‘Our hands are on the trigger’ – senior Iranian official

A senior security official in Tehran has told that Iran is prepared to take action unless Israel is punished and the US provides compensation for its strikes on the Islamic Republic’s nuclear facilities.

The IDF launched strikes on Iranian military and nuclear sites last month, killing senior commanders and nuclear scientists. Israel claimed the operation was aimed at preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons – a charge Tehran denied, responding with missile and drone attacks on Israeli targets. The US joined the campaign, striking several Iranian nuclear facilities. The 12-day war ended with a US-brokered ceasefire on June 24.

Addressing Washington’s request to resume nuclear talks, the official stated that Tehran had not agreed to a permanent ceasefire and considers negotiations premature. “The Americans are pursuing the start of negotiations, but Iran… is in a state of temporary cessation of the hostilities,” he said.

Washington has long demanded that Tehran halt all uranium enrichment – a condition Iran rejects as a deal-breaker. The latter insists its nuclear program is peaceful, legal, and under IAEA supervision. It currently enriches uranium to 60% purity, far above the 3.67% cap set under the now-defunct 2015 nuclear deal, which was rendered null and void after US President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew Washington from it during his first term.

Talks were revived earlier this year by Trump, but collapsed in the wake of the attacks on Iran. Tehran has since accused Washington of abandoning diplomacy and turning to force.

The official warned that Iranian forces remain fully prepared to respond to any further aggression, saying: “Our hands are on the trigger, but in case of any miscalculation by the child-killing regime, this time we will not wait for the enemy to fire the first shot.”

RT

Iran bars UN atomic energy chief from its nuclear sites

Iran has barred the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) from visiting its nuclear facilities. Tehran has accused the agency of distorting facts in a recent report, thereby providing justification for the recent Israeli and US strikes against the Islamic Republic.

The vice speaker of the Iranian Parliament, Hamid Reza Haji Babaei, announced on Saturday that Tehran would no longer allow IAEA personnel, including chief Rafael Grossi personally, to inspect its nuclear sites, as quoted by the local media outlet Mehr. The agency’s surveillance cameras will cease operating at the facilities, he added.

Earlier this week, Iran’s constitutional watchdog, the Guardian Council, approved a legislation to suspend cooperation with the IAEA until Iran is given security guarantees for its nuclear facilities. The bill is currently awaiting ratification.

Israel, which has for years has claimed that Tehran is secretly developing a nuclear weapon program, launched massive airstrikes against Iran on June 13, targeting several nuclear sites and a number of senior military commanders and scientists believed to be involved in the nuclear program. Last Sunday, the US joined the Israeli military campaign, striking the Natanz, Isfahan and Fordow nuclear facilities. Shortly thereafter, a ceasefire was reached between Israel and Iran.

Iran has maintained that its nuclear program is strictly peaceful in nature.

In a post on X last week, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baqaei accused the IAEA of issuing a “biased report” that “obscured this truth” and was “instrumentalized… to craft a resolution” that was later used by Israel to justify “an unlawful attack” on Iran’s nuclear facilities. He also suggested that the agency had handed over “sensitive facility data” to Israel.

The document released earlier this month stated that “Iran is the only non-nuclear-weapon state in the world that is producing and accumulating uranium enriched to 60%.”

The UN nuclear watchdog’s board then declared Iran in breach of its non-proliferation duties for the first time in 20 years, with 19 out of 35 IAEA member states backing the motion, including the US, UK, France, and Germany.

Appearing on CNN last Thursday, Grossi insisted that the watchdog’s report “could hardly be a basis for military action.” He added that the agency did not “have any indication that there is a systematic program in Iran to manufacture, to produce a nuclear weapon.”

On Tuesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov stated that the “Europeans… were actively preparing Grossi so that he would put the most ambiguously negative formulations into his report.”
Weeks before the Israeli and US airstrikes against Iran, Reuters cited anonymous diplomats as making allegations to the same effect.

“Imposed peace” would not be accepted: Iran

Despite Trump’s announcement of truce between Israel & Iran,Ground reality hits different

Trump’s announcement possibly “paves the way” for a ceasefire but the reality on the ground is very different, with sounds of explosions heard over the Iranian capital as air defence systems battle Israeli attacks.Sounds of several explosions have been heard across the Iranian capital, according to the country’s Tasnim news agency, amid reports that a ceasefire deal between Iran and Israel was reached and will come into effect in the next few hours.

In a post on X, Tasnim also reports that Iran activated air defence systems to repel the latest attacks carried out by Israeli aircraft.

According to Hamshahri News, “loud explosions” were heard in the west and centre of Tehran, as well as in the western suburb of Karaj.

