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Iran warns Saudi Arabia, UAE, Turkey of strikes on US bases if attacked - Reuters

Jan 14, 2026, 08:46 GMT+0

Iran has warned regional countries that it will strike US military bases on their soil if Washington attacks Iran, a senior Iranian official told Reuters on Wednesday, after President Donald Trump threatened to intervene amid nationwide anti-government protests.

"Tehran has told regional countries, from Saudi Arabia and the UAE to Turkey, that US bases in those countries will be attacked if the US targets Iran," the official said, adding that Iran had asked those governments to try to prevent any US attack.

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    INSIGHT

    Power vacuum in Tehran emboldens hardliners

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    Inflation spikes, basic goods slip out of reach for Iranians, citizens say

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    Iran turns to citizenship and assets as tools of pressure beyond its borders

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    Who backs war now? Tehran flips the script

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    As Tehran digs in, ordinary Iranians pay the price

  • Internet Pro or Censor Pro? Iran rolls out a new service
    ANALYSIS

    Internet Pro or Censor Pro? Iran rolls out a new service

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China says it opposes outside intervention in Iran after Trump warning

Jan 14, 2026, 07:44 GMT+0

China opposes any outside interference in Iran's internal affairs and does not support the use or threat of force in international relations, its foreign ministry said on Wednesday, after US President Donald Trump warned of "very strong action" against Tehran.

Mao Ning, a spokesperson for the Chinese foreign ministry, made the remarks at a regular news briefing when asked about Trump's comments.

Trump told CBS News that the United States would take "very strong action" if Iran starts hanging protesters. He also urged demonstrators to keep protesting and said that help was on the way.

Iran using death penalty to suppress protests, UN rapporteur warns

Jan 14, 2026, 07:39 GMT+0

The announced plan to use the death penalty against protesters was unlawful and showed authorities were willing to use executions to suppress demonstrations, said Mai Sato, the UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Iran, on Wednesday.

An Iranian protester, Erfan Soltani, 26, who was arrested on January 8 during anti-government protests in Fardis, west of Tehran, has been sentenced to death and was due to be executed on Wednesday.

Even if Wednesday execution does not go ahead immediately, Sato wrote on X, the stated intent to use capital punishment and the sentencing of a protester on a moharabeh (“enmity against God”) charge show disregard for freedom of assembly and expression.

“The death penalty is not the response of a country where freedom of assembly and expression are respected,” Sato said.

Iran blackout passes 132 hours as connectivity remains near zero

Jan 14, 2026, 07:32 GMT+0

Iran remained largely offline as the nationwide internet blackout passed its 132nd hour, internet monitoring group NetBlocks said Wednesday.

“Metrics show Iran remains offline as the country wakes to another day of digital darkness,” NetBlocks said, adding that early reports indicate thousands of casualties and that the lack of connectivity is obscuring the true scale of the killings.

Fars news agency, which is affiliated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, wrote that internet restrictions should continue as protests persist across the country.

It argued that maintaining limits on internet access is necessary, linking the blackout to what it described as security concerns during the unrest.

Iranians want a normal life and the ayatollah has no answer

Jan 14, 2026, 04:56 GMT+0
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Mohamad Machine-Chian

What is unfolding in Iran is a clash between a state that treats isolation and sacrifice as strategic virtues, and a society no longer willing to bear the economic and human cost of the Islamic Republic’s ideological and regional ambitions.

In recent weeks, millions have taken part in an unprecedented challenge to the Islamic Republic — and under a nationwide communications blackout, at least 12,000 people have been shot dead in what amounts to the largest mass killing of Iran’s contemporary history.

The collapse of the rial may have ignited the protests, but this wave of defiance runs far deeper than exchange-rate volatility. It reflects a society exhausted by decades of strategic deprivation.

The poverty pushing millions to the brink is not simply the result of policy error or mismanagement. It is the by-product of a conscious political choice: a calculated trade-off.

Tehran and its defenders routinely blame sanctions. Western analysts point to corruption or incompetence. Both explanations miss the governing logic at work.

What defines the Islamic Republic’s decision-making is not a lack of alternatives, but a rigid hierarchy of priorities: ideological integrity and regional reach consistently outrank broad-based prosperity.

In this calculus, economic crisis is not an unintended detour from the leadership’s path; it is the terrain on which that path has been chosen.

Fear of external influence and so-called “cultural invasion” reinforces this worldview. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has repeatedly framed material prosperity and deep integration with global markets as vulnerabilities that erode faith and weaken resistance.

His much-touted “Resistance Economy” is not designed to escape sanctions, but to endure them. It promises resilience, not growth; survival, not transformation.

That trade-off cascades through policy. The drive for agricultural self-sufficiency, promoted as revolutionary virtue, has drained aquifers and destabilized rural livelihoods, as water-intensive crops and inefficient irrigation exhaust already scarce groundwater.

  • The bazaar finally breaks with the Islamic Republic

    The bazaar finally breaks with the Islamic Republic

Meanwhile, a maze of subsidies, multiple exchange rates, and import restrictions creates rents that enrich well-connected actors while suffocating independent enterprise. These distortions are tolerated—even sustained—because they preserve political control and reward loyalty over innovation.

Even when officials acknowledge the scale of failure, they remain bound by the same red lines that produced it.

The water crisis lays this contradiction bare. Faced with mounting shortages, authorities warn of “water bankruptcy” and champion desalination plants and transfer megaprojects as proof of resolve, while continuing to treat self-sufficiency in water-intensive crops as a strategic achievement rather than a structural mistake.

The result is improvisation without reform: capital flows to spectacular projects that buy time, while the incentives driving depletion and waste remain untouched.

In such a system, rising living standards are irrelevant. Economic pain does not trigger reform because reform risks undoing the political architecture that keeps the Islamic Republic intact.

On the streets today, that logic is meeting its reckoning. Protesters are not merely rejecting inflation or unemployment; they are rejecting the premise that their suffering serves a higher purpose.

In recent remarks, Khamenei praised young people who aspire to “meet their maker” and embrace sacrifice over material advancement. Yet the chants echoing across Iranian cities demand something else entirely: dignity over obedience, participation over submission, a future to build rather than one to forfeit.

Confronted with this unrest, the leadership retreats to its familiar narrative of foreign plots, dismissing protesters as agents of outside powers. That rhetoric cannot conceal the deeper confrontation underway: two visions of national purpose that cannot coexist within a single political order.

One demands a society willing to trade its welfare, opportunities, and youth for an ideological project. The other, facing bullets and batons, is signaling that this exchange—their lives for the regime’s vision—is no longer acceptable.

For a generation that refuses to be treated as collateral, the Islamic Republic and its leader have no answer.

Israeli security forum chairman predicts Iranian government will fall

Jan 14, 2026, 01:53 GMT+0

Amir Avivi, chairman of the Israel Defense and Security Forum (IDSF), said the Iranian government is facing imminent collapse, predicting major regional changes and suggesting a large-scale US-led military action could occur in the near future.

“Today I can say something we couldn’t have said a month ago: this regime is going down. There will be no Iranian regime, and this is going to change entirely, the future of Israel,” Avivi said in a news event with Jerusalem Post on Tuesday.

“And indeed, I think that we’ll see in the very near future a massive American attack, with the help of Israel and with the demonstrators. I think this regime stands no chance, and they will fall,” he added.