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NOVANEWS by crescentandcross In the Wake of Raymond Davis, Suspicion Abounds by Jason Ditz Raymond Davis was presented to the Pakistani ...Read more

USA
NOVANEWS by crescentandcross   67-year-old Sirhan Bishara Sirhan Lawyers for convicted assassin Sirhan Sirhan claim that he was manipulated in a ...Read more

NOVANEWS by crescentandcross   A wounded man from Niger walks with a stick as he waits to be evacuated with some ...Read more

NOVANEWS by crescentandcross     Iran’s Ambassador to Syria Seyyed Ahmad Mousavi Iran’s envoy to Syria says the United States has ...Read more

NOVANEWS Ed note–do not be fooled by IsraHell’s latest theatrics concerning this ‘reconciliation’ between Hamas and Fatah. She could not ...Read more

NOVANEWS   IsraHell has threatened to use an “arsenal of measures” against the Palestinian territories, including withholding £480 million of ...Read more

NOVANEWS   antiwar.com   On Thursday, US ambassador Susan Rice announced that Libyan government troops were being issued Viagra and told ...Read more

Iraq | USA
NOVANEWS   by crescentandcross     BAGHDAD (AFP) – The killing on Friday of an American soldier made April the deadliest ...Read more

USA
NOVANEWS by crescentandcross     US is shifting its terror-killer drones from Pakistan to Afghanistan after Islamabad asked it to shut ...Read more

NOVANEWS by crescentandcross   Speaking at a weekly cabinet meeting, the prime minister says anyone in the world who wishes for ...Read more

NOVANEWS by crescentandcross Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz says he will hold up transfer of $89 million in Palestinian tax funds and ...Read more

NOVANEWS by crescentandcross   While revolution has been sweeping the Middle East, demonstrations in Iran have been more subdued. But what’s ...Read more

Concerns in Pakistan that USAID Officials Are CIA Spies

NOVANEWS

by crescentandcross


In the Wake of Raymond Davis, Suspicion Abounds

by Jason Ditz

Raymond Davis was presented to the Pakistani government as a technical support worker for the US Consulate in Lahore, so it came as quite a surprise when, in the wake of his arrest on double-murder charges, he turned out to be the de facto CIA head for Pakistan.

He wasn’t alone. The Davis fallout led Pakistani spy agencies to determine that the US indeed had hundreds of active CIA operatives working in the nation above and beyond the officially reported ones working with the government.
Now, Pakistan’s National Accountability Bureau has turned its eyes toward USAID, the official US government aid agency. There is concern, according to reports, that the various USAID “corruption” scandals surrounding inefficient projects are evidence that the agency is being used as cover for CIA activities.
The US has denied the allegations, and surely a US government agency needs no ulterior motive to be monstrously inefficient. Still, it brings more unwelcome attention to the agency at a time when it is arguing that its programs are “vital” to the war effort in various nations, and a time when its funding is under growing scrutiny.

‘RFK hit man was Manchurian candidate’

NOVANEWS

by crescentandcross

 

67-year-old Sirhan Bishara Sirhan

Lawyers for convicted assassin Sirhan Sirhan claim that he was manipulated in a mind control plot to kill Senator Robert F. Kennedy and that Kennedy was not shot by bullets from Sirhan’s gun.

Sirhan’s attorney, William F. Pepper, alleges that his client was under hypnosis and subjected to mind control and was actually “handled” at the murder scene by an unidentified mysterious woman in a polka-dot dress, who helped stage the assassination and gave the cue that triggered a “brainwashed” Sirhan to fire a gun in the pantry of the Ambassador Hotel, the Daily Mail reported on Friday.

Sirhan Bishara Sirhan, a 24-year-old Palestinian immigrant, now 67, who allegedly shot Robert Kennedy dead in a crowded hotel kitchen in Los Angeles shortly after midnight on June 5, 1968, made the claims this week in federal court documents that also detail extensive interviews with Sirhan during the past three years, some done while he was under hypnosis.

Daniel Brown, a Harvard University professor and expert in trauma memory and hypnosis, interviewed Sirhan for 60 hours with and without hypnosis, according to the legal brief.

Describing the events before the shooting, Sirhan said he went into “range mode” and believed he was at a firing range.

“I thought that I was at the range more than I was actually shooting at any person, let alone Bobby Kennedy,” he added.

He also suggested that he fired a gun in the pantry as a diversion and that someone else killed Kennedy.

Through the years, Sirhan has claimed to have no memory of shooting Kennedy and said in recent interviews that his presence at the hotel was an accident, not a planned destination.

