Genge la viongozi wa Iran linalovuruga Dunia

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Dec 11, 2011
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These Are the 5 Iranian Leaders You Should Know About
Tensions between the United States and Iran seem to be deescalating again, but the countries clearly are still at loggerheads.

Much media attention has been focused in recent days on President Donald Trump and his national security team, including Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

Trump ordered the U.S. drone strike in Iraq early Friday that killed Iranian Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, 62, whom some commentators have called the second most powerful official in Iran.

In the wake of Suleimani’s death, here are five of the key figures in Iran’s Islamist regime to know about going forward.

1. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as supreme leader, is the top religious and political leader of Iran’s theocratic dictatorship.

Khamenei has held the top spot since 1989 and the death of Iran’s first supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, challenging the policies of five American presidents.

The United States imposed sanctions on Khamenei and his associates last summer after Iran shot down a U.S. drone.

The second supreme leader since the Iranian Revolution in 1979 that overthrew Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, he was Iran’s president from 1981 to 1989.

Khamenei, 80, had brief stints as minister of defense and supervisor of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps before becoming the nation’s third president in the early, chaotic years after the revolution.

2. President Hassan Rouhani
President Hassan Rouhani was part of the revolutionary movement in the 1970s against the shah. He was a member of Iran’s parliament for about two decades.

Rouhani, 71, was elected president first in 2013 and then reelected in 2017. He has posed as a moderate, but has presided over much of the violence in Iran.

The president of the country is largely a figurehead role, while the religious government—the mullahs—make the decisions.

Rouhani served as secretary of the Supreme National Security Council during the presidencies of Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and Mohammad Khatami.

He resigned as the government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad took power from August 2005 to August 2013. Rouhani would become Ahmadinejad’s successor that month.

Announcing his candidacy for president in March 2013, Rouhani campaigned as a moderate reformer with the goal of having a more peaceful relationship with the West.

His government moved forward with the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, led by the Obama administration and joined by European allies, Russia, and China. The Trump administration pulled the U.S. out of the agreement in 2017.

Despite his reform image, Rouhani presided over Iran’s increased aggression in the region carried out by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

3. Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif is his nation’s equivalent of the U.S. secretary of state, conducting foreign policy and diplomacy for Iran. He was appointed to the job in 2013.

Zarif, 60, negotiated the nuclear agreement with the United States, Britain, France, Germany, China, and Russia that also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

He resigned earlier this year, but Rouhini didn’t accept his resignation.

He was a career diplomat before taking Iran’s top diplomatic role, holding various positions including representative to the United Nations.

Zarif not only speaks English but can do so with an American accent, The Brookings Institute has noted.

4. Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami
Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami last year became commander in chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which the U.S. considers to be a terrorist group. He reportedly joined the Revolutionary Guard in 1980, when the Iran-Iraq War began.

The Revolutionary Guard, separate from the nation’s military, has the mission of protecting the mullahs and spreading the Islamic revolution. It has 100,000 soldiers and sets up proxy militias and other organizations.

Despite the similar name, Salami is not to be confused with Suleimani, who headed the Revolutionary Guard’s Quds Force, which conducts terrorist and spying operations outside Iran.

The U.S. last year imposed sanctions on Salami among other Iranian figures, and the United Nations imposed sanctions on him in 2007. He is believed to be 60 years old.

During the elaborate Suleimani funeral services, Salami said Iran would exact “the kind of revenge that causes remorse” on the United States.

5. Defense Minister Amir Hatami
Brig. Gen. Amir Hatami is Iran’s minister of defense, the country’s equivalent of a defense secretary.
Rouhani appointed Hatami to the post in August 2017.

Hatami, 54, had been a Revolutionary Guard officer since 1989 and previously was an Army officer assigned to international relations.
 
Genge pekee linalovuruga dunia ni elite wa Marekani. Wamezigeuza nchi nyingine duniani kama wilaya za USA, wakiwaamulia mambo yao na kuwapangia watawala kadri watakavyo kwa maslahi yao.

Tazama nchi kama Venezuela, Syria, Libya, Misri, Lebanon, Yemen, Bolivia n.k.

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These Are the 5 Iranian Leaders You Should Know About
Tensions between the United States and Iran seem to be deescalating again, but the countries clearly are still at loggerheads.

Much media attention has been focused in recent days on President Donald Trump and his national security team, including Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

Trump ordered the U.S. drone strike in Iraq early Friday that killed Iranian Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, 62, whom some commentators have called the second most powerful official in Iran.

In the wake of Suleimani’s death, here are five of the key figures in Iran’s Islamist regime to know about going forward.

1. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as supreme leader, is the top religious and political leader of Iran’s theocratic dictatorship.
Khamenei has held the top spot since 1989 and the death of Iran’s first supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, challenging the policies of five American presidents.

