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Iran Internet Control: Tehran Tightens Grip On Web

By ALI AKBAR DAREINI and BRIAN MURPHY 04/16/12 01:06 PM ET AP

TEHRAN, Iran -- Iran calls it the "soft war" with the West: Battles to control, defend and monitor the Internet and other high-level telecommunications. The latest move came quietly when the powerful Revolutionary Guard recently launched what it claims is a hack-proof communications network for its high-level commanders.

Largely overshadowed by the showdowns over Iran's nuclear program, the efforts to build a cyber-fortress have become a priority among leaders fearful of Internet espionage and virus attacks from abroad and seeking to choke off opposition outlets at home.

The drive also highlights the stepped up attempts by many nations – particularly across the Middle East – to filter the Web after social networking sites played such a crucial role in the Arab Spring uprisings.

In a video message for Iranian new year last month, President Barack Obama denounced what he called the "electronic curtain" that keeps ordinary Iranians from reaching out to Americans and the West.

"We are not in an imaginary state of threats or sanctions," Revolutionary Guard Deputy Cmdr. Hossein Salami told Guard leaders in late March as he inaugurated the new closed communications system called "Basir," or Perspective. "Threats and sanctions are practically being enforced against us. Communications have changed the picture of the world including threats and wars."

The system is vaguely described as a something akin to a closed mobile phone network, possibly involving special relay towers and passcodes.

The Guard's network is separate from Iran's wider goal of creating a so-called "clean" Internet, a plan not fully explained by authorities but apparently seeking to weed out non-sanctioned content.

The Guard's new communications system reflects the increased emphasis on high-level security amid tensions over Iran's nuclear ambitions and the possibility of a pre-emptive Israeli strike to stop what the West suspects is a program aimed at building weapons.

Basir was unveiled days after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ordered the creation of an Internet oversight agency that included top military, security and political figures in the country's boldest attempt yet to control the Web.

The panel is headed by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and includes powerful figures in the security establishment such as the intelligence chief, the commander of the Revolutionary Guards and the country's top police chief.

Iranian officials have repeatedly claimed that websites with servers controlled from outside the country can't be trusted. The deputy intelligence chief in charge of technology, identified by the state only by his last name Ahangaran, was quoted in February as saying the "Internet is not an instrument of threat or espionage. It's a spy itself."

Iran's police chief, Esmail Ahmadi Moghadam, called Google an "instrument of espionage" rather than a search engine.

Iran claims that it now has enough homegrown technology to sharply limit the reach of the Web or develop military communications with protective cocoons such as Basir.

"The armed forces had no trust in the telecommunication equipment produced by other countries. So, an indigenous multilayer nationwide system was designed and built," said an article in a magazine published by the Guard.

But Iran's civilian telecommunications officials have used technology from a host of foreign companies, including Nokia Siemens Network, to boost capabilities of monitoring mobile and Web traffic – particularly after the unprecedented street protests and clashes touched off by Ahmadinejad's disputed 2009 re-election.

The Guard – which already runs every key military and industrial program in Iran – has added cyber cop to its portfolio in recent years after virus attacks such as the highly specialized Stuxnet in 2010.

Iran has blamed Israel and the U.S. for Stuxnet, which targeted nuclear facilities and other industrial sites. Tehran acknowledged the malicious software affected a limited number of centrifuges, an essential tool used in nuclear fuel production. But Iran has said its scientists discovered and neutralized the malware before it could cause serious damage.

Iranian leaders also have long maintained that the Islamic Republic is subject to a "cultural invasion" by enemies aimed at promoting dissent and undermining the ruling system.

Officials have made various proposals to develop a type of homegrown Internet, but few details on the logistics have been disclosed. Minister of Information Technology and Telecommunications Reza Taqipour said the first phase of a "national Internet" will be launched by June.

Experts say this would require special servers controlled by Iran.

Iranian users currently have relatively wide access to the Web and often use filter-busting proxy websites to access blocked sites such as those of the political opposition or some Western governments.

Late last year, the Obama administration opened a "virtual embassy" website as part of Washington's attempts at outreach to Iranians despite three decades without diplomatic ties. The site was quickly blocked by Iranian authorities.

New rules announced earlier this year limited the speed of home Internet links, complicating links to video and other data-heavy downloads. It also required Internet cafe owners to keep customer logs and install surveillance cameras.

Experts in Internet technology question whether Iran will try to create a completely closed Web universe – which is possible but exceedingly complicated – or simply take cues from China's "Great Firewall" policies that tightly control the Web and cut links at any signs of politically uncomfortable chatter or postings.