A large portion of the new documents seek to prove the bullets that hit Kennedy came from a different direction than the spot where Sirhan was standing. The papers do not name any other possible shooter.

According to some reports, several senior CIA officers were present on the night of the assassination, including David Morales, who was the chief of operations of JMWAVE, the CIA’s main anti-Castro station based in Miami, and Chief of Psychological Warfare Operations George Joannides.

Many experts say Sirhan’s description of the events indicates he may have been a victim of the CIA’s MK ULTRA mind control program.

Sirhan was denied parole in March by a panel that said he had not shown sufficient remorse for the killing.

Kennedy’s body lay in repose at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York for two days before a funeral mass was held on June 8. His body was interred near his brother John at Arlington National Cemetery.

Robert Kennedy’s murder changed the course of US history and world history. Kennedy was on course to win the Democratic nomination and may well have beaten Richard Nixon in the 1968 presidential election.

NATO dismisses Gaddafi’s truce offer

NOVANEWS

by crescentandcross

 

A wounded man from Niger walks with a stick as he waits to be evacuated with some 500 refugees near the port of the besieged Libyan city of Misratah on April 30, 2011

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) operating in Libya has dismissed the country’s ruler Muammar Gaddafi’s proposal of a ceasefire.

Earlier, Gaddafi asked the NATO member states involved in Libya operations to start negotiations to stop the air attacks, saying he was ready to make oil contracts with Western countries if it was the real motive behind the strikes.

Despite Gaddafi’s offer of a truce, his forces continued shelling the besieged city of Misratah, aggravating the humanitarian situation for the residents of the city.

Libyan revolutionaries say Gaddafi tanks took positions on the airport road Thursday night and shelled homes in Misratah, trying to get into the city but were kept back.

Gaddafi regime has threatened to attack any ships trying to get aid to people. Libyan government has said the only possible humanitarian route is by road and under the supervision of the army.

British Brigadier Rob Weighill, director of NATO operations in Libya, says they intercepted several Libyan boats putting anti-shipping mines outside the harbor of Misratah to cut aid route to the city. NATO said they deposed three mines early Friday.

‘US, IsraHell trying to blackmail Syria’

NOVANEWS

by crescentandcross

 

 

Iran’s Ambassador to Syria Seyyed Ahmad Mousavi

Iran’s envoy to Syria says the United States has launched a psychological war against Syria in order to force its demands on the government in Damascus.

In an exclusive interview with IRNA on Friday, Seyyed Ahmad Mousavi noted that the Israeli regime and the US are not after a change in Syria’s political system due to the popular support for President Bashar al-Assad.

Mousavi acknowledged that poverty and the corruption of some politicians have sparked protests against the Syrian government and that Damascus must take major steps toward reform. However, he dismissed allegations that Assad is facing a popularity crisis.
“The enemies are well aware that Assad enjoys widespread popularity with the Syrians and he cannot be easily toppled,” said Mousavi, who also serves as Iranian President Ahmadinejad’s advisor on Palestine affairs.

“He is very different from Mubarak and Ben Ali in this regard,” he noted, referring to the deposed Egyptian and Tunisian dictators after decades of autocratic rule in the North African countries.

The Iranian official said the presence of armed thugs, who Damascus blames for the killing of protesters in the country, is due to the failure of the enemies to incite Syrians against the Assad administration.

“The US and Israel as Syria’s main opponents and other enemies, no matter how hard they have tried, have not managed to push more than 10 percent of the country’s population onto the scene and thus have entered the military stage [of their plan],” he stated.

Mousavi added that Syria’s opponents are now seeking to incite people into joining anti-government protests by provoking clashes and bloodshed in the country.

But this ploy has failed largely thanks to the awareness of Syrians, he pointed out.

The Iranian diplomat said all the pressure from Assad’s enemies is focused on winning concessions from him and imposing their will on the Syrian government with regards to regional issues.

He said that unlike Tunisia and Egypt, army forces in Syria have come under attack by armed thugs who seem to be funded and masterminded by sources outside the country. This he said is due to the unpredictable political status that could follow Assad’s fall.

Mousavi called the mounting strategic and political failures in Iraq, Lebanon and Palestine the reason for the mounting pressure on Syria, where enemies are trying to take advantage of the people’s legitimate demands.

“If we add the defeat of the Zionist regime [of Israel] in the Gaza War and the 33-day war in Lebanon, their attempts for creating a greater Middle East, the Annapolis conference and their failure in distancing Iran and Syria…one can see the depth of US and Israeli failure… and the reason for their turning to mount pressure on Syria,” he said.

