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Joined December 2024
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
حلقة اليوم شوي مختلفة عن كل حلقات البرنامج،، رغم ان الطالب ماكان موجود اثناء تصوير الحلقة إلا ان البطل الرحّالة المغوار الشاطر رجل المهمات @sultanwho محورها .. حلقة اليوم لجمهورنا الحبيب الراقي في أرض الصومال. #خلكم_شطار. #سنة_أولى_سياسة #Somaliland
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
في مرحلة جيواستراتيجية أكثر تعقيدًا، تدرك الإمارات أن التعامل مع التحديات المقبلة يتطلب ثلاثة مرتكزات: الدبلوماسية الفاعلة، والروابط الاقتصادية المتينة، والردع القادر والموثوق. وستظل الإمارات ملتزمة بأمن واستقرار الخليج العربي، لأنه أساس للازدهار المشترك.
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
معلومة وليست رأي : من روّج وهلّل لخبر تحويل الأموال إلى إيران للانتقاص من الدور الإماراتي وتهميشه حاول إلصاق أفعاله بالإمارات في بداية الحرب الإيرانية قاموا بدفع مبالغ مالية للحوثيين واتفق معهم عن طريق وسيط أولاً وعبر أذرعه المباشرة ثانياً لعدم تحركهم وضربهم أو إغلاق باب المندب "دعم مالي مقابل تعهد الحوثي بعدم ضربهم" المعلومة الثانية تم الاتفاق مع وسيط آخر دولة مجاورة على تحويل مبلغ مالي لإيران ومساندتها ودعم مشاريعها في حالة توقف إيران عن ضربهم، مع تعهد إضافي بعدم تحرك الحوثي، وإبقاء قضية مضيق هرمز معلّقة كيفما تشاء إيران، وعدم تدخلهم طالما لم يتحرك الحوثي محاولة إخفاء الوقائع والانتقاص مما قامت به الإمارات بتسمية الأمور بمسمياتها ومواجهة العدوان الإيراني في كل الجبهات أرهقت من كان يحاول ليّ ذراع الإمارات، وضعفت مواقفه الهزيلة لذلك هم مستمرون بإطلاق الشائعات وترويجها في إعلامهم لإخفاء أفعالهم وتحركاتهم الحقيقية التي تعارض بياناتهم وتكشف ضعفهم
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
Messages from inside Iran Utter despair and a feeling of total betrayal
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Even the Islamic regime media posted UAE’s MOFA statement lol.
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
For God’s sake, even the Iranian government’s own media is repeating the UAE’s denial of this absurd claim. When both sides agree the story is nonsense, perhaps it’s time to stop believing it.
UAE Categorically Denies Media Reports Alleging Transfer of Funds to Iran
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RT @ssd_gov_ae: The strength of a position is not measured by the intensity of its rhetoric, but by the ability to express opinions in a wa…
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
🚨 The UAE has officially denied reports that it transferred funds to Iran, including claims involving $3 billion. The UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs called the allegations “entirely false and unfounded,” stating that no frozen Iranian funds have been released, transferred, or facilitated through the UAE. Beyond the denial itself, the story never passed a basic reality check. Anyone familiar with sanctions compliance, correspondent banking, regulatory approvals, and the extensive oversight involved in moving money in a heavily sanctioned environment knows that transferring billions of dollars to Iran is not something that happens quietly or without scrutiny. This claim failed even the most basic test of how the global financial system actually works.
