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Iran president, Indian PM talk on phone, explore ways to enhance bilateral ties

Raisi and Modi

In a phone conversation on Friday, Raisi said Iran and India should specifically expand cooperation in the fields of transit and energy security.

The Iranian president underscored more interaction on the North-South Corridor.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran seeks to strengthen regional convergence and develop economic relations with all countries across the globe, particularly those in Asia, in this regard,” Raeisi added.

The president underlined Tehran and New Delhi both enjoy experiences in history that make for proper grounds for the expansion of ties at various levels.

The Indian prime minister, for his part, condemned the terrorist attack on the Shah Cheragh shrine in the Iranian city of Shiraz and extended his sympathy with the Iranian government, nation and the bereaved.

Modi hailed long-term cooperation with Iran and said the implementation of the joint project of Chabahar Port and turning it into a connectivity hub would lead to the region’s development. He said India was ready to finalize the documents pertaining to the completion of the project.

Mohammad Jamshidi, the Iranian president’s deputy chief of staff for political affairs, also posted a message on X social platform, formerly known as Twitter, with respect to the talks between Raeisi and Modi.

“They agreed to quicken developing the Chabahar Port as a symbol of bilateral cooperation,” the Iranian official tweeted.

India’s Ministry of External Affairs said in a press release that Raeisi and Modi discussed matters of bilateral and regional importance.

According to the ministry, the Indian prime minister said the relationship between Tehran and New Delhi is “underpinned by close historic and civilizational connections, including strong people-to-people contacts.”

The two sides also exchanged views about cooperation at multilateral forums including expansion of the BRICS grouping of emerging economies ahead of its summit in Johannesburg, South Africa, on August 22-24.

Iran is looking to join BRICS, the influential group of developing economies consisting of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

According to South Africa, some 40 nations have shown interest in joining, either formally or informally, including Saudi Arabia, Argentina and Egypt.

The South African and Iranian foreign ministers recently signed a cooperation deal in Pretoria ahead of the BRICS summit.

Iran captures Daesh-linked ‘most pivotal’ supporter of Shiraz shrine terror attack

Iran Security Forces

The ministry made the announcement in a statement on Friday as it elaborated on the measures taken to counter and identify the terrorists behind the weekend’s attack on Shah Cheragh and the one that took place in the same place last year.

On Sunday evening, a gunman started shooting at people at the Shah Cheragh holy shrine in the southern Iranian city, killing at least two people and injuring several others. He was arrested at the scene and handed over to investigators for interrogation.

The statement said 196 Takfiri terrorists were arrested or killed between the two terrorist assaults on the holy shrine in Shiraz, all of whom were non-Iranians and from the Republic of Azerbaijan, Tajikistan and Afghanistan.

The intelligence ministry added the US-created Takfiri Daesh terrorist group claimed responsibility for last year’s attack and declared it would launch a retaliatory operation and send terrorists to Iran after the trial and punishment of a number of the perpetrators of the heinous crime.

The statement said the perpetrator of the recent terrorist operation in Shiraz was exactly the same type of Takfiri terrorists who entered the country with the aim of reprisal.

“Like last year’s dead terrorist, he is also a citizen of Tajikistan, who got to know and was attracted to Daesh through the [social media] platform of Telegram,” it noted.

“To enter Iran, he passed through Tajikistan, Turkey and Pakistan, then he was trained in Badakhshan province of Afghanistan and illegally entered the country from the eastern borders,” it said, adding, “In Iran, through the same foreign platform, he was in contact with the commanding generals of the operation to receive instructions and weapons, and finally, on Sunday, August 13, he embarked on the terrorist operation.”

Drawing an analogy between the two attacks, the statement said both assailants were Takfiri terrorists with Tajik nationalities, and that the first attack coincided with nationwide riots plotted by Iran’s enemies while the latter came as the anniversary of those riots is approaching.

Iran’s Intelligence Ministry also stressed that the United States is seeking to reactivate Daesh after the terrorist group was defeated by the resistance front in the West Asia region.

“The silence of Europeans as the purported advocates of human rights regarding the recent terrorist attack, along with the joy of their affiliated media in this regard, is not only another clear example of their hypocritical stance and double standards but can also show another address of the Takfiri terror creator and sponsor club,” the statement noted.

The Shah Cheragh shrine in Shiraz was the scene of a similar attack by armed terrorists last year.

