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Iran says parts of Strait of Hormuz shut briefly during Guards drills

Feb 17, 2026, 13:16 GMT+0
A handout photo released by Iranian media shows a missile being fired from a vessel during Revolutionary Guards drills in the Strait of Hormuz on February  17, 2026.
A handout photo released by Iranian media shows a missile being fired from a vessel during Revolutionary Guards drills in the Strait of Hormuz on February 17, 2026.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards carried out naval drills in and around the Strait of Hormuz on Tuesday and said parts of the strategic waterway were closed for several hours, as Iran and the United States held indirect nuclear talks in Geneva.

Iranian media said the temporary restriction was linked to the “Smart Control of the Strait of Hormuz” exercise and was aimed at ensuring safety and navigation principles during the drill.

Tehran has repeatedly warned in the past that it could close the strait if attacked, a step that would disrupt one of the world’s most vital oil export routes.

Guards navy commander Alireza Tangsiri said Iran’s forces were ready to shut the strait if ordered by the country’s leadership.

“The decision to close the Strait of Hormuz rests with the senior leaders, and as a soldier I say we are ready to carry it out whenever our leaders say,” Tangsiri was quoted as saying while overseeing the main phase of the exercise.

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Tangsiri said the weapons used in wartime could differ from those displayed in drills. “The weapons that enter the field on the day of war are not necessarily the same as the equipment used in exercises,” he said, signaling that Iran’s operational capabilities extend beyond what is shown publicly.

Iranian outlets described the drills as a combined exercise involving Guards naval combat and rapid-reaction units, with a range of offensive and defensive systems deployed. They reported that missiles were fired toward designated targets and that drone units carried out reconnaissance and attack missions under conditions of signal jamming.

The exercise began from Iran’s Persian Gulf islands – including Abu Musa, Greater Tunb, Lesser Tunb and Sirri – which Iranian media described as key positions for overseeing shipping there and the western approaches to the Strait of Hormuz. The reports said the drill included elements of electronic warfare and simultaneous launches from land and sea.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, referring to US naval deployments, was quoted as saying that an American aircraft carrier was dangerous but that “more dangerous than it is the weapon that can send it to the bottom of the sea.”

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Turkey warns expanding Iran talks to missiles risks another war

Feb 12, 2026, 10:16 GMT+0

Turkey’s foreign minister has warned that expanding nuclear talks with Iran to include its ballistic missile program and regional activities would risk triggering another war, even as Washington continues to press for a broader agreement.

“If the US insists on addressing all the issues simultaneously,” Hakan Fidan told the Financial Times, referring to Iran’s missile arsenal and support for militant groups, “I’m afraid even the nuclear file will not move forward … the result could be another war in the region.”

Fidan’s remarks come as the United States maintains that any durable deal with Tehran must go beyond uranium enrichment to include limits on ballistic missiles and an end to support for armed groups across the Middle East.

President Donald Trump repeated that position after hosting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on Wednesday, where the two leaders discussed Iran and agreed that the scope of any agreement is a critical issue.

Iranian officials, by contrast, have repeatedly said negotiations should focus solely on the nuclear dossier. Tehran has rejected any discussion of its missile program, which it describes as non-negotiable, and has defended its regional alliances.

Fidan, who has been involved in mediation efforts aimed at preventing a wider conflict, said there were signs of flexibility on both sides regarding enrichment.

“It is positive that the Americans appear willing to tolerate Iranian enrichment within clearly set boundaries,” he said.

“The Iranians now recognize that they need to reach a deal with the Americans, and the Americans understand that the Iranians have certain limits. It’s pointless to try to force them.”

He added that he believed Tehran “genuinely wants to reach a real agreement” and could accept restrictions on enrichment levels and a strict inspections regime, similar to the 2015 nuclear accord.

That agreement capped enrichment at 3.67 percent and sharply limited Iran’s stockpile. However, it did not address missiles or Iran’s support for regional proxies, omissions that critics in Israel and the Persian Gulf have long argued allowed Tehran to expand its military reach.

