The United States deported a planeload of about 100 Iranians to Tehran in one of the Trump administration’s starkest migrant returns to a country with severe rights concerns, marking a rare act of cooperation with Iran after months of talks, the New York Times reported Tuesday.
Citing two senior Iranian officials involved in the negotiations and a US official with knowledge of the plans, the report said a US-chartered flight took off from Louisiana on Monday night and was scheduled to arrive in Iran via Qatar on Tuesday.

The United States deported a planeload of over 100 Iranians to Tehran in one of the Trump administration’s starkest migrant returns to a country with severe rights concerns, marking a rare act of cooperation with Iran after months of talks, the New York Times reported on Tuesday.
Citing two senior Iranian officials involved in the negotiations and a US official with knowledge of the plans, the report said a US-chartered flight took off from Louisiana on Monday night and was scheduled to arrive in Iran via Qatar on Tuesday.
The deportees, including men and women -- some couples -- were either long in detention or had asylum requests denied, Iranian officials told the Times. Some had volunteered to leave after months in US custody, while others had not yet appeared before a judge.
The deportation marked one of the most direct efforts yet by the Trump administration to remove migrants even to countries with severe human rights conditions, the Times said.
The Times described the deportation as a rare moment of cooperation between Washington and Tehran, after months of negotiations.
Iranian officials said the country’s foreign ministry was coordinating the deportees’ return and that they had been assured of their safety. Still, they said, many were disappointed and some frightened.
Iran confirms 120 nationals deported
Later on Tuesday, Iran’s Foreign Ministry confirmed that 120 Iranian migrants are being deported from the United States and will return home in the coming days, saying they will receive full consular support.
Hossein Noushabadi, the ministry’s parliamentary director, told Tasnim news agency that US immigration authorities had decided to expel about 400 Iranians, mostly those who entered the country illegally, “with the first 120 to be deported soon, most of them having crossed through Mexico.”
“Some of those now returning even had residency permits, but the US authorities decided to include them in the list,” he said. “Their consent for repatriation has been obtained.”
Noushabadi said Iran had lodged diplomatic notes via the US Interests Sections in Tehran and Washington, urging Washington to respect the rights of Iranian migrants.
“We asked the US government to ensure Iranian migrants are not deprived of consular services, fair trial rights, and protections under international law,” he said.
He stressed that Tehran would support returnees. “Iran will definitely host its nationals who migrated for any reason,” Noushabadi said. “These people are Iranians, they left Iran legally, and there is no obstacle to their return.”
He added that if other Iranians on the US list are deported, they will also be accepted, and that the first group will arrive via Qatar within one to two days.



Earlier this year, groups of Iranians, including converts to Christianity who face possible persecution at home, were flown to Costa Rica and Panama. Advocates have challenged the flights in court.
For decades, the United States has provided refuge to Iranians fleeing persecution, including women’s rights activists, dissidents, journalists, lawyers, religious minorities and members of the LGBTQ community.
The Times added that the US has historically struggled to carry out deportations to Iran due to a lack of diplomatic ties and travel documents, deporting only about two dozen Iranians in 2024.
“Iran is the homeland of all Iranians, and our compatriots can freely return to their homeland and travel,” Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei said in February in response to earlier deportations, calling US treatment of migrants “harsh and inhumane.”
The deportations follow a broader crackdown. In June, Fox News reported that more than 130 Iranian nationals were arrested across the United States in a nationwide enforcement operation, citing federal sources.
Officials said those detained included individuals with suspected ties to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Hezbollah, as well as people with criminal records for drugs, weapons, and domestic violence.
One former Iranian army sniper was arrested in Alabama, while another man in Minnesota admitted past ties to Hezbollah, Fox News said.
The deportation also comes amid Iran’s worsening domestic crisis, with the economy battered by inflation, currency depreciation, and power and water shortages. The reimposition of United Nations Security Council sanctions on Saturday is expected to intensify pressure.

