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Trump authorized Saudi crown prince to manage US-Iran dialogue - Al-Akhbar

Nov 25, 2025, 08:27 GMT+0
US President Donald Trump and Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia interact during the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum in Washington, DC, November 19, 2025.
US President Donald Trump and Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia interact during the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum in Washington, DC, November 19, 2025.

US President Donald Trump has asked Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to manage a channel aimed at opening dialogue between Washington and Tehran as the kingdom seeks to avert further regional escalation, the Lebanese newspaper al-Akhbar reported on Tuesday.

Citing what it described as Western sources, the Beirut-based daily said Trump authorized bin Salman to manage contacts aimed at brokering an agreement with Tehran covering the nuclear file and sanctions.

According to the report, bin Salman argued to Trump that a US-Iran understanding was necessary for stability across the Middle East and warned that Israel could try to derail any diplomatic track through renewed military action.

Sources told the outlet that bin Salman had asked Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, during their September meeting in Riyadh about Tehran’s stance on a Saudi initiative toward Washington on a possible agreement with Iran. They said Larijani later sent a positive reply, while stressing that Tehran was not ready to make concessions.

Al-Akhbar also reported that Saudi officials contacted Iran’s leadership after the crown prince’s November 18 visit to the White House and agreed to hold a senior Saudi-Iranian meeting in Paris within 24 hours, to be followed by Saudi shuttle contacts between the United States and Iran.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi is due in Paris on Wednesday for talks with French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot focused on Iran’s nuclear program and the status of two French citizens who, though released from prison, remain under travel restrictions and are staying at the French embassy in Tehran, France’s foreign ministry said.

There has been no indication of any parallel Saudi-Iranian meeting in Paris. Iran International could not independently verify al-Akhbar’s account.

The report comes as Iranian officials push back against reports that President Masoud Pezeshkian asked the Saudi crown prince to help revive nuclear talks with the United States.

Iran says Pezeshkian’s letter to the crown prince was a routine message on Hajj coordination, while Reuters reported last week, citing two sources familiar with the exchange, that the letter urged bin Salman to use his influence with Trump to restart stalled nuclear diplomacy.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said, “The president’s message to the Saudi crown prince had purely bilateral content,” and added that persistent “baseless speculation about it does nothing to advance national interests.”

Baghaei’s comments follow a rising domestic debate over whether Tehran is exploring indirect channels to Washington after a former lawmaker, Mostafa Kavakebian, said Pezeshkian had sent a message to Trump through bin Salman offering talks without preconditions with the permission of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

Iran-foreign minister-araghchi-talks (file photo)
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‘Mediator talk is secondary to US approach'

The government’s news agency IRNA said on Tuesday that the flurry of talk about third-party mediation reflects a broader tendency to read every letter, trip or phone call as a signal of imminent Iran-US negotiations, but argued that mediation is not the core issue.

In its analysis, the state news agency said Iranian officials view the real obstacle as the absence of a shared understanding with Washington on what talks would look like, adding that Tehran wants “equal and fair” diplomacy rather than what it describes as US attempts to dictate terms.

IRNA added that, from Iran’s perspective, questions about mediators such as Saudi Arabia or Egypt are secondary to whether the United States changes its approach and shows seriousness about balanced negotiations.

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Firefighting efforts have contained weeks-old forest blaze, official says

Nov 25, 2025, 02:52 GMT+0

A blaze which had devastated a unique forest ecosystem in northern Iran has been brought under control after weeks of firefighting efforts, an environmental official said on Tuesday.

But when pressed on state television about the extent of damage to the ancient Hyrcanian Forest, head of Iran’s Natural Resources and Watershed Management Organisation Reza Aflatouni on Monday declined to respond.

“State TV should not make the sweetness of such management bitter for people’s taste,” he said.

Aflatouni said that the main phase of the blaze, which reignited on 15 November is now extinguished, with only isolated smoldering spots left under close monitoring.

The Elit wildfire has burned through parts of Iran’s ancient Hyrcanian Forests, a UNESCO World Heritage site dating back 25–50 million years and home to over 3,200 plant species and endangered wildlife, including Persian leopards.

In a report on Sunday, the semi-official ISNA news agency wrote that the fire has been burning for about 20 days. However, the head of natural resources in Mazandaran province rejected this, insisting two separate fires occurred 10 to 15 days apart.

ISNA's said local residents insist the blaze has continued without interruption since November 1, with smoke showing it never fully went out.

“The fire in the Hyrcanian forests is not merely an environmental disaster; it is a symbol of managerial backwardness, social neglect and a weak environmental culture,” the news website Rouydad24 wrote.

“Without urgent action, the continuation of this trend could destroy large parts of Iran’s natural heritage and cause irreparable damage to the country’s society and economy,” the report added.

Mazandaran Governor Mahdi Younesi estimates around eight hectares have been destroyed so far.

Indonesia to sell seized Iranian tanker and crude cargo at auction

Nov 25, 2025, 02:10 GMT+0

Indonesia announced it will auction the seized Iranian tanker MT Arman 114 and its 1.245 million barrels of crude oil starting December 2, with a reserve price of Rp 1.174 trillion ($70 million) through the government’s online auction platform.

