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Conservative coalition urges Congress to support Iran internet freedom bills

Jul 11, 2026, 01:46 GMT+1

A coalition of conservative foreign policy experts, Iran advocates and digital freedom groups urged Congress to include legislation aimed at helping Iranians bypass internet censorship in the 2027 National Defense Authorization Act, The Hill reported.

The coalition sent a letter to Senate leadership and the bipartisan leaders of the Senate Armed Services Committee backing the Iran Human Rights, Internet Freedom, and Accountability Act and the Feasibility Review of Emerging Equipment for Digital Open Media (FREEDOM) Act.

“Internet shutdowns have become one of the regime’s most powerful tools of repression – facilitating violence, mass arrests, and grave human rights abuses while preventing Iranians from communicating with one another and the outside world,” the letter said.

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A remote bridge shows how US-Iran war is expanding
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A remote bridge shows how US-Iran war is expanding

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US strikes, Hormuz clashes push Iran deal to brink

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Ali Khamenei buried in Mashhad after days-long funeral

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Tehran torn between war and deal as Khamenei is buried

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Iran turns Friday prayers into nationwide campaign for revenge

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Iran’s identity is and will be resistance to US, Khomeini’s grandson says

Jul 11, 2026, 00:53 GMT+1

Ali Khomeini, grandson of Islamic Republic founder Ruhollah Khomeini, said on Friday that any negotiations between Iran and the United States should not be interpreted as a path to peace, saying Iran’s identity was based on refusing compromise with what he called “arrogance.”

“If you see that the Islamic Republic talks about negotiations, it is not about peace negotiations. Can we make peace with criminal America? Our identity is non-compromise with arrogance. Negotiation means war; war has different forms,” Khomeini said.

“Anyone who wants to negotiate in order to reach peace with America is a traitor. Anyone who sends a message of friendship to America, their mouth is impure and unclean,” he added.

Iran tells Trump advisers it made mistake in Strait attacks - CBS

Jul 10, 2026, 22:57 GMT+1

Iranian officials privately told Trump administration advisers that they made a mistake by firing on commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz and blamed the attacks on what they described as an “errant” faction of hardliners seeking to undermine negotiations, senior US officials told CBS News on Friday. The officials said Tehran also expressed a desire to continue talks.

The Trump administration wants Iran to publicly acknowledge what it considers a mistake and views the attacks as a violation of the ceasefire, the officials said. They added that Washington expects Iran to confirm after Saturday’s talks in Oman that the Strait of Hormuz will remain open and operate as it did before the conflict, the report said.

US has military options to keep Iran nuclear sites inaccessible, officials say

Jul 10, 2026, 22:17 GMT+1

The United States has military options to ensure Iranian nuclear sites remain inaccessible, senior US officials told Reuters, as Washington seeks to prevent Tehran from restoring its nuclear capabilities.

No new Iran plot against Trump, Israel seeks influence on policy - CNN

Jul 10, 2026, 22:08 GMT+1

Recent US intelligence assessments show no indication of a new, specific plot by Iranian actors to kill President Donald Trump, but officials have detected continued chatter about such intentions, CNN reported on Friday citing two sources.

“US intelligence officials are also aware of Israeli concerns over being left out of Iran-related decision-making and efforts by Israel to influence the Trump administration’s policy toward Tehran,” the report added.

US declares end of Iran truce as diplomacy collides with retaliation threats

Jul 10, 2026, 22:00 GMT+1
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Officials from the United States, Iran, Qatar and Pakistan gather ahead of talks at the Lake Lucerne Summit in Switzerland in June 2026.

A day after Ali Khamenei was buried, US President Donald Trump declared the ceasefire with Iran over while agreeing to continue negotiations and warning of overwhelming retaliation if Tehran targeted him, as Iranian officials and clerics intensified calls for revenge.

“We have agreed to Iran talks, but the United States has stated to them, in no uncertain terms, that the ceasefire is over,” Trump said Friday, after renewed military exchanges raised questions over the future of a temporary memorandum signed last month.

Trump also told the New York Post that he had left instructions for Iran to be bombed at unprecedented levels if Tehran succeeded in killing him. “I’ve left instructions — if anything happens, to just literally bomb them at levels that they’ve never seen before,” he said.

The warning came as calls to target Trump and avenge Khamenei spread across official and religious platforms in Iran. Ahmad Reza Hajati, the Friday prayer leader in Ahvaz, urged anyone with missiles or drones to kill the US president and “purge the earth” of his existence.

IRGC commander-in-chief Ahmad Vahidi said punishing those who carried out, ordered or supported the killings of Khamenei and several Iranian military commanders would remain a “certain, legitimate and unforgettable demand.” Other senior clerics and hardline politicians also called revenge a national, legal or religious right.

Diplomatic contacts nevertheless continued. Axios reported that a new round of US-Iran talks was expected next week, possibly in Switzerland, while Al Arabiya said technical teams from the two countries were due to meet in Pakistan on Sunday, July 12.
The Trump administration is also pressing Iran to issue a public statement acknowledging that the Strait of Hormuz is open and pledging to stop firing on commercial ships, Axios reported Friday citing US officials.

Iran publicly disputed the accounts. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said Tehran had not requested negotiations with Washington, but had accepted a regional mediator’s request to visit Iran and discuss recent developments. He said the meeting took place Friday in Mashhad and that Iran conveyed its positions to the Qatari side.

As regional diplomacy continued, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi was due to travel to Oman on Saturday at the head of a diplomatic delegation for talks on regional developments, particularly the situation in the Strait of Hormuz, state-run IRNA reported. The report gave no details about his planned meetings.

A source close to Iran’s negotiating team separately denied that preparations for new talks had been finalized, IRGC-affiliated Fars News reported.

Qatar and Pakistan continued mediation efforts, seeking to de-escalate tensions, preserve the diplomatic track and address disputes over the Strait of Hormuz.

The military warnings also extended to Israel. Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said on X Friday that the Israeli military was prepared “at all times for any scenario in attack and defense.” Iran’s Supreme National Security Council Secretary Mohammad Bagher Zolghadr warned that any attack on Iranian infrastructure would draw a reciprocal response and that Israel would not be spared.
Senior US officials said Washington had military options to ensure Iran’s nuclear sites remained inaccessible, Reuters reported Friday.

The day ended with both sides signaling readiness for talks while trading threats that left the prospect of renewed conflict firmly in view.