Israhell FM says Palestinian deal crosses ‘red line’

NOVANEWS
Ed note–do not be fooled by IsraHell’s latest theatrics concerning this ‘reconciliation’ between Hamas and Fatah. She could not be happier, because now she can claim that Hamas controls the PA, which means that all talks of ‘peace’ are off the table. Then, when something goes “BOOM” in some enclave of  illegal Aliens settler nutcases and is blamed on Hamas, IsraHell will have the excuse she needs for a full-scale invasion of the West Bank in further “cleansing” the area of non-Jews.
JERUSALEM (AFP) – The Palestinian unity deal agreed in Cairo crossed “a red line,” Israel’s Avigdor Lieberman said on Thursday, warning that an array of measures could be taken against the Palestinian Authority.
“With this accord, a red line has been crossed,” the ultra-nationalist foreign minister told Israel’s military radio a day after the Palestinian parties announced a surprise reconciliation agreement.
“We have at our disposal a vast arsenal of measures including the lifting of VIP status for Abu Mazen and Salam Fayyad, which will not allow them to move freely,” he said referring to president Mahmud Abbas and his prime minister.
“We could also freeze the transfer of taxes collected by Israel for the Palestinian Authority,” added Lieberman, who leads the Israel Beitenu party in the coalition of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
After 18 months of largely fruitless reconciliation talks, delegations from Hamas and Fatah meeting in Cairo on Wednesday announced a deal to form an interim unity government with a view to holding presidential and legislative elections within a year.
The deal raises the prospect of an end to the devastating political divide that has seen the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority govern the West Bank while the Islamist Hamas movement controls the Gaza Strip.
But the agreement was criticised by Israel, with Netanyahu warning on Wednesday, shortly after the deal was announced, that Abbas must “choose between peace with Israel or peace with Hamas.”
Lieberman said the reconciliation deal would mean the “freeing of hundreds of Hamas terrorists detained by the Palestinian Authority in Judaea and Samaria” — the biblical name for the West Bank.
He said the elections envisaged under the agreement would allow Hamas “to take control of Judaea and Samaria.”
Lieberman said he wanted to see the international community insist that any unity government comply with conditions announced by the Middle East peacemaking Quartet, which includes the United Nations, United States, European Union and Russia.
“We hope that the whole international community will maintain the conditions imposed by the Quartet on the Palestinians, which means an end to violence, recognition of Israel and past agreements, and Hamas does not accept any of these conditions,” he said.
Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak said “the latest events do nothing but reinforce the necessity of relying only on ourselves.
“The army and the security services will use an iron fist to deal with any threat and challenge,” he warned.

IsraHell threatens ‘arsenal of measures’ in wake of Fatah Hamas pact

NOVANEWS
 

Israel threatens 'arsenal of measures' in wake of Fatah Hamas pact

IsraHell has threatened to use an “arsenal of measures” against the Palestinian territories, including withholding £480 million of taxes and subjecting leaders to humiliating border checks in retaliation for the Fatah Hamas pact.

The Telegraph
Mahmoud Abbas, the pro-western president of the Palestinian Authority, was accused of siding with terrorists after his secular Fatah party agreed on Wednesday to end a long-running schism with its arch-rival Hamas, the Islamist overlords of the Gaza Strip.
Avigdor Lieberman, Israel’s foreign minister, said the deal made it “inevitable” that Hamas would take over the West Bank leaving the Jewish state to confront an enemy bent on its destruction on two fronts.
Under the terms of the unexpected deal, reached after weeks of secret talks in the Egyptian capital Cairo, Hamas and Fatah, which fought a brief civil war in 2007, will form a provisional government that will oversee the preparation of presidential and parliamentary elections within a year.
While the deal has been hailed in the Arab world and among ordinary Palestinians, Israel has said it will have nothing to do with a government that comprises a significant terrorist element.
Mr Lieberman gave warning that Israel would show its displeasure by directly punishing Mr Abbas and his Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, who enjoys strong western support.

