one survived, after he quickly put on a parachute and jumped to safety. THE PRIMARY plane used by the squadron - the Boeing 707 - weighs 151 tons, can carry 87 tons of fuel and has a range of 5,000 km., with flight capability at altitudes from 300 feet-4,200 feet. Inside the 707, the cargo hold is lined with fuel tanks, all connected with metal pipes that lead to the back of the plane where the "gas hose" extends and connects to the "client" - the plane receiving the fuel. The system used to refuel planes was developed by Israel Aerospace Industries. The airman who operates the refueling system is called a "boomer" - the name given to the 40-foot gas tailpipe hose that connects to the top of fighters. The boomer, wearing specially designed 3D glasses, sits in the back of the plane in front of a computer console, and with a joystick moves the pipe into the receiving plane. The bottom of the fuel tanker is lined with a traffic light-like system that assists the plane receiving the fuel in lining up behind the tanker. With an eye to the future, A. is waiting anxiously for 2020, the year he believes unmanned aerial vehicles will operate as refueling tankers. The air force is also considering modernizing its refueling fleet and converting US-manufactured executive jets, such as the Gulfstream G550, into tankers. "If you have fuel, you can reach distant targets, better utilize your assets and carry larger amounts of weapons," IAF Brig.-Gen. Yohanon Loker said in a conference on aerial refueling several months ago. The advantage of unmanned refueling tankers is that they would minimize the risk to pilots and would be harder for enemy radar to spot because they are relatively small. They would also be able to spend extended periods in the air - some can stay airborne for 24 hours - without the need to refuel or land to switch pilots. But until the refueling UAVs come into service, Lt.-Col. A. and his men plan to continue taking to the skies to support IAF warplanes and transport aircraft, as they head out for missions around the world while chanting their motto: "Any place, any time and in any weather."
http://www.jpost.com/LandedPages/PrintA ... x?id=58668
With Iran's nuclear program racing ahead, the IAF's aerial refueling squadron is revving up its engines.
They are called the pilots of the Israel Air Force's "International Squadron" - not due to their diverse backgrounds, but to their having crisscrossed the globe and flown missions to more than 100 different countries. They flew prime minister Yitzhak Rabin's armored limousine to Morocco in 1993; airlifted 5,000 of the 15,000 Ethiopian Jews brought to Israel during Operation Solomon in 1991; and transported ammunition from the United States - and a chemical agent from France for fire extinguishing - during the Second Lebanon War last summer. Alongside these missions however, the International Squadron, also known as Squadron 120, is mainly responsible for the midair refueling of the IAF's wide array of F-15 and F-16 fighter jets. With Iran racing toward nuclear power and estimations that a military strike is a possible option to stop its nuclear program, this capability is turning into a strategic asset. "While the fighter jets do the work, it is up to the fuel tankers to get them to where they need to go," Lt.-Col. A. told The Jerusalem Post during a recent visit to squadron headquarters near Tel Aviv.
Established in 1963 by then-OC air force Ezer Weizman, the IAF's aerial refueling squadron has participated in some of the most fascinating and sensitive operations in the country's history, some of them still classified. Its first aircraft were Hercules and Dakotas but in 1972, the IAF received its current fleet of Boeing 707s, called Re'em (antelope) in Hebrew. The fleet also consists of a number of KC-130 tankers. In recent years, due to developments in the region, the squadron has increased its training regimen, A. revealed. Last September, Time magazine reported that IAF fighters were conducting "a lot of refueling training." Over the last year, the squadron's pilots have clocked in more than 1,000 flight hours. "We are prepared for every mission at any possible range and we are essentially the IAF's long arm," A. explained, without mentioning Iran. "Our business is aerial refueling at any altitude, in any weather, at night and during the day." He said the squadron has trained and drawn up plans for a wide range of missions, including those requiring midair refueling on the way to the target and again on return. In such missions, the tankers - large planes that make easy targets for enemy anti-aircraft missiles - would deploy at a standoff point outside range. "We are prepared to refuel planes any place in the world," A. said. "Our preference always is to get the plane the closest we can to its target."
