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Israel envoy says world must not ignore Iran repression

Jun 17, 2026, 08:02 GMT+1

Israel’s UN Ambassador Danny Danon said on Wednesday that the international community “must not remain indifferent” to Iran’s repression, citing torture, mass graves, forced disappearances and families left without answers.

“The Iranian regime’s history is written in the suffering of its own people: torture chambers, mass graves, forced disappearances, and families left without answers. The victims of Iran’s repression, and their families, deserve truth, transparency, and accountability,” Danon said on X.

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Iran media split over US MoU as hardliners warn of retreat
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INSIGHT

Iran media split over US MoU as hardliners warn of retreat

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INSIGHT

Iran-US MoU draws praise and backlash across Tehran’s political spectrum

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ANALYSIS

Iran hardliners rage over US deal, but experts say regime is closing ranks

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EXCLUSIVE

Israel to help oust Iran regime, Bennett tells Iranians frustrated by US deal

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Iran executes two January protesters as post-war crackdown continues

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  • Iran hardliners rage over US deal, but experts say regime is closing ranks
    ANALYSIS

    Iran hardliners rage over US deal, but experts say regime is closing ranks

  • Iran-US MoU draws praise and backlash across Tehran’s political spectrum
    INSIGHT

    Iran-US MoU draws praise and backlash across Tehran’s political spectrum

  • Iran media split over US MoU as hardliners warn of retreat
    INSIGHT

    Iran media split over US MoU as hardliners warn of retreat

  • Trump's Iran strategy underrates regime's resilience, ex-US diplomat says

    Trump's Iran strategy underrates regime's resilience, ex-US diplomat says

  • Lebanon may become first test of emerging Iran-US deal, experts say
    PODCAST

    Lebanon may become first test of emerging Iran-US deal, experts say

  • The uneasy mix of diplomacy and pressure in Canada’s Iran policy
    ANALYSIS

    The uneasy mix of diplomacy and pressure in Canada’s Iran policy

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G7 welcomes US-Iran deal, backs Hezbollah disarmament

Jun 17, 2026, 07:00 GMT+1
G7 welcomes US-Iran deal, backs Hezbollah disarmament
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G7 leaders for a family photo before a cultural performance and concert during the G7 summit, in Evian-les-Bains, France, June 16, 2026.

G7 leaders welcomed on Wednesday the announcement of a deal between the United States and Iran, saying it offered a major opening to prevent Tehran from acquiring a nuclear weapon and address regional and missile-related threats.

“We welcome the announcement of a deal between the United States and Iran, secured under the strong leadership of President Trump, with the support of mediating countries,” the leaders said in a statement on geopolitical issues.

They said the agreement provided “an historic opportunity to prevent Iran from acquiring any nuclear weapon and tackling the threats related to its regional and ballistic activities.”

“We support and are ready to contribute to its implementation,” the statement said.

The Group of Seven also backed further diplomacy after the US-Iran memorandum of understanding, saying any follow-on negotiation should address threats posed by Iran “in the region and beyond” and include relevant partners, including the International Atomic Energy Agency.

“We reaffirm that Iran will never obtain a nuclear weapon,” the leaders said.

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On Lebanon, the G7 tied its support to an immediate ceasefire and the disarmament of Iran-backed Hezbollah.

“In Lebanon, we support, through an immediate robust ceasefire, the Lebanese leadership’s efforts to achieve the disarmament of Hezbollah and the monopoly of arms, and to protect Lebanon’s territorial integrity and sovereignty with the appropriate international security guarantees,” the statement said.

The leaders also backed the resumption of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, saying “the right of transit passage without restrictions or tolls is the bedrock of international trade.”

They said a multinational defensive initiative led by France and the UK could help protect merchant vessels, reassure shipping operators and verify the removal of mines.

The G7 also pledged to reduce global vulnerability to the Strait of Hormuz by accelerating the diversification of energy supply routes and increasing energy stocks.

Qatar brings LNG tankers back toward Middle East - Bloomberg

Jun 17, 2026, 05:22 GMT+1

Qatar has begun bringing some of its liquefied natural gas tankers back toward the Middle East as it prepares to ramp up exports once the Strait of Hormuz reopens under a US-Iran deal, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday, citing ship-tracking data.

