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Putin agrees to mediate between Iran and US - Russian state media

Mar 4, 2025, 13:34 GMT+0Updated: 16:40 GMT+0
US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin shake hands in Helsinki, Finland, July 16, 2018.
US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin shake hands in Helsinki, Finland, July 16, 2018.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has agreed to mediate nuclear talks between Washington and Tehran, Russian state-owned outlet Zvezda cited the Kremlin spokesman as saying on Tuesday.

Trump conveyed his administration’s interest in engaging Iran to President Vladimir Putin in a phone call in February, according to a report by Bloomberg earlier, adding that the talks would also cover Tehran's support for armed militant groups.

"Russia believes that the United States and Iran should resolve all problems through negotiations,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Tuesday, adding that Moscow “is ready to do everything in its power to achieve this.”

Putin's foreign policy adviser Yuri Ushakov said Iran was among the issues discussed at recent Russia-US negotiations in the Saudi capital, Riyadh. Both sides had agreed to meet separately to discuss the issue, he added.

Asked about potential Russian mediation between Tehran and Washington, Iran's foreign ministry spokesperson said offers of assistance from various nations were natural.

"Given the importance of these matters, it is expected that numerous parties will express goodwill and a willingness to assist with various issues," spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said during a televised press conference in Tehran on Monday. "Therefore, it is natural for countries to offer aid when deemed necessary."

Talks, not war

British newspaper the Daily Telegraph cited an Iranian official in Tehran saying Trump's blowout with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the White House last week had made Iran wary of engagement with the volatile US leader.

“Officials from the Kremlin contacted the supreme national security council and said Putin wants to mediate and he’s ready to facilitate direct talks between Iran and America,” the official was quoted as saying.

“They said Trump wants to talk and is preferring it over war but, here, there is a big uncertainty around it after what happened in the White House last week.”

The Trump administration last week stepped up pressure on Ukraine into accepting a deal to end the war. The proposal broadly seeks peace in exchange for Ukraine ceding captured territory to Russia.

According to sources familiar with the discussions who spoke with Bloomberg, US and Russian officials, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, discussed Washington's interest in Russian assistance with Iranian issues during a February 18 meeting in Riyadh.

Subsequently, Russia's Lavrov shared details of the US meeting with his Iranian counterpart, Abbas Araghchi, during a meeting in Tehran, as Araghchi confirmed in a televised press conference.

However, Araghchi later claimed that Lavrov had not conveyed a message from the United States during his Tehran visit, and that no such message was anticipated.

Earlier this month, President Donald Trump announced the revitalization of sanctions under his “maximum pressure” policy. He underlined that his main demand is for Iran never to acquire nuclear weapons.

Last month, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said Trump cannot be trusted—pointing to his withdrawal from the Obama-era nuclear deal during his first term—and added that Iran would not be pressured into negotiations.

President Masoud Pezeshkian said last week that despite his own belief in the value of engaging with the US, he would align with Khamenei’s stance as long as Washington maintains economic sanctions on Iran.

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Iranian actress summoned to court as celebrities remain under pressure

Mar 4, 2025, 12:04 GMT+0

Iranian actress Chakameh Chamanmah said authorities have summoned her to the judiciary without pressing charges eight months after she was banned from leaving the country following her return to Iran.

Following the summons, Chamanmah said that while no official charges have been mentioned, she would appear before the judiciary with her lawyer.

She said she has been subjected her to repeated interrogations without a judicial order since her return to the country out of what she called love for her homeland.

The young actress was stopped at Tehran's Imam Khomeini Airport upon arrival, where her passport was confiscated and she was given an instant travel ban.

Since then, she said, "I have been repeatedly interrogated and questioned by various security agencies without a judicial order and, in some cases, faced mistreatment and insulting behavior.

"While government officials constantly talk about the return of Iranians abroad, from the moment I returned to my homeland, I have not been allowed even a single day to live in peace."

Chamanmah's summons comes just days after the directors and lead actors of My Favorite Cake, an Iranian film that premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival, went on trial in a court in Tehran, alongside other members of the production team.

Iran's entertainment stars have been among scores placed under such punishments as travel bans alongside the likes of sports figures in the wake of the 2022 uprising, many of whom having supported the Woman, Life, Freedom protests.

Other punishments included pay freezes, fines and sackings, causing a surge of stars fleeing the country.

Turkey summons Iranian envoy over policy criticism

Mar 4, 2025, 10:55 GMT+0

Turkey summoned Iran's chargé d'affaires on Tuesday over Tehran's public criticism of Turkish policies.

Turkey's move followed a meeting at Iran's Foreign Ministry, where Turkey's ambassador met with Mahmoud Heydari, the ministry's Director General for the Mediterranean and Eastern Europe, on Monday.

The meeting was prompted by Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan's recent remarks regarding Iran's role in Syria.

"The mutual interests of our nations and the delicate regional situation necessitate the avoidance of inaccurate statements and unfounded analyses that could strain bilateral relations," Heydari stated.

Fidan, in an interview with Al Jazeera, had described Iran's reliance on militias as dangerous and called for a policy shift.

He also suggested that "if you are attempting to destabilize a third country, other nations may reciprocate by supporting groups within your own borders."

Earlier on Monday, an Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson acknowledged disagreements between Tehran and Ankara.

"We place great value on our bilateral relationship with Turkey," Esmaeil Baghaei said. "However, the recurring remarks we have heard were counterproductive, requiring Iran to articulate its position firmly and clearly."

Baghaei further added, "Perhaps our Turkish counterparts should give greater consideration to the policies of the Zionist regime (Israel) in Syria and the wider region."

