#mashahd
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Swipe Left 🍁🧡🍂💜ورق بزن رفیقتو تگ کن 🤝 همانطور که به خواب میری یادت باشه چه انسان خوبیهستی . As you fall asleep, remember what a good person you are. . رفیق بغض هر شبم هوای گریه و تبم به گریه های من بگو خیال دیدن تو کو ای عشق تمام حسرت هنوزم دلیل آه سینه سوزم ببر مرا به ناکجا عشق ای درد ببین به استخوان رسیدی همین که از دلم بریدی ببر مرا به هرکجا عشق خیال خنده های تو شد آرزوی هر شبم به چشم های تو قسم که جان رسیده بر لبم خزان شد و نیامدی عزیز لحظه های من اگر ندیدمت تو را تو گریه کن برای من ای عشق تمام حسرت هنوزم دلیل آه سینه سوزم ببر مرا به ناکجا عشق ای درد ببین به استخوان رسیدی . . . . . . . . . . . Follow🤍 @shiva_7angel Follow🤍 @shiva_7angel Follow🤍 @shiva_7angel . . . 🌐Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shiva_7angel . . . . اگر در مورد خرید ، فروش ، اجاره و اقامت از طریق خرید ملک در دبی ، یا اگر ملکی در دبی دارید و تصمیم به فروش و یا اجاره ملک خود دارید و نیازمند مشاوره هستید لطفا با شماره ذیل در تماس باشید . موبایل و واتساپ شیوا خردمند ۰۰۹۷۱۵۰۱۵۷۶۳۵۷ . . . Pls Feel Free to Contact or DM Regard Properties in Dubai . Shiva Kheradmand Mobile: +971 (50) 1576357 (WhatsApp) . . . “𝑳𝒐𝒗𝒆 𝑶𝒏𝒆 𝑨𝒏𝒐𝒕𝒉𝒆𝒓”🤍 @shiva_7angel . @hojatashrafzade @omidsabbaghno @mohammadmohtashami1 @rezapanahimusic @dr.morteza.najafi @reza_rashidpour @rambodjavan @alizia #mohammadesfahani #حجت_اشرف_زاده #رفیق #امیدصباغنو #محمدمحتشمی #موسیقی #neyshabur #mashahd #khorasan #persianmusic #iranian #songpersian #اهنگ_ایرانی #خواننده_ایرانی #رفیق #دبی #مشاوره_رایگان #عشق #پدر #مادر #پاییز #پاپ_موزیک #ایرانیان_موزیک #ویدئو #کلیپ_موزیک #iranianmusic #popirani #mohammadisfahani love #dedicated #father #mother (at Dubai - دبى) https://www.instagram.com/p/CU8SCHph31N/?utm_medium=tumblr
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National Khayyam Commemoration Day
روز بزرگداشت عمر خیام
#Iran#omar khayyam#Fotrostravel#Irantour#iranclasscitour#happy#carpediem#Nishapur#Love#Shiraz#Mashahd#Isfahan#Kashan#Moment
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MiM.Iran Pour: Imam #Reza Is eighth Shi'ite #Imam. Burial place in #Mashahd city. .. Iran, Iran Travel, Iran Visa, Iran Tourism, Iran tourguide, Invitation To Iran, Iran Hotel, Iranian Food,Persian,Iranian Facts,Travel Iran,Tourism Iran,Persian Foods,iranian-monuments, ,Iranian nature, ,Iranian visa, ,booking hostel Iran, ,Iran seven hostels, ,Iran hotel, ,Iran guesthouse ,
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Trump’s order to kill Soleimani is already starting to backfire
Iran’s leadership vowed “severe revenge,” though many analysts suspect the regime will bide its time before mustering a violent reprisal. Instead, it basked in a surge of nationalist sentiment and anger at home. Less than two months ago, security forces are said to have killed hundreds of Iranian protesters to quell an uprising spurred by the regime’s dysfunctional management of the country’s crippled economy. On Sunday, hundreds of thousands of Iranians poured into the streets of Iranian cities to mourn a fallen hero and decry the “imperialist” power that killed him.
“At a time when his unprecedented sanctions had stirred unrest inside Iran, the political elite has just been handed a rallying cry,” wrote Mohammad Ali Shabani, a researcher at Soas University in London. “The strike on Suleimani, whose status approached that of national icon, will harden popular sentiment against the U.S. while simultaneously shoring up the regime.”
