A fragile ceasefire between the United States and Iran is teetering on the edge of collapse, with Iran's military openly warning that a resumption of hostilities is probable and Washington showing no sign of retreating from its maximalist demands. Nearly four weeks after the two sides reached a shaky truce brokered by Pakistan, diplomacy has stalled, the Strait of Hormuz remains functionally blocked, and both powers are simultaneously negotiating and preparing for renewed combat. A War That May Not Stay Frozen Iran's military headquarters issued its starkest assessment yet on Saturday. As stated by Al Jazeera's correspondent reporting from Tehran, the Iranian military said the resumption of war is "likely as evidence shows the US is not committed" to any agreement or treaty. A senior officer at the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Command echoed that view, telling BBC Persian that renewed conflict is "probable" and that Iran's armed forces are "fully pr...
With Iran's shadow falling across the Middle East and the spectre of a wider regional war growing harder to dismiss, the press organs closest to the ruling establishments in Ankara and Tel Aviv have opened a fresh front of their own — one fought in column inches and social media screeds rather than missiles, though the language deployed by both sides is scarcely less incendiary. The immediate trigger was the interception of the Sumud Freedom Flotilla in Greek waters on Friday. Israeli naval forces boarded vessels carrying roughly 180 pro-Palestinian activists — among them at least 20 Turkish citizens — before the convoy could reach Gaza. The episode ignited a torrent of commentary that laid bare just how deep, and how personal, the estrangement between the two former regional allies has become. In Turkey's pro-government Yeni Şafak, columnist İsmail Kılıçarslan dispensed entirely with diplomatic restraint. Writing hours after the flotilla's detention, he described Israel a...