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Iran's Kayhan Daily Publishes Editorial Celebrating Bounty on Trump, Predicting His "Death"

Kayhan, the Tehran newspaper that functions as the editorial mouthpiece of Iran's Supreme Leader's office, published a piece  framing US President Donald Trump as a marked man whose assassination is both inevitable and religiously sanctioned — the latest and most explicit escalation in a weeks-long campaign of Iranian and Iran-aligned media calling openly for his killing. The piece, bylined to a "Kayhan Int'l Staff Writer" and posted to the paper's English-language site, does not merely report on recent bounty announcements targeting Trump. It celebrates them, casts the president's death as a foregone religious certainty, and extends the pool of prospective killers to nationals of multiple countries and ethnic groups, describing the "promise of paradise" for anyone who carries out the act. The Levant Files is not reproducing the language, which functions less as commentary than as an incitement to violence against a head of state. An outlet that ...
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Iranian Media Cast US Losses As Proof Of Deterrence Amid Fears Of Wider War

Iranian media placed reported American military losses in Jordan at the centre of their coverage of the confrontation with the United States over the past 24 hours, presenting them as evidence that Tehran can still impose significant costs on Washington despite continuing US air strikes. The prevailing message across state-aligned and conservative outlets was that Iran had restored a measure of deterrence by demonstrating its ability to hit US forces outside the immediate Gulf theatre. Centrist and opposition-oriented publications, however, gave greater attention to the risks of escalation, disruption in the Strait of Hormuz and the growing effects of the fighting on civilians in southern Iran. Mahr News⁠ prominently reported a US Central Command statement saying that two American service members had been killed in Jordan, while one remained missing and four others were wounded. The agency framed CENTCOM’s announcement as an acknowledgment that Iranian missile and drone attacks had inf...

Jordan's Second Front: How Iran Is Fighting a War for Amman's Streets, Not Just Its Airspace

While the headlines of the past 24 hours have fixed on the deaths of two US service members in a July 17 Iranian ballistic missile and drone strike on Jordan's Muwaffaq Salti Air Base — the first confirmed American combat fatalities of this phase of the war, and the trigger for Tehran's declaration that the June memorandum of understanding is now "effectively suspended" — a quieter and arguably more consequential contest has been unfolding in parallel. It is a fight over the loyalty of the Jordanian public itself. CENTCOM confirmed that two American troops were killed and a third remains missing after Iranian ballistic missiles and drones struck US positions in Jordan on the night of July 17, with four additional personnel medically evacuated to Jordanian hospitals before being discharged. The US responded with an eighth consecutive night of strikes on Iranian targets, which it said were intended in part to "swiftly punish" the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Co...

Iran Declares Islamabad MoU Void as Gulf War Escalates, US Reinforces Israel with New Tanker Fleet

Iran announced on Saturday that it has suspended all commitments under the Pakistan-brokered Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding with the United States, marking the formal collapse of the fragile arrangement that had sought to end hostilities between Washington and Tehran after last month's war. The declaration came as Iranian forces struck US-linked infrastructure across Kuwait, Bahrain and Jordan for a second consecutive day, and as Washington moved additional aerial refueling assets into Israel amid reports that President Donald Trump is weighing a broader offensive against Iranian territory. Tehran declares the MoU dead Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi said Tehran considers itself no longer bound by the 14-point Islamabad MoU, arguing that the United States had already dismantled the agreement through repeated violations. "America not only violated the memorandum of understanding but also dismantled it," Gharibabadi said, according to Iran's sta...

Nobody Claims It, Nobody Names It: The Silent War Being Fought Over Autonomous Kurdistan

Nearly every night this week, air-defense batteries over Erbil have lit up the sky intercepting drones that no one will own. On 17 July alone, Kurdish counter-terrorism forces reported downing 16 explosive-laden drones over the Kurdistan Region's capital — the fourth such swarm in three days — while a separate strike hit an ammunition depot in Sulaimaniyah province and another wave targeted a camp belonging to the exiled Iranian-Kurdish opposition party Komala, killing at least eight of its members, according to the group. Four drones were shot down near the US consulate in Erbil the same evening. In the space of 48 hours, at least six distinct attacks landed across Iraqi Kurdistan. International coverage has folded all of this into the broader US-Iran war as a single undifferentiated category: "Iran attacks Iraqi Kurdistan." That framing is not wrong, but it is incomplete in a way that obscures the story's real center of gravity. Because as Iraqi and Kurdish security...