The United States imposed sanctions on Khamenei and his associates last summer after Iran shot down a U.S. drone.
The second supreme leader since the Iranian Revolution in 1979 that overthrew Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, he was Iran’s president from 1981 to 1989.

Khamenei, 80, had brief stints as minister of defense and supervisor of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps before becoming the nation’s third president in the early, chaotic years after the revolution.

2. President Hassan Rouhani
President Hassan Rouhani was part of the revolutionary movement in the 1970s against the shah. He was a member of Iran’s parliament for about two decades.

Rouhani, 71, was elected president first in 2013 and then reelected in 2017. He has posed as a moderate, but has presided over much of the violence in Iran.

The president of the country is largely a figurehead role, while the religious government—the mullahs—make the decisions.

Rouhani served as secretary of the Supreme National Security Council during the presidencies of Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and Mohammad Khatami.

He resigned as the government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad took power from August 2005 to August 2013. Rouhani would become Ahmadinejad’s successor that month.

Announcing his candidacy for president in March 2013, Rouhani campaigned as a moderate reformer with the goal of having a more peaceful relationship with the West.

His government moved forward with the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, led by the Obama administration and joined by European allies, Russia, and China. The Trump administration pulled the U.S. out of the agreement in 2017.
Despite his reform image, Rouhani presided over Iran’s increased aggression in the region carried out by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

3. Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif is his nation’s equivalent of the U.S. secretary of state, conducting foreign policy and diplomacy for Iran. He was appointed to the job in 2013.

Zarif, 60, negotiated the nuclear agreement with the United States, Britain, France, Germany, China, and Russia that also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

He resigned earlier this year, but Rouhini didn’t accept his resignation.

He was a career diplomat before taking Iran’s top diplomatic role, holding various positions including representative to the United Nations.

Zarif not only speaks English but can do so with an American accent, The Brookings Institute has noted.

4. Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami
Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami last year became commander in chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which the U.S. considers to be a terrorist group. He reportedly joined the Revolutionary Guard in 1980, when the Iran-Iraq War began.

The Revolutionary Guard, separate from the nation’s military, has the mission of protecting the mullahs and spreading the Islamic revolution. It has 100,000 soldiers and sets up proxy militias and other organizations.

Despite the similar name, Salami is not to be confused with Suleimani, who headed the Revolutionary Guard’s Quds Force, which conducts terrorist and spying operations outside Iran.

The U.S. last year imposed sanctions on Salami among other Iranian figures, and the United Nations imposed sanctions on him in 2007. He is believed to be 60 years old.

During the elaborate Suleimani funeral services, Salami said Iran would exact “the kind of revenge that causes remorse” on the United States.

5. Defense Minister Amir Hatami
Brig. Gen. Amir Hatami is Iran’s minister of defense, the country’s equivalent of a defense secretary.
Rouhani appointed Hatami to the post in August 2017.

Hatami, 54, had been a Revolutionary Guard officer since 1989 and previously was an Army officer assigned to international relations.
Hivi ni genge la viongozi wa Iran waliovamia Iraq na kumwondoa Saddam na kuiacha Iraq ikiwa unstable hadi kuruhusu kuibuka vikundi mbalimbali vya wapiganaji mfano ISIS?
Hivi ni genge la viongozi wa Iran waliovamia Libya na kuondoa utawala ulliokuwepo na kuigeuza Libya moja la eneo hatari zaidi kwa kila aina ya uovu ikiwemo minada ya kuuza watu, sehemu ya makundi kama ISIS na makundi mengine kujimwambafy?
Mimi nadhani US na wapambe wake ni hatari zaidi kwa amani ya dunia kuliko wengie ona wanachojaribu kufanya pale Venezuela.
Wao kwao mtazamo wao ndiyo sahihi sijui ni nani aliwapa hicho cheo cha kwamba wao ndiyo wana set standard kwa gear ya demokrasia. Sijui pale Iraq na Libya wamewapelekea demokrasia gani.
 
Hivi ni genge la viongozi wa Iran waliovamia Iraq na kumwondoa Saddam na kuiacha Iraq ikiwa unstable hadi kuruhusu kuibuka vikundi mbalimbali vya wapiganaji mfano ISIS?
Hivi ni genge la viongozi wa Iran waliovamia Libya na kuondoa utawala ulliokuwepo na kuigeuza Libya moja la eneo hatari zaidi kwa kila aina ya uovu ikiwemo minada ya kuuza watu, sehemu ya makundi kama ISIS na makundi mengine kujimwambafy?
Mimi nadhani US na wapambe wake ni hatari zaidi kwa amani ya dunia kuliko wengie ona wanachojaribu kufanya pale Venezuela.
Wao kwao mtazamo wao ndiyo sahihi sijui ni nani aliwapa hicho cheo cha kwamba wao ndiyo wana set standard kwa gear ya demokrasia. Sijui pale Iraq na Libya wamewapelekea demokrasia gani.
Nafaka. ni kweli, Saddam aliondolewa na USA ila Iran inaifanya Iraq isitawalike
 
Nafaka. ni kweli, Saddam aliondolewa na USA ila Iran inaifanya Iraq isitawalike
Kwan IRAN Ndio Alomuondoa Saddam .!?..

