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Iran Says Serious About Diplomacy but Ready for Defense as Talks with US Continue

Iranian officials have reiterated that Tehran is committed to pursuing diplomacy to end what it describes as the US-Israeli “war of aggression,” while stressing that the country remains fully prepared to defend its security and national interests. According to the Tasnim News Agency, the Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi made the remarks on Monday during a meeting in Tehran with Pakistan’s Federal Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, who is visiting Iran for consultations with senior officials. Araqchi said Iran is serious about diplomatic efforts aimed at ending the conflict but warned that Tehran would “spare no effort” to strengthen its defensive preparedness. He described what he called “contradictory and excessive demands” by the United States as a major obstacle to progress in negotiations. Referring to past experiences, Araqchi cited what he characterized as Washington’s breach of commitments and “betrayal of diplomacy,” saying Iran’s decision to enter talks was based on a responsible a...
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Persian Media Divide: How Iran's State TV and Independent Outlets Frame Trump's Latest Iran Moves

A comparative analysis of IRIB News, BBC Persian, and Iran International over the past 24 hours Three major Persian-language news outlets are telling starkly different stories about Donald Trump's latest Iran announcements — a two-week ceasefire conditioned on reopening the Strait of Hormuz and a continued maritime blockade — revealing a sharp editorial fault line between state-controlled and independent media. State broadcaster IRIB and its affiliated outlets are framing Trump's conditional pause as an American climb-down forced by Iranian military resolve. Quoting official sources, IRIB flatly denies Trump's claims of back-channel contacts, calling them a "lie," and describes his retreat from an earlier strike plan as an "abject retreat" driven by fear of Iran's armed forces. The language is deliberate and combative — terms like "firm and credible threat" and "no negotiations have taken place" dominate the coverage. Crucially, I...

THIS IS NOT PEACE: Trump Delays Iran Strike, Cites "Serious Negotiations" — But War Remains on the Table

U.S. President Donald Trump announced Monday that he has called off a planned military strike against Iran, citing what he described as "serious negotiations" underway between the two sides. The announcement, which rattled global markets and drew immediate international attention, stopped short of declaring a breakthrough — and Trump made clear that a "full, large scale assault" remains on the table if diplomacy fails. The White House statement confirmed that a strike had been scheduled for Tuesday but was postponed at the request of negotiating parties. Trump, speaking to reporters, said there was a "very good chance" of reaching a deal with Tehran, but offered few specifics. Senior officials stressed that U.S. forces remain on high alert and fully prepared to execute military options should talks collapse. Analysts and major news outlets — including Reuters, Al Jazeera, and the BBC — were quick to frame the move as coercive bargaining rather than a genui...

Israel Prepares for Renewed Iran Strikes as Trump Stalls on Decision

Writing in Haaretz, military analyst Amos Harel warns that while U.S. President Donald Trump has yet to signal clear intentions on renewing hostilities with Iran, Israel is behaving as though a new military campaign is all but inevitable. Both the Israeli government and military are hinting through statements and actions that they are actively preparing for a renewed round of U.S.-led strikes against Tehran. Trump's talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing yielded no visible results on the Iran file. Washington had reportedly hoped to trade concessions to Beijing over Taiwan pressure in exchange for Chinese diplomatic intervention in the Persian Gulf crisis — but no progress was made. The diplomatic deadlock leaves Israel in a strategic limbo, caught between an indecisive Washington and a rapidly recovering adversary. Iran's Nuclear and Missile Programs Largely Intact A damning assessment from Maj. Gen. (res.) Tamir Hayman, executive director of Tel Aviv's Institu...

Iran Warns of Military Surprises as Tensions with US Simmer: A Strategy of Preparedness and Diplomatic Leverage

As diplomatic channels with Washington remain active through intermediaries, Iran is signaling a multi-layered strategy should hostilities with the United States resume. In a detailed press conference, Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ismail Baqaei outlined a posture of heightened military readiness, legal countermeasures, and reinforced regional diplomacy, emphasizing that Tehran will not be passive in the face of renewed aggression. Baquqaei stated unequivocally that Iran’s armed forces are "prepared for any scenario" and possess "military surprises" should the U.S. or its allies take hostile action. This rhetoric underscores a strategy of deterrence through asymmetric capability, aiming to raise the perceived cost of any military strike. The spokesman framed recent regional tensions—including the January 2024 missile exchanges—as a catalyst for Iran to adopt "measures for its national security" based on international law, a position it maintains is legitimate...