"It would take years to engage the support of Iranian businesses and businesses from other countries that met Iran's approval to connect to a new Internet that was hosted only on Iranian-owned servers," said Jeffrey Carr, a cyber intelligence expert and consultant to U.S. and other governments on cyber defenses.

"If they think that they can set this up in a matter of months, it has to be a highly filtered Internet which is still hosted on the infrastructure of the World Wide Web," he added. "I really don't think anything else is feasibly possible in this short a period of time."

___

Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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TEHRAN, Iran -- Iran calls it the "soft war" with the West: Battles to control, defend and monitor the Internet and other high-level telecommunications. The latest move came quietly when the powerful ...
TEHRAN, Iran -- Iran calls it the "soft war" with the West: Battles to control, defend and monitor the Internet and other high-level telecommunications. The latest move came quietly when the powerful ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
11:15 PM on 04/17/2012
What if Iran took a completely different tack, and started selling hard goods for the international market, and not guns or something stupid like that, but like, car stereos, or blenders, something that households around the world need, and might purchase from/through Iran? Globalization is always a prickly topic, but hey, 2012, how about we try to learn to get along and do business together, even if we don't like each other all that much? Some people would probably flip their lids if regional countries decided to start doing business differently, and work in cooperation despite their differences, especially in spite of their differences, to demonstrate to themselves as well as the rest of the world that when there's grownups on-scene, even the Iranians and the Israelis can work in professional partnership. What kind of world do we want to live in, here? Missile Command?
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Baghooli
Immortals!
07:21 PM on 04/17/2012
Talking about censorship, why this comments were deleted after being published for a while now!
When there is U.S. Cyber Command (Stuxne virus!) then there is need for "Cyber fortress", western governments are the one starting cyber wars and forcing limit on freedom of navigation on Internet!
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Baghooli
Immortals!
07:42 PM on 04/17/2012
Nevermind!
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07:24 PM on 04/19/2012
That put a dent in your censorship theory, didn't it baghaali?
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Baghooli
Immortals!
05:52 PM on 04/17/2012
When there is U.S. Cyber Command (Stuxne virus!) then there is need for "Cyber fortress", western governments are the one starting cyber wars and forcing limit on freedom of navigation on Internet!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Farsha
08:46 AM on 04/17/2012
Propaganda
11:51 AM on 04/17/2012
You are delusional.
http://en.rsf.org/iran-iran-12-03-2012,42070.html
Meanwhile the authorities have fortified filtering and their technical capacity to closely monitor the Web. Individuals and groups alike have been arrested in order to identify and neutralize dissident networks and intimate bloggers and journalists. For the first time, four netizens have been given the death penalty, and three of them may be executed at any time. Iran’s already harsh repression has become even more brutal.

Sentenced to death for their online activities This is the first time that netizens have been sentenced to death. On January 29, 2012, the Iranian Farsnews agency, with close ties to the Guardians of the Revolution, confirmed the sentencing to death of Web developer Saeed Malekpour, a permanent resident of Canada, for “anti-government agitation” and “insulting Islam.”

In early 2012, Iran’s Supreme Court also confirmed the death sentence for IT student Vahid Asghari and website administrator Ahmadreza Hashempour. ...

These four netizens, who are between 25 and 40, are victims of a plot orchestrated by the Center for the Surveillance of Organized Crime, an entity created illegally in 2008 by the Revolutionary Guards. Under torture, the accused admitted having links with websites that criticize Islam and the Iranian government, and to having intended to “mislead” Iranian youth by distributing pornographic content. They were also forced to confess to participating in a plot backed by the United States and Israel.
11:55 AM on 04/17/2012
You are in denial, to be charitable.

http://en.rsf.org/iran-press-freedom-violations-recounted-16-04-2012,41718.html
The blogger and human rights activist Kouhyar Goudarzi, who kept a blog called Kouhyar, was finally released on bail of 100 million tomans (90,000 euros) on 12 April. Following his arrest on 1 August 2011 in Tehran, he spent several months in Evin prison without the authorities saying where he was being held...

Reporters Without Borders is appalled to learn that more journalists and netizens have been arrested or have been given long jail sentences in the past few days...

Mehran Faraji, a journalist with the newspaper Shargh and the now-closed newspaper Etemad Melli, was arrested on 3 April in order to serve a six-month jail sentence on a charge go anti-government propaganda....

Rihaneh Tabatabai, another Shargh journalist, was notified on 2 April that a Tehran revolutionary court has sentenced her to a year in prison. Arrested at her home by intelligence ministry officials on 12 December 2010, she was freed on 16 January 2011 on bail of 10 million tomans (7,500 euros).

