
Putin, Macron discuss Iran, Ukraine in first phone call in nearly three years
Russian President Vladimir Putin had a "substantial" phone call with French President Emmanuel Macron on the Iran-Israel conflict and Ukraine, the Kremlin said on Tuesday, the first such exchange between the two leaders since September 2022.
In Paris, Macron's office said the call lasted two hours and that the French leader had called for a ceasefire in Ukraine and the start of negotiations on ending the conflict.
A French diplomatic source said Macron had talked to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy before and after his call with Putin to brief him on the talks. Macron also talked to U.S. President Donald Trump about the exchange.
According to the Kremlin press service, Putin said it was necessary to respect Iran's right to the peaceful development of nuclear energy as well as its continued compliance with its obligations under the nuclear nonproliferation treaty.
The French president's office said Macron, who sees the Iranian nuclear threat as sufficiently serious to justify the involvement of all five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, had also stressed the need for Iran to cooperate fully with the International Atomic Energy Agency.
Iran's parliament approved a bill last month to suspend cooperation with the IAEA, the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog, after Israel and the United States bombed Iran's nuclear sites, aiming to prevent Tehran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. Iran has denied seeking one.
Macron "expressed his determination to seek a diplomatic solution that would lead to a lasting and rigorous resolution of the nuclear issue, the question of Iran's missiles, and its role in the region," his office said, adding that the two leaders had decided to "coordinate" their efforts.
France and Russia are both permanent members of the U.N. Security Council.
On Ukraine, Putin reiterated his position to Macron that the war was "a direct consequence of the West's policy," which he said had "ignored Russia's security interests" over the past few years.
Any possible peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine should have a "comprehensive and long-term character" and be based on "new territorial realities," the Kremlin quoted Putin as saying.
Putin has previously said Ukraine must accept Russia's annexation of swaths of its territory as part of any peace deal.
Macron has said Ukraine alone should decide on whether or not to accept territorial concessions.
During Tuesday's call, Macron's office said, "the president emphasised France's unwavering support for Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity."
Macron and Putin aim to continue their discussions on Ukraine and Iran, the French president's office said.
Macron and Putin held regular discussions around the start of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which was criticized by some European allies, with Macron also visiting Putin in Russia shortly before the invasion in February 2022.
© Thomson Reuters 2025.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Yomiuri Shimbun
3 hours ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Iranian Authorities Make Sweeping Arrests in Wake of War with Israel
DUBAI – Iranian authorities have arrested hundreds of people and executed half a dozen in a sweeping security crackdown that analysts say is aimed at exerting control after a brief but punishing war with Israel exposed Iran's deep infiltration by Israeli intelligence. In the week since a ceasefire was declared, security forces have erected checkpoints in Tehran and other cities and urged citizens to report anything suspicious. The Iranian parliament also announced an emergency bill that includes harsher punishments for espionage, including the death penalty, and the judiciary said it had ordered the creation of special courts to swiftly handle 'traitors and mercenaries.' In a news conference Sunday, the spokesman for Iran's judiciary, Asghar Jahangir, said he would soon provide details on how many people have been arrested and on what charges. He said only that 'a number of people suspected of spying for the Zionist regime have been identified and cases filed against them.' According to local media reports and human rights groups, more than 700 people were arrested across five provinces during the 12-day conflict. The Center for Human Rights in Iran, which is based in New York, said it received credible reports of hundreds more arrested in Tehran. It reported that at least six people were executed for spying for Israel, including three who were put to death in Oroumieh in western Iran on June 25. Rights groups have condemned the moves, with Amnesty International warning against arbitrary executions and expedited trials. The arrests have also raised fears inside Iran that a new wave of repression is coming, as the government seeks to root out spy networks and clamp down on any dissent among the wider population. Iranian security forces have beaten, arrested, tortured and executed thousands since the Islamic republic was founded in 1979. More recently, the regime cracked down on nationwide protests that erupted when a woman died while in the custody of Iran's guidance patrol – or morality police – in September 2022. In the months leading up to Israel's offensive, the government appeared to ease some social restrictions, while others were tightened. The enforcement of strict female dress codes appeared to taper off in some cities, but the government increased its monitoring of discourse online. At the same time, Iranian prisons stepped up executions. At least 975 people were executed in Iran last year, according to the United Nations, which said it was the highest number recorded in nearly a decade. So when the Israeli strikes started, 26-year-old Iman, an engineer from Tehran, said he immediately began to worry about a potential crackdown. 