🚨 The Islamic Republic keeps lashing out at the UAE because the UAE became one of the regime’s biggest sanctions-evasion hubs -and a safe haven for massive amounts of stolen elite wealth moved out of Iran. But that dependence also became a trap. By concentrating so much of its financial activity in Dubai and the UAE, the regime exposed key parts of its sanctions-evasion system to a country deeply tied to the U.S.-led global financial system. American pressure and financial monitoring increasingly turned those same networks into vulnerabilities. For years, the regime used the UAE - especially Dubai - to move oil revenue, bypass sanctions, operate front companies, recycle money, conduct shadow banking, transfer illicit funds through currency exchanges, and park enormous wealth outside Iran. The United States understood this dynamic for years. Rather than immediately shutting every channel down, U.S. sanctions policy often focused on tracing, monitoring, and tightening pressure over time. The more dependent Iran became on UAE-linked financial infrastructure, the easier those networks became to identify, sanction, pressure, and disrupt. Milad Torabi Fard, an international economics researcher, openly acknowledged this inside Iran. He said the regime’s dependence on the UAE had become a strategic vulnerability because major parts of Iran’s economy were tied to a country heavily exposed to U.S. and Western financial pressure. Now, after Iranian missile and drone attacks targeting Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Fujairah, that escape route appears to be narrowing even faster. Put simply: the UAE is reportedly cracking down on many of the same financial networks that helped the regime survive sanctions for years. Reports indicate the UAE has already started targeting: ⚪️ IRGC-linked accounts and entities ⚪️ Front and shell companies tied to Iranian oil sales ⚪️ Money changers and sarraf networks used for illicit transfers ⚪️ Shipping and trade routes linked to sanctions evasion Dozens of IRGC-linked money changers were reportedly arrested, offices shut down, and companies dismantled. Analysts describe this as one of the most serious blows to Iran’s sanctions-evasion infrastructure in years because these trust-based networks took decades to build. And the scale is enormous. Before the escalation, Iran reportedly moved around $43 billion annually in crude exports, much of it flowing through UAE-linked channels. U.S. Treasury-linked reporting allegedly identified $8.6 billion in Iran-related financial flows in 2024 alone, with more than 70% involving UAE-based entities, most of them in Dubai. Now, reports suggest the UAE is considering - or has already begun - freezing billions of dollars in Iranian-linked assets. Estimates of regime-connected exposure inside the UAE run into the tens of billions, including real estate, bank accounts, shell companies, and investment networks tied to regime elites and the IRGC. In other words, the regime attacked one of the very countries that helped it financially survive. And in doing so, it may have accelerated the collapse of one of its most important sanctions-evasion and wealth-protection systems outside Iran.
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
🇦🇪 STATEMENT FROM UAE: “The UAE categorically denies media claims regarding the transfer of funds to Iran” There is a lot of infiltration of propaganda especially this past week. Bots are all fired up, too.
🇦🇪 NEW: Reuters reports the UAE has agreed to unlock between $10–20 billion for Iran, according to multiple sources, with at least $3 billion already made available. Sources say the arrangement was agreed in exchange for a halt to Iranian attacks on the UAE following weeks of strikes during the U.S.-Israel war with Iran. The development comes as Tehran and Washington are reportedly in the final stages of negotiations that could also lead to the release of tens of billions of dollars in frozen Iranian oil revenues. A UAE official stated: “The UAE’s foreign policy is guided by promoting de-escalation and reducing tensions across the region, while advancing lasting peace and stability.”
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
BREAKING: The UAE flat out denies any money being transferred to Iran.
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
Jun 12
This is 99% BS. I'm not at all an expert on banking, but having spent time with OFAC and other sanctions-related stuff over the past month I can say: No bank in their right mind would touch such a deal without a clear waiver by the USA (which has to be published beforehand). There would be no clear way to just transfer billions from the UAE towards Iran, at least not through the banking system. We're not talking about some money laundering scheme as it has happened before, we're talking about the transfer of allegedly $3 billion at once. You can't use the normal IRGC money laundering channels for that, it must have been an official transaction from bank to bank. Iran isn't part of the SWIFT network, so the only option would be cash. Transferring 3 billion in cash or even gold is an enourmous logistical endavour. The first challenge would be to even aquire that much cash (from the UAE central bank I guess), then you'd have to ship it. You'd need a bigass cargo plane (777) or multiple smaller shipments with smaller planes (737). The math ain't mathing. Waiting for official confirmation, but I guess this is just a psyop
"Two regional sources told Reuters the UAE had agreed to release a total of $10 billion, more than $3 billion of which had already been delivered. "Two other sources with knowledge of the arrangement put the total funds involved at $20 billion, adding that the ​move had been agreed in return for a halt to Iranian attacks on the UAE. One of the sources with knowledge of the arrangement also said a first tranche of $3 ​billion had already been made available." reuters.com/world/middle-eas…
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Logical thinking.