Iranian woman dies after hijab gets caught in escalator in Tehran

Mar 4, 2025, 08:41 GMT+0

A woman in Tehran died after her veil became entangled in an escalator, marking the latest fatal accident linked to country's mandatory hijab laws.

The incident took place in eastern Tehran's Damavand Street last Thursday, according to a report by Tehran-based Didban News website.

Although the report referenced other incidents involving malfunctioning and poorly maintained escalators, it noted that the direct cause of this woman's death was her hijab getting caught.

The case is not the first time Iran’s compulsory hijab rules have been linked to fatal accidents involving women.

On November 7, 2021, Iranian media reported that 21-year-old Marzieh Taherian died at a spinning workshop in Semnan, northern Iran, after her headscarf became caught in a machine, pulling her head inside.

On June 5, 2023, a 26-year-old female worker at a plastic injection molding workshop in the northeastern Iranian city of Neyshabur, lost her life when her veil became entangled in a machine, dragging her into it.

The incidents highlight the potential safety risks associated with mandatory hijab in workplaces and public spaces.

On Monday, UN rights chief Volker Turk urged Iran to permanently repeal its hijab laws and end along with all other laws and practices that discriminate against women and girls.

However, despite multiple fatalities in recent years, and repeated calls from rights groups and UN officials, Iranian authorities continue to enforce mandatory hijab laws on women and girls.

Israel says Iran remains greatest threat as US boosts arms sales

Mar 4, 2025, 08:07 GMT+0

Israel's Defense Minister Israel Katz said Iran remains its greatest threat following talks with US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth.

"The Minister of Defense and the Secretary of Defense agreed that Iran is the main threat to the region, and that close cooperation between Israel and the United States should continue with the aim of preventing it from obtaining nuclear weapons," a statement from Katz's office said.

Katz thanked Hassett for the support of President Donald Trump and the administration to accelerate the delivery of weapons and security equipment to Israel.

On Saturday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio released a statement to say that he has signed a declaration to use emergency authorities to expedite the delivery of approximately $4 billion in military assistance to Israel.

"The decision to reverse the Biden Administration’s partial arms embargo, which wrongly withheld a number of weapons and ammunition from Israel, is yet another sign that Israel has no greater ally in the White House than President Trump," he said.

Since taking office, the Trump Administration has approved nearly $12 billion in major foreign military sales to Israel.

"This important decision coincides with President Trump’s repeal of a Biden-era memorandum which had imposed baseless and politicized conditions on military assistance to Israel at a time when our close ally was fighting a war of survival on multiple fronts against Iran and terror proxies," he said.

Last year, Iran launched two aerial strikes on Israel amid attacks from its military allies around the region as the two enemies' shadow war came to the fore, with Israel retaliating with strikes deep into Iran.

Russia sent missile experts to Iran amid conflict with Israel - Reuters

Mar 4, 2025, 07:47 GMT+0

Several senior Russian missile specialists traveled to Iran over the past year as Tehran and Moscow expanded their defense cooperation, Reuters reported on Tuesday, citing a review of travel records and employment data.

Seven weapons experts flew from Moscow to Tehran on April 24 and September 17 last year, according to the report.

Their trips occurred amid heightened tensions between Iran and Israel, as both countries exchanged military strikes in the same months.

The report, citing a senior Iranian defense ministry official, said Russian missile experts had visited multiple Iranian missile production facilities last year, including two underground sites. Some of these visits took place in September, the official said, without specifying locations.

A Western defense official cited by Reuters said that Russian missile specialists visited an Iranian missile base west of the port of Amirabad on Iran’s Caspian Sea coast in September.

According to Reuters, all seven Russian experts have military backgrounds.

The report said that a review of Russian databases showed that two hold the rank of colonel, two are lieutenant-colonel, and others specialize in air-defense missile systems, artillery, rocketry, advanced weapons development, and missile testing.

Their employment records range from 2021 to 2024, but it is unclear whether they still hold these positions, Reuters said.

The report said Hooshyaran-e Vatan, a group of activist hackers opposed to the Iranian government, provided the flight booking information to Reuters. The hackers claimed the seven Russians traveled with VIP status.

Reuters said it corroborated this information with a Russian passenger manifest from September, obtained from a source with access to Russian state databases. However, Reuters said it was unable to verify the manifest for the April flight.

Reuters identified two of the Russians booked on the April flight as Denis Kalko, 48, and Vadim Malov, 46. Tax records showed that Kalko previously worked at the defense ministry’s Academy for Military Anti-Aircraft Defense, while Malov worked for a military unit that trains anti-aircraft missile forces, according to 2024 records.

It also identified three other Russians on the April flight: Andrei Gusev, 45, a lieutenant-colonel who works as deputy head of the faculty of General Purpose Rockets and Artillery Munitions at the defense ministry’s Penza Artillery Engineering Institute; Alexander Antonov, 43, who has worked at the Main Rocket and Artillery Directorate; and Marat Khusainov, 54, a colonel linked to the Kapustin Yar missile-testing range.

According to Reuters, Sergei Yurchenko, 46, was one of two passengers on the September flight. Mobile phone records showed he worked at the Rocket and Artillery Directorate. His passport number had the prefix “22,” which is not used for private citizens or diplomats, Reuters said, citing Russian government regulations.

Reuters identified the other passenger as Oleg Fedosov, 46, who, according to Russian records, is linked to the Directorate of Advanced Inter-Service Research and Special Projects, a defense ministry branch developing future weapons systems.

Fedosov had previously flown from Tehran to Moscow in October 2023, using his official state passport, Russian border crossing records showed.