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These Are the 5 Iranian Leaders You Should Know About
Tensions between the United States and Iran seem to be deescalating again, but the countries clearly are still at loggerheads.

Much media attention has been focused in recent days on President Donald Trump and his national security team, including Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

Trump ordered the U.S. drone strike in Iraq early Friday that killed Iranian Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, 62, whom some commentators have called the second most powerful official in Iran.

In the wake of Suleimani’s death, here are five of the key figures in Iran’s Islamist regime to know about going forward.

1. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as supreme leader, is the top religious and political leader of Iran’s theocratic dictatorship.
Khamenei has held the top spot since 1989 and the death of Iran’s first supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, challenging the policies of five American presidents.

The United States imposed sanctions on Khamenei and his associates last summer after Iran shot down a U.S. drone.
The second supreme leader since the Iranian Revolution in 1979 that overthrew Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, he was Iran’s president from 1981 to 1989.

Khamenei, 80, had brief stints as minister of defense and supervisor of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps before becoming the nation’s third president in the early, chaotic years after the revolution.

2. President Hassan Rouhani
President Hassan Rouhani was part of the revolutionary movement in the 1970s against the shah. He was a member of Iran’s parliament for about two decades.

Rouhani, 71, was elected president first in 2013 and then reelected in 2017. He has posed as a moderate, but has presided over much of the violence in Iran.

The president of the country is largely a figurehead role, while the religious government—the mullahs—make the decisions.

Rouhani served as secretary of the Supreme National Security Council during the presidencies of Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and Mohammad Khatami.

He resigned as the government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad took power from August 2005 to August 2013. Rouhani would become Ahmadinejad’s successor that month.

Announcing his candidacy for president in March 2013, Rouhani campaigned as a moderate reformer with the goal of having a more peaceful relationship with the West.

His government moved forward with the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, led by the Obama administration and joined by European allies, Russia, and China. The Trump administration pulled the U.S. out of the agreement in 2017.
Despite his reform image, Rouhani presided over Iran’s increased aggression in the region carried out by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

3. Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif is his nation’s equivalent of the U.S. secretary of state, conducting foreign policy and diplomacy for Iran. He was appointed to the job in 2013.

Zarif, 60, negotiated the nuclear agreement with the United States, Britain, France, Germany, China, and Russia that also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

He resigned earlier this year, but Rouhini didn’t accept his resignation.

He was a career diplomat before taking Iran’s top diplomatic role, holding various positions including representative to the United Nations.

Zarif not only speaks English but can do so with an American accent, The Brookings Institute has noted.

4. Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami
Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami last year became commander in chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which the U.S. considers to be a terrorist group. He reportedly joined the Revolutionary Guard in 1980, when the Iran-Iraq War began.

The Revolutionary Guard, separate from the nation’s military, has the mission of protecting the mullahs and spreading the Islamic revolution. It has 100,000 soldiers and sets up proxy militias and other organizations.

Despite the similar name, Salami is not to be confused with Suleimani, who headed the Revolutionary Guard’s Quds Force, which conducts terrorist and spying operations outside Iran.

The U.S. last year imposed sanctions on Salami among other Iranian figures, and the United Nations imposed sanctions on him in 2007. He is believed to be 60 years old.

During the elaborate Suleimani funeral services, Salami said Iran would exact “the kind of revenge that causes remorse” on the United States.

5. Defense Minister Amir Hatami
Brig. Gen. Amir Hatami is Iran’s minister of defense, the country’s equivalent of a defense secretary.
Rouhani appointed Hatami to the post in August 2017.

Hatami, 54, had been a Revolutionary Guard officer since 1989 and previously was an Army officer assigned to international relations.
Poleni sana

Mnateseka sana na WAAJEMI....

