News stories by Gareth Porter, page 5
Police Case for Iranian Bomb Plot Based on Tainted Evidence - Part 2*
- Inter Press Service

WASHINGTON, Aug 28 (IPS) - The "Special Cell" of the Delhi police has identified an Iranian, Houshang Afghan Irani, as the man it believes carried out the Feb. 13 car bombing at the Israeli embassy in New Delhi that injured the wife of an embassy official. The police believe three other Iranians were also involved in the plot.
Evidence in Delhi Embassy Bombing Suggests Journalist Was Framed - Part 1*
- Inter Press Service

WASHINGTON, Aug 27 (IPS) - New Delhi police officials have released hundreds of pages of documents from their investigation into the Feb. 13 bombing of an Israeli Embassy car. The documents aimed to show that a well-known Indian Muslim journalist aided an Iranian conspiracy to plan and carry out the bombing.
Israel’s Iran War Talk Aims at Deal for Tougher U.S. Policy
- Inter Press Service

WASHINGTON, Aug 16 (IPS) - Two recent interviews apparently given by Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak provide evidence that the new wave of reports in the Israeli press about a possible Israeli attack on Iran is a means by which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Barak hope to leverage a U.S. shift toward Israel’s red lines on Iran’s nuclear programme.
Israel Pins Bombing on Hezbollah to Get EU Terror Ruling
- Inter Press Service

WASHINGTON, Jul 24 (IPS) - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's claim Sunday of absolutely reliable intelligence linking Hezbollah to the bombing in Burgas, Bulgaria last week was apparently aimed at supporting his government’s determination to get the EU to declare Hezbollah a terrorist organisation.
Netanyahu - Unlike Olmert - Refuses Explicit Iran Attack Threat
- Inter Press Service

WASHINGTON, Jul 18 (IPS) - The perception that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is threatening to attack Iran’s nuclear facilities unless sanctions and diplomacy succeed in shutting them down has been the driving force in the Iran crisis.
Karzai Demand on Night Raids Snags U.S.-Afghan Pact
- Inter Press Service

Nearly a year after the Barack Obama administration began negotiations with the government of Afghan President Hamid Karzai on a U.S. military presence in Afghanistan beyond 2014, both sides confirmed last week that the talks are still hung up over the Afghan demand that night raids by U.S. Special Operations Forces (SOF) either be ended or put under Afghan control.
U.N. Tally Excluded Most Afghan Civilian Deaths in Night Raids
- Inter Press Service

A July United Nations report asserting that only 30 civilians died in targeted raids in Afghanistan during the first six months of 2011 reflected only a very small fraction of night raids in which civilians were killed, according to officials of the independent Afghan commission which had co-produced the 2010 report on civilian casualties with the U.N. Mission.
U.N. Reported Only a Fraction of Civilian Deaths from U.S. Raids
- Inter Press Service

The number of civilians killed in U.S. Special Operations Forces (SOF) raids last year was probably several times higher than the figure of 80 people cited in the U.N. report on civilian casualties in Afghanistan published last week, an IPS investigation has revealed.
Cables Belie Gulf States' Backing for Strikes on Iran
- Inter Press Service

The dominant theme that emerged in U.S. media coverage of the first round of Wikileaks diplomatic cables last week was that Arab regimes in the Gulf - led by Saudi Arabia - shared Israel's view that Iran's nuclear programme had to be stopped by military force, if necessary.
Amiri Told CIA Iran Has No Nuclear Bomb Programme
- Inter Press Service

Contrary to a news media narrative that Iranian scientist Shahram Amiri has provided intelligence on covert Iranian nuclear weapons work, CIA sources familiar with the Amiri case say he told his CIA handlers that there is no such Iranian nuclear weapons programme, according to a former CIA officer.