“We haven’t received any official reaction from Tehran regarding the latest statement that came out from the US President Donald Trump,” Asadi said, adding that previous statements by Iran’s senior leaders signalled that an “imposed peace” would not be accepted.

“We have to keep in mind the previous statements that we heard from the Iranian leaders including the supreme leader of the country, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who came out to say a couple of days ago in a video message that we are not going to accept an imposed peace,” Asadi said.

“Whether the statement that we heard from the US president is going to be interpreted as an imposed peace or an agreed peace is something that we have to keep waiting for,” he said.

“A new emerging development on the ground here in Tehran is more sounds of explosions that we can hear related to the interception by air defence systems.”

Iran’s supreme leader warns Trump of ‘irreparable harm’ if US joins Israeli strikes

Iran’s supreme leader warns Donald Trump of “irreparable harm” if the US military intervenes in Tehran’s conflict with Israel. Ali Khamenei has responded to US President Donald Trump in a televised statement.

But this isn’t the first time he’s spoken to the US.Trump and Khamenei have been exchanging words online for some time now.

On Tuesday, Trump claimed to have “complete and total control of the skies over Iran”.

In another post on his Truth Social platform, he warned Khamenei: “We know exactly where the so-called ‘Supreme Leader’ is hiding. He is an easy target, but is safe there – We are not going to take him out (kill!), at least not for now… [but] our patience is wearing thin.”

A final post read: “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!”Trump is considering joining Israel’s strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, the BBC’s US partner CBS News reports.

In his own flurry of posts on X on Wednesday, Khamenei warned that the US entering the “war” is “100% to its own detriment”.

He also wrote that it isn’t “wise” to tell Iran to surrender, adding that they “will never surrender in response to the attacks of anyone”.

Another X post read: “With his [Trump’s] absurd rhetoric, he demands that the Iranian people surrender to him… The Iranian nation isn’t frightened by such threats.”

Iran, Israel, and the Nuclear Mirage

The Real Motives Behind U.S. and Israeli Moves Against Iran

The escalating confrontation between Iran and Israel, with the United States firmly backing Tel Aviv, is more than just a clash over nuclear ambitions. Beneath the surface lies a complex web of economic defiance, geopolitical rivalry, and decades-old double standards that have shaped the modern Middle East. As tensions soar, many are questioning whether Israel is being used as a proxy for American strategic aims, and whether the narrative of an imminent Iranian nuclear threat is another case of weaponized intelligence—reminiscent of the false claims about Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction that led to catastrophic war in 2003.

Iran’s resistance to U.S. dominance is not new. Over the past two decades, Iran has aggressively moved to reduce its reliance on the U.S. dollar in international trade, especially in its oil and gas deals. This shift, driven by both necessity and ideology, has seen Tehran forge tighter economic partnerships with nations like China, Russia, and India, often settling transactions in local currencies or through barter. In 2018, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani declared that the dollar would no longer be allowed to dictate the country’s economic destiny, describing it as a tool of American economic tyranny.

In 2018, President Hassan Rouhani declared:

“The dollar will no longer control our trade. We will not let it be a weapon against our sovereignty.”
(Reuters, 2018)

This economic rebellion threatens a core pillar of U.S. global power: the dollar’s role as the world’s reserve currency and the backbone of the petrodollar system. Many analysts believe that it is this challenge, as much as Iran’s nuclear activities, that fuels Washington’s relentless campaign of sanctions and military pressure.

At the heart of this campaign is Israel, whose military operations against Iran—including strikes on Syrian soil, sabotage of nuclear facilities, and the assassination of Iranian scientists—have repeatedly raised the risk of a wider regional war. These actions, many argue, serve U.S. interests by weakening an anti-Western power without requiring American boots on the ground. Professor John Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago has pointed out that Israel’s military moves align with U.S. strategic goals, allowing Washington to pursue its objectives while outsourcing the risks of direct military confrontation. In return, Israel enjoys billions in U.S. military aid, advanced weaponry, and diplomatic protection at the United Nations.

As Professor John Mearsheimer wrote:

“Israel fights the battles that align with U.S. strategic interests. This allows Washington to pursue its goals while avoiding direct military entanglement.”
(Foreign Affairs, 2021)

Central to Israel’s justification for these actions is the claim that Iran is on the brink of acquiring nuclear weapons. For nearly forty years, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned that Iran is mere months away from a bomb. In 1992, he declared Iran was three to five years from nuclear capability. In 2009, he took the stage at the United Nations with a cartoon bomb diagram, insisting that Iran was at the final stage of its weapons program. As recently as 2022, Netanyahu claimed Iran was weeks, perhaps days, from breakout capacity.