On October 26, 2022, an armed terrorist barged into the shrine, killing 15 pilgrims, including women and children, and injuring dozens more before he was shot and injured by security forces. The terrorist later died of his wounds in hospital.

UN suspends services in Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon after deadly clashes

Lebanon Refugee Camp

Deadly clashes broke out at the Ein el-Hilweh camp last month after a gunman from the Junud al-Sham armed group tried to assassinate Mahmoud Khalil, a leader of the Palestinian political faction, Fatah, forcing hundreds to flee.

Khalil’s companion, Fatah commander Abu Ashraf al-Armouchi was fatally shot and several of his aides were killed. Al-Armouchi was in charge of security inside Ein el-Hilweh.

The camp is home to more than 63,000 Palestinian refugees and their descendants, who were forcibly displaced from their homes in 1948 in the run-up to Israel’s creation.

“The agency does not tolerate actions that breach the inviolability and neutrality of its installations,” United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) said in a statement.

It announced that schools in the camp were unlikely to be available for 3,200 children at the start of the new school year.

“UNRWA reiterates its call on armed actors to immediately vacate its facilities, to ensure unimpeded delivery of much-needed assistance to Palestine refugees,” the agency added.

More than a dozen people were killed in the fighting, and thousands of others were displaced.

Following a 1969 agreement between Lebanon and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), the Lebanese army largely avoids entering the camps, but Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister had earlier this month threatened to send in the country’s army to Ein el-Hilweh if the clashes continued.

Dorothee Klaus, the director of UNRWA Affairs in Lebanon, stated UNRWA facilities have been damaged by the recent fighting in the camp.

“All UNRWA facilities, including schools, must be protected at all times,” she said in a statement, adding, “Schools are meant to be a sanctuary for children and zones of peace where children learn and play. They must never be used for armed conflict, clashes, violence and fighting.”

Some 400,000 refugees live in Lebanon’s 12 Palestinian camps.

Established in 1949 following the first Arab-Israeli War, UNRWA provides public services including schools, primary healthcare and humanitarian aid in the Israeli-occupied territories of the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, as well as the neighbouring countries of Jordan, Syria and Lebanon.

Republican lawmakers scold Biden for Iran prisoner swap deal

Iran US Flags

Washington and Tehran reached a deal, via Omani and Qatari mediators, that will see billions of dollars of Iranian funds unfrozen and Iranian prisoners freed in exchange for the release of five detained Americans.

The senators wrote a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen voicing their “significant concern” over the decision to release an estimated $6 billion in frozen Iranian assets.

“While we firmly believe the United States must use every appropriate resource to secure the release of American citizens wrongfully detained overseas, this decision will reinforce an incredibly dangerous precedent and enable the Iranian regime to increase its destabilizing activities across the Middle East,” the letter read.

“Seven years later, the current administration is providing a ransom payment worth at least fifteen times that amount to the world’s largest state sponsor of terror, in yet another violation of the United States’ long-standing ‘no concessions’ policy,” the senators wrote.

They also warned that this would only encourage additional hostage-taking in return for financial or political gain.

The Republican senators stated they feared the recent deal was an attempt to “sidestep” Congress and pursue alternative paths to financially compensate Iran “in an attempt to renegotiate a successor to the ill-fated 2015 nuclear deal.”

The Obama administration cut a similar deal with Iran when it released $400 million in liquidated assets to Iran in 2016 in return for Americans detained by Tehran.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 542

Russia Ukraine War
An emergency service worker stands at the site of a Russian missile strike in Chernihiv, Ukraine August 19, 2023.

Toll rises again from Chernihiv missile attack, with 7 confirmed dead and 90 injured

Seven people are now confirmed dead from the Russian missile strike on the northern Ukrainian city of Chernihiv on Saturday, Ukraine’s Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor Klymenko said.

“The body of one more victim was discovered in Chernihiv. An unidentified woman. The death toll has risen to 7,” he wrote on Telegram.

“90 injured people applied for medical assistance. Among them are 10 police officers and 12 children. 25 people have been hospitalised. A 12-year-old girl is being urgently transferred by ambulance to Kyiv city. The child is in grave condition,” he added.

The missile hit the city center, where people were leaving church. It struck a theater and a university.


Russia says thwarted Ukraine drone attack on Moscow area

The Russian army announced it has thwarted a Ukrainian drone attack on Moscow and its region, hours after other drone raids on Moscow-annexed Crimea and a military airfield.