Iranian operatives posing as the manager of an Israeli rapper attempted to lure the 17-year-old daughter of firebrand National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir into an online meeting, Israel's security agency said.
According to Israeli media, the operatives contacted Hallel Ben-Gvir through WhatsApp, using the name of the manager of Israeli rapper Yoav Eliasi, known as The Shadow, and offering her an opportunity to collaborate with well-known Israeli musicians.
They sent her a video link that repeatedly failed, leading her to abandon the attempt.
The Shin Bet later determined the approach was orchestrated by Iranian operatives. The agency briefed Ben-Gvir and his staff, warning that Tehran was focusing on him and his family.
Ben-Gvir, who is under heavy security, has been the target of multiple threats. Earlier this month, the Shin Bet also revealed it had thwarted a Hamas plot to assassinate him using explosive drones.
Last week, Israeli authorities indicted Yaakov Perl, an American-Israeli, for allegedly passing information on Israeli figures, including Ben-Gvir, to Iranian agents.
Iran’s intelligence minister Esmail Khatib last week claimed his ministry had obtained “millions of pages” of classified Israeli documents related to nuclear projects and Western collaborations.
However, the announcement was quickly mocked by both dissidents and hardline loyalists of the Islamic Republic, as the so-called secret documents largely consisted of publicly available images and materials related to Israeli officials.
Itamar Ben-Gvir is an Israeli lawyer far-right politician. He is the leader of the Otzma Yehudit (“Jewish Power”) party, which has roots in Kahanism, an extremist movement banned in Israel founded by deceased ideologue Meir Kahane.
Ben-Gvir is known for his hardline views on Palestinians, Jewish settlement expansion in the West Bank and controversial rhetoric that has drawn both some domestic support and international criticism.

A relative of Shiri Bibas and her two young sons - Israelis abducted by Tehran-backed Hamas militants on October 7 2023 and eventually killed - filed a complaint at the International Criminal Court (ICC) accusing Iran of genocide for its alleged role.
The complaint, submitted in The Hague earlier this month on behalf of the Bibas family, charges Tehran with crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide.
Iran has denied any foreknowledge of the attacks but officialdom has cited with pride its support of what it describes as resistance groups in the region.
The two young red-headed boys Arial and Kfir became emblems of Israel's agony over the lingering hostage standoff with militants in Gaza amid an Israeli incursion that has devastated the coastal enclave and killed tens of thousands of Palestinians.
Hamas says the family was killed in an Israeli air strike while Israel counters that their captors murdered them. The father, Yarden, was also captured and released as part of an earlier prisoner swap.
The complaint alleges Iran’s leadership, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force commander Esmail Qaani, provided Hamas with weapons, training and coordination used in the assault.
The filing demands ICC prosecutors open a formal investigation and issue arrest warrants for both men. It argues Iran acted knowingly and intentionally in supporting Hamas, which left Bibas, her two young sons and other family members dead.
“The IRGC, at the direction of the Iranian regime and specifically Khamenei and Qaani, knowingly and intentionally provided weapons to Hamas for the purpose of killing Jews, Israelis and other affiliated members of a protected group,” the filing says.
The Bibas family tragedy resonated across Israel. For their surviving relatives, the complaint marks an attempt to hold Tehran accountable at the highest level.
The filing, submitted by former US Justice Department war-crimes prosecutor Eli Rosenbaum and human-rights lawyer Elliot Malin, argues Iran’s support for Hamas constitutes complicity in crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide.
It cites what it calls Hamas’s own statements acknowledging Iranian backing, as well as evidence from US investigations into Tehran’s financing of regional armed groups.
Though Iran is not a party to the ICC, prosecutors have previously asserted jurisdiction over Gaza, opening the possibility of probes into outside actors. The court has not yet said whether it will act on the complaint.
ranian President Masoud Pezeshkian departed Tehran for the United Nations in New York last week buoyed by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's quiet blessing to start secret talks with Washington to ward off looming sanctions.
According to two members of Pezeshkian's delegation, the 86-year-old hardline theocrat had privately told the relatively moderate president he could start a secret dialogue if it headed off the return of United Nations sanctions due for the week's end.
But as their plane crossed the Atlantic, Khamenei delivered a fiery speech on state television categorically ruling out any talks with Washington in a reversal that stunned Pezeshkian and Iran's top envoy, according to the two sources.
Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi later confided before a closed-door meeting of Iranian experts and academics that renewed US talks were the only avenue to halt the return of the European-triggered sanctions, three participants told Iran International.






