Newspaper warned for discussing impact of Houthis' Israel attack on US talks
Iran's Press Supervisory Board on Monday issued a warning to Ham-Mihan newspaper over an article discussing the impact of the Houthi missile attack against Israel on the Iran-US talks, and referred the case to the judiciary.
In the article, Ham-Mihan discussed the impact of the Yemeni rebels' attack targeting Ben Gurion Airport on the ongoing negotiations between Tehran and Washington.
The article said, “After two or three rounds of progress, negotiations between Iran and the US have stalled and apparently entered a difficult phase.”
As Tehran and Washington cautiously inch forward their nuclear negotiations, the United Kingdom is positioning for a stronger hand in shaping any potential agreement amid Iranian-linked security threats and a standoff over detained Britons.
British Foreign Secretary David Lammy’s high-level meetings with Omani officials on April 27—just one day after Iran and the United States held indirect talks in Rome under Omani mediation—underscored the United Kingdom's efforts not to remain a bystander in one of the region’s most consequential diplomatic processes.
The UK was also set to meet Iranian officials along with France and Germany on May 2 just before the planned fourth round of US-Iran talks in Rome. However, that meeting was canceled following the postponement of the latest round of Tehran-Washington negotiations. No further plans have been announced yet.
The UK or any of the other signatories to the 2015 nuclear deal (JCPOA) has until October to activate the JCPOA’s so-called snapback mechanism which would reimpose all UN sanctions on Iran.
Lammy had already signaled alignment with Washington in late March, expressing a shared commitment to ensuring Iran "never develops or acquires a nuclear weapon." On April 15, he also discussed Iran’s nuclear program with Israeli Foreign Minister Gidon Saar during a meeting in London.
Iran’s foreign ministry and state television have remained silent on the arrests. While some domestic outlets cautiously reported the news by citing international coverage, they refrained from offering analysis or commentary. In contrast, the hardline Quds daily responded swiftly and critically on Monday.
In a commentary titled “Security Dossier to Disguise Diplomatic Blackmail,” Quds accused the UK of exploiting the arrests for political leverage in the nuclear talks. “The latest move comes at a time when indirect nuclear talks between Tehran and Washington are taking place, and in this context, London's decision seems meaningful.”
Tehran-based analyst Sohrab Sadreddin quoted in the piece suggested that the arrests were intended as a signal to the US—especially Trump-aligned factions—that Iran remains a strategic threat to the West.
Sadreddin added that Britain, France and Germany are keen to be included in any future agreement between Washington and Tehran: "If an agreement is to be reached, Europe must also be included in it.”
Adding another layer of complexity and pointing to the recent arrest of two British nationals in Iran, the commentary also raised suspicions about a possible prisoner swap strategy.
The Foremans are not the only UK-linked detainees in Iran. Mehran Raouf, a 68-year-old British-Iranian labor activist, has been imprisoned since October 2020. He is currently serving a 10-year sentence on charges related to national security offenses.
Iran, which does not recognize dual nationality, has a long history of detaining dual citizens and foreigners on security-related charges, often using them as bargaining chips in its dealings with Western powers, including Britain.
In April 2022, British-Iranian nationals Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe and Anoosheh Ashouri -- both accused of espionage -- were released following Omani mediation, after Britain settled a long-standing £400 million debt owed to Iran.
Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of undermining US diplomacy on Iran, saying he is “brazenly dictating” terms to Donald Trump and seeking to drag Washington into another regional conflict.
In a post on X, Araghchi cited a warning by Foundation for Defense of Democracies CEO Mark Dubowitz, carried by the Jewish Insider, who said any deal with Iran “should be avoided at all costs” because it would “put Israel in a much weaker position.”
“Netanyahu is attempting to brazenly DICTATE what President Trump can and cannot do in his diplomacy with Iran. The world has also learned how Netanyahu is directly MEDDLING within the US Government to DRAG it into another DISASTER in our region,” reads his message.
Araghchi condemned what he called “lethal support” for Netanyahu’s campaign in Gaza and US involvement in Yemen, saying it has “achieved NOTHING for the American people.”
He accused Netanyahu of influencing US decisions during the Biden administration and urged Trump to pursue diplomacy “based on mutual respect and mutual interests.”
He said diplomacy remains the only viable path to ensuring Iran does not pursue a nuclear weapon, echoing Trump’s own stated goal.
“If the goal is ‘The only thing they can't have is a nuclear weapon’ as President Trump just said, a deal is achievable and there is only ONE PATH to achieve it: DIPLOMACY based on MUTUAL RESPECT and MUTUAL INTERESTS.”
Iranian officials expect the fourth round of nuclear negotiations between Tehran and world powers to be held soon, the Beirut-based outlet affiliated with Iran-backed Hezbollah, Al Mayadeen network reported Sunday, citing unnamed sources in Iran.
The sources said the exact timing had not yet been finalized.
The anticipated talks come as diplomatic tensions mount over the scope of negotiations, following European and US calls to restrict them strictly to nuclear issues. Tehran is also facing renewed scrutiny after a blast at the Rajaei port and stepped-up Western pressure on its uranium enrichment program.
The explosion at Rajaei port could have caused between three and five billion dollars in damages, a deputy communications minister said on Monday, citing the incident as an example of weak data infrastructure and a lack of information transparency in the country.
Mohammad-Hassan Sadr, the deputy minister of information and communications technology, questioned why the port had a backlog of 130,000 containers without clear information on their contents.
"Why should 130,000 containers be stockpiled in this port, but the contents of none of them be clear?" Sadr was quoted as saying.