“An attempt was thwarted this afternoon by the Kyiv regime to carry out a terrorist attack with an aircraft-type drone on objects on the territory of Moscow and the Moscow region,” the Russian army said.

It added that air defence had detected a drone, which crashed in a “deserted area near the village of Putilkovo”, causing no damage.


Death toll in Chernihiv rises to six after death of six-year-old girl: Ukrainian official

The death toll following a Russian missile strike on the northern Ukrainian city of Chernihiv has risen to at least six after a six-year-old girl died in hospital, according to Ukraine’s Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor Klymenko.

“Her mother is in grave condition. The police officers provided first aid to the girl. Unfortunately, doctors were unable to save her upon arrival at the hospital due to a heavy blood loss,” Klymenko said.

He added hospitals are operating at full capacity, with 36 people wounded, including police officers and court security officers. “These are civilians who were either on Chernihiv central square or returning from church,” he explained.

“The Security Service and the Prosecutor’s Office are documenting the crime. The missile hit the Palace of Culture in the city center. There were also people in the nearby cafes. Buildings in the old part of the city were destroyed,” he continued.

An air raid alert had sounded a few minutes before the missile struck, meaning most of the people inside the theater and outside were able to take shelter. “That’s what saved a lot of people’s lives,” Klymenko stated.

Acting mayor of Chernihiv, Oleksandr Lomako, told national TV: ”There is a park right behind the drama theater, many children and their parents usually spend time there. There are numerous restaurants with outdoor terraces located nearby as well. It all happened in the middle of the day when obviously there are many people in the city center.”

“This crime cannot be interpreted except as a war crime against civilians,” he added.

Lomako said a lot of buildings around the drama theater in Krasna Square were damaged, with “rocket fragments and broken windows.”


Russian missile attack kills five in Chernihiv: Interior minister

A Russian missile attack has killed five people and wounded 37 others in the city centre of Chernihiv, the regional capital of the northern province of the same name, Ukraine’s Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said.

The attack hit a theater and university in the city centre and 11 children are among the injured, he added.

President Volodymyr Zelensky condemned Saturday’s attack on the northern city, which he said hit buildings including a theatre and a university.


Moscow says warplane damaged in Ukrainian drone attack on airfield

A Ukrainian drone has targeted a military airfield in Russia’s Novgorod region, causing a fire and damaging one warplane, Russia’s Defence Ministry says.

The ministry announced nobody was hurt and the fire was quickly extinguished. The Novgorod region lies northwest of Moscow, hundreds of kilometres from Russia’s border with Ukraine.

“As a result of the terrorist attack on the territory of the airfield, a fire broke out in the parking lot of aircraft, which was quickly eliminated by fire fighters. One aircraft was damaged,” the ministry added.

Drone air attacks deep inside Russia have increased in recent months. One smashed into a building in central Moscow on Friday after Russian air defences shot it down, disrupting air traffic at all civilian airports of the Russian capital.


Deaths reported as Russian missile hits university and theater in Chernihiv

A Russian missile strike has hit the center of the northern Ukrainian city of Chernihiv, turning “an ordinary Saturday… into a day of pain and loss,” President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Telegram.

“There are dead, there are wounded,” Zelensky stated, adding, “A Russian missile hit right in the center of the city, in our Chernihiv. A square, the polytechnic university, a theater.”

Oleksandr Lomako, acting mayor of Chernihiv city, said the number of victims is being clarified.

Emergency services are working at the scene, Lomako added.


Putin visits Ukraine military operation headquarters

Russian President Vladimir Putin met with the head of the General Staff, Valery Gerasimov, and other high-ranking military commanders during an unannounced visit to the headquarters of Russia’s Southern Military District, the Kremlin said on Saturday morning.

The president received classified briefings from Gerasimov and other senior commanding officers involved in the military operation in Ukraine, the brief statement added.

Russian state media shared a video of the rare visit, which shows the head of the General Staff greeting Putin at the headquarters ahead of the closed-door meeting. However, it remains unclear when exactly the meeting took place.


Ukraine attempts to attack Crimea with S-200 missile, Russian air defense intercepts it

Kiev attempted to attack Crimea with an S-200 surface-to-air missile re-equipped into a strike weapon during the night, while Russia’s air defense capabilities intercepted it, Russia’s Defense Ministry reported on Saturday.

