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Iran's Execution Machine Runs Uninterrupted as Diplomats Negotiate

As American and Iranian officials hold fragile ceasefire negotiations and a watching world awaits the outcome of what may be the most consequential diplomatic confrontation of the decade, Iran's judicial machinery has not paused for a single day. Protesters, political dissidents, and opposition supporters continue to be hanged in prisons across the country — sometimes in the very hours that diplomats debate their fate behind closed doors. The case of Afsaneh Rahimi, a woman reported by rights monitors to have been detained in connection with the wave of anti-government protests that swept Iran in late December 2025 and January 2026, reflects a broader and documented pattern: women swept up in mass arrests, held incommunicado, subjected to what rights groups describe as torture-extracted confessions, and facing accelerated trials before Revolutionary Courts. Her case — like those of thousands of others detained since the uprising — has not been officially acknowledged by Iranian aut...
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Two Hundred Thousand Strong: The Levant Files Marks a Milestone Year

The Levant Files has crossed a major threshold: over 200,000 visitors in just one year. This isn’t just a number for us — it’s a powerful signal that thoughtful, multilingual journalism focused on the Levant matters, resonates, and travels far beyond borders. From day one, our mission has been clear: to offer sharp, accessible, and reliable analysis of a region too often reduced to headlines. Today, we celebrate not only the growth of our readership but the growth of our voice — now published in five languages, ensuring that our work reaches communities across continents and cultures. And we’re not stopping here. New language editions and fresh content formats are already in development, expanding the ways we tell stories and connect with readers. This milestone belongs to every one of you who reads, shares, challenges, and supports our work. Your engagement fuels our commitment to deepen coverage, broaden perspectives, and keep building a platform worthy of the region’s complexity. Ou...

Ceasefire On The Brink: Us Seizes Iranian Ship, Tehran Refuses Talks As Wednesday Deadline Looms

The fragile two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran teetered on the edge of total collapse on Monday, as the U.S. Navy fired on and seized an Iranian-flagged cargo vessel near the Strait of Hormuz — an act Tehran condemned as piracy — sending diplomatic efforts to broker a second round of peace talks in Islamabad into immediate jeopardy. With the ceasefire set to expire on Wednesday, the world is watching what could become the most dangerous 48 hours of the ongoing US-Iran war. A Ship Seized, A Ceasefire Shattered In a dramatic escalation, the U.S. Navy fired on and seized an Iranian-flagged container ship in the Strait of Hormuz on Sunday, which American officials said was defying Washington's ongoing naval blockade of Iranian ports. President Donald Trump announced the seizure on social media, simultaneously declaring that his negotiating team — led by Vice President JD Vance — was heading to Islamabad, Pakistan, for a second round of peace talks with Iran. Tehran w...

Tehran Refuses Second Round of Talks, Demands End to US Naval Blockade

Iran's negotiating team conditions any further diplomacy on the lifting of what Tehran characterises as an illegal maritime siege — as an IRGC naval skirmish with US forces compounds the standoff Iran has formally declined to commit to a second round of nuclear and diplomatic negotiations with the United States, conditioning any further talks on the prior lifting of what it describes as an illegal American naval blockade of its ports and coastline. The announcement, relayed through Iranian state and semi-state media on Sunday, marks a significant hardening of Tehran's public posture following the collapse of the first negotiating round, which was brokered through Pakistani mediation. According to Tasnim News Agency, which carries close ties to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), back-channel message exchanges between Tehran and Washington have continued in recent days via Islamabad as intermediary — a process Tehran frames as a continuation of talks that failed due to...

A Second Round in Islamabad in US–Iran Talks. But Is a Breakthrough Within Reach?

Washington and Tehran are heading back to the Pakistani capital for a new round of negotiations, as the ceasefire teeters on expiry and Iran keeps its grip on the Strait of Hormuz. Sources close to The Levant Files warn that optimism in official circles far outpaces reality on the ground. With the clock ticking on a fragile two-week ceasefire set to expire on April 22, the United States and Iran are heading back to Islamabad for a second round of high-stakes negotiations. President Donald Trump announced on Sunday that Vice President JD Vance, special envoy Steve Witkoff, and senior adviser Jared Kushner would travel to the Pakistani capital — the same delegation that presided over last weekend's marathon but inconclusive talks at the Serena Hotel. The announcement came wrapped in characteristic Trumpian bluster. In a post on Truth Social, the President issued what analysts described as a barely veiled war crime threat: "I hope they take it because, if they don't, the Unit...