#Iran Sunday: Gen. #Soleimani’s funeral reaches Mashahd. Millions of Iranians are attending. Note: Iran’s regime orders people to the streets all the time but numbers they get barely make tens of thousand. This is different, it appears genuine. pic.twitter.com/X9JdY4KnLt
— Farnaz Fassihi (@farnazfassihi) January 5, 2020
On Sunday, Iran made its fifth announcement about winding down its obligations to the 2015 nuclear deal. Iranian authorities said that they would no longer abide by restrictions on uranium enrichment, but would return to their previous commitments should the United States withdraw the sanctions whose imposition were also a violation of the pact. The announcement had been expected before Soleimani’s assassination but took on a darker cast as tensions mounted.
In Iraq, too, the backlash was swift. The country’s parliament voted on Sunday to ask for the removal of U.S. troops on Iraqi soil. The resolution was nonbinding and “did not immediately imperil the U.S. presence in Iraq,” wrote The Post’s Erin Cunningham, “but it highlights the head winds the Trump administration faces after the strike, which was seen in Iraq as a violation of sovereignty and as a dangerous escalation by governments across the Middle East.”
For President Trump and some of the Washington foreign policy establishment, though, it still may be worth it. In Trump’s words, Soleimani was “the number one terrorist in the world,” the mastermind behind a generation of asymmetric warfare in the region, as well as various plots against America. In briefings with reporters, U.S. officials justified the targeted killing of Soleimani as an act of “deterrence” based on intelligence that the senior leader was planning a number of “imminent” possible attacks on U.S. interests. But other officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity to my colleagues and other outlets, suggested that the evidence of Soleimani’s direct involvement was “razor thin” and that Trump had chosen the most extreme path of retaliation after pro-Iran militiamen ransacked sections of the U.S. Embassy in Iraq last week.
Soleimani was the head of the Quds Force, a wing of Iran’s powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps that steers the regime’s proxies in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere. These factions have been locked in months of shadow conflict with the United States and its allies in the wake of Trump’s reimposition of sweeping sanctions on Iran after quitting the Obama-era nuclear deal.
On one hand, the Trump administration believes its “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran is working and that killing Soleimani adds to the regime’s internal strains. But Iran’s destabilizing activities in the region — a key reason cited by Trump for reneging on the nonproliferation pact — have only spiked in recent months, including alleged attacks on U.S. positions in Iraq, shipping in the Persian Gulf and a major Saudi oil facility.
….targeted 52 Iranian sites (representing the 52 American hostages taken by Iran many years ago), some at a very high level & important to Iran & the Iranian culture, and those targets, and Iran itself, WILL BE HIT VERY FAST AND VERY HARD. The USA wants no more threats!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 4, 2020
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo declared the world a “safer place” after Soleimani’s death. But the path ahead remains deeply treacherous. “My sense is that we will see an escalation in Iraq,” said Maha Yahya, director of the Carnegie Middle East Center, to my colleague Liz Sly. “But I don’t think the Iranians really want a war with the U.S. I don’t think they are interested in an all-out regional conflict. The problem is that all it takes is one small error and the whole region would be engulfed.”
Amid the crisis, the United States ordered American citizens to leave Iraq and suspended its military cooperation and training programs with Iraqi security forces. The latter action risks undermining the ongoing effort to defeat the extremist Islamic State. And the Trump administration has hardly rallied a united front to its cause, with Pompeo bemoaning how European allies — who are trying to keep afloat the gutted husk of the nuclear deal — were “not helpful” enough.
Sahred From Source link World News
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Rasht, Iran
I’m from Rasht, a central city of the Gilan region, in the north of Iran, near the coast of the Caspian Sea, where I live with my parents. I’m 21. I learn Android App development.
