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Iran, Syria slam Israel as ‘root cause’ of all regional crises

Raisi and Assad

In a statement issued at the end of talks between Iranian and Syrian Presidents Ebrahim Raisi and Bashar al-Assad in Damascus, the two countries strongly condemned repeated Israeli attacks on Syria and described them as “a destabilizing factor in the region.”

Both sides emphasized Syria’s right to respond to these aggressions in an appropriate way.
They also slammed Israel’s continued occupation of the Golan Heights in violation of international law and the US’s recognition of that occupation.

Iran and Syria described Israel “as the main cause of all crises and a threat to peace and security in the region,” condemning the regime’s atrocities against Palestinians and attempts at changing the status quo of occupied al-Quds.

Meanwhile, Tehran and Damascus denounced the presence of unlawful foreign forces in Syria in breach of the country’s sovereignty as well as “the US military’s theft of Syria resources.”

Elsewhere, they called for a removal of unilateral US and European sanctions on Iran and Syria, saying the bans violate international law and hurt ordinary people.

Syria’s return to Arab League ‘very likely’: Secretary General

Syria's Bashar Assad

Speaking in an exclusive interview with Arabic-language Asharq News, Aboul Gheit underscored that Syria’s return to the Arab League is “very likely” as heads of Arab states would come together in the Saudi capital city of Riyadh on May 19.

He noted Syria’s return to the Arab League will take place gradually and step by step.

The 80-year-old Egyptian politician and diplomat added that a series of meetings will be held initially to assess the process, and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad will be invited to the Arab League summit in Riyadh once member states reach a consensus on the matter.

According to the contacts made and the actions taken, Aboul Gheit underlined, there is a really very high chance that the Arab League would restore Syria’s membership at the Riyadh meeting, unless something unexpected happens.

Earlier this week, a group of Arab foreign ministers met with their Syrian counterpart in Jordan to discuss how to normalize diplomatic ties with Damascus and bring the country back to the Arab fold.

The Monday meeting was part of a Jordanian proposal to reach a political solution to more-than-a-decade-old Syrian conflict.

Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan and his Egyptian and Iraqi counterparts, Sameh Shoukry and Fuad Hussein, traveled to Amman on Monday for the meeting with Syria’s Faisal Mekdad.

A spokesman for the Jordanian Foreign Ministry said the meeting came as a follow-up to talks in Saudi Arabia last month between the Persian Gulf Cooperation Council members, as well as Egypt, Jordan and Iraq.

The spokesman added that those countries aimed to build on their contacts with the Syrian government and discuss a “Jordanian initiative to reach a political solution to the Syrian crisis.”

At the Jeddah meeting, there was resistance to the move to invite Assad to the May 19 Arab League summit, with Qatar, Jordan and Kuwait saying it was premature before Damascus agrees to negotiate a peace plan.

Jordan has called on Damascus to engage with Arab states on a roadmap to end the conflict, and tackle such issues as refugees and drug smuggling across the war-ravaged country’s borders.

In recent weeks, Saudi Arabia — which once backed Takfiri militant groups in Syria — has reversed its stance on the Syrian government and is pushing its neighbors to follow suit.

The Saudi foreign minister visited Damascus last month for the first time since the kingdom cut ties with Syria more than a decade ago.

Saudi Arabia has said, after its rapprochement with Iran, a new approach was needed towards Damascus, which is under Western sanctions.

The Arab League suspended Syria’s membership in November 2011, citing an alleged crackdown by Damascus on opposition protests. Syria has denounced the move as “illegal and a violation of the organization’s charter.”

Syria was one of the six founding members of the Arab League in 1945. In recent months, an increasing number of countries and political parties have called for the reversal of its suspension from the Arab League.

US says to agree to Israel’s ‘freedom of action’ if Iran tries to get nuclear bombs

Iran nuclear programe

“We have made clear to Iran that it can never be permitted to obtain a nuclear weapon. As President [Joe] Biden has repeatedly reaffirmed, he will take the actions that are necessary to stand by this statement, including by recognizing Israel’s freedom of action,” the White House official said.

Sullivan added that Washington will keep “engaging Iran diplomatically regarding its nuclear program.”

