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In pictures, the Israel-Iran war on day five

Jun 18, 2025, 22:49 GMT+1
 A destroyed drone, which the Iranian Army says belongs to Israel, is seen in Isfahan, Iran, in this handout image, June 18, 2025.
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A destroyed drone, which the Iranian Army says belongs to Israel, is seen in Isfahan, Iran, in this handout image, June 18, 2025.
Smoke rises following an Israeli attack in Tehran, Iran, June 18, 2025.
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Smoke rises following an Israeli attack in Tehran, Iran, June 18, 2025.
An interceptor missile is seen from Jerusalem, after missiles are launched from Iran, June 18, 2025.
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An interceptor missile is seen from Jerusalem, after missiles are launched from Iran, June 18, 2025.

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Ghalibaf defends Iran-US talks amid hardline backlash
1
INSIGHT

Ghalibaf defends Iran-US talks amid hardline backlash

2
VOICES FROM IRAN

Bread shortages, soaring prices strain households in Iran, residents say

3
INSIGHT

Iran diplomacy wobbles as factions compete to avoid looking soft on US

4
ANALYSIS

The politics of pink: how Iran uses cuteness to rebrand violence

5

War-hit homeowners feel abandoned as Iran’s reconstruction aid fades

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Spotlight

  • Lights out, then gunfire: Witnesses recount Mashhad protest crackdown
    VOICES FROM IRAN

    Lights out, then gunfire: Witnesses recount Mashhad protest crackdown

  • Family told missing teen was alive, then received his body 60 days later
    EXCLUSIVE

    Family told missing teen was alive, then received his body 60 days later

  • Is Iran entering its Gorbachev moment?
    INSIGHT

    Is Iran entering its Gorbachev moment?

  • Iran crackdown reaches cemeteries as graves of slain protesters defaced
    EXCLUSIVE

    Iran crackdown reaches cemeteries as graves of slain protesters defaced

  • Iran diplomacy wobbles as factions compete to avoid looking soft on US
    INSIGHT

    Iran diplomacy wobbles as factions compete to avoid looking soft on US

  • The politics of pink: how Iran uses cuteness to rebrand violence
    ANALYSIS

    The politics of pink: how Iran uses cuteness to rebrand violence

  • Bread shortages, soaring prices strain households in Iran, residents say
    VOICES FROM IRAN

    Bread shortages, soaring prices strain households in Iran, residents say

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In rubble, not in court: Hajizadeh’s death and the voices of PS752

Jun 18, 2025, 22:23 GMT+1
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M. Mehdi Moradi

So much has happened since Israel began striking Iran that the killing of IRGC aerospace chief Amir Ali Hajizadeh already feels half-buried—but not to those who lost loved ones on Flight PS752, shot down by the forces under his command.

Hajizadeh was the face of Iran’s missile and drone program. He wasn’t its architect, but its courier. His image, projected through ceremony and spectacle, became central to the Islamic Republic’s projection of power.

That changed five years ago.

On January 8, 2020, two missiles, fired seconds apart, tore through a Ukrainian passenger jet departing Tehran. One hundred seventy-six lives were lost—students, children, newlyweds, entire families.

The next day, Hajizadeh appeared on television, standing before the flags of Iran’s regional allies and praising a missile strike on a US base in Iraq—launched in response to the killing of Qasem Soleimani days earlier.

He spoke with pride, smirking as if a massacre had not just unfolded under his command.The IRGC admitted to downing the plane three days later.

Hajizadeh resurfaced, blaming a lone operator. No resignation. No remorse. The gap between his initial celebration and later deflection said more than either moment alone.

In the years that followed, truth remained elusive. Families were silenced. One father recalled being told by a senior commander that if the plane had not crashed, Iran and the US might have gone to war, and “ten million could have died.”

Few admissions made the intent more legible: the passengers may have been a human shield against retaliation.

A reckoning by other means

For families of PS752, Hajizadeh’s killing brought a wave of raw emotion—grief laced with a private sense of justice. Their motto had always been: Never Forget, Never Forgive.

They had waited not for revenge, but for truth. For the day a free court would summon him by name. That day never came. The reckoning arrived by other means.