I was born here, grown up here. I don’t remember well of my childhood, but my mom told me this anecdote. At this time I could walk but I hadn’t talked yet. My mom used to go to work in the mornings and I used to be left with my dad. One day my dad decided to go out for some minutes to pay the bills or something like this while I was asleep. He left me with my milk bottle beside me in case I’d woke up. I’d drink it and fall asleep again. But when I woke up, I took it and left the house. It was raining and I had not been wearing a proper clothes. I walked about maybe fifty meters until I reached an electric shop and it got my attention. Then when my dad came, he searched after me everywhere, under beds, in the wardrobes… He then came outside and told the shop keepers to search for me. Finally one of them found me in front of that shop. He took me home. I used to ride my bicycle a lot in a nearby park. I have no brother or sister, so I had to play with myself most of the times. Riding was one of my hobbies. I also used to have pets like chickens, rabbits and some birds…
As a teenager, I was surrounded with my own little world. When I first read the Harry Potter books I really became obsessed with everything related to it. I started the habit of reading on my mom’s recommendation and though she didn’t approve at first that I chose Harry Potter, she didn’t stop me either. I had heard of Harry before that time but it never got my attention until I started to read it, and then I couldn’t get out of it. I kept reading the books one after another… It was like I was a part of it, like I wasn’t born in this real world. I had my own group of friends which we had a lot of fun together. I had this obsession with my appearance as a girl to be pretty and well-dressed and everything. But time passed and I lost a lot of my friends. I have no longer that obsession of being just pretty. But I am still a huge fan of Harry’s world! I’m also in love with Paris. It was also always my fantasy to visit this city since I was a little kid, mainly because of the cartoon Anastasia. I have this cliché that it’s a love city or something like that. I’ve watched movies related to Paris I just fall over and over in love again for this city…
In Iran girls and women are mostly fashionable but in different ways than in western countries. As you probably know we can’t wear t-shirts or skirts or these things in street. We wear what we call a manto which is like a long blouse, and a scarf. As for me I like to wear Converse. I love these shoes. With jeans, a medium manto, and long scarfs. Some women wear hijab but they are also very stylish. But chador is not mentioned in the Quran. Wearing chador, I was never ok with it. It was not in our culture.
On my free time, most of the time, I’m alone. I usually watch movies or read books. I like Disneys, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Supernatural, Game of Thrones… With my friends or family, we sometimes are going to the cinema or we meet in a café, or as girls we go shopping, obviously.
I like the weather in Rasht, which is often misty rainy. Actually the city changed a lot in the two or three past years by the government. It has now a lot of bazars and malls and a lot of people from villages come here to sell their products. Recently one of the oldest streets of Rasht has become something like Paris’s Champs Élysées. Rasht is not the best city in Iran but I love it most. It has recently been designated by the UNESCO as one of the 47 most creative cities for food. As for Iranian food, I love kashke bademjoon, it’s made of eggplant and yoghurt, and ghorme sabzi, a vegetables stew with beans and lamb or veal, served with rice. But I also love pizza and hamburger! We usually eat food for lunch which is made from rice. But for dinner we eat food with bread.
I love music. I usually can’t go a day without listening to music. I listen to almost every kind of music. As for Iranian singers, I like Ehsan Khaje Amiry and Reza Yazdani. There’s good female singers, like Googoosh, Sogand, Ebi… Googoosh is a well-known Iranian singer and she sang a lot of songs in different languages. She is like 67 or something now. Women can’t sing in Iran legally (at least if there’s some men in the public) so there are two kinds of Iranian singers, some that lives and work here in Iran, like Ehsan and Reza, and some who live and work in other countries like Googoosh, Ebi… And we listen to both of them. It is illegal to listen to these singers, or western music, so you can’t hear it on medias like our national TV, but people always do what they like. We have a lot of channels that are based in other countries like TV Persia, Manoto, Gem group… Nowadays people can have access to almost everything so hiding or something is quite ridiculous, it won’t be hidden for so long. As for western music, I like Back Street Boys, Enrique Iglesias, Sam Smith, Sia… I also like David Garrett musics. He plays violine an he is awesome. Whenever I’m coding I listen to his music. I also like Frank Sinatra, Glen Campbell, or Matt Monro.
I might be going to a trip to Mashahd soon, with our university. It’s a holy city for Muslims and Iranians. It has a lot of amazing places, and was also the city of so many poets, like Ferdowsi. Ferdowsi (a.940-1020) was one of the most famous and important poets of Iran. A lot of people believe that our language was saved by him. Mashahd has lots of myths and stories that are famous among us. So many heroes that became our symbols. I have travelled there like 3 or 4 times. But travelling with friends is something else. We went there like 3 years ago, with my friends, and it was awesome. That’s why I really hope to go there again. I would like to go again to Shiraz. It’s an amazing city. It’s one of the most famous cities in Iran, for many reasons. A lot of well-known poets of Iran are from there, like Sa’adi and Hafiz. It has spectacular gardens and buildings. It’s also near the ancient city of Persepolis where The Great Cyrus rolled. I just never get tired of there, though I’ve just visited there once.
I always wanted to be adventurous, like travelling in a VW Kombi and discover new places, experiencing new things, sleeping beneath the stars… But until now it hadn’t happened, living in a city with its problems, and a lot of other reasons. And maybe yeah they are just excuses. Maybe I should just stand up, pack my things and hit the road one of these days.
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