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Je Marekani imeifanya Iraq itawalike? Huyo Trump mwenyewe amewahi kukiri kuwa kama kuna kosa US ilifanya ni kumuondoa Saddam na Gadaff
Halafu kumbuka Iran imesaidia sana kuondoa ISIS pale mashariki ya kati
 
Ndiyo kama ambavyoUS ana wapambe akina U.K na France Iran au ndiyo wapambe wake pia na US majeshi yake huko yanafanya nini maana kila yanapokanyaga amani inaondoka sijui uwa wanalinda amani au wanaharibu amani mbona hawaji kullinda amani Congo
 
Ndiyo kama ambavyoUS ana wapambe akina U.K na France Iran au ndiyo wapambe wake pia na US majeshi yake huko yanafanya nini maana kila yanapokanyaga amani inaondoka sijui uwa wanalinda amani au wanaharibu amani mbona hawaji kullinda amani Congo
Nafaka, hawa jamaa ni magaidi na waoga kama wanaume kweli wapigane vita ya wazi
Quds Force
Designated as a terrorist organisation by
سپاه قدس
Active1979–present
IdeologyKhomeinism
Shia Islamism
Anti-Westernism
Anti-Americanism
Anti-communism
Anti-Wahabbism

Anti-Zionism
LeadersLeader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Sayeed Ali Khamenei
HeadquartersTehran
Part of
23px-Flag_of_the_Army_of_the_Guardians_of_the_Islamic_Revolution.svg.png
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
AlliesState allies
Non-state allies
Opponent(s)State opponents
Non-state opponents:
United States
Canada
Egypt
23px-Flag_of_Bahrain.svg.png
Bahrain
23px-Flag_of_Saudi_Arabia.svg.png
Saudi Arabia
 
Mkuu una uhakika kila majeshi ya USA yalipo Amani haipo?
Ngoja nikupe mifano..

*Japani (kuna USA base)

*Uturuki

*UAE

*Saudi Arabia

*Eritrea

*Qatar

*Bahrain

*German

*South Korea

*Taiwan

Hizi baadhi je hazina Amani..
Musitake kuhusisha kila kitu na US ndio ana mabaya lakini si kwa kila kitu..kuna matatizo mengine yanatokana na nature ya watu au sasa za nchi zenyewe!
Ndiyo kama ambavyoUS ana wapambe akina U.K na France Iran au ndiyo wapambe wake pia na US majeshi yake huko yanafanya nini maana kila yanapokanyaga amani inaondoka sijui uwa wanalinda amani au wanaharibu amani mbona hawaji kullinda amani Congo

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Mkuu una uhakika kila majeshi ya USA yalipo Amani haipo?
Ngoja nikupe mifano..

*Japani (kuna USA base)

*Uturuki

*UAE

*Saudi Arabia

*Eritrea

*Qatar

*Bahrain

*German

*South Korea

*Taiwan

Hizi baadhi je hazina Amani..
Musitake kuhusisha kila kitu na US ndio ana mabaya lakini si kwa kila kitu..kuna matatizo mengine yanatokana na nature ya watu au sasa za nchi zenyewe!

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Naongelea Middle East na nchi zenye mafuta. Hizo military base zilizoko huko hasa middle East anazitumia kuvuruga amani ya huko
 
Nafaka, hawa jamaa ni magaidi na waoga kama wanaume kweli wapigane vita ya wazi
Quds Force
Designated as a terrorist organisation by
سپاه قدس
Active1979–present
IdeologyKhomeinism
Shia Islamism
Anti-Westernism
Anti-Americanism
Anti-communism
Anti-Wahabbism

Anti-Zionism
LeadersLeader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Sayeed Ali Khamenei
HeadquartersTehran
Part of
23px-Flag_of_the_Army_of_the_Guardians_of_the_Islamic_Revolution.svg.png
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
AlliesState allies
Non-state allies
Opponent(s)State opponents
Non-state opponents:
United States
Canada
Egypt
23px-Flag_of_Bahrain.svg.png
Bahrain
23px-Flag_of_Saudi_Arabia.svg.png
Saudi Arabia
Hizi zote propaganda gaidi ni US mwenyewe ndiye gaidi kuliko wote.
Hivi ugaidi ni nini au ni yule mtu ambaye US imeamua kusema ni gaidi. Hivi unajua Mandela alikuwa kwenye list ya magaidi ambayo US ilikuwa inawatambua mpaka mwaka 2008?
 
Hizi zote propaganda gaidi ni US mwenyewe ndiye gaidi kuliko wote.
Hivi ugaidi ni nini au ni yule mtu ambaye US imeamua kusema ni gaidi. Hivi unajua Mandela alikuwa kwenye list ya magaidi ambayo US ilikuwa inawatambua mpaka mwaka 2008?
Nafaka, naelewa na hayo unayoyaamini ni udini na propoganda za Iran. Ilani anajaribu kujipima kwa USA na kutaka kujifanya USA wa middle East hivyo uwe mwangalifu. Iran ni Shia na anataka kujiona yeye ndiye custodian wa uislam duniani lakini anachosahau ni kuw Madina na Mecca ziko Saudia. Kwa ujumla Iran ni kakambale kadogo kanakoanza kuota sharubu- kachecheze Kibiti huku tu basi.
 
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