'As long as this government exists, I am concerned about the chances of increased repression, but during times when there's an 'external threat,' the repression gets much worse, as they have more excuse to see us as enemies,' he said of Iranian authorities. Iman, like some others in this story, spoke on the condition that he be identified only by his first name for fear of reprisal by security forces. Over the past week, he said, he has changed the way he dresses in public, wearing less colorful clothing out of fear he could become a target. New checkpoints in Tehran, where plainclothes officers stop cars and question drivers, have contributed to an intimidating atmosphere in the sprawling capital, residents said. Zahra, 41, an activist from Tehran, she said she has heard that at least four fellow activists were rounded up during the conflict. She fears that more widespread arrests are on the horizon, she said. 'The Iranians probably don't even know the full extent of the infiltration yet,' said a Western official who was briefed on the security situation and spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter. 'So, they are out there hunting,' the official said. 'Suspicions are heightened.' Perhaps most troubling, rights groups say, is the effort by parliament to make espionage a capital crime. Iran is already one of the world's top executioners, hanging people for offenses ranging from murder and rape to drug smuggling and corruption. The law would give the judiciary much broader authority to impose the death penalty, rights activists say. And while Israel pummeled Iranian military targets throughout the conflict, including weapons, infrastructure and senior commanders, the tools Iran uses to crack down domestically are largely intact, according to Afshon Ostovar, an Iran expert and professor of national security affairs at the Naval Postgraduate School in California. 'What Israel has done is really weaken the military as an external actor, but it hasn't done much to weaken it as an internal actor. And it takes a lot less to wage violence inside a country than outside of it,' Ostovar said. To crack down domestically, Iranian forces 'don't need missiles and drones and jets and helicopters. They just need rifles and big vehicles, and those still exist,' he said. 'The state hasn't lost its ability to monopolize violence.' But Ostovar doubts that Iran's leaders will reflect on some of the more uncomfortable questions about their deep unpopularity and the value of some security practices such as mass surveillance. 'If they were reflective, they'd realize that the reason why they were so bad picking up the Israelis is because they're focused on every single person in the crowd,' he said. He referred to surveillance programs that cast wide nets, monitoring social media discourse or how Iranian women cover their hair in public. 'They have no way to discriminate who's an actual spy and who's not, because everybody with a bad hijab or tweeting the wrong thing is seen as equal to an actual foreign operative,' Ostovar said. The Iranian judiciary announced last week that it was expanding its monitoring of electronic communications. Jahangir, the judiciary spokesman, said Sunday that it would also pursue online accounts 'that were cooperating with the enemy.' Jahangir also praised Iranian citizens, who he said 'immediately provided a lot of information' that led to quick identifications and arrests. In recent days, top Iranian officials have emphasized the country's 'unity' in the face of Israel's attacks, which killed more than 900 people, according to the government. In his first public remarks since the ceasefire, Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said the country 'showed that when it's necessary, a unified voice will be heard from this nation, and praise God, this is what happened.' President Masoud Pezeshkian echoed those comments. Iranians learned 'not to submit to humiliation and not to bow our heads before oppression,' he said in a statement on X. 'Our voice of unity reached the ears of the world.' Regardless of the messaging, however, Iran has emerged from the conflict 'in a greatly weakened position,' said Gregory Brew, an Iran analyst with Eurasia Group, a New York-based political risk consultancy. 'There will be questions about the strategic failures of not only the last two weeks, but of the last two years,' he said, referring to the collapse of Iran's allies in Gaza, Lebanon and Syria following the Hamas attacks on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. That kind of accounting could lead to shuffles within the country's leadership. 'So not regime change,' Brew said. 'But changes within the regime should be expected in the months and years ahead.'