“During the night on August 19, the Kiev regime attempted to carry out a terrorist attack using an S-200 surface-to-air missile re-equipped into a strike weapon on the Crimean territory. Russia’s air defense capabilities timely detected and intercepted it in the air,” the ministry said, adding that no casualties or damage on the ground were reported.

Russia’s Defense Ministry announced earlier that on August 12, Kiev attempted to attack the Crimean bridge with S-200 surface-to-air missiles re-equipped into strike weapons twice. They were detected and intercepted by the Russian air defense systems.


Western calls for Ukraine peace talks a ‘tactical ploy’: Russia

The US and its allies do not want the Ukraine conflict to end and their purported peace initiatives are merely attempts to buy Kiev time, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in an interview published on Saturday.

Negotiating directly with the Americans would make sense, he told the magazine International Affairs when asked about the idea.

“The problem, however, is that the United States has no intention of ending the conflict,” Lavrov explained, noting that “their officially declared objective is to inflict a ‘strategic defeat’ on Russia.”

Prospects for negotiations between Russia and the West “are non-existent at this stage,” Lavrov added, while Kiev “Western sponsors are constantly pushing them to up the ante.”

Insisting on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s so-called ‘peace formula’ at meetings in Copenhagen and Jeddah – to which Russia was not invited – “hardly demonstrates an intention by the West to negotiate with Russia,” Lavrov continued. Moscow has dismissed Zelensky’s ten-point list of demands as an unacceptable ultimatum unrelated to reality.

“We regard the Westerners’ hypocritical calls for talks as a tactical ploy to buy time once again giving the exhausted Ukrainian troops a respite and the opportunity to regroup, and to send in more weapons and ammunition,” Lavrov said, adding that “this is the path of war, not a peaceful settlement process.”


Scholz says there are no Germany soldiers in Ukraine

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz stated that he sees his government’s task in not letting Germany be dragged into the conflict in Ukraine.

“I am doing my best to prevent this,” he said during a discussion organized by the Augsburger Allgemeine newspaper when asked about the risk that Germany could be drawn into the conflict.

“That is why, for instance, there are no German soldiers in Ukraine and there will not be any,” he pledged.

“We will support Ukraine and we are supplying weapons, which is a violation of the taboo – in recent decades Germany has never supplied any weapons to conflict zones, with rare exceptions,” he continued, adding however that he thinks that it was a right decision to provide Kiev with weapons because “Russia invaded the neighboring country to seize its territory, which is unacceptable.”

At the same time, in his words, while making decisions the German government has been keeping a close eye on what its allies are doing to avoid a possible confrontation between Russia and NATO. “And this has always been our principle,” he stressed.

“We have always been weighing our decisions and will continue to do so.”

According to Scholz, it was the right decision to supply Leopard tanks to Ukraine only is the Americans send their combat vehicles as well.

Germany is second after the United States in terms of military assistance to Kiev. he Russian side has repeatedly stressed that the West’s weapons supplies to Kiev and its assistance in training Ukrainian troops only prolong the conflict and will not change the situation on the battlefield.


Biden: Consequences of war in Ukraine “extend well beyond Europe”

In remarks after a trilateral summit with Japanese Prime Minster Fumio Kishida and South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, US President Joe Biden commended the Japanese leader on his response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Answering questions from a Japanese reporter at Camp David in Maryland, Biden said Japan has “showed strong leadership through the G7 as well and contributed to a significant amount of financial and humanitarian assistance to Ukraine as well as nonlethal military equipment. And they’ve joined so many other nations in holding Russia accountable through international sanctions.”

Biden stated when he called up Kishida about Ukraine, he didn’t have to convince him “of anything.”

Calling Russian President Vladimir Putin’s rationale over the invasion “ridiculous,” Biden stressed, “Imagine if we’d done nothing. And the point was immediately recognized if I’m not mistaken by you, Mr. Prime Minister, that we’re in a situation where it could happen anywhere. If we stood still, what statement would that send to China about Taiwan? What signal would that send around the world?”

“Russia has already lost. It cannot meet its original objective which it stated. It’s not possible. … Japan’s leadership from day one, it has been critical making it clear that the consequences for war extend well beyond Europe,” he continued.

The invasion is not “only a European problem; there hasn’t been that kind of invasion since World War II,” Biden added.


Russia bars dozens of British citizens from entering the country, including journalists and ministers

Russia has barred 54 more British citizens from entering the country, according to the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In the latest update to its sanctions policy, Russia accused the individuals and entities of involvement in “propaganda support of the activities of the [Ukrainian] Zelensky regime” and of being “Russophobic.”