He described as a “tragic mistake” the decision to quit the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) “with nothing at all to replace it.”

The White House adviser stated that his country was not rejecting attempts to forge an agreement on Iran’s nuclear program and views it as the best way to achieve the intended result.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant claimed on Thursday Iran already possesses the means to make as many as five nuclear bombs.

In March, Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley predicted that Tehran could produce enough nuclear material for a bomb within weeks. The US general admitted, however, that the Islamic Republic would still need “several months” to make it into a bomb.

Tehran has repeatedly stated that it has no intention of developing nuclear weapons, with Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei even issuing religious edicts against the atom bomb and other weapons of mass destruction.

Back in mid-April, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi warned that any hostile move from Israel “will lead to the destruction of Haifa and Tel Aviv.” Speaking at an annual military parade, Raisi called on the US and other “extra-regional” forces to leave the Middle East for their own good. Last year, Raisi issued a similar warning, saying that Iran’s armed forces would target “the center of the Zionist regime” if Israel made “the tiniest move against the nation of Iran.”

White House dispatching top aide to meet with MbS

MbS Mohammad bin Salman

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said Thursday he will travel to Saudi Arabia on Saturday for talks with Saudi officials and will also meet with his counterparts from the United Arab Emirates and India during his visit.

Sullivan stated that he would “discuss new areas of cooperation between New Delhi and the Gulf, as well as the United States and the rest of the region.” India and UAE last year signed a comprehensive economic partnership aimed at improving ties between the two countries.

Sullivan is expected to meet with the crown prince, who is often referred to by his initial MbS, during the visit, according to a person familiar with Sullivan’s travel plans who was not authorized to publicly discuss that element of them.

Sullivan spoke by phone with MbS last month amid signs that the Saudis and Houthis in Yemen are making remarkable progress toward finding a permanent end to their nine-year conflict.

He added the Yemen war will be a “significant topic of conversation” during his upcoming Saudi visit.

Sullivan’s planned visit is the latest sign of warming relations between the kingdom and the Biden administration that have been strained by Biden’s criticism of Saudi Arabia’s human rights record and oil policies.

Last October, after the OPEC+ alliance cut oil production, Biden said there would be consequences for the kingdom, which is a leading member. The administration saw the oil production cut — which boosted oil prices — as softening the financial blow on another OPEC+ member, Russia, caused by US and Western sanctions imposed on Moscow for its war in Ukraine.

Sullivan spoke of his plans during wide-ranging remarks on the Biden administration’s Middle East policy at an event hosted by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

Erdogan accuses Turkish opposition of being gay

Kemal Kilicdaroglu

“We know that Mr. Kemal is an LGBT person,” Erdogan told a rally in the city of Giresun on Thursday.

“CHP is LGBT, IYI party is LGBT, HDP is LGBT,” he continued, listing off the political factions in Kilicdaroglu’s six-party National Alliance bloc.

“As the People’s Alliance, we are against this,” he declared, referring to his own political bloc.

“Family is sacred to us. A strong family means a strong nation. No matter what they do, God is enough for us,” the president continued.

Erdogan has accused Kilicdaroglu and his allies of being pro-LGBT before, and made the same speech almost word-for-word at a rally in the town of Rize on Wednesday.

Kilicdaroglu is not an outspoken supporter of gay rights, but has promised to reinstate the Istanbul Convention if elected.

Signed by 45 countries plus the European Union in 2011, the convention aimed to strengthen legal penalties for violence against women, but Turkey withdrew in 2021, stating that it had been “hijacked by a group of people attempting to normalize homosexuality.” This was likely a reference to the treaty’s listing of transgender women, who are biologically male, as women.

“They are trying to…ungender the whole of our society under the name of LGBT,” Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said of Kilicdaroglu and his allies in February.

“If Kilicdaroglu wants to ungender himself and his colleagues, let him do so,” Soylu continued, adding, “Family is important for us, woman is important for us, man is important for us.”

In a radio interview last month, Soylu claimed that the “LGBTQ” designation “includes the marriage of animals and humans.” He went on to describe LGBT ideology as a “religion,” and LGBT activists as “completely under the control of America and Europe.”