“With this accord, a red line has been crossed,” Mr Lieberman said. “We have always made clear that we will not negotiate with a terror organisation. We have to make clear that our words were not empty threats.
“We have at our disposal a vast arsenal of measures including the lifting of VIP status for Abu Mazen [Mr Abbas] and Salam Fayyad, which will not allow them to move freely.”
If Mr Lieberman were to make good his threat, the ability of both men to travel outside the Palestinian Territories would be heavily circumscribed and they would be subject to the frequently humiliating security checks that ordinary Palestinians face on a regular basis.
Even more damagingly, Mr Lieberman threatened to withhold Palestinian customs levies, which are collected by Israel as the occupying power, a step that could deprive the Palestinian Authority of up to a third of its revenues. Israel took the same measure after Hamas won a parliamentary majority following legislative elections in 2006.
Accusations of betrayal were also levelled against Mr Abbas by Ehud Barak, defence minister, who spoke in menacing terms of Israel’s future relationship with the new Palestinian government.
Mr Abbas insisted that the inclusion of Hamas made no difference to the Palestinian Authority’s determination to seek a peace deal with Israel, saying the transitional government’s remit was restricted to preparations for elections and did not extend to negotiations.
He also expressed optimism that Hamas would now meet international demands by recognising Israel’s right to exist and disavowing violence.
In private, some Israeli officials have been cautiously welcoming of the deal, saying it removed a major obstacle to any Arab-Israeli peace deal.
Until now, Israel has frequently argued that Mr Abbas did not have a mandate to reach a peace deal with Israel or to seek international recognition for Palestinian statehood because he did not represent the people of Gaza.

Susan Rice’s Viagra Hoax: The New Incubator Babies

NOVANEWS

 

antiwar.com
 

On Thursday, US ambassador Susan Rice announced that Libyan government troops were being issued Viagra and told to rape as a terror weapon. She made the comment as part of a debate with another envoy to highlight that “the coalition is confronting an adversary doing reprehensible things.” Several diplomats said Rice provided no evidence for the Viagra allegation, which they said was made in an attempt to persuade doubters the conflict in Libya was not just a standard civil war but a much nastier fight in which Gadhafi is not afraid to order his troops to commit heinous acts.

However, today, MSNBC was told by US military and intelligence officials that there is no basis for Rice’s claims. While rape has been a weapon of choice in many other African conflicts, the US officials say they’ve seen no such reports out of Libya.

This sort of tactic is nothing new. It is reminiscent of the incubator babies story. In the run-up to the first gulf war in 1990, a tearful Kuwaiti girl testified before a congressional committee that she had witnessed Iraqi troops removing premature babies from incubators and stealing the incubators, levaing the babies to die. The story was used to promote the attack on Iraq, and continues to be cited as a reason for going to war in 1991.

However, the story has been widely debunked. The girl who made the allegations turned out to the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador the US, a resident of Washington, DC. Investigations by human rights groups and others found no evidence that the event ever occurred, or that the ambassdor’s daughter was even in Kuwait at the time.

My guess is that the Viagra story will still be repeated years from now as a reason we attacked Libya.

Truth is the first casualty of war.

April deadliest month for US in Iraq since 2009

NOVANEWS

 
by crescentandcross

 

April deadliest month for US in Iraq since 2009


 

BAGHDAD (AFP) – The killing on Friday of an American soldier made April the deadliest month for US forces in Iraq since 2009, according to figures compiled by AFP.

The soldier “was killed April 29 while conducting operations in southern Iraq,” a US military statement released on Saturday said, without giving further details.

The death brought to 11 the number of US troops to die in Iraq in April, according to an AFP tally based on data compiled by independent website www.icasualties.org.

That is the highest monthly toll since November 2009, when 11 soldiers also died, starkly highlighting the risks American soldiers still face even after combat operations were officially declared over last summer.

Of the remainder of April’s 11 killed, six died in “non-hostile” incidents, two were killed by a roadside bomb in Numaniyah, Wasit province, and two died in separate mortar attacks in Baghdad and Babil provinces.

For complete coverage of politics and policy, go to Yahoo! Politics ]

Also on Saturday, the US army’s Contingency Operating Site Echo in the southern province of Diwaniyah was hit by a rocket attack, while an American military convoy near the Shiite holy city of Najaf was targetted, Sergeant Elvis Umanzor said.

No further details were available regarding either incident.

Around 45,000 US soldiers still remain stationed in Iraq. While they are primarily charged with training and equipping their local counterparts, they can return fire in self-defence and still take part in joint counter-terror operations with Iraqi forces.

Friday’s death also brings to 4,452 the number of American troops to have died in Iraq since the 2003 US-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein, according to the AFP tally.