While Israel is still far away from deciding to launch a strike against Iran, according to Brig.-Gen. (ret.) Shlomo Brom, a senior researcher with the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University, the IAF's tankers would play a crucial role in any such operation. IAF fighters have carried out long-range missions, some with refueling support and some without. In 1981, F-16s bombed the Osirak reactor near Baghdad and returned on their last drops of fuel and, without midair refueling. In 1985, however, Squadron 120 was activated for the IAF's longest-range air strike, when fighters flew more than 2,000 kilometers to bomb PLO headquarters in Tunis. WHETHER TANKERS would be used during a hypothetical strike on Iran would depend on the route used by the air force. The quickest and most convenient route would be over Jordan and Iraq, although it would not be simple. According to Brom, the IAF would be best off flying the longer route over the Indian Ocean, with minimal penetration of any other state's air space. "Flying through Jordan without the explicit or implicit permission of the Jordanians would hurt relations with a friendly Arab state," Brom wrote in a recent article in the book Getting Ready for a Nuclear Iran. "Flying over Iraq without coordination with the United States would lead to a clash with US interceptors." According to Brom, the jets would need to fly low to avoid radar detection, and as a result they would burn more fuel. "It means that the attack aircraft would need to be refueled at least twice, on their way to the targets and from the targets," he wrote. Squadron 120 saw action in Lebanon last summer, when its pilots clocked in 400 flying hours, refueling fighters that were hunting for Katyusha rocket launchers. Tragedy has also struck the squadron. In September 1971, an airplane was hit by an Egyptian SA-2 anti-aircraft missile and exploded. Seven airmen were killed and one survived, after he quickly put on a parachute and jumped to safety. THE PRIMARY plane used by the squadron - the Boeing 707 - weighs 151 tons, can carry 87 tons of fuel and has a range of 5,000 km., with flight capability at altitudes from 300 feet-4,200 feet. Inside the 707, the cargo hold is lined with fuel tanks, all connected with metal pipes that lead to the back of the plane where the "gas hose" extends and connects to the "client" - the plane receiving the fuel. The system used to refuel planes was developed by Israel Aerospace Industries. The airman who operates the refueling system is called a "boomer" - the name given to the 40-foot gas tailpipe hose that connects to the top of fighters. The boomer, wearing specially designed 3D glasses, sits in the back of the plane in front of a computer console, and with a joystick moves the pipe into the receiving plane. The bottom of the fuel tanker is lined with a traffic light-like system that assists the plane receiving the fuel in lining up behind the tanker. With an eye to the future, A. is waiting anxiously for 2020, the year he believes unmanned aerial vehicles will operate as refueling tankers. The air force is also considering modernizing its refueling fleet and converting US-manufactured executive jets, such as the Gulfstream G550, into tankers. "If you have fuel, you can reach distant targets, better utilize your assets and carry larger amounts of weapons," IAF Brig.-Gen. Yohanon Loker said in a conference on aerial refueling several months ago. The advantage of unmanned refueling tankers is that they would minimize the risk to pilots and would be harder for enemy radar to spot because they are relatively small. They would also be able to spend extended periods in the air - some can stay airborne for 24 hours - without the need to refuel or land to switch pilots. But until the refueling UAVs come into service, Lt.-Col. A. and his men plan to continue taking to the skies to support IAF warplanes and transport aircraft, as they head out for missions around the world while chanting their motto: "Any place, any time and in any weather."
http://www.jpost.com/LandedPages/PrintA ... x?id=58668
"O correr da vida embrulha tudo,
a vida é assim: esquenta e esfria,
aperta e daí afrouxa,
sossega e depois desinquieta.
O que ela quer da gente é coragem."
João Guimarães Rosa
a vida é assim: esquenta e esfria,
aperta e daí afrouxa,
sossega e depois desinquieta.
O que ela quer da gente é coragem."
João Guimarães Rosa
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
Distribuição de máscaras à população, posicionamento de baterias aae nos arredores da capital...
----------------------------------
Israel distribui máscaras de gás em meio a temores de guerra
30 de março de 2012 • 06h19
(...)
Fonte: Terra
http://noticias.terra.com.br/mundo/noti ... uerra.html
- FOXTROT
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
Tudo preparado para mais uma agressão sionista. se bem que essa será retaliada
Saudações
Saudações
"Só os mortos conhecem o fim da guerra" Platão.
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
FOXTROT, a questão é que uma guerra naquela região neste momento vai afectar todo o mundo e o resultado final é de todo desconhecido.
Isto mete os EUA e a OTAN, Israel, Irão, China, Russia...tem tudo para tornar-se num conflito de cariz global.
Isto mete os EUA e a OTAN, Israel, Irão, China, Russia...tem tudo para tornar-se num conflito de cariz global.
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
Israel está se preparando para o ataque ao IrãRodrigoiano escreveu:
Distribuição de máscaras à população, posicionamento de baterias aae nos arredores da capital...
----------------------------------
Israel distribui máscaras de gás em meio a temores de guerra
30 de março de 2012 • 06h19
(...)
