Ali Khamenei’s recent speech “clearly exposed the line of America’s betrayal” and warned the nation against trusting the US, said Ahmad Rastineh, a member of Iran’s parliament on Thursday.
He criticized pro-Western factions in Iran for seeing talks with Washington as a solution. Rastineh said ignoring Khamenei’s guidance had caused unnecessary costs for Iran, calling the Supreme Leader’s stance on nuclear negotiations “wise and transparent”.

Iranian media reported that the fifth round of negotiations between Tehran and Washington will be held at noon Friday in Rome.
The announcement came after Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei warned the talks may lead nowhere.
“We are still weighing whether to attend the next round,” Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Wednesday, casting uncertainty over Iran’s participation just two days before the meeting.
Israel is making preparations to rapidly attack Iranian nuclear facilities if ongoing negotiations between Tehran and Washington collapse, Axios reported citing two Israeli sources with knowledge of the discussions, confirming an earlier report by CNN.
Israeli intelligence community has shifted just in the past few days from believing a was close to thinking talks could soon break down, the sources say.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “is waiting for the Iran talks to collapse and for the moment US President Donald Trump will be disappointed about the negotiations and open to giving him the go ahead,” Axios said citing an Israeli source.
"No one dares to attack Iran,” as all parties are aware of the Islamic Republic’s defensive capabilities, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told Saudi TV channel @AsharqNews.
“The language of threats does not work against Iran," he said, referring to the US threats to use the military option against Iran.
He described uranium enrichment as a “fundamental issue” for the Islamic Republic and said that major differences with the United States persist, particularly over uranium enrichment.
Responding to European threats to trigger the so-called "snapback" mechanism and restore UN sanctions against Iran, Araghchi said, “The threat is completely irrational and lacks legal and political basis. If Europe proceeds with it, it will be making a grave mistake and must accept the consequences.”

The US state department announced on Wednesday it would target more construction-related materials for sanctions, saying the sector was under the control of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
It said the materials, which include sodium perchlorate, magnesium ingots, austenitic nickel-chromium alloy, tungsten copper and various other metals could aid Iran's nuclear and missile programs.
"With these determinations, the United States has broader sanctions authorities to prevent Iran from acquiring strategic materials for its construction sector under IRGC control and its proliferation programs," the state department said in a statement.

An ad displayed in Tehran’s metro cars that many perceived as a bizarre attempt to criticize birth control has stirred controversy over Iran's official measures to combat shrinking population growth.
“The nurse who healed my mother’s wounds, you are a great lady,” read the caption over an image that many observers at first interpreted as a condom crinkled over a phallic shape.
Below was written: “The nurse who was never born” and “Giving an opportunity to future heroes to be born.”
Social media posts suggested the ad was understood as an anti-condom message promoted by the hardline-dominated municthey have
“Looks like they have seriously used an image of a broken condom in the metro to campaign for childbirth. Since when have they become so open-minded,” user @nah__r asked on X.

“This ad is dangerously misleading! Condom use is not just for preventing pregnancy, it plays a much more vital role in maintaining sexual health and preventing sexually transmitted diseases,” London-based Iranian hemato-oncologist Dr. Shahram Kordasti weighed in in a post on X.
“Incomplete information is harmful and a sign of the utter irresponsibility of its publishers.”
Design misfire
But the apparent message was due to a misfire in design. Some social media users later clarified that the graphic was intended to show a hospital bed with a bedsheet—not a condom.
The ad, other images bore out, was part of a broader campaign to warn about a future shortage of critical workforce—such as firefighters, emergency responders, and border guards—if Iran’s birth rate continues to fall.
Other versions showed the same shape variously pocked with bullet holes, burnt and frozen, praising the heroism of 'unborn' border patrols, firefighters and rescue workers.
“I realized that that (the opaque covering) was supposed to represent hospital sheets, not condoms after I investigated the ad,” @adameaval posted on X, blaming the campaign’s designers for the confusion.

Towards a pro-birth policy
Iran’s first condom factory was launched in 1987 by the Ministry of Health, part of a wider effort to curb explosive population growth that had exceeded five percent in the early 1980s.
In the 1990s, Iran’s family planning program was considered among the most effective globally, providing free contraceptives through public health services and promoting smaller families.
But over the past decade, authorities have reversed that approach in response to a steep drop in birth rates. According to the latest official statistics, the population growth rate is now just 0.7 percent.
In 2022, the Health Ministry banned free distribution of contraceptives and required a prescription for purchases. Yet demand continues, and illegally imported condoms and contraceptives are still available—sold discreetly through online shops and some pharmacies.
At the same time, abortion crackdowns have intensified. Abortions in Iran are only allowed during the first four months of pregnancy and only in cases of severe fetal abnormalities or when the mother’s life is at risk. Screening kits for congenital anomalies that may encourage abortions have also been banned.
Babies with benefits
The government is now offering financial and other incentives to encourage childbearing, including bonuses for childbirth, free land and extended maternity leave.
In a bid to support infertile couples, the government recently expanded insurance coverage. On April 27, Iran’s Health Insurance Organization announced it would cover 90% of costs for IVF and ICSI in public hospitals, and 70% in private ones.
Speaking at a National Population Day event on May 19, Mohammad-Jafar Ghaempanah, executive deputy to President Masoud Pezeshkian, warned that the recent 7.4 percent drop in births compared to the previous year is a “serious alarm.”
He added that reversing the trend would require “economic stability, improved livelihoods, and job security.”
However, Iran’s struggling economy complicates these ambitions. The Misery Index—defined as the combined rate of unemployment and inflation—has jumped from 19.3 percent in 2016 to 40.3 percent in 2024, with inflation hovering above 32.5 percent for years.
“A government that hasn’t been able to provide welfare or at least the minimum of it for its current population is not well-positioned ethically to tell its people to have more children,” sociologist Saeed Payvandi told Iran International TV from Paris.






