A separatist movement long confined to Pakistan sees opportunity in Tehran's weakness — even as analysts caution it is not yet ready to open a front inside Iran. As US and Israeli strikes battered Iran through early 2026, one actor has watched the unfolding crisis more intently than most, and with more to gain. The Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), a separatist organization that has waged a decades-long insurgency against Pakistan, has positioned itself to exploit any opening created by Tehran's distress. Yet for all its calculation, the group remains largely absent from international headlines dominated by missiles over Tehran and diplomacy in Islamabad. The BLA's intentions are not hidden. In March 2026, the group issued a formal statement welcoming the US-Israeli strikes on Iran and, according to regional reporting, urged the attackers to be "more effective, coordinated and result-oriented." Analysts read the endorsement less as ideological alignment than as a...
Tehran Says It Wins Concessions ‘With Missiles, Not Talks’ as Nournews Frames Trump’s ‘Diplomacy of Suspension’
Nournews, an outlet linked to Iran's Supreme National Security Council, argues that the current standoff between Tehran and Washington is better described as a “threshold of decision” than a “threshold of agreement,” casting Donald Trump's negotiating posture as a “diplomacy of suspension” — an imaginary weapon meant to wear down Iran's resolve. In the Iranian state-aligned outlet's telling, the two sides have never appeared closer to an understanding, yet have also never been mired in such deliberate ambiguity, where neither war nor peace is certain and neither a deal nor a breakdown has materialized. According to the analysis, Washington keeps signaling that an accord is near, with American media citing drafts and preliminary understandings and senior Trump officials describing the talks as hopeful. On the ground, however, Nournews contends that U.S. pressure has not fully eased, a naval blockade has not ended, and Washington has shown no willingness to pay the polit...