Fonte: Terra
http://noticias.terra.com.br/mundo/noti ... uerra.html
Vamos assistir a mais um massacre no Oriente Médio
"Uma nação que confia em seus direitos, em vez de confiar em seus soldados, engana-se a si mesma e prepara sua própria queda."
Rui Barbosa
Rui Barbosa
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
Se os bunda moles (Russia e China) não tivessem aprovado varias sanções contra o Irã e boicotado as iniciativas Brasileira-Turquia, eles não estarim tão encorajados a atacar o irãn.cabeça de martelo escreveu:FOXTROT, a questão é que uma guerra naquela região neste momento vai afectar todo o mundo e o resultado final é de todo desconhecido.
Isto mete os EUA e a OTAN, Israel, Irão, China, Russia...tem tudo para tornar-se num conflito de cariz global.
- rodrigo
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
Se houver ataque, e retaliação iraniana, espero que se limite a alvos militares e estratégicos israelenses, como a usina de Dimona. Ataque indiscriminado justifica respostas desproporcionais. E um Irã decapitado não teria muitas condições de proteger seu petróleo. O que os EUA achariam muito ruim
"O correr da vida embrulha tudo,
a vida é assim: esquenta e esfria,
aperta e daí afrouxa,
sossega e depois desinquieta.
O que ela quer da gente é coragem."
João Guimarães Rosa
a vida é assim: esquenta e esfria,
aperta e daí afrouxa,
sossega e depois desinquieta.
O que ela quer da gente é coragem."
João Guimarães Rosa
- FOXTROT
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
rodrigo escreveu:Se houver ataque, e retaliação iraniana, espero que se limite a alvos militares e estratégicos israelenses, como a usina de Dimona. Ataque indiscriminado justifica respostas desproporcionais. E um Irã decapitado não teria muitas condições de proteger seu petróleo. O que os EUA achariam muito ruim
Essas coisas eu não entendo, se é para ter regra que Israel abra sua usina e exija o mesmo do Irã, nesse caso, não há necessidade de guerra e os sionistas não precisarão iniciar outra guerra.
Agora se optarem por um "ataque preventivo", em minha modesta opinião, ferrou, não tem essa de "só vale alvo militar", Israel inteiro é um alvo legítimo.
Saudações
"Só os mortos conhecem o fim da guerra" Platão.
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
Um ataque ao Irã envolverá facilmente a Síria, Líbano, Iraque e Afeganistão e sabe sei lá quem mais. Ou seja, mais um Iraque, um Afeganistão e uma Líbia! É bom as potências ocidentais se preparem para lidar com pelo menos 3 novas guerras interestatais e/ou civis. Depois não adianta reclamarem do fundo do buraco por terem se envolvidos em guerras por politicagem doméstica e interesses corporativos.
No fim é a sociedade desses países que chora seus mortos, mutilados, paga a conta e sofre com o desmanche dos resquícios de bem-estar que um dia tiveram. Mas buenas, não são democracias? E não diz o velho ditado: cada povo tem o governo que "merece"...
A China e a Rússia agradecem.
[]'s.
No fim é a sociedade desses países que chora seus mortos, mutilados, paga a conta e sofre com o desmanche dos resquícios de bem-estar que um dia tiveram. Mas buenas, não são democracias? E não diz o velho ditado: cada povo tem o governo que "merece"...
A China e a Rússia agradecem.
[]'s.
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
terra.com.br
Premiê turco diz que Irã não produzirá armas atômicas
30 de março de 2012 • 12h59 • atualizado às 13h36
O primeiro-ministro turco, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, expressou nesta sexta-feira ao voltar do Irã que as autoridades deste país garantiram que seu programa nuclear não é destinado à produção de armas. Erdogan pediu ao mundo que também questione o programa de armas nucleares de Israel, informou a agência turca Anadolu.
O primeiro-ministro chegou na madrugada desta sexta-feira a Ancara e resumiu diante da imprensa os resultados de sua viagem ao Irã, após sua participação na Cúpula de Segurança Nuclear, realizada nesta semana em Seul, na Coreia do Sul. Erdogan afirmou que havia explicado claramente ao presidente americano, Barack Obama, que o Líder Supremo do Irã, Ali Khamenei, garantiu que sua religião não permite a fabricação de armas de destruição em massa.
"Khamenei disse que a sharia (lei corânica) não permite o uso de armas de destruição em massa; disse que não há lugar para isso em sua religião. Após essa afirmação, eu não posso acreditar que o Irã esteja desenvolvendo armas nucleares", acrescentou. "De novo compartilhamos nossas ideias de forma sincera com a parte iraniana e continuaremos trabalhando para encontrar uma solução diplomática a esse problema", disse o político turco.