Kilicdaroglu has largely avoided personal attacks on Erdogan and Soylu, instead making heavy use of pro-Western rhetoric in his speeches. The 74-year-old former civil servant has promised to immediately restart EU accession talks if elected, and to implement reforms demanded by Brussels.

Opinion polls currently show Erdogan and Kilicdaroglu in a statistical dead heat.

Iran to unveil ‘matchless’ aircraft carrier soon: IRGC Navy cmdr.

Iran Air Force

Speaking at an exhibition of military achievements on Thursday, Admiral Alireza Tangsiri said the Iranian-made ship is capable of both carrying aircraft and a number of missile launchers on board.

Based on the experience achieved in building earlier models of warships, Iran will develop new-generation vessels in the future, he added.

The IRGC Navy chief praised the progress of Iran’s defense sector in various fields, saying the country has designed and developed military hardware that would befit any war scenario.

“In maritime warfare, every scenario has been carefully thought out so that the appropriate weapons are available to the forces in accordance with any threats,” he said.

Iran’s Raisi hails historic visit to Syria as ‘turning point’ in bilateral ties

Raisi and Assad

Upon arrival home on Friday morning, Raisi said he made the visit to Syria in an expression of praise for the nation’s 12-year-long resistance against enemy conspiracies with the support of the Islamic Republic.

He described the trip as a “turning point” in the two countries’ economic, political and security cooperation.

“Today, after 12 years of resistance, the change in conditions of the people of Syria and the region is quite evident,” said Raisi, adding that the two states have now placed trade and economic cooperation high on agenda, although constant security ties are still significant.

Raisi highlighted the great potentials of Iran and Syria for economic cooperation and said his talks with President Bashar al-Assad of Syria mainly focused on trade-related issues.

“Today, the people of Syria and the region believe that the Islamic Republic of Iran is a strong pillar and a strong tree with deep roots in the ground and high branches in the sky that they can lean on,” he said.

The Iranian president thanked the Syrian people and government for their hospitality and said, “I hope my colleagues and Syrian authorities will do their utmost to accelerate the implementation of the agreements reached so that the outcome will come to light in both countries sooner.”

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 436

Russia Ukraine War

Ukraine downs Russian hypersonic missile with US Patriot system

Ukraine has claimed it downed a Russian hypersonic missile over the capital Kyiv using a newly acquired US Patriot defence system in what would be a first in its ability to intercept one of Moscow’s most modern weapons.

The Kinzhal missile is one of the latest and most advanced Russian weapons. Its military says the air-launched ballistic missile has a range of up to 2,000km (1,250 miles) and flies at 10 times the speed of sound, making it hard to intercept.

A combination of hypersonic speed and a heavy warhead allows the Kinzhal to destroy heavily fortified targets, such as underground bunkers or mountain tunnels.

“I congratulate the Ukrainian people on the historic event. Yes, we shot down the ‘unique’ Kinzhal,” Ukrainian Air Force Commander Mykola Oleshchuk stated on Saturday, adding, “It happened during the nighttime attack on May 4 in the skies of the Kyiv region.”

It was the first time Ukraine is known to have used the Patriot missile defence system.

Oleshchuk noted that the Kh-47 was launched by a MiG-31K aircraft from Russian territory and was shot down with a single Patriot missile.

The Ukrainian military has previously admitted lacking assets to intercept the supersonic weapon.

The Kinzhal, which means “dagger” in Russian, is one of six “next generation” weapons unveiled by President Vladimir Putin in 2018 when the Russian leader boasted it cannot be shot down by any of the world’s air defence systems.

The air-launched ballistic missile can reach speeds of up to Mach 10 (12,350 kilometres per hour) and is capable of carrying nuclear or conventional warheads.


We won ‘powerful reinforcement of weapons’: Zelensky says upon return from visits to allies

Speaking on return from visits to Helsinki and The Hague, President Volodymyr Zelensky has said in an address he had won “a powerful reinforcement of weapons for our soldiers – on land, in the air and at sea” as a result of talks with allies there.

“I’m happy to say that, as a result of our meetings in Helsinki and The Hague, we have a powerful reinforcement of weapons for our troops – on land, in the air, and at sea,” stated Zelensky.

“I thank our partners! This is a significant reinforcement. We have made more progress towards NATO and the European Union. We have made more progress towards holding Russia responsible for its aggression against our state,” he added.