At least four empty LNG vessels owned by Qatar recently began heading back toward the region after idling or sailing in another direction, while another Qatar-chartered ship is also heading there, the report said.

The tankers are signaling Ras Laffan, the world’s largest LNG export plant in Qatar, as their next destination.

Four other Qatar-linked tankers are idling in the Gulf of Oman and could try to pass through Hormuz into the Persian Gulf, Bloomberg reported. It said Qatar has not brought an empty vessel into the Persian Gulf since the war began in February.

Hope, anger and distrust: Iranians debate Iran-US memorandum online

Jun 17, 2026, 03:38 GMT+1
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Maryam Sinaiee
Hope, anger and distrust: Iranians debate Iran-US memorandum online
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FILE PHOTO: People walk along a street with Iranian flags and a poster with images of Iran's late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Tehran.

The digital signing of a memorandum of understanding between Tehran and Washington to end the war and open a new round of negotiations, including on Iran’s nuclear program, has triggered sharply divided reactions across Iranian social media.

The MoU is expected to be formally signed on Friday and followed by 60 days of talks aimed at reaching a final deal, leaving many Iranians torn between relief over the end of fighting, hope for sanctions relief, anger over years of delay, and distrust of both Tehran and Washington.

Regime supporters say Iran forced concessions

Some government supporters argued that Iran emerged from the conflict without losing territory and succeeded in compelling its adversaries to accept its demands through resistance.

A review of public comments posted in response to a Khabar Online survey on reactions to the end of the war showed both pride and anger among users.

One user wrote that they were “very happy” about the end of the war while also feeling “a sense of pride.”

That view was quickly challenged by others. Responding to the comment, another user wrote: “Exactly what is there to be proud of? The destruction of military and technical infrastructure? Crushing inflation that is breaking people's backs? Or the fact that countries in the region are no longer willing to maintain relations with Iran? What pride are you talking about?”

Another user was even more critical, writing: “They struck our leader and senior officials. Several layers of leadership were hit from top to bottom. Our skies had become a thoroughfare for Israel and the United States. I am not proud of this situation.”

Relief mixed with anxiety

Many users said they welcomed the end of the fighting but remained pessimistic about the future or fearful that war could erupt again.

Responding to Khabar Online, one user wrote: “I am happy the war is over, but I do not have an encouraging outlook for the future.”

The user added that prospects would remain bleak as long as some groups could freely gather in the streets under the protection of security forces and express their views, while criticism of government policies by others was treated as opposition to the entire political system and met with “insults, reprimands, prison, and torture.”

Another user described their feelings as “a measure of calm accompanied by anxiety about another war in the future.”

Some users expressed hopes that a final agreement and the lifting of sanctions could improve living conditions.

Dorna Afshinfar wrote on X: “If a final agreement is reached and sanctions are lifted, what changes do you expect to see? I expect dramatic falls in the prices of essential goods such as rice, meat, chicken, dairy products, and fruit; sharp declines in housing, dollar, and gold prices; medicines and healthcare becoming much cheaper; the arrival of new airplanes, buses, and ships; and lower ticket prices for all of them.”

Critics say the deal came too late

A recurring theme among users was criticism of the government for resisting negotiations with Washington for years before eventually returning to the negotiating table after a costly conflict.

One user named Mojtaba wrote on X: “After all this war and misery, we are back to nuclear negotiations again. My God, what sin did we commit that negotiations never leave us Iranians alone?”

He added: “If you were going to make all these concessions, you should have accepted them from the beginning and not let people be crushed under the burden of inflation.”

The same user accused officials of ruining lives through years of insistence on the nuclear issue, writing: “You destroyed people's lives through all these years of absurd insistence on nuclear energy. Now you have accepted it. You should have made a rational decision from the start. I feel bitter that my past, present, and lost youth have been wasted.”

Another user wrote: “What do we feel? We feel inflation, helplessness, and a lost future. Why did you choose this path from the beginning, create all this damage, and then return to where you started? Why all these costs and wasted opportunities?”

Opposition lashes out at Trump

Many opponents of the Islamic Republic reacted angrily to Washington's decision to reach an agreement with Tehran, saying they felt abandoned by President Donald Trump and his administration.