US to use Afghanistan as base for drone attacks in Pakistan

NOVANEWS

by crescentandcross

 
Drone
 
US is shifting its terror-killer drones from Pakistan to Afghanistan after Islamabad asked it to shut down UAV bases on its territory, but America has vowed to continue hitting militants based in Pakistan’s tribal areas.
Pakistan has asked CIA to remove its personnel from the Shamsi airbase, about 350 kms southwest of Baluchistan’s capital Quetta, where some of the drones are based, ‘New York Times’ reported quoting senior American officials.
“The withdrawal has not occurred but is expected soon,” the official said adding that the drone attacks would then be flown out of Afghanistan where some of them are already based.
But even after shifting, the Predators and Reapers, top US military commander, Admiral Mike Mullen, in a private meeting in Islamabad last week told Pakistan’s powerful army chief Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani that CIA would not reduce the drone strikes until Pakistan launched a military operation against the Haqqani network in North Waziristan.
As tensions mount between the two nations, ‘The Times’ said the appointment of General David H Petraeus as America’s top spy chief could further inflame relations as Pakistan military does not regard him as a “friend”.
The usually secretive Kayani, has made little secret of his distaste for Petraeus, calling him a political general.
Petraeus has privately expressed outrage at what American officials say is the Pakistani main spy agency’s most blatant support yet for fighters based in Pakistan who are carrying out attacks against American troops in Afghanistan.
Repairing the frayed ties between the CIA and Pakistan’s military-run agency, ISI, will be difficult, American officials say.

 

Netanyahu: Hamas-Fatah unity deal should worry all those who care about peace

NOVANEWS

by crescentandcross

 

Speaking at a weekly cabinet meeting, the prime minister says anyone in the world who wishes for peace should be concerned about a Palestinian government containing Hamas.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told his cabinet Sunday that a recent unity agreement between long-warring Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah should be a cause for concern for “all those in the world who aspire to see peace between us and our Palestinian neighbors.”

A future peace between Israel and the Palestinians will be created “only with those who want to be on our side, and not those who want our annihilation,” Netanyahu said.

Netanyahu - Emil Salman Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a weekly cabinet meeting
Photo by: Emil Salman

His comments came days after the Palestinians announced a new unity deal between the Western-backed Palestinian Authority and the Iran-backed Hamas, which rejects any accommodation with Israel.
Israel has said it will not negotiate with Hamas, which is considered a terrorist organization by the United States and European Union.
“Israel extends its hand in peace to all peoples of the region, to all of our neighbors that aspire to live alongside us in peace,” Netanyahu said, “and will stand steadfast against whoever tries to attack us and endanger our existence.”
The prime minister recently hinted to a visiting delegation of U.S. Congress members that the United States should consider stopping economic aid to the Palestinian Authority if a Hamas-Fatah unity government did not recognize Israel and renounce terror.
Speaking to the American legislators, Netanyahu quoted remarks by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in April 2009, that Israel would not hold talks with or economically support a Palestinian government, including Hamas, until Hamas recognized Israel and abandoned violence.
Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz told Army Radio earlier Sunday that Israel is freezing an $89 million cash transfer to the Palestinians due to the unity deal. Palestinian official Saeb Erekat branded the move a declaration of war by Israel.

IsraHell freezes cash transfer to Palestinians due to Fatah-Hamas unity deal

NOVANEWS

by crescentandcross

Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz says he will hold up transfer of $89 million in Palestinian tax funds and customs fees until it was clear it would not reach Hamas militants; PA condemns the move.Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz says he is delaying a cash transfer to the Palestinian Authority because of a new unity deal between rival Palestinian factions.

Steinitz says he will hold up the transfer of $89 million in Palestinian tax funds and customs fees that Israel collects on the Palestinians’ behalf.
Steinitz told Army Radio on Sunday that the money was supposed to be transferred this week but would remain in Israeli hands until it was clear it would not reach the militants of Hamas.
Last week the Palestinians announced a new unity deal between the Western-backed Palestinian Authority and the Iran-backed Hamas, which rejects any accommodation with Israel.
The Israeli government says it will not negotiate with a government that includes Hamas.
A senior Palestinian official in the West Bank condemned the move, saying Israel had no right to withhold Palestinian funds.
“Israel has started a war even before the formation of the government,” senior Palestinian official Saeb Erekat said.
The finance minister said that the issue could be reconsidered “if the Palestinians can prove to us … that there is not a joint fund between the Palestinian Authority and Hamas in Gaza.”
“We ask the entire world not to fund Hamas, so we must not do so, even indirectly,” he said.
Steinitz noted that Israel had withheld the tax revenues in the past, during a Palestinian uprising that began in 2000.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently hinted to a visiting delegation of U.S. Congress members that the United States should consider stopping economic aid to the Palestinian Authority if a Hamas-Fatah unity government did not recognize Israel and renounce terror.
Speaking to the American legislators, Netanyahu quoted remarks by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in April 2009, that Israel would not hold talks with or economically support a Palestinian government, including Hamas, until Hamas recognized Israel and abandoned violence.

Inside Iran: What life is really like in Tehran

NOVANEWS

by crescentandcross

 
An anti-US mural near the former US embassy in Tehran, November 2007

While revolution has been sweeping the Middle East, demonstrations in Iran have been more subdued. But what’s really going on in this notoriously secretive state? In a special report from inside the country, Patrick Cockburn takes to the streets to find out.