The 1997-built supertanker (IMO 9116412), flagged to Iran and under US sanctions, was seized by Indonesia’s Maritime Security Agency in October 2023 in the North Natuna Sea.

The MT Arman 114 had conducted an illegal ship-to-ship transfer with the Cameroon-flagged MT S Tinos while both vessels had their AIS identification systems switched off.

Drone footage captured a pipeline between the ships and an oil spill entering the sea.

Following a district court ruling on July 10, 2024, the Egyptian captain, Mohammed Abdelaziz Mohamed Hatiba, was convicted of illegal waste dumping. He was sentenced to seven years in prison and fined Rp 5 billion (approximately $300,000).

The court ordered both the vessel and its cargo forfeited to the state, paving the way for the upcoming auction.

A security deposit of Rp 118 billion ($7 million) is required for the aucion. Only companies licensed to trade or process oil and gas, or those registered with the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry, are eligible to bid. As of Monday, 19 firms have registered interest.

Iranian pro-government users apologize as X unmasks internet privileges

Nov 24, 2025, 23:24 GMT+0

Several pro-government social media activists in Iran issued public apologies after a new transparency feature on X revealed that their accounts had been granted unrestricted internet access, a privilege reserved for only a select few by the authorities.

The accounts of several journalists and activists - on both reformist and conservative camps - were exposed by the feature, triggering widespread backlash from ordinary Iranian internet users who struggle daily to access the web. The controversy quickly spread under the hashtags #LocationGate and #Whitelisted_Line”.

“I swear on my honor that I will never again be active on any social network without a VPN,” right-wing social media activist Amir Tanha wrote on Monday. “To all friends who became upset or disappointed with me: I give my word of honor that, as always, I will stand with the people."

“I request the relevant authorities to immediately restore my line back to the same state as the rest of the people of Iran,” he posted on X. “Please forgive me.”

Right-leaning journalist Behnam Abdollahi issued a similar apology, relinquishing his privileged access.

“Without any further explanation, I sincerely apologize from the bottom of my heart to all my dear compatriots and ask for your forgiveness,” Abdollahi posted on X.

“I request the relevant authorities to return my line to normal status. I give my word of honor that as a journalist I will never use any special privileges and will remain with the people. May God grant us all a good end," he added.

The apologies sparked thousands of replies, many mocking them as insincere.

“The ‘whitelisted SIM card’ is not the issue,” wrote user Hatef Salehi. “What sparked public outrage was the double standards of those posing as standing by the people.”

Fayyaz Zahed who until recently was a member of President Masoud Pezeshkian’s Information Council, posted an apology in the same tone.

“Now that I’ve seen how upsetting this is for people, I’ve asked my friends – since I’m no longer in the government – to make my line normal. I hope filtering is lifted.”

‘Orwellian discrimination’

Tehran-based whistleblower and journalist Yashar Soltani compared the privileged access to behavior of some characters in George Orwell's Animals Farm.

“Seeing the ‘whitelisted internet’ of officials – especially the hardliners who oppose free internet – reminded me of the pigs in Animal Farm. They enter through the main gate while people must climb over the wall," Soltani posted on X.

Freedom, when rationed, is no longer freedom; it is structural discrimination. White internet for 90 million Iranians!" he added.

Iran’s “White Line” or “white SIM cards” provide privileged, unfiltered internet access to select elites, officials and government loyalists, bypassing national censorship, according to journalists who enjoyed the privilege.

X (formerly Twitter) has been officially blocked for ordinary users in Iran since 2009, though many senior officials, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, maintain active accounts.

In July 2025, Iran’s Supreme Council of Cyberspace approved tiered internet regulations, officially to empower “digital businesses,” but critics denounce the system as “digital apartheid” that rewards loyalty and deepens inequality.

The intensity of the reaction reflects a deeper public grievance with longstanding filtering policies.

Ex-CIA agent says weakened Islamic Republic won't go down without a fight

Nov 24, 2025, 19:22 GMT+0
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Negar Mojtahedi

Worsted in war and sapped by sanctions, the Islamic Republic remains determined to quash with deadly force any domestic move to topple it, former CIA case officer Reuel Marc Gerecht told Iran International.

Few understand the stakes better than former CIA case officer Reuel Marc Gerecht, a man who once risked his life to enter Iran on his own.

After four decades of watching the Islamic Republic from every angle - as a CIA officer, a historian and someone who smuggled himself into Iran just to see what it was really like - Gerecht’s conclusion about Iran today is stark.

“These people are not moving to Paris,” he said. “They are going down swinging.”

Tehran, he says, is fundamentally unstable, badly shaken by a US-Israeli war in June and deeply suspicious of intelligence penetration by its enemies.

“It has spiritually and perhaps bureaucratically dealt a death blow to the Supreme Leader,” he said, asserting that the stature of veteran theocrat Ali Khamenei who since the conflict has emerged in public more rarely is on the wane.

“I am very doubtful that the eighty-six-year-old gentleman is actually running the government now," he said. "His clones are. He has been effective replicating himself inside the system.”

