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Khamenei's Top Advisor Claims Trump PLEADED For Negotiations With Iran, Explains Reason Behind Washington's Move

Khamenei's Top Advisor Claims Trump PLEADED For Negotiations With Iran, Explains Reason Behind Washington's Move

Time of India30-06-2025
Iran Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei's top advisor has claimed that the United States was "pleading" to hold talks with Iran. Ali Larijani told SNN TV that Donald Trump had hinted at regime change in Iran while making moves to resolve the nuclear deadlock with Tehran. Watch out for more.#iran #ayatollahkhamenei #alilarijani #donaldtrump #irannuclearprogram #unitedstates
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Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei ‘spends the day sleeping and using drugs': Report
Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei ‘spends the day sleeping and using drugs': Report

Hindustan Times

time3 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei ‘spends the day sleeping and using drugs': Report

A social media account linked to Israel's intelligence agency Mossad has made allegations against Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, claiming he spends much of his day 'sleeping and using drugs.' Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has been accused of spending his days sleeping and using drugs by a Mossad-affiliated account.(REUTERS File) 'How can a leader lead when he sleeps half the day and the other half is a wreck from drug use? Water, electricity, life!' the account Mossad Farsi wrote on X (formerly Twitter). The post, originally written in Farsi and automatically translated, stopped short of naming Ayatollah Khamenei but was broadly seen as a reference to the 86-year-old Iranian supreme leader, reported Israeli news outlet ynetnews. The account behind it, @MossadSpokesman, is verified and regularly addresses Farsi-speaking users with content critical of Iran's leadership, often delivering political messages aimed at the regime in Tehran, the Israeli-based news outlet mentioned. The post on X has drawn over 1.9 lakh views, with its closing remarks seemingly referencing Iran's ongoing infrastructure and resource challenges, including widespread protests over water scarcity and power cuts. While Israel has not formally confirmed ownership, the Mossad Farsi has emerged as a provocative digital presence, widely seen as an unofficial outlet for the intelligence agency's messaging aimed at Iranian audiences. Mossad Farsi bio warns users to use VPN amid attacks on Iranian regime The account bio reads, 'To everyone contacting us through private messages, for your own security, please ensure you are using a VPN.' Over the past month, 'Mossad Farsi' has posted a series of barbed messages targeting Iran's leadership, including comments on Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's health. In one post, the account ridiculed the secrecy surrounding the newly appointed, unnamed commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya, a key military command within Iran's armed forces. After the semi-official Tasnim news agency reported that the commander's identity was being withheld for security reasons, the account claimed it already had the name and encouraged users to guess. When someone responded with 'Ali Abdollahi Aliabadi,' the account wrote back: 'Contact us privately to receive your prize.' The account's use of public taunts is an unusual departure from Mossad's typically covert and restrained communication style. Two intelligence experts told Israeli news outlet JFeed that the channel appears to be genuine. 'Some of the information it has shared could only have come from Mossad,' said Beny Sabti, a former IDF Persian-language officer and current Iran specialist at Israel's Institute for National Security Studies. Accusations about Khamenei's drug use have surfaced in the past as well. Fox News quoted a 2022 remark by Iranian academic Nour Mohamed Omara, who claimed on a Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated TV channel in Turkey, 'Many viewers do not know this, but Khamenei himself uses drugs.'

Why Trump, Putin, and Xi All Want the Zangezur Corridor Now
Why Trump, Putin, and Xi All Want the Zangezur Corridor Now