The Independent

“Sit long enough by the river and the corpse of your enemy will float by,” says an old Middle Eastern proverb. For Iranian leaders, the truth of this saying has been proved this spring as the Arab Awakening unexpectedly overthrew or weakened their enemies across the region. As recently as January, the White House was satisfied that it was gradually tightening the noose around the neck of Iran as it imposed ever more severe sanctions on its old foe. But within three months, without Iran actually doing anything, American policy was in fragments. One stalwart of the anti-Iranian alliance, President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt, was in hospital under arrest – and another, King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, had plenty to worry him close to home in Bahrain and Yemen; urging an aggressive policy towards Iran, the king had once advised Washington “to cut off the head of the snake”, but as revolution sweeps the Arab world, the United States is losing whatever small appetite it had for a confrontation with Iran.

This doesn’t mean that the US hasn’t been thinking about how the present turmoil is affecting Iran. As the White House debates the extent of its military engagement in Libya, senior officials never forget that what happens to Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s regime is a sideshow compared with America’s long-drawn-out struggle with Iran – one that stretches back to the overthrow of the Shah in 1979, the US embassy hostages and Ayatollah Khomeini. American support – or lack of it – for pro-democracy uprisings in the Arab world always takes account of how far this hurts – or benefits – its main enemy in Tehran. The brutal crushing of the majority Shia population in Bahrain by the Sunni monarchy, backed by Saudi troops, is winked at by the US and Britain because a democratic Bahrain might actually be more sympathetic to Shia Iran.

Some Western pundits suggest hopefully that the current revolutionary wave will spread to Iran – while Iranian opposition spokesmen, mostly operating from abroad, speak of thousands of baton-wielding riot police and militiamen confronting weekly street protests in cities across the country. So far, however, the reality has been much tamer. When I was in Tehran in February and early March there were few signs of demonstrators, though police were milling about in large numbers. The government had been surprised on 14 February when 30,000 supporters of the opposition Green movement, born at the time of the allegedly fixed presidential election of 2009, had taken to the streets. But the number of demonstrators has since dwindled. “Unfortunately, the outside world is making a mistake by exaggerating the importance of these protests,” an Iranian journalist usually sympathetic to the Greens told me. “The problem is that the picture of what is happening in Iran these days comes largely from exiled Iranians and is often a product of wishful thinking or propaganda.”

The severity of the repression shows that the regime is worried, but does not necessarily mean that it is under serious threat. The Iranian government invariably overreacts to any kind of dissent, denouncing the protesters in lurid terms as traitors and pawns of the US and Britain whose aim is the destruction of the Islamic Republic. Given that Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader and successor to Ayatollah Khomeini, is God’s representative on Earth, it follows naturally that opposition to him and his policies is nothing less than an assault on Islam.

In reality, political developments are, for the moment, going in the opposite direction to those in much of the Arab world, where state power is crumbling or under threat. For, in Iran, the authority of the state is being concentrated and strengthened. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad – the pious, populist, authoritarian Iranian leader first elected in 2005 – is seeking to create an imperial presidency by eliminating other centres of power. He adeptly used the mass demonstrations against his 2009 election “victory” to crush his opponents and rivals. The two embattled leaders of the Green movement and former presidential candidates Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, already under house arrest, are now being ever more closely confined. They are prevented from communicating with the outside world by phone or the internet and their families can no longer meet them. But despite these privations, the regime appears to have decided to isolate rather than imprison them to avoid turning them into martyrs and provoking a reaction on the streets.

Power in the Islamic Republic has traditionally been fragmented, particularly since the death in 1989 of Ayatollah Khomeini, the fount of all authority in the first decade after the revolution. Rivalry between Iran’s different political and religious elites has been continuous. Ali Khamenei has never had anything like Khomeini’s uncontested authority. As a result, there has been a 20-year-long struggle between those demanding a more democratic and secular state and those wanting a more militarised and Islamic government. It is this battle which now seems to be coming to a conclusion – and the future is looking bleak for secular reformers.

The establishment had been split. Mousavi and Karroubi both represent the reformist trend, but neither was previously an out-and-out radical: Mousavi was Iran’s prime minister from 1981 to 1989 before leaving politics to sculpt and paint, while Karroubi served two terms as speaker of the parliament. Now, however, the fragmentation of power between different centres and personalities is no longer tolerated. Important politicians who supported the Greens in 2009 are today being forced to denounce the renewed demonstrations of 14 February. Neutrality or silence is no longer an option.