Israel Seizes Gaza Flotilla Off EU Coastline — And Greece and Cyprus Have Questions to Answer

Israeli naval commandos boarded vessels of the Global Sumud Flotilla in international waters off Cyprus on Monday morning — deep inside the maritime neighbourhood of two European Union member states, neither of which has taken any public action to stop it. The interception, the third in roughly a year and the second carried out hundreds of kilometres from Israel's coast, seized a number of the convoy's lead boats and detained hundreds of activists from 45 countries; the remainder were expected to turn back. The flotilla had departed the Turkish port of Marmaris on Thursday, May 14, bound for Gaza, whose Israeli naval blockade has been in place since 2007. Livestreams from the flotilla showed commandos in tactical gear boarding several of the lead vessels with weapons drawn, while activists wearing life jackets raised their hands and, in some cases, threw mobile phones into the sea before transmissions cut. According to Israeli reporting, the operation was designed to seize roug...

Choked at Hormuz, Crushed at Home: How a Distant War Is Detonating the World's Class Fault Lines

  From Nairobi's burning barricades to Dhaka's silent generators, the same shock — and the same losers. The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively shut since late February, when U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran — and the assassination of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei — triggered Tehran's closure of the world's most important oil chokepoint. Pre-war, roughly 20% of global seaborne oil and LNG passed through it; today only a small fraction of normal traffic moves. The International Energy Agency calls it the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market. Brent crude has traded above $100 a barrel for months, peaking near $126. But the deepest damage is not on the trading floor. It is in the wage packet, the fuel queue and the factory line — and it is falling, almost without exception, on the people who can least absorb it. Nairobi: A Strike Lit by a Gulf Pipeline On May 18, Kenya's public-transport sector shut the country down. Matatu owners, truckers...

US-Iran Nuclear Talks on the Brink of Collapse as Region Teeters Toward War

Drone strike on UAE nuclear plant, deadlocked negotiations, and open military threats signal the Middle East may be approaching a catastrophic breaking point A alarming convergence of diplomatic failure and military escalation is pushing the Middle East toward the edge of open conflict, as US-Iran nuclear negotiations appear hopelessly deadlocked and a drone attack struck dangerously close to the UAE's Barakah nuclear power plant Sunday. Iran's semi-official Fars News Agency — closely linked to the country's military and security establishment — has revealed the staggering gulf separating Washington and Tehran in ongoing negotiations, exposing a list of five American conditions and five Iranian counter-demands that appear almost impossible to reconcile. According to Fars, the United States is demanding Iran surrender 400 kilograms of enriched uranium, accept the release of none of its frozen assets, maintain only a single nuclear facility, pay zero war repara...

Africa in Flames: A Continent in Crisis

  Jihadist Offensives, Ebola Emergency, and Endless War Converge in Catastrophic Multi-Front Collapse The African continent is experiencing one of the most severe convergences of simultaneous crises in its modern history. Over the past three weeks, a devastating jihadist offensive has effectively besieged Mali's capital, a rare and poorly understood strain of Ebola has jumped borders and been declared a global health emergency, and Sudan's civil war has entered a terrifying new chapter defined by mass civilian slaughter from drone strikes. Taken together, these crises are reshaping the security, humanitarian, and geopolitical architecture of an entire hemisphere — and doing so largely beyond the gaze of an international community consumed by other flashpoints.   🇲🇱 MALI: The Siege of Bamako and the Collapse of the Russian Gamble What began on April 25 as a coordinated series of attacks has since evolved into the most dangerous crisis Mali has faced since the 2012...

Tunisian Tragedy: Mass Protests, Silenced Voices, and a Democracy in Freefall

As President Kais Saied tightens his authoritarian grip, Tunisians take to the streets in the largest wave of demonstrations since his 2021 power grab — but the tools of resistance are shrinking fast Fifteen years after the Arab Spring ignited a revolution that once made Tunisia the world's brightest democratic hope, the North African nation is burning again — this time not with the euphoria of uprising, but with the fury of a people watching their hard-won freedoms systematically dismantled. Demonstrations have erupted across Tunisia, from the capital Tunis to the industrial city of Gabès, fuelled by a cascading series of political crises: mass political trials handing out sentences of up to 66 years, the forced shuttering of the country's most respected civil society organizations, the imprisonment of journalists, lawyers, and opposition leaders, and an economy offering little hope to an increasingly desperate population. A Nation's Democratic Flame Flickering Out Fifteen...