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...
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...