Countries fail to agree to authorize new ships for Ukrainian Black Sea grain exports: UN

Officials overseeing Ukrainian grain and fertilizer exports through the Black Sea have failed to reach an agreement to authorize any new ships, a United Nations spokesperson said Friday.

Russian, Ukrainian, Turkish and UN officials are part of the group known as the Joint Coordination Center. For now, the group said it is continuing to inspect previously approved vessels but is encouraging the countries to keep negotiating on new ships.

“As you will recall, the Secretary-General has communicated to all parties his proposal on the way forward aimed at the improvement, extension and expansion of the Initiative, taking into account positions expressed by the parties. We urge all parties to continue their discussions, overcome operational challenges and work towards the full implementation and continuation of the Initiative,” stated Farhan Haq, deputy UN spokesperson.

The export deal was brokered by the UN and Turkey and was signed by representatives from Russia and Ukraine last July.

It promised to unblock ports on the Black Sea to allow the safe passage of grain and oilseeds, following routes identified by Ukrainian maritime pilots to avoid mines, and with stops in Istanbul to ensure weapons are not being smuggled back into the country.


Amid Wagner feud, Russian DM inspects troops and promises military supplies

ussian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu inspected troops and military equipment in Russia’s southern military district on Friday, the Russian military said, amid a very public feud with the head of the Wagner private military company.

The statement said Shoigu has instructed “to keep under special control the issues of continuous and rhythmic supply of the groups of troops in the areas of the special military operation with all the necessary weapons and military equipment.”

“Deputy Minister of Defense Colonel General A. Kuzmenkov, who is responsible for the material and technical support of the Russian Armed Forces, presented General of the Army Sergei Shoigu with new batches of modern tanks, armored fighting vehicles, special equipment and motor vehicles supplied by enterprises of the military-industrial complex to supply the groups of Russian troops,” the defense ministry said.

Shoigu’s visit followed a flurry of angry statements by Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, who has directly accused Shoigu and the Russian military leadership of responsibility for tens of thousands of Wagner casualties due to a lack of ammunition supply


Ukrainian defense official backs Wagner claim of ammunition deficit

A representative of Ukraine’s defense intelligence agency has backed a claim by Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin that Russia’s defense establishment is blocking their supply of artillery shells.

Andriy Yusov told CNN: “It is true Wagner group is experiencing artillery shells deficit due to [Russian Defense Minister Sergei] Shoigu and [chief of the Russian armed forces Gen. Valery] Gerasimov blocking the supply.”

“When [Sergey] Surovikin was in command of the Russian occupying forces in Ukraine, the situation was more favorable for Wagner,” he added.

Yusov told CNN that Wagner fighters lead most land offensives around Bakhmut while the regular Russian military conduct air strikes.

He said there was “internal competition” within the area of Russian defense, with “ different Kremlin towers backing up both parties.”

Wagner chief Prigozhin said in a Telegram post Friday that his fighters would withdraw from Bakhmut in five days’ time, having taken heavy casualties in the fight for the city. He laid the blame on Russia’s defense establishment for not providing the private military group with enough ammunition and called for the regular army to step in.

Prigozhin has long complained that the Russian government has not provided his fighters with sufficient ammunition in their attempt to take Bakhmut. This week, he posted an expletive-laden video to social media in which he pointed at what he stated were dozens of bodies of Wagner fighters and renewed his appeal for supplies


‘I’m pulling Wagner units out of Bakhmut’ on May 10: Wagner boss

In a sudden announcement, the Wagner chief says his forces will leave Bakhmut on May 10 after posting a video slamming top Russian generals.

Yevgeny Prigozhin stated they were leaving due to heavy losses and a lack of ammunition.

“I declare on behalf of the Wagner fighters, on behalf of the Wagner command, that on May 10, 2023, we are obliged to transfer positions in the settlement of Bakhmut to units of the defence ministry and withdraw the remains of Wagner to logistics camps to lick our wounds,” Prigozhin said in a statement.

“I’m pulling Wagner units out of Bakhmut because in the absence of ammunition they’re doomed to perish senselessly,” he added.