Asahi Shimbun
3 hours ago
- Asahi Shimbun
Fiji says China military base not welcome as Pacific islands steer between superpowers
Fiji's Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka arrives at the Great Hall of the People for a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing on Aug. 20, 2024. (Pool via REUTERS) SYDNEY--Fiji is opposed to China setting up a military base in the Pacific Islands, Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka said on Wednesday, adding that it did not need such a base to project power, as shown by an intercontinental ballistic missile test. Strategically placed between the United States and Asia, the Pacific Islands are a focus of rivalry between Washington and Beijing for security ties. The islands were trying to cope with a big, powerful China seeking to spread its influence, Rabuka told the National Press Club in the Australian capital, adding that Beijing understood he would lobby other Pacific leaders against such a base. 'Pacific leaders in all their recent discussions have tried to go for policies that are friendly to all and enemies to none - and it is a fairly tough course to steer, but it is possible,' he added. The Pacific would feel the impact of any conflict over the Taiwan Strait between major powers, a possibility already being planned for by China and other nations, he said. Fiji opposes establishment of a military base by China, he said, in response to queries on Beijing's security ambitions in a region where it already has a security pact with the Solomon Islands and a police presence in several nations. 'If they want to come, who would welcome them?' he said. 'Not Fiji.' China's embassy in Fiji did not immediately respond to a request for comment, and Beijing has previously ruled out establishing a military base in the Solomon Islands. China did not need a base to project power, Rabuka added, as Beijing tested an intercontinental ballistic missile in September that flew over Fiji to land in international waters. China showed off its coast guard to 10 visiting leaders of Pacific islands in May, after registering two dozen of its vessels with a regional fisheries commission last year, though it has yet to start South Pacific patrols. China's coast guard would need to 'observe our sovereignty, our sovereign waters', Rabuka said. Fiji's cooperation with China to develop infrastructure should not affect how it interacts with Australia, New Zealand and the United States, he added. To manage strategic competition in the region, Rabuka is trying to build support for an Ocean of Peace treaty to ensure outsiders respect its unity and the 'rejection of coercion as a means to achieve security, economic or political advantage.' Leaders of the 18 members of the Pacific Islands Forum will consider the pact at a meeting in September.


Kyodo News
3 hours ago
- Kyodo News
Hiroshima mayor says Trump remarks out of touch with A-bomb reality
HIROSHIMA - The mayor of Hiroshima said Wednesday that U.S. President Donald Trump "does not understand the reality of the atomic bombings" of Hiroshima and Nagasaki after he equated the devastating 1945 attacks with recent U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear sites. Hiroshima Mayor Kazumi Matsui urged the president to visit the western Japan city to improve his understanding, saying he "does not seem to understand that once used, atomic bombs kill friend and foe alike and threaten humanity." The United States in late June struck three sites in Iran with the aim of destroying the nation's nuclear weapons infrastructure, widening a conflict between Israel and Iran. Trump said last Wednesday during a visit to the Netherlands for a NATO summit, "I don't want to use an example of Hiroshima, I don't want to use an example of Nagasaki, but that was essentially the same thing. That ended that war." The remark provoked an angry outcry from survivors in Japan who accused him of trying to justify what was the world's first use of nuclear weapons against a civilian population. Matsui said he will invite Trump, via the U.S. Embassy in Japan, to visit the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum documenting the devastation caused by the U.S. atomic bombing and to listen to the survivors' stories. Atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in the final days of World War II in August 1945, killing an estimated 214,000 people by the end of that year and leaving numerous survivors to grapple with long-term physical and mental health challenges.