Open, Closed, Fired Upon: The 24-Hour Whiplash in the World's Most Dangerous Strait

  In less than a day, Iran declared the Strait of Hormuz open, watched tankers turn back under gunfire, then shut it again — leaving global energy markets in freefall and a ceasefire teetering on the edge of collapse. For approximately eighteen hours on Friday 18 April, the world held its breath. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi announced, via a post on X, that the Strait of Hormuz — the narrow, 39-kilometre-wide chokepoint connecting the Persian Gulf to global energy markets — was "completely open" to commercial vessels for the duration of the Lebanon ceasefire. Oil futures plunged more than 10 percent in a matter of hours. US President Donald Trump celebrated on social media. Markets exhaled. By Saturday evening, it was over. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) had reimposed full closure of the strait, Indian-flagged merchant vessels had been fired upon, at least three additional tankers had been targeted according to the UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO)...

Hezbollah IEDs Claim Two Israeli Reservists as Group Shifts to Guerrilla Warfare

Two Israeli reserve soldiers were killed and twelve others wounded in two separate roadside bomb attacks in southern Lebanon, Israeli military censors confirmed Sunday morning, reviving fears of an insurgency-style campaign that haunted Israeli forces during their occupation of Lebanon in the 1980s and 1990s. According to Israeli defence analyst Avi Ashkenazi, writing in Maariv (19 April 2026), the fallen soldiers were identified as Staff Sergeant Barak Kalfon and Staff Sergeant Lidor Porat. The attacks, which occurred on Saturday evening and Sunday morning respectively, underscore a significant tactical shift by Hezbollah away from conventional defensive engagements. Ashkenazi notes that over the past six weeks, Hezbollah has largely avoided direct confrontation with advancing Israeli Defence Forces, retreating or withdrawing from most positions rather than holding ground. The group's leader, Naim Qassem — who remains alive and operational despite public threats by Israeli Defence...

Qatar Counts the Cost of a War It Never Wanted

Qatar, one of the world's wealthiest nations and a key diplomatic broker in the Middle East, has emerged from the US-Israeli military campaign against Iran as one of the conflict's most significant economic casualties — despite never being a party to the hostilities. According to a report published by the New York Times, the Gulf emirate endured more than 700 Iranian missile and drone strikes targeting Gulf states hosting American military installations. The attacks forced Qatar to suspend liquefied natural gas production at its principal facility in Ras Laffan — a shutdown with consequences felt far beyond the region. Qatar ordinarily supplies approximately one-fifth of the world's LNG. With the Strait of Hormuz rendered impassable for safe export operations, and Ras Laffan itself sustaining heavy damage in mid-March Iranian strikes, the country's economic engine ground to a halt. Energy Minister Saad al-Kaabi estimated the repairs could take up to five years to comple...

The Quartet Rising: How the Iran War Is Forging a New Muslim Power Bloc

Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Turkey have moved from diplomatic convenience to geopolitical agency — brokering a ceasefire, sidelining both Tehran and Tel Aviv, and sketching the outlines of a new regional order. In the early hours of 8 April 2026, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif announced that the United States and Iran had agreed to a two-week ceasefire, ending the most intense phase of a conflict that had shaken the Persian Gulf, disrupted global shipping, and left both belligerents — as well as Israel — in a state of deepening regional isolation. The announcement came less than a fortnight after four foreign ministers had gathered in the Pakistani capital for talks that, at the time, attracted less attention than they deserved. The ministers of Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Turkey met in Islamabad on 29 March. Their joint communiqué called for an immediate end to hostilities. What followed rewrote the diplomatic architecture of the Middle East: within days, Islama...

Lebanon Ceasefire Takes Hold as US-Iran Nuclear Deal Edges Closer

A ten-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon came into effect at midnight Thursday, prompting celebrations and a mass return of displaced civilians to southern Lebanon, even as early reports of violations cast a shadow over the fragile truce. The halt in fighting, brokered by United States President Donald Trump, follows a separate ceasefire with Iran declared last week, and comes amid intensifying diplomatic efforts to secure a longer-term agreement ending nearly seven weeks of regional war. Ceasefire Terms and Early Violations The ceasefire agreement, outlined in a US State Department press release whose text was agreed to by both governments, commits Lebanon to taking "meaningful steps" — with international support — to prevent Hezbollah and other armed groups from attacking Israel. The agreement may be extended should both countries agree and as Lebanon demonstrates its ability to assert its sovereignty. Hours after midnight, however, the Lebanese army reported Israeli ...