Wagner fighters have spearheaded Russia’s attempt to capture Bakhmut and have continuously complained to Russian defence ministers over the lack of weapons deliveries.


Russia will respond to Kremlin attack with ‘concrete actions’: FM

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Wednesday’s alleged drone attack at the Kremlin was a “hostile act” and Russia would respond with “concrete actions”.

Russia accused Ukraine of firing drones at the Kremlin in an attempt to kill President Vladimir Putin and said the United States was behind it.

But both Ukraine and the US have denied the allegations.

“It was clearly a hostile act, it is clear that the Kyiv terrorists could not have committed it without the knowledge of their masters,” Lavrov told a press conference in India.

“We will not respond by talking about ‘casus belli’ or not, we will respond with concrete actions,” he added.

“Casus belli” is a Latin phrase for an action that provides justification for war.

The negotiations to resolve the current crisis do not concern Ukraine alone, they will take place sooner or later, but not with Volodymyr Zelensky – he is a Western puppet – but with his masters, Lavrov stressed.

Second drone attack reported at Russia’s IIsky oil refinery

A drone attack on the Ilsky oil refinery in southern Russia, the second in two days, has caused a fire, the TASS news agency reported.

Russia’s RIA Novosti news agency reported that there were no casualties following the incident but that the fire had been put out.

It was not immediately clear who was behind the incident.

The Ilsky refinery, near the Black Sea port of Novorossiisk in the Krasnodar region, has a processing capacity of around 6.6 million tonnes per year.


China to “maintain communication and coordination with Russia”: FM

China’s foreign minister told his Russian counterpart on Thursday that Beijing would “maintain communication and coordination” with Moscow during efforts to reach a “political settlement” to the Ukraine conflict.

“China is willing to maintain communication and coordination with Russia to make tangible political contributions to the political settlement of the crisis,” Qin Gang told Sergei Lavrov at the SCO Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Goa, India, according to a statement released by China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Beijing has so far refused to condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine or call for a withdrawal of its troops, instead urging restraint by “all parties” and accusing NATO of fueling the conflict. It has also continued to deepen diplomatic and economic ties with Moscow.

A vaguely-worded “political settlement” to the conflict released by China on the first anniversary of Russia’s invasion has been widely viewed in the West and Kyiv as being far more favorable to Russia than Ukraine. It calls for a ceasefire but includes no provision that Moscow first withdraw its troops from Ukrainian land, which Ukrainian officials have suggested is necessary for them to engage in negotiations.

During the previous meeting between the two foreign ministers on April 13, Qin told Lavrov that all parties need to take action to build mutual trust and create conditions for peace talks.


US intelligence chief: Russia unlikely to be able to mount a “significant offensive” this year in Ukraine

Russia will likely not be able to mount a “significant offensive operation this year” due to munitions and manpower shortages — whether or not the Ukrainian counteroffensive is successful, according to Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines.

“In fact, if Russia does not initiate a mandatory mobilization and secure substantial third-party ammunition supplies beyond existing deliveries from Iran and others, it will be increasingly challenging for them to sustain even modest offensive operations,” Haines testified to the Senate Armed Services Committee.

President Vladimir Putin “probably” has scaled back his near-term ambitions in Ukraine to consider a victory “to consolidate control of the occupied territory in eastern and southern Ukraine, and ensuring that Ukraine will never become a NATO ally,” Haines added.

Despite this assessment, Haines added it wasn’t very likely that Russia negotiates a pause this year unless political factors “alter his thinking.”

Haines also noted that Russian forces are preparing “new defensive positions” for the Ukrainian counteroffensive, and have “gained less territory in April than during any of the three previous months.”


The blood is still fresh. Film all of them!”: Wagner chief slams Kremlin officials

The head of Russian private military company Wagner has launched an expletive-filled verbal attack on Kremlin officials in a graphic new video in which he appears beside what he says are the bodies of his mercenaries killed fighting in Ukraine.

“These guys here are Wagner PMC [men] who died today. The blood is still fresh. Film all of them!” Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin says in the video posted to social media.

Prigozhin last month threatened to withdraw his mercenaries from the embattled eastern city of Bakhmut if they don’t receive more munitions to continue the fight.

In the new video, he reiterated his call for munitions, urging Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chief of General Staff of the Russian Armed forces Valery Gerasimov to look at the bodies.

