Former US Vice President Mike Pence said on Tuesday that the collapse of oppressive governments is inevitable and that Iran will follow the path of the Soviet Union.
“No oppressive regime can last forever. Inside every human heart is an unquenchable fire that burns to be free. Just as the Soviet Union collapsed under the weight of its own sins, so too will be the fate of the oppressors of Iran,” Pence wrote on X. “May 2026 be the year that sees the dawn of a Free and Democratic Iran.”
Senator Roger Wicker expressed his support for the people of Iran, saying their struggle is to achieve a normal, accountable leadership.
“Iranians are taking to the streets today in response to the economic ruin that Iran’s terrorist-supporting leadership has brought upon the country,” the Republican senator from Mississippi wrote on X on Monday night.
“I support their struggle for sane leadership that puts their interest first, not the interests of Islamist terrorists. Iranians should be free of the despotism that devastated a once thriving society,” he added.
Mehdi Beik, the political editor of Tehran-based Etemad newspaper, had not been heard of since Monday after he went to central Tehran to report from the field on gatherings by bazaar merchants, his wife said on Tuesday.
The newspaper later announced that Beik had been arrested by security forces on Monday and was released a few hours ago.

At least five students were arrested on Tuesday during protests in Tehran, according to student Telegram channels.
Mobin Aminian, an undergraduate student in chemical engineering; Shahin Shokouhi, a PhD student in sociology; Aref Hadi-Nejad, an undergraduate student in philosophy; and Mani Eidi, an undergraduate student in philosophy, were arrested outside the University of Tehran campus in downtown Tehran.
Abolfazl Morovvati, a graduate student in computer engineering at Sharif University of Technology, was also arrested by security forces.

At least eleven protesters were arrested on Tuesday on Sabounian Street near Tehran’s Shoush Square, according to human rights groups.
A video circulating on social media purportedly shows the moment security forces were transferring the detainees.

The US Treasury on Tuesday imposed new sanctions on individuals and firms in Iran and Venezuela, accusing them of facilitating weapons transfers, including Iranian-made combat drones for Venezuela and procurement networks tied to Iran’s missile program.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control said it was targeting ten individuals and entities linked to Iran’s unmanned aerial vehicle trade with Venezuela, as well as separate actors involved in sourcing missile-related chemicals for Iran’s defense industry.
Treasury said the measures build on earlier nonproliferation designations made in October and November, following the September 27 reimposition of United Nations sanctions on Iran.
Officials said Iran’s UAV and missile programs threaten US and allied personnel in the Middle East, destabilize commercial shipping in the Red Sea, and undermine US interests in the Western Hemisphere through arms transfers to Caracas.
“Treasury is holding Iran and Venezuela accountable for their aggressive and reckless proliferation of deadly weapons around the world,” said Treasury Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence John K. Hurley.
An Iranian vice president on Tuesday defended Tehran’s ballistic missile capabilities as essential for deterrence, after the US president warned of further attacks if Iran moves to develop its missile program which was severely damaged in a June war.
"Iran must have missiles; without them, we would be defenseless. We must stand for Iran’s dignity," Vice-President for Executive Affairs Mohammad-Jafar Ghaempanah said.
Non-proliferation concerns
According to Treasury, the action was taken under Executive Orders 13382 and 13949, which target weapons of mass destruction proliferators and Iran’s conventional arms activities.
The designations were also linked to National Security Presidential Memorandum 2, which directs US agencies to curb Iran’s missile program and deny the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps access to financial resources.
OFAC designated three Iran-based individuals for efforts to procure chemicals used in ballistic missiles for Parchin Chemical Industries, an element of Iran’s Defense Industries Organization responsible for chemical imports and exports. Treasury said the materials sought included sodium perchlorate, sebacic acid and nitrocellulose, all used in solid-propellant rocket motors.
Treasury identified Mostafa Rostami Sani as a key figure in the procurement network, accusing him of sourcing large quantities of sodium perchlorate and acting as a liaison between foreign suppliers and Parchin Chemical Industries. Rostami Sani is the chairman of Pardisan Rezvan Shargh International Private Joint Stock Company, which was also designated. The company’s managing director, Reza Zarepour Taraghi, was sanctioned as well.
OFAC also expanded sanctions on Iran’s defense-linked technology sector, designating entities and individuals connected to Rayan Fan Kav Andish Co, a holding company tied to firms producing components and software for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ UAV and aerospace programs. Newly designated entities include Fanavari Electro Moj Mobin Company and Kavoshgaran Asman Moj Ghadir Company, along with executives Bahram Rezaei, Erfan Qaysari and Mehdi Ghaffari.





