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Iran demands half its frozen funds upon signing deal - report

May 26, 2026, 17:42 GMT+1

Iran is insisting on receiving half of its frozen assets upon signing a memorandum of understanding with the United States, Al Arabiya reported, citing a diplomatic source.

The source said Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf’s trip to Qatar was aimed at discussing mechanisms to release the frozen assets.

Tehran is demanding that the remaining half be transferred within 60 days, the report said, adding that Iran has sought the release of about $24 billion in frozen assets during the negotiations.

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Iran restores internet after 88-day blackout, keeps social media blocked
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Iran restores internet after 88-day blackout, keeps social media blocked

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OPINION

Trump vs Tehran: how not signing became the deal

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INSIGHT

Qatar emerges as key broker in US-Iran frozen funds dispute

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Prospect of US-Iran deal fuels attacks on Ghalibaf

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US officials deny Navy resumed Hormuz ship assistance - Al Arabiya

May 26, 2026, 16:50 GMT+1

US official sources denied that the US Navy had resumed helping ships pass through the Strait of Hormuz, Al Arabiya reported on Tuesday.

The denial followed a Wall Street Journal report saying the US Navy had restarted assisting vessel crossings through the strategic waterway.

CENTCOM says US has redirected 108 vessels under Iran blockade

May 26, 2026, 16:45 GMT+1

US Central Command said on Tuesday that US forces had redirected 108 commercial vessels as part of enforcement of the US blockade against Iran.

CENTCOM released an image of a US sailor standing watch in the pilothouse aboard the USS John Finn, a guided-missile destroyer transiting the Arabian Sea in support of the blockade.

US Navy restarts guiding ships through Hormuz – WSJ

May 26, 2026, 16:02 GMT+1

The US Navy has restarted assisting vessel crossings through the Strait of Hormuz, the Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday, citing US military officials.

The officials said a Greek supertanker carrying two million barrels of crude was guided by the US Navy as it crossed the waterway off Oman’s coast.

The ship had been stuck in the Persian Gulf since early March and is now heading to India to deliver its cargo.

The renewed effort was said to be a part of “Project Freedom,” a US initiative to guide ships through the vital shipping corridor.

The US Navy plans to help about a dozen vessels, including supertankers and container ships, cross Hormuz in the coming days, the report said.

Trump to hold Camp David cabinet meeting as Iran talks near crunch point - NY Post

May 26, 2026, 15:43 GMT+1

US President Donald Trump is expected to hold a cabinet meeting at Camp David on Wednesday as talks with Iran near a critical stage, the New York Post reported on Tuesday.

All cabinet members, including outgoing Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, are expected to attend the meeting at the presidential retreat in Maryland, the report said.

The meeting location could change because of bad weather, it added.

Iran internet partly restored after 88-day blackout despite court challenge

May 26, 2026, 15:30 GMT+1

Iran partially restored internet access on Tuesday after 88 days of near-total isolation, NetBlocks said, even as state media reported that an administrative court had temporarily halted the government-created body behind the reopening order.

"Live metrics show a partial restoration to internet connectivity in Iran on day 88, after 2093 hours of near-total isolation from international networks, the longest nationwide internet shutdown in modern history," the internet observatory Netblocks said in a Tuesday post on X.

The restoration followed a Monday vote by a special cyberspace body created by President Masoud Pezeshkian to return international internet access to its pre-January 2026 status.

However, state media reported Tuesday that an administrative court had temporarily suspended implementation of the order that established the body, raising questions over the legal future of the reopening process.

ICT Minister Sattar Hashemi said the restoration decision was approved by nine votes to two at the body’s first official meeting, while his deputy said the reopening of fixed-line internet had begun nationwide.

On Monday, the IRGC-affiliated Fars News agency first questioned whether the administration had the authority to issue such an order, arguing that because the restrictions were imposed by the Supreme National Security Council, only the same body could formally reverse them.

Hours later, however, Fars appeared to soften its position in an editorial describing the reopening as a necessary “technical and security” decision that would have happened “sooner or later” as cyber conditions improved.

The outlet said the restrictions had originally been imposed to prevent cyber espionage and protect critical infrastructure during wartime conditions and an unprecedented wave of cyberattacks.

While acknowledging criticism over the legal process behind the decision, Fars dismissed efforts to turn the issue into a political dispute and accused some reformist media outlets of exploiting the shutdown to deepen internal divisions during what it described as a “full-scale war.”

The meeting of the Special Task Force on Cyberspace Management ended with nine votes in favor and three against reconnecting Iran to the global internet, according to reports.

Peyman Jebelli, head of Iran’s state broadcaster, and Mohammad-Amin Aghamiri, secretary of the Supreme Council of Cyberspace, were among the strongest opponents of restoring international internet access, Faraz reported citing informed sources.

According to Faraz, both men remained firmly opposed to reconnecting the country to the global internet until the end of the meeting.

The report said Aghamiri’s position was particularly notable because the secretary of the Supreme Council of Cyberspace is appointed by the president. Although Aghamiri was first appointed under the previous administration, Pezeshkian later retained him in the post.

Faraz said Aghamiri’s opposition had placed him at odds with the government at a time when Pezeshkian has publicly identified restoring internet access as one of his priorities.