The surprise Israeli air campaign in June appeared to expose broad intelligence failures and killed hundreds of military personnel and civilians.

Assassinations of top commanders need not have required many Israeli personnel or agents, said Gerecht, a former so-called Iranian targets officer who identified and recruiting Iranians to work for US intelligence.

“The number wouldn’t be that large,” he said.

Young men

Still, the impasse over Iran's disputed nuclear program festers despite US President Donald Trump's assertion that US attacks on nuclear facilities had "obliterated" it.

Khamenei and other top leaders have ruled out US conditions to restart talks even as US and international sanctions on Iran have deepened, driving up costs of living and undermining popular support for authorities.

“The regime cannot make a full recovery and they know that,” he said. “They know how many people dislike them intensely.” Yet as long as Tehran maintains “X number of young men willing to commit violence” on its behalf, it survives.

The United States, he said, is unlikely to seek Tehran's downfall by force.

“The unexpected could happen,” he said. “It is the unexpected that really scares them.” But he sees no serious external push for regime change. “Trump certainly does not have a regime change strategy,” he said. “The bureaucracies are always opposed to that.”

Given US reluctance to get embroiled in another Mideast adventure, any change to the nearly fifty-year-old Islamic system would come from within.

The "Woman, Life, Freedom" protest movement sparked by the death of a young woman, Mahsa Amini, in 2022 was quashed with deadly force by security forces.

“Women can’t bring the Islamic Republic down," Gerecht said. "It has to be young men.”

Going rogue

It was the early 1990s and Iran was still emerging from revolution and a devastating war with Iraq when Gerecht made a decision few would dare.

Driven by a relentless desire to understand the country from within, he left the agency and paid a truck driver to hide him in a cramped storage compartment as they crossed the border from Turkey into Iran.

“They (the CIA) didn’t allow me to go inside Iran,” he said. “So I went rogue.”

In his view, the governing system has lost legitimacy but not its capacity for violence, and real change will only come from fractures among the men who enforce the clerical establishment, not from foreign pressure or peaceful transition.

Gerecht recalled an anecdote far from Iran. At a party in Moscow years ago, he asked a group of former and current KGB officers what had disturbed them most about their service. “They all said they got tired of lying to their children,” he recalled.

He wonders whether one day those inside Iran’s own security establishment might face that same reckoning.

“If that type of scenario is possible,” he said, “then you could conceivably have real change in the Islamic Republic.”

Until then, he sees Iran as a country full of contradictions and a clerical establishment determined to maintain its grip by force.

Israel hosts first Iranian film festival on Gaza frontier

Nov 24, 2025, 18:33 GMT+0

The first Iranian Film Festival in Israel opened on Sunday in Sderot, a southern Israeli city attacked by Iran-backed Hamas militants on Oct. 7 2023, which organizers say will promote cultural dialogue between the peoples of the two nominal enemies.

The festival was conceived by Dana Sameah, an Israeli of Iranian heritage who said in an interview with Iran International on Sunday that she hoped to create a bridge between Iran and Israel by founding the festival.

The two-day event, titled “Nowruz Fest,” is being held at the Sderot Cinematheque, located less than a mile from the Gaza border, and streamed on Facebook to allow potential viewers in Iran to watch, although many social media platforms are blocked inside the country.

Listed among the festivals' backers on its official website is the Tkuma Directorate, an Israeli government body which supports the rehabilitation of communities astride the Gaza Strip which were attacked on Oct. 7.

Sameah, born in Beersheba to Iranian immigrant parents, told Israeli outlet Times of Israel earlier this month that she grew up between the two cultures and hoped the festival could help bridge divides between “governments and people.”

She added that she wanted to send “a message from love” at a time when many Iranians worry about the future following a 12-day war between Israel and Iran in June.

She said she chose Sderot — a city still recovering from the Oct. 7 attack in which 72 residents were killed — to encourage Israelis to support cultural life in the western Negev.

“The festival is in Sderot because Israelis should go to the western Negev to support it after October 7,” Sameah was quoted as saying by Times of Israel.

“Things are calmer now, but when I would go to Sderot for meetings, there were the sounds of war in the background, and imagining that things would improve gave me hope,” she added.

The festival features five Iranian films, as well as performances of Persian music.

Screenings include two films by Tehran-based dissident director Asghar Farhadi — The Salesman, his Oscar-winning film, and A Hero.

The political thriller The Seed of the Sacred Fig Tree by exiled Iranian filmmaker Mohammad Rasoulof is also being shown, alongside Reading Lolita in Tehran by Israeli director Eran Riklis and the animated film Persepolis, based on the graphic novel by Iranian-French artist Marjane Satrapi.

Israeli singer Rita is set to receive a lifetime achievement award for her work promoting Iranian culture, and Middle East scholar David Menashri will also be honored.

Hamas-led militants breached security barriers and infiltrated Israeli communities, killing 1,200 soldiers and civilians while taking over 250 hostages, both foreign and Israeli.

Israel responded by launching a full-scale war on Gaza, killing 46,000 people, according to Gaza health ministry data.