The sanctions list includes several government ministers as well as journalists from public broadcaster the BBC, the Guardian newspaper and the Daily Telegraph newspaper.

“We would like to emphasize again that any efforts by London to further spin the anti-Russian sanctions flywheel will inevitably receive a decisive response from our side,” the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement, adding, “Work on expanding the Russian ‘stop list’ in response to the actions of the British authorities will continue.”

The updated list includes British cabinet minister Lucy Frazer, the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport. Russian authorities claimed that Frazer is “actively lobbying for the international sports isolation of Russia.”

Earlier this year, Frazer said in a social media post that she asked sponsors of the Olympic Games “to join 35 like-minded nations and press the IOC for a continued ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes competing in international sporting competitions,” adding that “we must continue to ensure that Russia and Belarus cannot use sport for their propaganda purposes.”

The new sanctions also include a Minister of State at the British Ministry of Defence, Baroness Goldie DL, who Russia has accused of being “responsible for the supply of weapons to Ukraine, including depleted uranium shells.”

British prosecutor Karim A. A. Khan KC, who is an elected official on the International Criminal Court, will also be barred from Russia due to his involvement “in issuing a warrant for the arrest of the Russian leadership,” according to the Russian foreign ministry statement.

In February, Khan submitted applications to the ICC for warrants of arrest for Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russian Commissioner for Children’s Rights Maria Lvova-Belova.


Russia says west needs continual reminder of risks of nuclear war

Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that possession of nuclear weapons protects Russia from security threats and that Moscow continually reminded the West of the risk of a nuclear conflict.

Lavrov’s comments are the latest reference by Russian officials to their country’s nuclear weapons arsenal, a rhetoric of military escalation by Moscow that has gained tempo and frequency since Russian forces invaded Ukraine last year.

“The possession of nuclear arms is today the only possible response to some of the significant external threats to the security of our country,” Lavrov said in an interview for the state-owned magazine, The International Affairs, published early on Saturday on the foreign ministry website.

The minister stated that the United States and NATO military alliance members risk ending up in “a situation of direct armed confrontation of nuclear powers”.

“We believe such a development should be prevented. That’s why we have to remind about the existence of high military and political risks and send sobering signals to our opponents,” he added.


Turkey’s foreign minister to visit Kyiv as Ukraine pushes for a new grain corridor

Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan is scheduled to visit Ukraine next week to explore options for revitalising the grain deal suspended by Russia, according to informed sources.

The move comes as Kyiv proposes an alternative route for the transportation of agricultural products, one which would circumvent international waters.

Two sources familiar with the visit told Middle East Eye that Fidan will use his first ever visit to Kyiv as foreign minister, on 25 August, to exchange views on bilateral issues as well as the ongoing Ukrainian offensive and Ukraine’s own peace plan.

The visit comes as Turkey and the UN have intensified their efforts to convince Russia to revive the landmark Black Sea grain deal, which ensured the safe passage of 33m tonnes of grain between August 2022 and July 2023. Moscow terminated the deal last month, over written promises that it says have not been met.

Moscow says western powers could not facilitate the export of Russian ammonium and insurance for the Russian ships that carry crops, as well as payment for these deliveries in foreign currencies.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly announced that he hopes to meet his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, at the end of this month to make progress on resolving Moscow’s grievances with a set of proposals, as well as expanding the deal into a wider attempt to declare a ceasefire.

However, the Ukrainian government believes there is no time to lose, as the harvest season is approaching.


US has given Denmark approval for F-16 instructional materials for Ukraine

The US has approved the transfer of F-16 instructional materials to Ukraine, according to a Biden administration official and a US official, as the program to train Ukrainian pilots on the American jets is set to begin.

“We can confirm the Department has recently approved a request from F-16 training partner Denmark related to their effort to stand up pilot and maintenance training programs,” said the official in President Joe Biden’s administration.

The approval includes training modules, documentation, and classroom training materials, the official said, which contains information about sensitive US technology.

The approval of the third-party transfer request from Denmark was one of the critical steps before Ukrainian fighter pilots could begin training to fly the fourth-generation jets, which Kyiv has requested for months. Earlier Friday, the Danish defense ministry said Ukrainian pilots would begin training on F-16 jets later this month, part of a coalition of 11 countries that will be involved in the training program.

