• العربية
  • فارسی
Brand
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Theme
  • Language
    • العربية
    • فارسی
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
All rights reserved for Volant Media UK Limited
volant media logo

Russia unable to mediate if Israeli strikes aim for ‘regime change’ in Iran – Bloomberg

Jun 17, 2025, 15:49 GMT+1

Russia will not be able to act as a mediator to stop the conflict if Israel’s goal is “regime change” in Iran, Bloomberg reported, citing a source close to the Kremlin.

No one can stop Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu from pursuing the bombing, the source said.

Iran has not asked for Russian help, and Moscow does not plan to offer any defense assistance, the source added.

Most Viewed

Tehran hardens stance on Hormuz as ‘non-negotiable’
1
INSIGHT

Tehran hardens stance on Hormuz as ‘non-negotiable’

2
INSIGHT

Who speaks for Iran: What the public rift means, and what it hides

3

Iran cuts oil output as US blockade strains storage - BBG

4
PODCAST

‘Permit for a terrorist’: Canada opposition asks who cleared ex-IRGC official’s entry

5

Two more men hanged in Iran as authorities ramp up executions

Banner
Banner

Spotlight

  • War shadow lays bare divisions among Iran’s clerics
    INSIGHT

    War shadow lays bare divisions among Iran’s clerics

  • Who speaks for Iran: What the public rift means, and what it hides
    INSIGHT

    Who speaks for Iran: What the public rift means, and what it hides

  • Tehran hardens stance on Hormuz as ‘non-negotiable’
    INSIGHT

    Tehran hardens stance on Hormuz as ‘non-negotiable’

  • ‘Permit for a terrorist’: Canada opposition asks who cleared ex-IRGC official’s entry
    PODCAST

    ‘Permit for a terrorist’: Canada opposition asks who cleared ex-IRGC official’s entry

  • Iran war cannot end with Revolutionary Guards still in control
    OPINION

    Iran war cannot end with Revolutionary Guards still in control

  • Soaring prices push medicine beyond Iranians' reach

    Soaring prices push medicine beyond Iranians' reach

•
•
•

More Stories

Friends of the Iranian people? The dead beg to differ

Jun 17, 2025, 15:45 GMT+1
•
Tehran Insider

Five days have passed since the war began. Last night, Donald Trump told us to leave Tehran—but didn’t say where.

Unlike the jammed roads out of Tehran, the city itself is quiet—until it isn’t. Then come the missiles, the drones, the air defenses. Silence shatters. We brace. Then wait. Then do it all over again.

People’s reactions are far from uniform.

Some still cling to the idea that this war isn’t really theirs—that it’s between Israel and the Islamic Republic and will not touch their homes or families. They believe, somehow, they’ll be spared.

They have chosen not to let reality shake their belief, not to allow the mounting rubble and growing number of deaths register.

Today I overheard someone at the grocery store say Khamenei had fled to the mountains, and that the war would end by Tuesday. I told him this is Tuesday. He nodded and said, “Exactly—so it ends today.”

Others saw what was coming and hit the roads by Day 3, hoping to reach safety outside the capital. Many didn’t get far.

The highways are still choked with cars; people are running out of fuel, out of options. Many are stuck—no way forward, no way back. Tehranis are heading north, toward the Caspian provinces that have neither the space nor the infrastructure to absorb them.

There’s fear of what’s waiting on the other end: food shortages, fuel scarcity, and overcrowded shelters. And yet, people keep fleeing.

For those who stay behind, the fear is different but no less consuming.

Israel’s defense minister has declared that Tel Aviv will take revenge not just on the Islamic Republic—but on Tehran itself. And so the city waits.

It’s hard to grasp how fast everything collapsed. Just last week, we believed we were in a “tense but manageable” phase. Now, even that looks like a golden age.

Few believe the Iranian leadership will prioritize the people over their own survival. You can feel that abandonment hanging in the air.

I asked the grocer if deliveries are still coming. “So far, just dairy,” he said. “We’re waiting on bread and soda.” Most shops are shuttered. Workplaces are closed. It feels like the city is holding its breath.

The government says the metro can be used as a shelter. But for those who remain, home still feels safer—if only psychologically.

Most people I know or encounter just want the war to end—with a deal, a collapse, or just a pause in the strikes. “One way or another,” as my partner puts it.

Wasn’t this about nuclear facilities, many ask. Why target city ministries? Why strike targets nestled inside residential neighborhoods?

We’re friends of the Iranian people, Israeli officials say. Well, the dead and wounded beg to differ. So far, the casualties are overwhelmingly civilian. Homes have been flattened. Lives erased.

Tragic stories abound.

A young man is missing. His pregnant wife lies in a hospital bed, her body broken. A young poet and her entire family are gone. Painful images that the regime’s media machine tries to use and misuse.

On social media, the battle over the truth is as fierce as anything in the skies.

People are still hoping the power and water systems will be spared. Just imagine: no electricity, no water—on top of everything else.

I saw a woman today carrying water half her weight. Many are stocking up, but for a few days’ need only. They can’t imagine the war lasting longer than that.

But what if it does? Worried whispers are starting. What if this becomes another Ukraine? Or another Gaza?

We drift between disbelief and dread, clinging to the same fragile wish: that this nightmare ends—one way or another—soon.

Germany's chancellor says Tehran rulers unlikely to gain prior strength

Jun 17, 2025, 15:39 GMT+1

Israel’s attacks have weakened Iran, and Tehran’s rulers are unlikely to regain their previous strength, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz says.

"This regime is very weakened and will probably not return to its former strength, making the future of the country uncertain. We will have to wait and see," Merz told German broadcaster Welt at the G7 summit in Canada on Tuesday.

"If a new situation were to arise, Germany, France, and the United Kingdom would again be prepared to provide diplomatic assistance, as they were until last Thursday," he added.

Another explosion reported near Iran's state broadcaster

Jun 17, 2025, 15:00 GMT+1

A massive explosion appears to have occurred near the headquarters of Iran’s state broadcaster, IRIB, on Tuesday, according to videos sent to Iran International.

Israel first hit IRIB HQ in northern Tehran on Monday.

Trump opposed Israeli plan to target Khamenei - Axios

Jun 17, 2025, 14:24 GMT+1

US President Donald Trump blocked an Israeli plan to assassinate Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei over the weekend, Axios reported, citing US officials.

The Israeli army believed they had a window to carry out the strike, but Trump rejected it.

While the White House continues to support Israel’s goals of dismantling Iran’s nuclear and missile capabilities, it does not back a broader effort to topple the Islamic Republic by force, according to the report.

The official added that Trump could still “swoop in and do some gigantic action.”

Iranian journalist detained while reporting on aftermath of Israeli strike, outlet says

Jun 17, 2025, 13:49 GMT+1

Ali Pakzad, a journalist with the reformist Iranian daily Shargh, has informed his family that he is in detention, the newspaper said on Tuesday.

Pakzad had been out of contact since Monday after heading out to report on the aftermath of an Israeli strike on Iran’s state broadcaster in Tehran. Shargh said the reasons for his detention remain unclear and called for his swift release.

Ali Pakzad
100%
Ali Pakzad