The renewed diplomacy follows indirect talks in Muscat last week between US envoys and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, facilitated by regional states including Turkey, Qatar and Oman. Both sides described the discussions as a positive first step, though officials have cautioned that major obstacles remain.

Trump’s messaging has at times appeared mixed. While Washington has insisted that missiles and regional activities be part of any final deal, Trump has also said a nuclear-only agreement could be “acceptable” under certain circumstances.

After meeting Netanyahu, he said negotiations would continue “to see whether or not a deal can be consummated,” adding that if not, “we will just have to see what the outcome will be.”

Israel has pushed strongly for Iran’s missile capabilities to be included in negotiations, arguing that they pose a direct and growing threat. Iran, meanwhile, maintains that its missile program is defensive and outside the scope of nuclear talks.

Iran has enough uranium for a dozen bombs

The nuclear file itself remains fraught. Rafael Grossi, director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said on Wednesday that inspectors have been denied access for months to three key enrichment sites struck during last year’s 12-day war.

He said the agency has a “firm impression” that about 400 kilograms of uranium enriched to just above 60 percent purity, a level close to weapons-grade, remains at the underground facilities.

“The material is there and this material is enough to manufacture a few, maybe a dozen devices,” Grossi said, warning that analysis cannot substitute for physical inspection and that the stockpile carries clear proliferation risks.

President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Wednesday that Iran is willing to open its nuclear sites to “any verification” to prove it is not seeking nuclear weapons, a step that should allow inspectors to assess the damage from the June Israeli and US strikes and account for Iran’s uranium stockpile.

Against that backdrop, Fidan cautioned against attempting to resolve all disputes at once. He argued that while Washington’s primary concern is nuclear capability, “the other issues are closely tied to countries of the region, because missiles and proxies affect regional security.”

He also warned that military action would be unlikely to bring about regime change in Iran. “I don’t think that regime change will occur,” Fidan said, suggesting that while infrastructure and state institutions could be severely damaged, the political system would endure.

Why Tehran sees war as a survival strategy

Feb 6, 2026, 07:48 GMT+0
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Hooman Abedi

Iran’s leadership is edging toward a war scenario not because diplomacy is necessarily collapsing, but because confrontation is increasingly seen as the least damaging option for a ruling system under intense internal and external pressure.

While Iran’s foreign minister is right now visiting Oman for bilateral talks with the United States, in Tehran’s calculus, negotiations now promise steady erosion. War, by contrast, offers a chance – however risky – to reset the balance.

This marks a shift from the Islamic Republic’s long-standing view of war as an existential threat. Today, senior decision-makers appear to believe that controlled confrontation may preserve the system in ways diplomacy no longer can.

That belief explains why war is no longer unthinkable in Tehran, but increasingly framed as a viable instrument of rule.

At the core of this shift lies a stark assessment: the negotiating table has become a losing field.

This is not because an agreement with Washington is impossible. It is because the framework imposed by the United States and its allies has turned diplomacy into a process of cumulative concession.

When nuclear limits, missile restrictions, regional influence, and even domestic conduct are treated as interlinked files, Iranian leaders see talks not as pressure relief, but as strategic retreat without credible guarantees of survival.

From Tehran’s perspective, diplomacy no longer buys time. It entrenches vulnerability.

In that context, confrontation begins to look less like recklessness and more like a way out of a narrowing corridor.

War as a domestic instrument of control

Why war? Because war is the one scenario in which the Islamic Republic believes it does not necessarily lose.

Domestically, the regime faces its most severe legitimacy crisis in decades.

Widespread repression, the killing of protesters, economic collapse, and a society increasingly resistant to fear-based governance have eroded the state’s traditional tools of control.

Under these conditions, war serves a powerful political function. It rewrites the rules of governance.

In wartime, dissent can be reframed as collaboration with the enemy. Protest becomes sabotage. Opposition becomes a national security threat.

Emergency logic compresses public space and legitimizes measures that would provoke backlash in peacetime.