“These are someone’s fking fathers and someone’s sons. And you fkers who aren’t giving [us] ammunition, you b*tches, will have your guts eaten out in hell!”, Prigozhin stated in the video.

“You sit there in your luxury clubs, your kids are addicted to shooting clips for YouTube. You think you are the masters of this life? You think you can dispose of their lives? If you have warehouses full of ammunition, then you do,” he added.

Prigozhin, whose forces have played a key role in Russian assaults on Ukrainian territory, has often clashed with Putin’s generals and other defense officials in Moscow. He has complained for well over a month of receiving insufficient support from the Kremlin in the grueling fight for Bakhmut.

“This is simple math,” he says in the video.

“If you give the normal amount of ammunition, there would be five times less [dead]. They came here as volunteers and are dying so you can sit like fat cats in your luxury offices,” he adds.


NATO official warns of “significant risk” Russia could target undersea internet cables as part Ukraine war

There is a “persistent and significant risk” that Russia could target critical allied infrastructure, including undersea internet cables, as part of its war on Ukraine, David Cattler, NATO’s assistant secretary general for intelligence and security, stated.

“There are heightened concerns that Russia may target undersea cables and other critical infrastructure in an effort to disrupt Western life and gain leverage against those nations that are providing support to Ukraine,” Cattler told reporters.

According to Cattler, more than 95% of international internet traffic is transmitted through roughly 400 undersea cables. These cables “carry an estimated 10 trillion US dollars worth of financial transactions every day,” he said, adding that they are an “economic linchpin.”

While Russia is “actively mapping” this infrastructure, Cattler said, “China is another significant actor on the seabed.” Beijing, Cattler added, is working towards developing its own undersea infrastructure rather than “extensively testing the vulnerabilities of other nations’.”

NATO allies are monitoring the situation closely, Cattler stated.

“This is really a holistic, multi-spectrum, multi-domain threat set when it comes to critical infrastructure. Cooperation between the private sector and NATO and allied governance is really crucial in order to have a clear threat picture,” he continued.


US doesn’t have information it needs to assess alleged Kremlin drone attack: Top intelligence official

The United States still does not have information needed to provide an assessment on this week’s alleged drone attack on the Kremlin, according to Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines.

“You’ve seen the Ukrainian government deny their having engaged in this. And, at this stage we don’t have information that would allow us to provide an independent assessment on this,” Haines said.

In an exchange with Sen. Tom Cotton at a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing, Haines confirmed that Russian President Vladimir Putin does not “spend the night at the Kremlin all that much” and that Ukraine denied the attack, whereas in past attacks against Russia, Ukraine has been “ambiguous or silent about responsibility for the attacks.”

“Perhaps some grounds to think that maybe these claims are exaggerated,” Cotton said.

Defense Intelligence Agency Director Lt. Gen. Scott Berrier stated that Russia’s claim that Ukraine tried to assassinate Putin with American assistance was likely “misinformation.”


Russia denies deploying military equipment and explosives at Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant

Russia has dismissed claims that it deployed military equipment and explosives at the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant.

On Wednesday, Ukraine’s State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate accused Russia of placing weapons, explosives and military equipment in one of the power plant’s units. The Inspectorate said it received the information during its weekly meeting with International Atomic Energy Agency representatives a day earlier.

“In the event of an emergency situation at the Zaporizhzhia NPP with a potentially possible release of radioactive substances into the environment, the consequences will be felt not only by Ukraine — but they will also have a cross-border nature,” the inspectorate said.

It called on the international community “for a consolidated and decisive response to the actions of the aggressor country.”

Vladimir Rogov, a member of the Russian-appointed military-civilian administration in occupied Zaporizhzhia, called the claims “a lie.”

“We do not use the nuclear power plant as a military facility — this has already been proven by everyone and confirmed more than once,” Rogov told Russian state news agency TASS.

Russian forces continue to control the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, but the plant is still physically operated by Ukrainian staff. The plant has frequently been disconnected from Ukraine’s power grid due to intense shelling in the area, raising fears of a nuclear accident.


Zelensky reiterates Ukraine’s calls to join NATO, saying country’s message is to join alliance after war ends

Ukraine’s message is that it will be a NATO member after the war has ended, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky stated on Thursday.