Jun 12
This is 99% BS. I'm not at all an expert on banking, but having spent time with OFAC and other sanctions-related stuff over the past month I can say: No bank in their right mind would touch such a deal without a clear waiver by the USA (which has to be published beforehand). There would be no clear way to just transfer billions from the UAE towards Iran, at least not through the banking system. We're not talking about some money laundering scheme as it has happened before, we're talking about the transfer of allegedly $3 billion at once. You can't use the normal IRGC money laundering channels for that, it must have been an official transaction from bank to bank. Iran isn't part of the SWIFT network, so the only option would be cash. Transferring 3 billion in cash or even gold is an enourmous logistical endavour. The first challenge would be to even aquire that much cash (from the UAE central bank I guess), then you'd have to ship it. You'd need a bigass cargo plane (777) or multiple smaller shipments with smaller planes (737). The math ain't mathing. Waiting for official confirmation, but I guess this is just a psyop
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
NEW | U.A.E. Ministry of Foreign Affairs has denied reports that funds were transferred from the Emirates to Iran.
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
It’s interesting how the pieces fit together. Members of the Muslim Brotherhood who are designated as terrorists in the UAE fled to London, where they were able to continue operating through investment, media, education, and real-estate ventures. One of the companies carried the name “Yas,” a brand strongly associated with the UAE. Then came the reported $3 billion story by Bloomberg that was denied by both the UAE and Iran, along with an extension of that weird? narrative by @Reuters targeting the UAE. Viewed individually, these may seem unrelated. Viewed together, they look increasingly like part of a broader effort to undermine a country that has maintained one of the clearest and most consistent positions in the region.
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
The United Arab Emirates has firmly denied reports claiming that funds were transferred from the UAE to Iran, including allegations involving $3 billion.
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
The UAE “categorically denies transfer of funds to Iran.” Reuters quoted unnamed sources that the UAE had flown $3 billion to Iran. Reuters copied earlier Iranian reports.
Replying to @mofauae
UAE Categorically Denies Media Reports Alleging Transfer of Funds to Iran
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
The United Arab Emirates “categorically denied” reports alleging the transfer of funds from the UAE to the Islamic Republic of Iran, “including allegations concerning $3 billion.” In a statement, the UAE’s Foreign Ministry said these allegations “are entirely false and unfounded, stressing that no frozen Iranian funds have been released, transferred, or facilitated through the UAE.”
The UAE has reportedly agreed to release $10 billion for Iran, more than $3 billion of which have already been delivered, in return for a halt to Iranian attacks on the UAE, Reuters reports citing unnamed sources. Reuters stated it could not establish whether the funds belonged to the UAE or originate in frozen Iranian accounts in the ⁠UAE banking system, or elsewhere. A UAE official, asked to comment on the transfer, said the country was trying to ease tension and foster peace.
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Rauda Altenaiji retweeted
الإمارات تنفي بشكل قاطع مزاعم إعلامية بشأن نقل أموال إلى إيران نفت الإمارات العربية المتحدة بشكل قاطع ما ورد في بعض وسائل الإعلام الدولية بشأن نقل أو تحويل أي مبالغ مالية من دولة الإمارات إلى الجمهورية الإسلامية الإيرانية، بما في ذلك الادعاءات المتعلقة بمبلغ 3 مليارات دولار. وأكدت وزارة الخارجية، في بيان لها، أن هذه المزاعم غير صحيحة ولا تستند إلى أي وقائع أو معلومات موثوقة، مشددةً على أنه لم يتم الإفراج عن أو تحويل أو نقل أي أموال إيرانية مجمّدة عبر دولة الإمارات. كما دعت الوزارة وسائل الإعلام إلى تحري الدقة واستقاء المعلومات من مصادرها الرسمية، وعدم تداول أو نشر معلومات غير موثقة أو ادعاءات تفتقر إلى المصداقية.
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