Hamed Esmaeilion, who lost his wife and nine-year-old daughter, Reera, responded to the news with words shaped by fury and mourning. He recalled Hajizadeh’s defense: “the operator had ten seconds to decide.”

That moment, Esmaeilion said, sealed Hajizadeh not as a soldier, but as a custodian of a lie. “You are dead,” he wrote, “but our hatred of you, dead and alive, will live on in history.”

For Esmaeilion and others, Hajizadeh’s death may have closed a chapter, but not the book—not before the eyes of his daughter Reera, now etched in the national memory as a symbol of innocence lost.

Javad Soleimani, who lost his wife that same morning, wrote that while there was relief, there was also regret: “Standing eye to eye with Hajizadeh was a wish that never came true.”

The feeling echoed in Meghdad Jebelli, whose nephew was killed aboard PS752.

“Regret was added to all the regrets of my life,” he said—not seeing Hajizadeh “in a prison uniform and handcuffs, standing in a righteous court.” Still, he admitted, the feeling was “sweeter” than any regret before it.

As news of Hajizadeh’s killing spread, many families posted joyful clips of their loved ones—glimpses of life reclaimed against the void left by the IRGC’s system of violence.

A legacy built on bluster

Hajizadeh had projected strength, but his record told a different story.

He postured as a man firm against enemies, but often struck the powerless. He softened when under pressure, as when he downplayed the US base strike, insisting it was symbolic and not meant to kill.

The man who smirked as families wept, who lied as bodies burned, is no more.

The house of cards he built—missiles, drones, staged power—collapsed with him. He never stood before Esmaeilion, Soleimani, Jebelli, or the nation’s eyes to face the public humiliation that real justice brings.

Still, the justice dealt in the rubble, though imperfect, carried its own humiliation.One journalist wrote she hoped he lived for “three minutes and forty-two seconds”—the time it took PS752 to fall from the sky.

For the families, it may have offered a moment of healing. But the wound will not close until the truth behind the tragedies under his command is brought to light—and the system that created him is confronted in full.

Trump OK'd attack plan but gauging if Iran will drop nuclear program - WSJ

Jun 18, 2025, 22:22 GMT+1

US President Donald Trump informed his inner circle late on Tuesday that he had approved an attack plan on Iran but was holding off to see if Iran could be persuaded to give up its nuclear program, the Wall Street Journal reported citing three people familiar with the matter.

The threat to join Israel's attacks on the Islamic Republic was part of Trump's push for Tehran to make concessions, the newspaper quoted the sources as saying.

Multiple US options were on the table, a White House official cited by the paper said, and the president was monitoring how Israel was conducting its campaign.

Starmer puts UK cabinet on alert for possible US strike on Iran

Jun 18, 2025, 21:33 GMT+1

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer warned his cabinet to prepare for a potential US military strike on Iran, British officials said Wednesday.

Starmer convened an emergency meeting with senior ministers and military chiefs, where the possibility of the US using the joint UK-US air base at Diego Garcia to strike Iranian nuclear facilities was discussed, officials briefed on the talks said.

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US senators to receive classified Iran briefing as conflict escalates

Jun 18, 2025, 21:26 GMT+1

Senators will be briefed on Iran in a classified session early next week, an aide to Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said Wednesday, following Schumer’s request amid rising hostilities between Iran and Israel.

The announcement came after President Donald Trump declined to say whether he had decided to join Israel’s bombing campaign.

Trump, speaking in the Oval Office, said that all options remain on the table but offered no specifics on possible US military involvement.

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'Iran’s regime could fall,' Trump says

Jun 18, 2025, 21:05 GMT+1

US President Donald Trump said Wednesday the Islamic Republic's collapse is possible, and that he would meet national security advisers imminently to discuss the conflict.

“Sure, anything could happen, right?” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office when asked if Iran’s government might fall.

“We have a plan for everything,” the president added, noting a Situation Room meeting was scheduled within the hour.

Iran was “a few weeks away” from developing a nuclear weapon before Israel launched strikes last week, he said, adding that he now seeks “total and complete victory,” not a ceasefire.

“I’m not looking to fight, but if it’s a choice between fighting and having a nuclear weapon, you have to do what you have to do,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. “Maybe we won’t have to fight.”

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