“We are realistic and know that we will not be in NATO during the war. But during the war we want to get a very clear message that we will be in NATO after the war,” Zelensky said in a joint news conference in the Netherlands with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo.

Zelensky noted that while Ukraine has received “some positive messages” from countries who support it, “we need something more.”

“I think that our friends will support us and see us in NATO,” the Ukrainian president added.

Part of Russia’s premise for its invasion of Ukraine was to fend off NATO from expanding close to its borders. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has said, “Ukraine’s future is in NATO.” Even though Ukraine is not a member of the alliance, and NATO has insisted that it is not a party to the conflict, the bloc has played a critical role in supporting Kyiv, donating billions in military aid and other support.

At the news conference, Zelensky also appealed for its allies to deliver their promised weapons to Kyiv as quickly as possible, stating, “The most important thing now is to deliver what was promised to our soldiers as quickly as possible.”

Iran’s president says Israel “weaker than ever”

Ebrahim Raisi

“Palestinian intifadas changed the conditions and the victory by Lebanon’s Hezbollah in the 33-day war caused the Zionist regime to be weaker than ever and resistance fighters stronger than ever,” he said on Wednesday while addressing a host of Syrian people and officials at the shrine of Hazrat Zainab, the granddaughter of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), in Damascus.

“The resistance by you and the Palestinian people in the face of the Zionist regime has changed the situation in favor of the Resistance Front,” he stressed, adding that Israel is “very vulnerable” now.

“For 12 years, they waged oppression and offered ill-gotten money to Takfiri groups … Twelve years have passed since the crimes of the US, Zionist regime, and Takfiri groups, but Syria is still standing strong,” President Raisi continued, referring to the bloodletting campaign of terrorists, most notable among them Daesh, in Syria and Iraq in the past decade.

Since the inception of Takfiri groups, some had not understood the situation, but Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei correctly recognized it as an “American-Zionist” movement, he said.

The Leader, according to President Raisi, noted at the time that this level of violence cannot be carried out by Muslims and that such crimes had the hallmarks of Zionist operations.

In 2017, Iran’s military advisory assistance – alongside help provided by the Arab country’s other allies, including support aerial operations by Russia – helped Damascus defeat Daesh.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the president said that Iranians appreciate the “insight” and resistance of the Syrian government and people in the face of this “sedition.”

“The policy of the Islamic Republic of Iran is to support the oppressed and hence, it stands beside the oppressed Palestinian nation as well as the resistance in Lebanon, Syria and elsewhere in the world,” he added.

“Syria resisted for 12 years and emerged victorious,” he said, adding, “Syria will be reconstructed by your hands and all the destruction will be turned into lasting constructions … We will stay by your side in the reconstruction phase just the way we did during the hard days.”

The relations between Iran and Syria, the Iranian president maintained, are “strategic” and no one can undermine this “brotherhood.”

President Raisi arrived in the Syrian capital of Damascus on Wednesday at the head of a high-ranking delegation for an official two-day visit. This is the first visit by an Iranian president since the foreign-backed militancy gripped the Arab country in 2011.

Earlier in the day, President Raisi met with his Syrian counterpart Bashar al-Assad before inking an agreement on a long-term strategic comprehensive cooperation agreement.

Coronavirus death toll in Iran remains single-digit

COVID in Iran

“A sum of 142 new patients infected with COVID-19 have been identified in the country based on confirmed diagnosis criteria during the past 24 hours,” the Iranian Health Ministry’s Public Relations Center said on Thursday, and added, “65 patients have been hospitalized during the same time span.”

It further announced that the total number of COVID-19 patients has increased to 7,609,491.

“Unfortunately, eight patients have lost their lives in the past 24 hours, increasing the number of the dead to 146,144,” the ministry noted.

It expressed satisfaction that 7,360,831 coronavirus patients have recovered or been discharged from hospitals so far.

The center went on to say that 528 cases infected with COVID-19 are in critical conditions.

It added that 56,428,581 coronavirus diagnosis tests have so far been carried out across the country.

The health ministry public relations warned that 9 cities are orange, 213 cities are yellow, and 226 cities are blue.