India Today

time3 days ago

  • India Today

Why Trump, Putin, and Xi All Want the Zangezur Corridor Now

In a mountainous corner of southern Armenia lies a stretch of land barely visible on most maps. Just 43 kilometres long, the proposed Zangezur Corridor could reshape the geopolitics of the South Caucasus—and beyond. Azerbaijan hails it as a vital link. Armenia sees it as a national threat. Turkey views it as the spine of a new Turkic superhighway, while Iran calls it a dagger at its northern The corridor would connect Azerbaijan to its exclave, Nakhchivan, and from there to Turkey—bypassing Armenia proper. It's an idea rooted in Soviet-era railways, but revived after Azerbaijan's military victory in the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war. The Russia-brokered ceasefire included vague language about reopening transport links. Baku interpreted this as a green light for term 'Zangezur Corridor' was first publicly invoked by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in 2021. Soon after, he warned that if Armenia refused, Azerbaijan would open the corridor 'by force.'Tensions rejects what it calls the 'corridor logic'—the notion that a foreign-controlled land route could be carved through its territory. Yerevan insists any trade route must fall fully under Armenian jurisdiction, with its customs, laws, and security in role is deeply entwined. Moscow helped broker the ceasefire and proposed that its FSB border service secure the corridor. This would deepen Russia's logistical footprint in the Caucasus—ensuring relevance even while distracted in Ukraine and reeling from meanwhile, has drawn a red line. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei has stated that no corridor crossing Armenia should fall under foreign control, warning that such a project would sever Tehran's access to Yerevan and empower pan-Turkic influence along Iran's sensitive northwest already feels excluded from China's Belt and Road Initiative. Zangezur could be the final blow to its regional connectivity however, sees opportunity. The corridor would slot neatly into its evolving Middle Corridor—linking China to Europe through Central Asia, the Caspian, and the Caucasus. It's a faster, cheaper alternative to the northern route via Russia or the southern one through Iran. Geopolitically, it's less risky—and far more while regional players jostle, the United States is now re-entering the frame—with a striking new proposition under former President Donald Trump's foreign policy advisors are reportedly floating a bold plan: hand operational control of the corridor to a U.S.-based commercial logistics company. In this vision, American enterprise would act as a stabilising force—mirroring similar initiatives in Ukraine involving rare earth supply proposal serves several strategic goals:Cut Russian FSB oversight from the region,Sideline Iran from east-west logistics,Provide Armenia with security assurances,advertisementAnd entrench U.S. corporate influence in Eurasian essence, the Trump camp wants economic control to yield geopolitical leverage. But Armenian officials remain sceptical. For them, it's a sovereignty 2024, Yerevan tabled a 'Crossroads of Peace' plan—offering trade transit under full Armenian control. It includes customs checks, security guarantees, and open access, but firmly rejects the notion of warn that accepting 'foreign-managed' corridors—even symbolically—could set dangerous precedents, threatening national sovereignty and regional however, is watching with glee. Ankara sees Zangezur as the linchpin of a greater Turkic world—stretching from Istanbul to the Chinese Russia bogged down in Ukraine and Iran facing isolation, Turkey believes the time is ripe to assert leadership in the Caucasus. The corridor, from Ankara's perspective, is about more than trade. It's about identity, culture, and geopolitical talks continue. Armenia and Azerbaijan met in Kazan in late 2024 to discuss new terms. But so far, there is no final remains adamant. Iran remains opposed. Russia remains embedded. And Trump—though not in office—remains corridor is not merely theoretical. Skirmishes near Syunik, surveillance in Armenian villages, and increased military deployments all signal that the situation remains volatile. Human rights groups warn of displacement risks for local residents. Environmentalists highlight the ecological fragility of the Zangezur Mountains—home to endangered species and vital water these concerns, the corridor's economic promise is significant. If managed neutrally, institutions like the IMF and World Bank estimate it could raise regional GDP by up to 5% and slash freight times by nearly a third. For landlocked Armenia, it could be a rare chance to pivot from isolation to Washington, policy analysts see the Zangezur Corridor as a potential wedge—one that could weaken China's Belt and Road monopoly, dilute Russian control, and offer U.S. allies like Georgia a new economic Moscow sees it differently. Kremlin strategists fear that a U.S.-anchored corridor could bring NATO-aligned logistics infrastructure perilously close to Russia's southern Tehran, hawks warn that the corridor, if U.S.-backed, could serve as a containment tool—tightening a noose around Iran's vulnerable northwest, where millions of ethnic Azerbaijanis in Ankara, it's the foundation of a grand project: Pan-Turkic this is about far more than roads or railways. Zangezur has become a 21st-century crucible for power dusty Soviet maps to headlines in Washington, Zangezur now symbolises the struggle for control over the South Caucasus—and the shape of post-post-Cold War next chapter may be written by diplomats, business executives—or whoever controls Zangezur may well control the crossroads of Eurasia itself.- Ends

Russian president Putin shocks everyone with two massive steps in a day, Trump will be both happy and sad because…, Iran will now…
Russian president Putin shocks everyone with two massive steps in a day, Trump will be both happy and sad because…, Iran will now…

India.com

time6 days ago

  • India.com

Russian president Putin shocks everyone with two massive steps in a day, Trump will be both happy and sad because…, Iran will now…

Russian president Putin shocks everyone with two massive steps in a day, Trump will be both happy and sad because…, Iran will now… In two massive developments impacting the geopolitical world, Russian President Vladimir Putin surprised everyone by taking two steps simultaneously. Media reports have it that the Russian President h By Abhijeet Sen Edited by Abhijeet Sen Advertisement Russian President Putin and Donald Trump In two massive developments impacting the geopolitical world, Russian President Vladimir Putin surprised everyone by taking two steps simultaneously. Media reports have it that the Russian President has on one hand, agreed to hold peace talks to end the Ukraine war, and on the other hand, he has held a surprise meeting with Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's top nuclear advisor Ali Larijani on Tehran's nuclear program. Here are all the details you need to know about the two significant developments between Iran, Russia and US. On the meeting with Ali Larijani on Sunday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that it was an unannounced meeting in which Larijani shared with the Russian president his 'assessment of the deteriorating situation in the Middle East and the Iranian nuclear program.' Advertisement === What was decided in Russia-Iran secret talk? In the recent development, it has been reported that Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on the meeting with Ali Larijani that it was an unannounced meeting in which Larijani shared with the Russian president regarding Putin's 'assessment of the deteriorating situation in the Middle East and the Iranian nuclear program.' Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky proposes fresh talks with Russia In the recent development, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said that Kyiv has proposed to hold a new round of peace talks with Moscow next week. Notably, Rustem Umerov, who headed the Ukrainian delegation in the previous two talks in Istanbul, had sent the Russian side the offer to hold the meeting next week, Zelensky said in his recent address to the nation as per a report by IANS news agency. Advertisement === 'The momentum of the negotiations must be stepped up,' Zelensky said. 'Everything should be done to achieve a ceasefire.' Russia rejects US President's 50-day ultimatum In response to Trump's statement, Russia rejected US President's 50-day ultimatum to agree to a Ukraine ceasefire, dismissing the threat of 'severe tariffs' as unacceptable. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov emphasised that Moscow favours a diplomatic resolution to the Ukraine conflict and is ready to negotiate. (With inputs from agencies)

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