Another important figure, Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, for three decades one of the chief power-brokers of Iran, is coming under escalating attack from Ahmadinejad’s supporters. He has been compelled to give up his post as head of the Council of Experts, the clerical body which chooses the Supreme Leader. Other signs of his influence being chipped away are the brief detention of his daughter, for taking part in protests, and the resignation of his son as head of the Tehran metro system.

Iran is often portrayed abroad as being controlled by the Shia clergy, but the truth is that though it may be a theocratic state, it is a very strange one. The president and his closest associates are not clerics. In elections, Ahmadinejad presents himself as the anti-establishment candidate, the friend of the urban and rural poor. His ideology is a blend of Shi’ism and Iranian nationalism that is frequently more hardline than that of the senior clergy. The son of a blacksmith, he is a former officer in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and of the generation whose attitudes were shaped by the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war, in which a million Iranians were killed and wounded. Reverence for the self-sacrificing religious and nationalist commitment of the men who fought in the trenches plays the same role in determining the mentality of many Iranians as it did in the 1930s in post-First World War Europe.

Ahmadinejad is better able to crush protests than Arab leaders because, unlike them, he has a core of fanatical supporters. This support is organised in powerful bodies such as the IRGC and the Basij militia, which may be a million strong. He has the backing of hardline mosques, though he is suspected by many clergy of subtly ignoring their views. Indeed, the greatest threat to his position comes not from the protesters but from Ali Khamenei and political leaders who backed him against the Greens but fear him monopolising power.

And the result of all this is that the Greens and the radical reformers look simply too weak to take on the forces of the regime. They have a reasonable claim to be the real winners of the election in 2009 and, when demonstrations were at their height, as many as three million people protested. But the number of militant reformers is far smaller than this. Many Iranians are discontented – but they do not necessarily hate the regime so much that they will risk the grim consequences of opposing it. And support for the reformers is becoming difficult to mobilise, because any media sympathetic to them has been taken over or closed down and information favourable to their cause can increasingly be found only via foreign-based militants or the BBC and Voice of America in Farsi.

At the same time, the desire for change is not going to go away. Iran remains a country deeply split by the revolution of 1979, just as the French Revolution divided France for 150 years. One of the main reasons why the regime is so edgy when confronted by even small demonstrations is that Iran is the one country in the Middle East where a seemingly all-powerful state machine was once overthrown by street protests. The former revolutionaries do not want the same thing to happen to them. One Iranian cleric compared the threat to the Islamic Republic from the reformist leaders to that facing the Soviet Union in its final years. He said that some of the Iranian reformist leaders are like Gorbachev and would, in his view, unintentionally undermine the Islamic ideology of the state if they were in power. But he compared others with Boris Yeltsin, who secretly schemed to destroy the whole system.

In Tehran in recent weeks there has been little sense of emergency. The regime sees no hypocrisy in lauding protesters abroad at the same time as it is driving them from the streets at home. The only visible sign of anything out of the ordinary when I was there was the groups of black-helmeted policemen standing as they waited for demonstrators who mostly failed to turn up. This might change, but so far there is no sign of it.

International sanctions in response to Iran’s nuclear programme are having an impact, but their seriousness is limited compared with the United Nations sanctions against Iraq in the 1990s. The withdrawal of state funding for food and utilities, which had been costing the government $100bn a year, affects day-to-day life more than any embargo. Tehran traffic remains among the most terrifying in the world, as pedestrians weave expertly between speeding cars that often miss them by inches. But the streets are a little less congested than they used to be and the number of vehicles has shrunk because petrol – previously almost free – has gone up in price as subsidies have been removed. Cars can use the roads only on alternate days, so one day will be allocated to vehicles with their numbers ending in an even number and the next will be for odd numbers. “Tehran is short on entertainment,” one resident told me, “and, when petrol was cheap, people liked to go joy-riding for lack of anything to do. But they do not do it any more because of the expense…”

Once one of the cheapest cities in the world, Tehran is now becoming much more costly. Prices have risen steeply as subsidies disappear for everything from electricity, gas and water to foodstuffs such as flour and cooking oil. People are shocked to find that their utility bills have quadrupled. It is a measure of the government’s stability that so far this reform has been carried through without protest. A weakness of the Greens is that the movement, unlike its equivalents in Egypt and Tunisia, has remained largely confined to the educated and the middle-class. Demands for political liberty and civil rights from people in north Tehran have never combined with the economic demands of the urban poor in the south of the capital. When they do, the regime will truly have something to be frightened of.

I went to see the mausoleum of Ayatollah Khomeini in south Tehran and was surprised to find so few worshippers. The silver dome over his tomb rises amid minarets and cranes that stood out against the grey sky.