The Gulf's Quiet War: How Water Became the Battlefield No One Is Watching

Every night for the past week, the world's attention has followed the same script: American strikes on Iranian coastal and transport targets, Iranian missiles fired back at Gulf states, oil prices twitching, the Strait of Hormuz named again and again as the conflict's central prize. But buried inside the hourly bulletins of the past 24 hours is a story that deserves to be read on its own terms, not as a bullet point in a live blog — because it may prove more dangerous, in the long run, than any single round of missiles. Water has become a battlefield. And both sides are now fighting on it, in the open, without pretense. What happened in the last 12 hours In the early hours of Saturday, 18 July, U.S. Central Command confirmed a seventh consecutive night of strikes on Iranian territory, hitting what it described as surveillance sites, military logistics, underground weapons storage and maritime capabilities along the coast facing the Strait of Hormuz. Iranian state television rep...

Inferno Over the Gulf: A Region on the Brink as US-Iran War Enters Its Sixth Consecutive Night of Fire

The Middle East convulsed once more overnight as the United States pounded Iranian territory for a sixth consecutive night, tearing through bridges, railways, power stations and coastal radar installations in a campaign that has now killed at least 38 people and wounded more than 400 since a fragile truce collapsed. In return, Tehran unleashed a sweeping wave of retaliation across five Gulf states — a spasm of missiles and drones that has turned the Strait of Hormuz, and the wider waterways around it, into one of the most dangerous chokepoints on Earth. What began seven days ago as a rekindling of hostilities has, by Friday, hardened into something far graver: a widening war that increasingly resembles regional conflagration rather than contained confrontation. The ceasefire memorandum signed in Switzerland weeks ago now lies in tatters, its provisions abandoned amid a relentless cycle of strike and counterstrike that shows no sign of slowing. Sixth Night, Same Fury US Central Co...

Defiance, Fatigue, and Distrust: What Persian-Language Media Is Saying About the US-Iran Clash

As the renewed exchange of fire between Washington and Tehran enters its second week following the collapse of the Islamabad memorandum, Persian-language media — spanning hardline outlets inside Iran, reformist and pragmatic-conservative papers, state wire services, and diaspora/exile channels broadcasting from abroad — has produced a dense stream of analysis and opinion over the past 24 to 48 hours. Read together, the coverage reveals a media landscape less united behind a single narrative than fractured along the same fault lines that run through Iranian politics itself: whether to fight on or return to the table, and who is to blame for the return of war. Hardline press: defiance and a demand to escalate Unsurprisingly, the sharpest rhetoric comes from Kayhan, the standard-bearer of Iran's hardline camp. In its "Kayhan and Readers" column, the paper argued that limited retaliatory strikes on US bases in Bahrain and Kuwait carry no real cost for Washington and therefore...

'Guardian angel' or protection racket*

  China Daily editorial The US administration has never disguised its instinct to turn geopolitics into a commercial transaction. US President Donald Trump's latest proposal — that the United States should become the "guardian angel" of the Strait of Hormuz and charge other countries for safe passage — takes that logic to a telling degree. The proposal marks a striking departure from decades of US maritime doctrine. From the Barbary Wars onward, successive US administrations argued that strategic waterways should remain open because global commerce depended on them. Transforming one of the world's busiest sea lanes into a toll booth is a reversal of principle. It is also a reversal driven by a crisis Washington has itself created as well as its disregard for the fact that the strait is not US territory. The latest US strikes on Iranian targets, followed by Iranian retaliation, have once again turned the Strait of Hormuz into the world's most dangerous maritime cho...

"A Sign of Vulnerability": The US Launches a New Campaign Against Iran*

  RIA Novosti, David Narmania   For two months, Washington and Tehran conducted ceasefire negotiations — only for Donald Trump to tear up the effort three weeks after the memorandum was signed. Iran says the agreement has effectively collapsed and that the Americans have resumed the war. What comes next is the subject of this report. Exchange of Strikes Since 8 July, the United States has struck Iran almost daily. The official pretext was Iranian action against commercial vessels crossing the Strait of Hormuz. Overnight into Wednesday, 15 July, air strikes continued for seven hours, and by that afternoon US Central Command had announced a new wave of bombing, beginning at 13:00 Moscow time. According to CENTCOM's statement, the goal is to degrade Tehran's military capacity in the Strait of Hormuz. Most of the strikes have hit cities in the south of the country and along the Persian Gulf coast. According to Hossein Kermanpour, spokesman for Iran's Ministry of Health, the num...