One user wrote on X: “Shame on Trump for making a deal with the killers of 50,000 martyrs.”

Another user, referring to reports that Trump prevented Israel from targeting Ali Khamenei during the 12-day war in 2025, said: “This agreement is a betrayal of the Iranian people. They told us not to come out into the streets until the right time arrived, but it never came. Why did they not allow Khamenei to be targeted during the 12-day war? There are many other questions that I know will never be answered. They played with our blood.”

Yet another user wrote: “Forty thousand martyrs are the light that guides us, and avenging them remains our goal. Whether America wants it or not, whether it makes a deal or not, what matters is what the people of Iran want.”

Others insisted that the opposition movement would continue regardless of diplomatic developments.

“One way or another, they will reach an agreement and remain in power, but we will still be here. We will confront them in the streets. We swear by the blood of the slain that we will not go back,” one user wrote on X.

Another added: “Despite this agreement, I have never been more certain that this regime will fall. We have a king, and we will stand by our king and our flag until the end. We will reclaim Iran ourselves.”

Hardliners reject negotiations

Hardline government supporters who oppose any negotiations with the United States and believe the conflict should continue until the defeat of the United States and Israel also expressed anger at the agreement.

In recent days, hardline demonstrators have chanted slogans such as “Death to the compromisers,” “What happened to the blood of the martyred Leader?” and “We do not accept the agreement.” They have also launched a campaign under the slogan “We Do Not Accept” in an effort to halt the deal.

Videos and posts circulating on social media appeared to show security forces trying to prevent some of these gatherings and, in some cases, using force against demonstrators in Tehran and Mashhad. Iran International could not independently verify the footage or the circumstances.

Among the posts shared on X was one by Mohammad-Taher Rahimi, who wrote: “May the hand be cut off of anyone who shakes hands with the killers of the martyred Imam and poses for a commemorative photograph with them.”

A hardline user named Mehrdad wrote: “After the enemy gains access to uranium, we will enter a difficult existential war. Do not forget that Ghalibaf and Pezeshkian paved the way for this conflict.”

Another user, Hessam Mahmoudi, argued that Iran's uranium stockpile was a key deterrent. “The enemy needed to destroy missile cities with tactical nuclear bombs to force Iran's surrender. The only thing stopping them was uranium. If we give up our uranium stockpile or destroy it, next time they will do something unprecedented to us.”

A user posting under the name Bi Behnam on X wrote: “Let me be very clear. Trump's primary and ultimate goal in accepting this agreement is to remove Iran's uranium reserves. After that, the rest of the path will not be difficult for him. The moment the reserves are handed over or diluted, they will come down on Iran in a way that will become a lesson for history.”

US officials say Iran agreement text is intentionally vague - CNN

Jun 17, 2026, 03:34 GMT+1

US officials told CNN that the memorandum of understanding between Washington and Tehran was drafted in broad terms to facilitate future negotiations rather than resolve key disputes.

According to the report, officials described the document as “incredibly vague” and primarily intended to create a favorable environment for upcoming technical talks, while also helping Iran present the agreement to a domestic audience.

One official said “people shouldn’t read too much into the language of the MOU,” describing it as a “political document.” The official added that “what’s more important than the actual document is the understandings we have with each other,” and said the text does not reflect what officials described as critical back-channel commitments made by Iran.

"Issues such as sanctions relief, a nuclear agreement and access to frozen funds would be tied to future negotiations and progress on implementation rather than being immediately granted under the memorandum itself," The officials told CNN.

Senator Kaine says Trump’s Iran policy 'paved the path to war'

Jun 17, 2026, 02:20 GMT+1

Democratic Senator Tim Kaine on Tuesday criticized the decision to withdraw from Iran nuclear deal, saying it contributed to the current conflict and unnecessary US losses.

“Donald Trump’s decision to tear up a diplomatic deal that was working paved us a path to war," Kaine told MS Now. "The decision caused the deaths of American troops who would be alive today and led to the expenditure of tens of billions of dollars that shouldn’t have been expended.”

Kaine also said the US and its troops had been “betrayed by ridiculous civilian decision making.”