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Top GOP senator warns Iran deal could undermine US military gains

Jun 19, 2026, 00:56 GMT+1

Roger Wicker, the Republican chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, warned that the Iran-US memorandum of understanding risks “negotiating away” recent US military successes.

Wicker said it would be a mistake to force Israel to stand down against Hezbollah in Lebanon and opposed lifting sanctions on Iran or unfreezing Iranian funds in exchange for what he described as Tehran's mere agreement to negotiate for another 60 days.

The remarks underscore continuing skepticism among some Republican lawmakers and pro-Israel voices who fear the agreement could provide Tehran with economic and political benefits before a broader settlement on nuclear and regional issues is reached.

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Tehran's familiar battle lines return over deal with US

Jun 19, 2026, 00:44 GMT+1
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Behrouz Turani
Tehran's familiar battle lines return over deal with US
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Worshippers attend a Muharram mourning ceremony in Tehran, commemorating the martyrdom of Imam Hussein, a central figure in Shia Islam, June 17, 2026

Hardline opposition in Iran to the Islamabad MoU increasingly resembles the reaction of ultraconservatives to the 2015 nuclear deal.

The parallels now extend beyond the critics themselves: a message attributed to Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei on Thursday offered cautious backing for the agreement while signaling reservations about its terms, recalling the balancing act performed by his father during the JCPOA debate.

When then–Foreign Minister Javad Zarif returned to Tehran after the JCPOA was announced in Vienna in July 2015, vigilante groups gathered at the airport, threatening to lynch him on arrival.

Eleven years later, similar militant factions in Tehran and Mashhad have been heard chanting death threats against chief negotiator Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, denouncing them as “traitors” and “mercenaries of the United States.”

The comparison is striking despite the very different nature of the two agreements.

The JCPOA was a comprehensive, multilateral non-proliferation accord negotiated in peacetime. The June 2026 MoU, by contrast, is a rapid bilateral framework designed to halt a destructive war, reopen the Strait of Hormuz and create a 60-day window for broader negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program.

In 2015, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei ultimately shielded Zarif and his team, praising their “services to the nation and Islam” despite earlier criticism. A decade later, Mojtaba Khamenei appears to be performing a more cautious version of the same role.

In doing so, he echoed a familiar formula: approving diplomacy while distancing himself from its potential costs. He said he had authorized the agreement despite reservations in principle, after receiving assurances that Iran’s rights and the interests of the “Resistance Front” would be protected.

Hardline outlets and figures have recycled much of the same language deployed against the JCPOA, warning of “capitulation,” “retreat” and repeated “betrayals,” while more pragmatic and reformist-leaning voices defend the MoU as a system-approved effort to secure economic relief and end the war.

Notably, some of the loudest opponents of the Islamabad MoU, including ultraconservative MP Mahmoud Nabavian and Kayhan editor Hossein Shariatmadari, played a similar role in 2015.

Ultraconservative factions continue to accuse negotiators of falling into a Western trap. Elements within the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) view provisions requiring a freeze on enrichment levels and the return of IAEA inspectors to damaged facilities as an unacceptable concession.

The parallels are not exact, but the political script has proved remarkably durable. In both periods, opponents of diplomacy have framed engagement with Washington as a threat to national sovereignty and security.

The JCPOA sought to resolve a long-running nuclear dispute through a detailed and legally complex framework. The Islamabad MoU is a temporary political arrangement intended to stop active hostilities and create space for further negotiations.

Yet some critics on both sides have approached it through the same lens that shaped the debate over the JCPOA.

Similar concerns surfaced at the ongoing G7 summit in France, where several European leaders urged President Trump to adopt a tougher stance toward Tehran and ensure that any future agreement contains sufficient safeguards against the potential weaponization of Iran’s nuclear activities.

Trump may feel free to dismiss such concerns, believing European governments have offered limited support for his campaign against Tehran. Ghalibaf, by contrast, is clearly attempting to persuade domestic hardliners to accept the agreement.

Addressing the Chamber of Commerce on Wednesday, he declared: “All of us must take over the trench that was held by the battlefield warriors, stand firm, lift the people out from under economic pressures, and build the country with power.”

Mojtaba Khamenei’s statement appeared designed to contain opposition from within the conservative camp. While emphasizing that he had approved the agreement only after receiving specific assurances from Iranian officials, he portrayed the decision as a conditional endorsement rather than a strategic shift, signaling to critics that support for the memorandum should not be mistaken for acceptance of broader concessions to Washington.

By invoking the language of wartime sacrifice while defending a diplomatic agreement, Ghalibaf appeared to be making a familiar argument: that negotiation, however unpopular among hardliners, may sometimes be necessary to preserve the very system they seek to defend.

Why some think a weakened Iran could emerge stronger

Jun 19, 2026, 00:37 GMT+1
Why some think a weakened Iran could emerge stronger
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Iran emerged from the recent conflict militarily weakened, its regional proxies battered and its deterrence challenged, yet many analysts now warn that Tehran may be turning battlefield losses into political leverage.

The central question, some observers say, is no longer whether Iran lost the war but whether it survived long enough to turn military setbacks into political gains.

"The Iranian regime is now entering the strategy of what I call surviving, recovering, and rebuilding," former Israeli intelligence official and Middle East analyst Avi Melamed said.

That assessment reflects a broader regional anxiety that after years of pressure on Iran's so-called Axis of Resistance, Tehran may now gain the time and space necessary to reconstruct its influence.

Read the full article here.

US-Iran memorandum lacks key constraints, UANI warns

Jun 18, 2026, 23:59 GMT+1

The United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) said on Thursday that the US-Iran memorandum of understanding provides Iran with significant economic relief while failing to sufficiently constrain its nuclear program and regional activities.

In a statement, UANI Chairman Jeb Bush and CEO Ambassador Mark D. Wallace welcomed US military and political actions against Iran’s nuclear and regional capabilities, but argued the memorandum remains “intentionally vague” and risks providing Tehran with early sanctions relief before key concessions are secured.

UANI urged the administration to adopt what it described as “red lines” in negotiations, including zero uranium enrichment, full removal of enriched uranium stockpiles, intrusive inspections, and restrictions on Iran’s missile and drone programs.

The organization also called for greater congressional oversight and warned that without stronger conditions, the agreement could risk repeating shortcomings of previous Iran nuclear frameworks.

Iran unified behind Supreme Leader after recent developments, Rezaei says

Jun 18, 2026, 23:53 GMT+1

Mohsen Rezaei, former IRGC commander and military adviser to Supreme Leader said on Thursday Iran is fully aligned behind the country’s leadership following recent developments.

"The proud and triumphant nation of Iran brought the devils of the world to their knees and shattered their dominance; this epic will endure eternally in history. We mourn over the blood of our martyred leader, and there is no balm for this wound save vengeance. United as one behind the Supreme Leader of the Revolution, we await the fulfillment of the conditions," he posted on X.

White House details US-Iran memorandum to Congress

Jun 18, 2026, 23:47 GMT+1

Senior Trump administration officials held a call with House and Senate leaders on Thursday about the US-Iran memorandum of understanding signed this week, according to a White House official and a congressional source cited by CBS News.

Top lawmakers from the Senate Foreign Relations and House Foreign Affairs committees also joined the call, where officials provided a readout of the agreement, answered questions, and outlined upcoming US-Iran negotiations. The briefing comes as the deal faces criticism from some Republican lawmakers who say it does not go far enough in restricting Iran.

Senate Armed Services Committee Chair Roger Wicker said he was concerned the memorandum could “negotiate away” gains from “Operation Epic Fury” in ways that are not aligned with President Donald Trump’s objectives, the report said.