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Iran MP says Hormuz fee proposal to be reviewed next week

Mar 26, 2026, 06:49 GMT+0

A draft proposal to let Iran collect transit fees in the Strait of Hormuz has been prepared and would be sent to parliament’s research center next week for legal review, an Iranian lawmaker said on Thursday.

Mohammadreza Rezaei Kouchi said he had prepared the draft jointly with Tehran lawmaker Somayyeh Rafiei and that they planned to finalize it with a legal team.

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Iran’s lion-and-sun flag at center of FIFA row before 2026 World Cup
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Iran’s lion-and-sun flag at center of FIFA row before 2026 World Cup

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INSIGHT

Iran factions clash over interim US deal as Trump weighs final call

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SPECIAL REPORT

Witnesses describe gunfire, blocked exits and deadly market fire in Rasht

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INSIGHT

How four Khamenei family names map the Islamic Republic’s inner circle

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Amnesty says Iran using war to intensify repression

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  • Iran factions clash over interim US deal as Trump weighs final call
    INSIGHT

    Iran factions clash over interim US deal as Trump weighs final call

  • Names of some Iran protest victims vanish from Tehran cemetery database

    Names of some Iran protest victims vanish from Tehran cemetery database

  • How four Khamenei family names map the Islamic Republic’s inner circle
    INSIGHT

    How four Khamenei family names map the Islamic Republic’s inner circle

  • Witnesses describe gunfire, blocked exits and deadly market fire in Rasht
    SPECIAL REPORT

    Witnesses describe gunfire, blocked exits and deadly market fire in Rasht

  • Iran’s lion-and-sun flag at center of FIFA row before 2026 World Cup

    Iran’s lion-and-sun flag at center of FIFA row before 2026 World Cup

  • Iran’s partial internet return exposes rift inside ruling system

    Iran’s partial internet return exposes rift inside ruling system

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Rescue forces head to impact sites in central Israel, military says

Mar 26, 2026, 05:53 GMT+0

Search and rescue forces were heading to reported impact sites in central Israel, the Israeli military said on Wednesday.
The public was asked to avoid gathering in those areas and to keep following Home Front Command instructions.

Two people were lightly hurt in Kafr Qasim after an Iranian cluster bomb impact, Times of Israel reported, citing medics.

A 55-year-old man and a 55-year-old woman were treated after a bomblet struck a building in the central city, according to the report.

Trump wants Iran war ended within weeks - WSJ

Mar 26, 2026, 05:15 GMT+0
Trump wants Iran war ended within weeks - WSJ
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U.S. President Donald Trump looks on during the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) annual fundraising dinner in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 25, 2026.

US President Donald Trump told aides in recent days he wanted to end the war in Iran within weeks and avoid a prolonged conflict, people familiar with the matter told the Wall Street Journal.

He said privately he believed the war was in its final stage and urged advisers to stick to a four-to-six-week timeline, the people said.

White House officials planned a mid-May summit with China’s Xi Jinping expecting the war to end before the meeting, some of the people added.

Trump also told an associate the conflict was distracting from domestic priorities, according to one of the people.

A senior administration official said Trump floated securing US access to Iranian oil as part of a possible deal, though no planning was underway.

US officials said Trump remained reluctant to deploy ground troops, partly over concerns about casualties.

Another senior US official said Trump had directed the military to keep pressure on Tehran while leaving options open.

IRGC rhetoric frames US island assault as chance to capture troops

Mar 26, 2026, 02:29 GMT+0
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Behrouz Turani
IRGC rhetoric frames US island assault as chance to capture troops
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US Marines disembark from a U.S. Navy Landing Craft Utility (LCU) during amphibious operations in Arroyo, Puerto Rico, December 9, 2025

Some Tehran commentators say any US attempt to seize Iranian islands in the Persian Gulf could play directly into the IRGC’s long-standing strategy of capturing American troops for leverage.

Much of the commentary in Iranian media and political circles frames such a scenario as an opportunity rather than a risk for Tehran, arguing that deploying US forces on Iranian territory would expose them to capture by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and potentially inflict a political humiliation on Washington.

The idea has deep roots in Iran’s political rhetoric. Mohsen Rezai, the former IRGC commander who once floated the proposal of capturing US troops and demanding large sums for their release, now serves as a senior military adviser to Iran’s new Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei.

Former IRGC commander Hossein Kanani Moghaddam said last week that one scenario allegedly considered by the United States involved focusing on Iran’s southern islands and attempting to seize them to gain control over Persian Gulf oil routes.

“If Trump were to deploy air and naval forces along with Delta Force commandos in a ground operation, the battlefield would shift entirely in our favor,” Kanani Moghaddam said. “By killing or capturing American soldiers, we could raise the level of US losses to a point where they would quickly regret their actions.”

He added that such losses could trigger a political backlash in Washington and even lead to impeachment proceedings against President Donald Trump.

The prospect of an occupation of an Iranian island has also been linked in Iranian commentary to the broader diplomatic standoff between Tehran and Washington.

Despite Trump’s references to “constructive negotiations,” Iranian officials argue that US military threats undermine any possibility of diplomacy.

On March 25, Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said Iran had already experienced “two catastrophic examples” of trusting US diplomacy. “Over the past nine months, the United States has attacked Iran twice in the middle of negotiations,” he said. “This was a betrayal of diplomacy.”

In a March 23 interview with the Iranian outlet Fararu, Jalal Sadatian, Iran’s former chief diplomat in London, said Trump could not simultaneously threaten military action against Iranian territory while expecting Tehran to accept ceasefire proposals.

Sadatian also warned that Iranian retaliation could expand beyond direct confrontation with US forces. He pointed to the IRGC’s earlier warnings that electricity-generation facilities and desalination plants in regional countries could be targeted if Iran’s own critical infrastructure were attacked.

According to Sadatian, Tehran had long warned that any attack on Iran would trigger a broader regional war. He argued that Washington underestimated Iran’s willingness and ability to strike US bases across the region.

Israel adviser says ending Iran threat means removing regime

Mar 26, 2026, 01:48 GMT+0

A senior adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dismissed prospects for US-Iran diplomacy, telling CNN that Tehran “always lies” and arguing that Israel’s objective is to eliminate the threat posed by the Islamic Republic.

“Well, Iran always lies. We've we've learned that they always lie. But more importantly, our objective is to remove the existential threat posed by this ayatollah regime," Ophir Falk said.

"The best way of doing that is to remove the regime. Another way of doing that is to decimate their capabilities, decimate their military capabilities until they get to the stone age," he added.

Uganda pledges to back Israel if attacked, army chief says

Mar 26, 2026, 01:19 GMT+0

Uganda Chief of Defense Forces General Muhoozi Kainerugaba posted on X on Wednesday that the world wants the Middle East war to end now, but any talk of destroying or defeating Israel will bring Uganda into the war on Israel's side.