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Israel says it struck Hezbollah command centers in southern Lebanon

Jun 29, 2026, 07:56 GMT+1

The Israeli military said on Monday that it struck three Hezbollah command centers in southern Lebanon in response to what it called violations of the ceasefire agreement.

The IDF said the strikes targeted sites in the Nabatieh and Mayfadoun areas after Hezbollah continued attacks on Israeli soldiers.

It said Israeli soldiers earlier struck and dismantled a launcher that Hezbollah had continued using to direct attacks at them.

The military said it would continue operations to remove threats to Israeli soldiers and prevent Hezbollah from harming Israeli civilians and troops.

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Iraq arrests officials tied to Iran-aligned parties in Baghdad raids, sources say
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EXCLUSIVE

Iraq arrests officials tied to Iran-aligned parties in Baghdad raids, sources say

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INSIGHT

Khamenei mourning site shut as shroud-wearing hardliners expose loyalist rift

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Iran's top clerical body turns on itself over US deal

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INSIGHT

Return of Iran-US thaw advocate ignites hardline debate

5
VOICES FROM IRAN

Citizens tell Iran football team it lost the public long ago

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Spotlight

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    ANALYSIS

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  • How a US-Iran deal can reshape the Middle East
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  • Iranians recast Ashura mourning to remember January protest victims
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  • Investigation traces January protest deaths to Gharazi Hospital in Isfahan
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    Investigation traces January protest deaths to Gharazi Hospital in Isfahan

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Iran, Oman hold first joint Hormuz committee meeting

Jun 29, 2026, 07:34 GMT+1

Iran and Oman held the first meeting of their joint Hormuz committee in Muscat to discuss the future management of the Strait of Hormuz, Iranian deputy foreign minister said on Monday.

Kazem Gharibabadi said he met Abdulaziz Al Hinai, Oman’s ambassador-at-large, during the visit and reviewed current issues related to the strait.

He said the two sides exchanged views on future management of the strait under clause five of the Tehran-Washington memorandum of understanding.

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Iran cyberattacks on Israel rose sharply in 2026, official says

Jun 29, 2026, 07:13 GMT+1

Iranian cyberattacks against Israel have surged since the launch of the US-Israeli strikes on Iran this year, a senior Israeli security official was quoted as saying on Monday.

Yossi Karadi, director general of Israel’s National Cyber Directorate, told Germany’s Die Welt newspaper that Israeli authorities recorded about 1,600 hostile cyber incidents during military operations on Iran in June 2025.

He said the number rose to about 4,800 incidents in the same month this year.

“Some groups are very skilled,” Karadi said. “We can handle them, but we have to take them seriously. Unlike in the kinetic realm, there’s no ceasefire in cyberspace.”

Karadi said the attacks targeted systems used by critical infrastructure, central organizations, small and medium-sized companies and the public, including law and accounting firms.

“So far - and hopefully it stays that way - we’ve managed to fend off attacks on critical infrastructure,” he said.

Hardline daily editor says Trump must be handed to Iran for trial

Jun 29, 2026, 06:47 GMT+1
Hardline daily editor says Trump must be handed to Iran for trial
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Hossein Shariatmadari, Iranian Supreme Leader’s representative at the Kayhan newspaper, wrote on Sunday that Iran’s first demand in negotiations should be the handover of US President Donald Trump for trial in Iranian courts.

“The first step in fulfilling the Leader’s demands in the negotiations is to insist on handing Trump over to the Islamic Republic for trial in Iran’s judicial authorities,” he wrote.

He also wrote that Iran’s negotiating team should refuse to accept Trump or his representatives in future talks and instead propose a delegation made up of members of the US Congress.

“The effort to avenge Supreme Leader must take place on American soil itself,” he added.

Iran lawmaker urges unity over delayed parliament reopening

Jun 29, 2026, 06:09 GMT+1

An Iranian lawmaker said on Sunday that concerns over the continued closure of parliament are valid, but the issue should not be handled in a way that creates division or room for abuse.

Parliament budget committee member Mohsen Zangeneh said lawmakers should move forward in a way that avoids division, adding that for various reasons it had been decided to reopen the chamber after the funeral of Iran’s slain Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

More than 60 Iranian lawmakers canceled a planned protest outside parliament on Sunday after the parliament's presiding board promised to resume open sessions following funeral ceremonies for senior officials killed in the recent conflict, hardline influencer Davood Modaresian said on Saturday, adding that the lawmakers were wrong to call off the demonstration.

Why falling oil prices don't mean Hormuz crisis is over

Jun 29, 2026, 04:58 GMT+1
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Dalga Khatinoglu
Why falling oil prices don't mean Hormuz crisis is over
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Global oil prices have fallen back to around where they stood before the Iran war. But the decline reflects not a recovery in supply but a combination of emergency measures including strategic reserve releases, alternative export routes and, above all, weakening global demand.

According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the massive supply shock triggered by disruptions in the Persian Gulf has been partially offset by excess oil production accumulated last year and in early 2026, emergency stock releases by industrialized countries, Saudi Arabia's and the UAE's use of export routes bypassing the Strait of Hormuz, and a sharp decline in global oil demand led by China.

The scale of the disruption remains enormous. Oil production across the Persian Gulf has fallen by more than 10 million barrels per day over recent months, resulting in a cumulative production loss of roughly 1.3 billion barrels.

At the same time, global oil demand contracted by about 5.5 million barrels per day in the second quarter of 2026 as economic activity slowed.

China, the world's largest crude importer, has reduced its oil imports by roughly 40 percent—or about 4.6 million barrels per day—over recent months, making weaker demand one of the biggest reasons prices have retreated.

Even so, the region's oil exports remain about 25 percent below their February levels, and restoring pre-war export capacity is likely to take many months. In some cases—particularly Qatar's damaged liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities—a full recovery could take years.

Another temporary buffer has come from floating storage. Iran alone holds around 150 million barrels of crude at sea, while Washington's two-month waiver allowing Iranian oil exports has also helped ease market tensions.

Those inventories are helping cushion the supply shock, but they cannot replace the region's lost production capacity.

Meanwhile, production of crude oil and other petroleum liquids across the Persian Gulf region remains roughly 45 percent below February levels. Even Saudi Arabia—which can bypass the Strait of Hormuz through its East-West pipeline to the Red Sea—is producing well below pre-war levels, underscoring the scale of the disruption.

In total, the loss of roughly 1.3 billion barrels of production has only been partially offset by the release of more than 300 million barrels from the strategic reserves of industrialized countries.

Even under the most optimistic scenario, repairing the damage inflicted on global oil markets by the Strait of Hormuz crisis is unlikely before the middle of next year.

Geopolitical risks also remain elevated. Thursday's attack on a commercial vessel near Oman underscored how fragile maritime security remains despite the ceasefire. Shipping costs in waters south of Iran have risen to roughly 5.5 times their pre-war levels, while tanker charter rates have surged to nearly nine times their pre-war levels.

The disruption extends well beyond crude oil. Exports of petrochemicals, metals, fertilizers, helium and other raw materials from the Arab Gulf continue to face severe constraints, with implications for global industry, agriculture, supply chains and international trade.

Oil prices returning to the $72–74 range should therefore not be interpreted as evidence that the crisis has passed. They instead reflect a market being sustained by emergency inventories and demand destruction rather than recovering supply.

Until shipping through the Strait of Hormuz returns to normal and Persian Gulf production fully recovers, the global economy will remain vulnerable to renewed energy shocks and heightened market volatility.