Jordan’s foreign minister in a phone call with his Iranian counterpart on Monday said Amman would not allow its territory or airspace to be used for any military action against Iran.
“I discussed regional developments and efforts to reduce escalation in a phone call with Iran’s foreign minister,” Ayman Safadi said, referring to talks with Abbas Araghchi. “Jordan will not be a battleground for any party in any regional conflict, nor a launchpad for any military action against Iran.”

Britain added 11 new designations under its Iran sanctions regime on Monday, including Iran’s interior minister Eskandar Momeni and the country’s law enforcement forces, citing alleged human rights abuses.
The UK foreign ministry said those sanctioned were responsible for or involved in serious abuses linked to crackdowns on protests in 2025 and 2026. The measures include asset freezes, travel bans and director disqualification sanctions.
Those listed include Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni; provincial police chiefs Mohammad Reza Hashemifar and Ahmed Amini; senior security official Mohammad Zamani; Brigadier General Mohammad Ghanbari; judges Ahmad Darvish Goftar and Mehdi Rasakhi; Majid Feiz Jafari; Yadollah Bouali; businessman Babak Zanjani; and the Law Enforcement Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Britain said the sanctions were imposed over alleged violations including the killing of protesters, torture, sexual violence and restrictions on freedom of expression and peaceful assembly.
The head of Iran’s parliamentary national security and foreign policy commission said he had written to the foreign minister urging retaliatory steps after the European Union designated the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as a terrorist organization.
Ebrahim Azizi said in the letter that Iran should designate military attachés from EU member states as terrorists and expel them, particularly from countries he said had acted against Iran during recent conflicts or unrest, state media reported.
He described the EU decision as a political and “ill-considered” move that undermined regional and international security and violated international law.

Iran has no plans to transfer its enriched nuclear material to any country and talks are not focused on such an option, a senior Iranian official said, pushing back against earlier reports.
Ali Bagheri, deputy for foreign policy at Iran’s Supreme National Security Council secretariat, said Iranian officials had no intention of moving enriched nuclear materials out of the country.
“Iranian officials have no plan to transfer enriched nuclear materials to any country, and negotiations are not about such an issue,” he was quoted as saying by state media.
His comments came after Reuters reported on Monday that an unnamed Iranian official said diplomacy was ongoing and that Iran was ready to show flexibility on uranium enrichment, including possibly handing over 400 kg of highly enriched uranium under certain arrangements.

The European Union said on Monday it rejected Iran’s decision to consider the armies of EU countries as “terrorist groups” after the bloc designated Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as a terrorist organization.
“We reject the announcement of the listing of EU armies and the accusation of terrorism,” European Commission spokesman Anouar El Anouni said.
Iran’s move followed an EU decision last Thursday to list the Revolutionary Guards, a step that marked a shift in the bloc’s approach toward Iran’s leadership after a deadly crackdown on protests.

A senior Iranian military commander warned on Monday that Iran would respond forcefully if its security was threatened, saying the region could not remain safe if Iran was unsafe.
“We will never accept that Iran is unsafe while the region is secure,” Kioumars Heidari, deputy commander of Iran’s central Khatam al-Anbiya headquarters, was quoted as saying by Iranian media.
He said that if the United States endangered Iran’s security, “neither the Zionist regime nor other countries that help the US will have security,” adding they would be defeated and forced to leave the region.
Heidari also warned Washington to act "wisely" toward Iran. “It is in the Americans’ interest to behave rationally,” he said, adding that otherwise they would face a “harsh and regret-inducing” response.