"O presidente (Mahmoud Ahmadinejad) disse o mesmo. Por que eles não têm direito a manter um programa nuclear com fins pacíficos?" questionou o primeiro-ministro. "Nosso desejo é que o mundo se comporte de maneira justa. Neste momento, a situação de Israel é óbvia. Tem tantas ogivas nucleares e ninguém diz nada. O Ocidente deveria questioná-lo sobre isso também", finalizou Erdogan.
Premiê turco diz que Irã não produzirá armas atômicas
30 de março de 2012 • 12h59 • atualizado às 13h36
O primeiro-ministro turco, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, expressou nesta sexta-feira ao voltar do Irã que as autoridades deste país garantiram que seu programa nuclear não é destinado à produção de armas. Erdogan pediu ao mundo que também questione o programa de armas nucleares de Israel, informou a agência turca Anadolu.
O primeiro-ministro chegou na madrugada desta sexta-feira a Ancara e resumiu diante da imprensa os resultados de sua viagem ao Irã, após sua participação na Cúpula de Segurança Nuclear, realizada nesta semana em Seul, na Coreia do Sul. Erdogan afirmou que havia explicado claramente ao presidente americano, Barack Obama, que o Líder Supremo do Irã, Ali Khamenei, garantiu que sua religião não permite a fabricação de armas de destruição em massa.
"Khamenei disse que a sharia (lei corânica) não permite o uso de armas de destruição em massa; disse que não há lugar para isso em sua religião. Após essa afirmação, eu não posso acreditar que o Irã esteja desenvolvendo armas nucleares", acrescentou. "De novo compartilhamos nossas ideias de forma sincera com a parte iraniana e continuaremos trabalhando para encontrar uma solução diplomática a esse problema", disse o político turco.
"O presidente (Mahmoud Ahmadinejad) disse o mesmo. Por que eles não têm direito a manter um programa nuclear com fins pacíficos?" questionou o primeiro-ministro. "Nosso desejo é que o mundo se comporte de maneira justa. Neste momento, a situação de Israel é óbvia. Tem tantas ogivas nucleares e ninguém diz nada. O Ocidente deveria questioná-lo sobre isso também", finalizou Erdogan.
"Só os mortos conhecem o fim da guerra" Platão.
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
A té que fim, um país importante que tem fortes ligações com as potencias ocidentais tem coragem de dizer a verdade. Os Covardes sunitas deveriam seguir este exemplo.FOXTROT escreveu:terra.com.br
Premiê turco diz que Irã não produzirá armas atômicas
30 de março de 2012 • 12h59 • atualizado às 13h36
O primeiro-ministro turco, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, expressou nesta sexta-feira ao voltar do Irã que as autoridades deste país garantiram que seu programa nuclear não é destinado à produção de armas. Erdogan pediu ao mundo que também questione o programa de armas nucleares de Israel, informou a agência turca Anadolu.
O primeiro-ministro chegou na madrugada desta sexta-feira a Ancara e resumiu diante da imprensa os resultados de sua viagem ao Irã, após sua participação na Cúpula de Segurança Nuclear, realizada nesta semana em Seul, na Coreia do Sul. Erdogan afirmou que havia explicado claramente ao presidente americano, Barack Obama, que o Líder Supremo do Irã, Ali Khamenei, garantiu que sua religião não permite a fabricação de armas de destruição em massa.
"Khamenei disse que a sharia (lei corânica) não permite o uso de armas de destruição em massa; disse que não há lugar para isso em sua religião. Após essa afirmação, eu não posso acreditar que o Irã esteja desenvolvendo armas nucleares", acrescentou. "De novo compartilhamos nossas ideias de forma sincera com a parte iraniana e continuaremos trabalhando para encontrar uma solução diplomática a esse problema", disse o político turco.
"O presidente (Mahmoud Ahmadinejad) disse o mesmo. Por que eles não têm direito a manter um programa nuclear com fins pacíficos?" questionou o primeiro-ministro. "Nosso desejo é que o mundo se comporte de maneira justa. Neste momento, a situação de Israel é óbvia. Tem tantas ogivas nucleares e ninguém diz nada. O Ocidente deveria questioná-lo sobre isso também", finalizou Erdogan.
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Re: Irã tem como se defender de Israel?
digam isso pros Curdos após o ataque de Saddan HusseinKhamenei disse que a sharia (lei corânica) não permite o uso de armas de destruição em massa
"Uma nação que confia em seus direitos, em vez de confiar em seus soldados, engana-se a si mesma e prepara sua própria queda."
Rui Barbosa
Rui Barbosa