On Thursday, the US said it had committed to approving the transfer of F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine as soon as training is complete.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken sent letters to his counterparts in Denmark and the Netherlands assuring them that the transfer of the jets would have the “full support” of the Biden administration and would move quickly when training on the advanced aircraft is complete.

“You have my assurances that we will expedite approval of the requisite Third Party Transfer requests in time to enable delivery when the training is completed, including required notification to our Congress,” wrote Blinken in the letters.

On Friday, the commander of US Air Forces in Europe and Africa said the Ukrainian pilots who will learn to fly the F-16 fighter jet are getting language instruction in the United Kingdom, since all of the materials and the instruments in the jet itself are in English, before they start flying training aircraft.

“They’re going to get a little bit more training on (propellor aircraft) and then go down to France and fly in the Alpha jet for a little bit,” said Gen. James Hecker, speaking to a roundtable of reporters as part of the Defense Writers Group. The Alpha jet used by the French is an advanced jet trainer.

“That all is going to take time, and that’s probably not going to happen before the end of the year, so that takes a while to make that happen,” Hecker continued, adding, “So that’s why it’s going to be at least until next year until you see F-16s in Ukraine.”

Hecker stated the Ukrainian pilots taking part in the F-16 training program are younger pilots who “barely have any hours at all” and are not currently taking part in the war.

The Ukrainians also announced on Wednesday that they didn’t expect to receive the F-16s until next year.


Ukrainian pilots will start F-16 training in Denmark later this month

Ukrainian pilots will begin training on F-16 fighter jets in Denmark later in August, the Danish defense ministry said Friday.

A coalition of 11 countries will be involved in the training, it added.

The US has committed to approving the transfer of F-16 fighter jets for Ukraine as soon as training is complete, according to a US official.

Denmark and the Netherlands have taken the lead in preparing a program to train Ukrainian pilots on the American jet, but the US is still working with other countries to see who may provide F-16s to the Ukrainian Air Force.

Ukraine said Wednesday that it didn’t expect to receive F-16s until some time next year.


German army trains “highly motivated” Ukrainian soldiers on Leopard tanks

Germany’s army trained Ukrainian troops on Leopard 1 battle tanks Thursday in the eastern town of Klietz, outside Berlin.

The Ukrainian army needs to train more soldiers after many have either been wounded or killed during the fight against Russia’s invasion, German Lt. Gen. Andreas Marlow told reporters at the training site.

“I think the most important concern for Ukraine is the training of officers, because it’s obvious that the professional soldiers have been at war for a year and a half now,” Marlow said, adding, “Many have been killed or wounded, and now they need supplies, including leaders and sub-leaders. And there is quite a demand for that.”

The Ukrainian soldiers are “highly motivated,” said Marco Maulbecker, a German armed forces commander and trainer.

“They have to be. After all, if you want to learn the basic skills of the main battle tank, the instruction manual is a good 700 pages long. And you can see the motivation above all in the fact that they also deal with the system after duty and are really willing to learn the system in a really short time,” he added.

Ukrainian soldiers also spoke to journalists at the training site.

“The training is very important for us because we receive (new) tanks with technical (systems), and the soldiers have to learn to use this equipment. Therefore, it is very important for us, so that our soldiers can use it efficiently during battles,” one service member said, adding, “We are very motivated to fight for our home country and that’s the best remedy against fear.”

Russia foreign minister to travel to US for key UN meeting

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov

Apart from Lavrov, the Russian team will include Deputy FM Sergey Vershinin, permanent envoy to the UN Vassily Nebenzia, the heads of Russia’s upper and lower chamber foreign affairs committee, Grigory Karasin and Leonid Slutsky, respectively, as well as other senior diplomats, the decree reads.

High-level week at the UNGA is set to take place in late September. In late July, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin had no plans to participate in the event personally.

Russia’s representation at the UN has been riddled with various issues lately, as ties between Moscow and the UN’s host nation, the US, have deteriorated even further over the Ukraine conflict. Earlier this year, Russia held the rotating presidency at the UN Security Council, but the US failed to grant visas to journalists from the media pool traveling with Lavrov.

At the time, the foreign minister condemned Washington’s decision to withhold visas as “stupid,” noting this had only exposed the true worth of Washington’s “oaths about protecting freedom of speech, about access to information, and so on.”