For the Islamic Republic, war is not primarily imagined as a catastrophe imposed from outside. It is a mechanism that restores hierarchy, discipline, and fear at home.

This logic is not unique to Iran, but it has taken on renewed urgency as the Islamic Republic confronts a society it can no longer reliably intimidate into submission.

Externally, Tehran’s calculations rest on another assumption – that the United States wants to avoid a prolonged war.

The experiences of Afghanistan and Iraq, combined with Washington’s cautious posture toward the war in Ukraine, have reinforced the belief that the US lacks the political appetite for a long, grinding conflict.

  • US strikes on Iran a matter of 'when not if,' former IDF spokesman says

    US strikes on Iran a matter of 'when not if,' former IDF spokesman says

From Tehran’s vantage point, even a military strike would likely be limited.

Airstrikes, cyber operations, or narrowly defined attacks are forms of pressure the Islamic Republic believes it can absorb.

This feeds into a core element of Iran’s survival doctrine: without foreign ground forces, the system is not collapsible.

Military action that stops short of sustained ground involvement is therefore seen as manageable.

More than that, Iranian leaders believe escalation can be shaped by exporting costs across the region.

By threatening US allies and regional partners, Tehran calculates that a drawn-out confrontation would quickly become politically and economically unattractive for Washington.

In this reading, a limited war could push human rights concerns off the global agenda, expose divisions among Western allies, unsettle energy markets, and ultimately force a return to narrower negotiations.

This strategy, however, rests on a dangerous assumption: control.

Wars that begin with expectations of containment rarely remain contained.

In a volatile and heavily armed region, escalation chains are hard to manage, and actions Tehran defines as deterrence may be read in Washington as crossing red lines.

  • Tehran and Washington test the limits of talks without trust

    Tehran and Washington test the limits of talks without trust

Still, the trajectory is clear.

The Islamic Republic has concluded that it loses at the negotiating table, but may endure – or even regain leverage – in sustained tension.

That belief explains why war is no longer treated as a last resort, but increasingly as a calculated, if perilous, component of its survival strategy.

Muslim-majority states push wider framework for Iran-US talks - reports

Feb 5, 2026, 22:10 GMT+0

As Iran and the US convene in Oman for bilateral talks, reports suggest Muslim-majority states are pushing for a framework that would include a non-aggression pact, curbs on Iran’s nuclear program and its arms support for allied militants, and reassurances on its missiles.

Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, Oman, the United Arab Emirates and Pakistan worked on the framework proposal ahead of the Friday talks, The Times of Israel reported, citing two Middle Eastern diplomats.

The proposal includes a non-aggression pact under which Washington and Tehran would agree not to target one another, the report said, adding that the pact would also cover allies and Iran-backed armed groups in the region.

The framework drafted by the six countries would also address Iran’s nuclear program, ballistic missiles and Iran-backed armed groups, according to the report.

One of the diplomats cited in the report acknowledged that binding Israel to such an agreement would be difficult.

Proposed Iran commitments

Separately, Al Jazeera reported that mediators from Qatar, Turkey and Egypt have presented Iran and the United States with a framework of key principles to be discussed in Friday’s talks, citing two sources familiar with the negotiations.

Under that proposal, Iran would commit to zero uranium enrichment for three years, after which it would limit enrichment to below 1.5 percent, the report said.

Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium — including about 440 kilograms enriched to 60 percent — would be transferred to a third country under the framework, according to the report.

The Al Jazeera report said the proposal also includes a ban on Iran's initiation of ballistic missile attacks and a commitment by Iran not to transfer weapons or technologies to its allied armed groups in the region.

Iran and the United States have not yet reacted to these reports.

Iran’s foreign ministry said on Thursday the negotiations would focus solely on the nuclear issue, underscoring Tehran’s position that other matters — including missiles and regional activities — are off the table.

A day earlier, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Washington expects talks with Iran to address a range of issues beyond the nuclear file.