The netizen Mansoureh Behkish has also just learned that a Tehran revolutionary court has sentenced her to four and half years in prison on charges of anti-government propaganda and creating the “Mothers in Mourning” movement in order to “meet and conspire against national security.”
07:44 AM on 04/17/2012
Iran is on a right track to identify Internet as spy and war tool. I wish other countries keenly takes the notice of this and follows the same path to protect their country's security and Sovereignty. Foreign intrusion in the name of freedom has become very common . There is a lot of naivety on peoples part globaly about all this issues. Internet, media and social sites are the tools of modern warfare and countries that use this smartly are going to have and edge in future.
10:08 AM on 04/17/2012
Iran is a dictatorship run by religious fanatics,without tight control of almost everything they would be overthrown and that day is coming. China is another 1 party dictatorship that would lose control without military control of all aspects of life. Add North Korea and Saudi Arabia,Syria and a number of others to this list.
04:37 PM on 04/17/2012
As opposed to the U.S. who is a terror fanatic? Nearly all aspects of electronic communication, social networking sites, searches, etc. are scrubbed by the government (courtesy of the Patriot Act and others) to search out "terrorist" links and ties. They even sent the FBI to interrogate an elementary school kid for a half an hour before his mom could even show up because of a stupid, harmless post he made about the president. We may not be a dictatorship, but do not fool yourself or try to fool others that we live in the "land of the free". Our freedom has been sacked for paranoia and "security". Enjoy.
10:36 AM on 04/17/2012
"There is a lot of naivety on peoples part..."

There's nothing like applauding the censorship and information gathering of authoritarian countries to show that you're not naive. Thank you for being so sophisticated as Iranians are denied the right to free expression and free press.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bmiller616
Live Music with Bernie Miller/FB
07:44 AM on 04/17/2012
Iran has this guard force that is totally out of control in that country.. They are for themselves, nothing else.. They live next door to you and will hunt you out just to get what they want.. It is a total sham to the people. The government has no control over this group...
07:41 AM on 04/17/2012
Nokia Siemens Network, now Trovicor, sold surveillance technology to Iran, Syria and other countries.

Barry French, member of the Executive Board at Nokia Siemens Networks during the hearing on new information technologies and human rights in June 2010:

"There is an additional conflict rooted in the fact that the human rights environment that exists in any particular country can change dramatically during the lifespan of the networks we provide. We are always at risk of finding that we have deployed technology that seemed appropriate for use by one government only to find it misused by the next."

Meaning: 'Blimey, we've only sold some extensive surveillance technologies to the bad guys' governments. How could we possibly imagine they would misuse it?'

Yeah, who would have planned on that?
06:46 AM on 04/17/2012
It is hard to imagine any screen saver in Iran not being that of the "beloved" Khomeni.... or one of the other glorious leaders. Amadenajad will have a second career as a haberdasher when he leaves office, he's one smart dresser.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charlotte Bonnie
Agnostic. Turkish-American. Classical liberal. Gay
06:40 AM on 04/17/2012
One day that ugly tall dam wall will be cracked too and the flood is going to be awesome washing away all the mullahs.
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06:12 AM on 04/17/2012
The squeeze President Obama on Iran's government is telling. Further evidence that Iran is has no intention to act in good faith and become a civilized and responsible member of the world community. Reminds me of Khadaffi when he thought Reagan was bluffing-He thought wrong. Iran is seriously underestimating this US President who has used the peaceful approach-But, only as Teddy Roosevelt would use it in-"Speak softly but carry a big stick". As the President Clearly Stated-"The clock's ticking".
11:02 PM on 04/16/2012
The tighter they clinch their fist, more will slip through their fingers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
braigno2
In the end it all comes down to money.
09:05 PM on 04/16/2012
hahaha! they are paranoids! you may slow down the wave but they 'll never stop it !for a tsunami of cyberhell wil rain on them inthe future
r8dj
I could use another hour of not this.
08:13 PM on 04/16/2012
Iran's attempt to censor its citizens into submission.
08:03 PM on 04/16/2012
Every day I pray to Allah hoping someone will assassinate Mahmoud.
11:14 PM on 04/16/2012
What good with that do? I hear the most common male name is "Mahmoud".
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Thummper
05:25 AM on 04/17/2012
Which one ? Better he do something about the mullahs instead.
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07:57 PM on 04/16/2012
But he had talks with Mr Obama, I see the light......