“Of course, I understood how notorious our American colleagues are for such things but I was sure that, this time, given the attention that was drawn to their ugly behavior, everything would be different. But I was wrong,” Lavrov stated.

The Russian foreign minister and several other senior officials were subjected to US sanctions last year shortly after the Ukraine conflict broke out. However, the US, as the nation hosting the UN headquarters, remains obliged not to hinder the work of foreign dignitaries or their staff, including accredited journalists.

Iranian analyst: Saudis have recognized Iran as a regional power

Iran and Saudi FMs Amirabdollahian and bin Farhan

Mohammad Safaee said in a comprehensive plan, Riyadh seeks to become a modern and influential country in the world and sees its national security as the most important factor in developing its economy and attracting foreign capital. According to Safaee, for this reason, the Saudis are making an effort to bring Iran, which is the key member of the anti-Western axis in the region, into interaction with them in order to remove purported obstacles to Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman’s ambitious plans.

He added that this provides a great opportunity for Tehran to alleviate its economic hardships by using its elements of strength such as its military and geopolitical might.  

Safaee also said the differences between Saudi Arabia and some Arab countries such as Qatar and the UAE have paved the way for the expansion of relations between Iran and all these countries and Tehran can benefit from cooperation with them and also take advantage of their differences.

Saudi newspapers’ headlines on Iran FM Amirabdollahian’s visit to Riyadh

Hossein Amirabdollahian Saudi Arabia

Here are the headlines of a number of important newspapers in the kingdom.

Asharq al-Awsat:

 Saudi Arabia and Iran… strengthening cooperation and regional security

The servants of the holy shrines invites Raisi to visit Saudi Arabia

Productive talks between bin Farhan and Amirabdollahian

Al-Riyadh:

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Iran eager to strengthen bilateral relations

Tehran supports Saudi Arabia’s bid to host Expo 2030

Al-Jazeerah: 

Saudi Arabia and Iran…common interest and mutual respect 

Okaz

Saudi FM: We are waiting for a new era and boosting relations with Iran

Diplomatic missions and ambassadors of both sides resume their work 

Arab News

Iranian FM in Riyadh as revival of ties gather steam

 Al Yaum 

Iran and Saudi Arabia eye boosting ties

Saudi Crown meets Iran FM, invites President Raisi to Riyadh

Amirabdollahian bin Salman

Bin Salman extended the invitation in a Friday meeting with the visiting Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian in the Saudi port city of Jeddah.

Bin Salman noted that a meeting between the leaders of the two countries would be very important and that such meetings will have a significant effect on the expansion and deepening of bilateral and multilateral relations.

The Saudi crown prince added his country’s view of the relationship with Iran is strategic and that the kingdom is firmly resolved in this regard. 

Iranian Foreign Amirabdollahian also  emphasized the need for the expansion of ties between Iran and regional countries including Saudi Arabia.

Referring to the opportunities ahead of the two countries, Amirabdollahian said the Islamic Republic of Iran and Saudi Arabia can help the region grow and prosper further through expanding cooperation in all areas including in political ties, economy, trade, transit, science and technology and culture as well as popular matters. 

Amirabdollahian also said the key to the region’s prosperity is to strengthen dialogue and development-oriented cooperation.

He then pointed to the position and role of Iran and Saudi Arabia in the region and the Muslim world, describing the issue of Palestine and al-Quds as the central issue for the Islamic world. 

Amirabdollahian underlined that the Zionist regime is a threat to all countries. 

The top Iranian diplomat also stressed the significance of endogenous and lasting security in the region.

Iran army monitors ‘radar-evading’ American F-35s

F-35

Deputy Commander of Operations of the Iranian Army Air Defense Force, Brigadier General Reza Khajeh, told Iran’s Fars New Agency that in the past few days, several American F-35 stealth fighter jets were flying over the Persian Gulf and were completely monitored by Iranian radars from the moment they took off.

The Iranian commander noted, “All the radars located in the south of the country were monitoring the planes every moment.” 

Genersl Khajeh also stressed, “All flights by foreign forces in the Persian Gulf region, the Strait of Hormuz and the Sea of Oman are definitely monitored and observed by our radars, especially the radars located on the southern edge of the country, and if necessary they are given warnings.” 

He assured that the Iranian radar systems have never failed to monitor reported flights in the region. 

The comnents follow the recent US military build-up in the Persian Gulf to counter what Washington calls Iran’s threats against oil tankers in the region.