“I think in order for talks to actually lead to something meaningful, they will have to include certain things, and that includes the range of their ballistic missiles. That includes their sponsorship of terrorist organizations across the region. That includes the nuclear program, and that includes the treatment of their own people,” Rubio said, referring to items on the US agenda for Friday’s talks with Tehran.

Hope for US–Iran talks shaken by drones, gunboats and new demands

Feb 3, 2026, 21:16 GMT+0

Monday’s cautious optimism about renewed US–Iran diplomacy took several blows on Tuesday, as Tehran reportedly signaled fresh conditions for talks and Iranian and American forces clashed at sea.

US officials said American forces shot down an Iranian drone after it approached a US Navy aircraft carrier in the Arabian Sea, and later intervened when armed Iranian boats harassed a US-flagged merchant vessel transiting the Strait of Hormuz.

The incidents underscored the fragility of a diplomatic process that Washington and Tehran had suggested was back on track only a day earlier.

Iran’s foreign ministry sought to downplay growing uncertainty around talks expected later this week, saying discussions over the venue and timing were ongoing and should not be “turned into a media issue.”

Esmail Baghaei, the ministry’s spokesman, said Turkey, Oman and other regional countries had offered to host the talks, and thanked “friendly countries” for helping create conditions for diplomacy.

“In principle, the venue and timing of talks are not complicated issues and should not be used as a pretext for media games,” Baghaei said, adding that details would be announced once finalized.

Behind the scenes, however, Iranian officials appeared to be revisiting earlier understandings. Reuters and Axios reported that Tehran was seeking to move the talks from Istanbul to Oman and to limit discussions strictly to the nuclear file, excluding missiles and support for regional armed groups—issues that Washington and regional allies have said must be addressed.

Axios cited informed sources saying Iran was “walking back” agreements reached in recent days after other countries had already been invited to participate.

The Wall Street Journal reported that Iranian officials had also threatened to pull out of talks altogether, though it was not immediately clear what prompted the warning.

At sea, the confrontations continued. US Central Command said Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces harassed a US-flagged, US-crewed merchant vessel in the Strait of Hormuz, while a US fighter jet downed an Iranian drone that had approached a carrier strike group.

Iranian state-linked media said the drone was conducting a “routine and lawful mission” in international waters and that data had been transmitted successfully before contact was lost.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said talks with US envoy Steve Witkoff were still scheduled, but stressed that military options remained on the table. “For diplomacy to work, of course, it takes two to tango,” she said.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu struck a harsher note, saying Iran “has repeatedly proven it cannot be trusted to keep its promises.”

Suspicious blasts kill several in southern Iran; officials blame gas leak

Jan 31, 2026, 22:48 GMT+0

Two explosions in southern Iran killed at least seven people and injured more than a dozen on Saturday, with officials blaming gas leaks, residents questioning the claim, and Israel denying any involvement.

In the southern port city of Bandar Abbas, an explosion in a residential building killed at least two people and injured 14 others, a local crisis management official told state media.

The local fire department chief said the blast was caused by a gas leak, a preliminary assessment echoed by state news outlets. However, one resident said in a video obtained by Iran International that the building was not yet connected to the gas grid.

Videos and images from the site showed significant structural damage to the building, with two floors destroyed and debris scattered nearby.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) denied rumors that the Bandar Abbas blast targeted its Navy commander, calling the reports false, according to the IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News Agency.

A video released by a local newspaper showed a man in uniform had been injured in the blast. However, local officials later said he was a Law Enforcement agent who was injured while trying to help the victims.

Separately, in Ahvaz in southwestern Iran, another explosion attributed to gas leak killed five people and injured three others, according to state media.

Reuters quoted two Israeli officials as saying the Jewish State was not involved in the explosions.

Iranian authorities said they were investigating both incidents and did not immediately provide further details on the causes.

Following a 12-day war between Iran and Israel last June, mysterious explosions and fires were reported at residential, commercial and infrastructure locations in several cities of Iran, including Tehran, Karaj, Qom, Mashhad and Tabriz.

In many cases, Iranian officials and state media described them as accidents, frequently citing gas leaks or technical causes, and said investigations were ongoing.