Since the 1980s, Netanyahu has repeatedly claimed that Iran is “months away” from weaponization, urging U.S. action and often shaping U.S. foreign policy decisions.

In 1992, Netanyahu, then a parliamentarian, warned:

“Iran is three to five years away from being able to produce a nuclear weapon.”
(Israeli Knesset records, 1992)

In 2009 at the UN General Assembly, he dramatically displayed a cartoon bomb diagram, saying Iran was at the “final stage” of its bomb project. As recently as 2022, he claimed:

“Iran is weeks, maybe days, from breakout capacity.”
(Times of Israel, 2022)

And yet, despite these repeated alarms, concrete evidence of a weapons program has not materialized. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which monitors Iran’s nuclear activities under the Non-Proliferation Treaty, has consistently reported no diversion of nuclear material for weapons use. As IAEA Director Rafael Grossi affirmed in 2023, inspections show no proof of a nuclear weapons program, even as Iran’s enrichment activities exceed the limits set by the now-defunct 2015 nuclear deal.

Iran remains a signatory of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and subjects its facilities to IAEA inspections. IAEA Director Rafael Grossi noted in March 2023:

“We have no evidence that nuclear material has been diverted to weapons use in Iran.”
(IAEA official statement, 2023)

Iran, for its part, insists that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, aimed at producing energy and medical isotopes. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s fatwa forbidding nuclear weapons is often cited by Iranian officials as evidence of their intent. The global community, however, remains divided. Critics argue that Iran’s advanced enrichment levels give it the potential for rapid weaponization—the so-called “Japan model” where a country remains on the threshold of nuclear arms without crossing it. Yet the stark contrast with Israel is difficult to ignore. Israel, which has never signed the NPT, is believed to possess up to 100 nuclear warheads, faces no inspections, and enjoys Western silence regarding its arsenal. Former IAEA head Mohamed ElBaradei once remarked that it is difficult to convince countries not to seek nuclear weapons when their neighbors possess them with impunity.

Former IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei captured this inconsistency:

“We cannot credibly tell Iran not to seek nuclear weapons when its neighbors have them and face no consequences.”
(The Guardian, 2009)

The double standard is glaring. The United States and Israel, both nuclear powers, insist that Iran must be permanently denied any nuclear weapons capability. This, even though Iran has allowed inspections and remained within the legal frameworks of international law far more than Israel. The hypocrisy damages the moral authority of non-proliferation efforts and deepens resentment across the Global South, where many see the Western position as less about peace and more about maintaining power.

The specter of Iraq looms large. In 2003, the United States launched a devastating war on Iraq based on claims of weapons of mass destruction—claims that were later proven false. The parallels with today’s rhetoric on Iran are unsettling. There are repeated warnings of imminent nuclear danger, demands for military action, and a reliance on intelligence that often appears shaped to fit policy rather than vice versa. Hans Blix, the former UN weapons inspector, has warned that the world should not repeat the mistakes of Iraq, urging that any action against Iran must be based on solid evidence, not suspicion or geopolitical convenience.

Hans Blix, the former UN weapons inspector, warned in 2020:

“We should not again rush into conflict based on suspicion rather than solid evidence.”
(BBC, 2020)

Beyond the nuclear question, Iran’s real “crime” in the eyes of Washington may well be its challenge to U.S. hegemony. By building alliances with China and Russia, defying U.S. sanctions, and undermining the dollar’s dominance in energy trade, Iran threatens the architecture of American global power. In this contest, Israel’s role as a military proxy is indispensable, offering the U.S. a way to pressure Iran without paying the full cost of conflict.

One often-overlooked but crucial factor is the Strait of Hormuz. This narrow waterway, bordering Iran, is one of the most strategically important chokepoints in global oil trade—through which about 20% of the world’s petroleum passes. Any nation controlling or influencing this strait gains leverage over the global energy supply chain. The United States, long reliant on securing energy routes for its own economic stability and that of its allies, has a clear interest in ensuring the Strait of Hormuz remains outside Iranian dominance. A militarily weakened or destabilized Iran would naturally diminish Tehran’s ability to threaten or control shipping through the strait, as it has occasionally warned of doing in response to sanctions and military threats.

In truth, the Iran-Israel-U.S. confrontation is not solely about nuclear weapons. It is about who sets the rules of the international order, who controls global financial systems, and who gets to decide which countries are allowed to possess ultimate deterrence. The path forward should be one of consistency, diplomacy, and evidence-based policy—not recycled alarmism, proxy wars, and double standards that could plunge the region into disaster.