The mausoleum seems to be permanently under reconstruction and part of its interior is still being built more than 20 years after his death. The persistent but not very heavy rain on the day I was there had been too much for the roof of the shrine’s entrance hall, where water was dripping into buckets and drums. Worshippers, who had already removed their socks, were trying gingerly to skirt the pools of water to get into the main part of the shrine.

Not far away is the vast cemetery of Behesht-e Zahra, where so many of the soldiers and barely trained militiamen killed in the Iran-Iraq war are buried. It is one of the saddest and most moving cemeteries in the world. Photographs of the young men who died stare out of large glass cases above each tombstone. Beside the pictures are mementos of the war – a few cartridges, perhaps, or a scarf. Bodies are still being found in the mountains, deserts and marshes of the Iran-Iraq frontier and are brought here to be reburied. Their remains provide a still-potent symbol of ideological purity – and taking advantage of this, Ahmadinejad had some of the bodies reburied in public places around Tehran, including dissident strongholds such as university campuses.

Sanctions are making life more difficult for Iranians and have increased their sense of isolation. Money is difficult to get in and out of the country, though this can still be done with time and effort. Elaborate arrangements have to be made by importers and exporters to route transactions through Dubai or other entrepôts. Petrol cannot be imported, so the shortfall is being made up by converting petro-chemical plants – but their product is low-grade and produces toxic fumes, adding to the clouds of smog that so often hide the mountains just to the north of the capital. “Why is the world so worried about us being able to make a nuclear bomb,” asked one Iranian sarcastically, “when we cannot even build proper refineries to make petrol?”

Iran is a difficult country to know, because its recent historic experience is unique: no other country in the region has had a genuine popular uprising that overthrew a whole ruling class. Protesters in Tunisia and Egypt have got rid of unpopular leaders, but it is too early to know whether the uprisings will lead to real revolutions or simply a changing of personnel at the top. Ayatollah Khomeini’s brand of militant and politicised Shia Islam was the main force which overthrew the Shah, but it was by no means the only one. The domination of his ideology has never been uncontested or fully accepted by all Iranians, producing a fascinating culture that is full of contrasts.

There is a deep chasm between the way people are meant to behave and the way they really live. For instance, premarital sex remains a taboo, but a recent opinion poll of 7,000 young men and women showed that 55 per cent admitted to having a boyfriend or girlfriend; the real figure is believed to be higher. In restaurants and cafés in central Tehran women wear headscarves, but are otherwise as smartly dressed as in any European capital. A majority of students at the universities are women and – according to one small businessman I spoke to – private companies prefer female employees. “They are likely to be better educated than men, work harder, and do not use opium,” he told me.

If Iran is a country little understood by the outside world, this is partly the fault of its rulers. By excluding foreign media and tightly controlling Iranian journalists, they create a vacuum of information that is inevitably filled by hostile propaganda. The West has demonised Iran for so long that the country’s international image differs little from that of the Taliban when they ruled Afghanistan. In addition, the political cultures of America and Israel require a ready supply of demons – and both countries portray Iran as a great and menacing power on the verge of developing a nuclear weapon. In practice, the best efforts of US intelligence have failed to find any evidence that Iran is developing a nuclear bomb.

The exaggeration of the Iranian threat by its enemies is not unwelcome to Iranian leaders, since it bolsters their picture of Iran as a world power. But this grandiose vision has usually been accompanied by a highly practical sense that Iran’s ability to expand its influence on the ground is confined to states that have a Shia majority, such as Iraq, or a powerful Shia community, such as Lebanon. Even in Bahrain, which is 70 per cent Shia, there is no evidence of Iranian involvement in the uprising, despite self-interested and paranoid claims by the Sunni monarchy.

Iran may not be very strong, but its opponents have turned out to be weaker or stupider than anybody supposed. Some Iranian clerics argue that only divine intervention on the side of Iran can explain the recent developments in the region. Ten years ago, Iran faced enemies to the east and west in the shape of the Taliban in Afghanistan and Saddam Hussein in Iraq. The US conveniently overthrew both, but its intervention provoked such strong resistance that it ruled out US military action against Iran. Now, without Iranian leaders doing anything, Mubarak is gone and the Saudis are quaking at the uprisings all around them. The only bad news for Tehran is that Syria, Iran’s long-term ally, is also under threat.

For all their blood-curdling rhetoric, the Iranian regime has not been doing much to spread the Islamic revolution. But why should it when, sitting by the river, its leaders have the satisfaction of watching the deceased remains of so many of its opponents drift by?

Patrick Cockburn writes about the Middle East for The Independent and The Independent on Sunday.