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Iran responds to EU-drafted nuclear deal text

Iran's Bagheri and EU's Mora

No details have been revealed about the content of Iran’s response by EU officials, but remarks made by insiders and officials earlier in the day indicated that both sides are closer than ever to an agreement after months of intensive negotiations in the Austrian capital Vienna and Qatar’s Doha.

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian said on Monday, “We will relay our final conclusion on the outstanding issues to the EU coordinator in writing by midnight today to see what feedback it will have and what reaction the US will show.”

Iran had announced it needs written sanctions relief and economic engagement guarantees to reap the benefits of the restored Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) nuclear agreement with the West.

On an upbeat note, Western official have hinted that the safeguards agreement is on the home stretch towards a resolution.

Officials say with Iran having sent its response to the “final” EU proposal, the ball is in the US court to decide whether it wants to re-join the remaining parties to the JCPOA – namely Iran, Russia, China, UK, France and Germany – after its 2018 withdrawal and save the deal.

Amirabdollahian has said if the talks fail, “We also have our own Plan B, but this issue must be resolved through talks.”

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 174

Russia Ukraine War

Russia “stole” energy from Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant to send to Crimea: Ukrainian official

Ukraine claims a Crimean substation that was also affected by explosions at an ammunition depot in the village of Maiskoye had been used to divert power from the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.

“You must understand that they stole from the Zaporizhzhia NPP in order to send electricity to Crimea through Dzhankoi (where Maiskoye is located),” Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a televised interview on Tuesday.

“I think and believe that this is karmic retribution. Everything that is stolen does not bring wealth,” he added.

Podolyak stated that Moscow’s explanations for the explosions at the ammunition depot in the Crimean village of Maiskoye, as well as the blasts at an air base in Crimea last Tuesday, suggested the Russian military was deploying “untrained” staff to some locations.

The series of explosions at Novofedorivka air base, on Crimea’s west coast, destroyed at least eight Russian military aircraft, satellite imagery showed.

The blasts killed one person and injured 14, according to the Crimean health ministry.


Russia says Crimea arms depot blast was result of ‘sabotage’

Russia’s defence ministry has announced that a military warehouse near the town of Dzhankoi in northern Crimea had been damaged by sabotage, the Russian state-owned news agency RIA reported.

Earlier on Tuesday, Crimean officials noted there had been a big fire at an ammunition depot in the area.

The state-owned news agency TASS cited the defence ministry as saying that civilian infrastructure, including an electricity-supply station had been damaged as a result of the “sabotage”.


Russia warns of ‘direct military clash’ with US

The Russian Embassy in the US cautioned, “The US steps to further engage in a hybrid confrontation with Russia in the context of the Ukrainian crisis are fraught with unpredictable escalation and a direct military clash of nuclear powers.”

The embassy noted that Washington has recently withdrawn from two key arms control agreements, which allowed for surveillance flights over each other’s territories.

Earlier, the US accused Moscow of using the Zaporozhye nuclear plant in southern Ukraine as cover for its soldiers. While Russia initiated a UN Security Council meeting last week regarding the situation around the power plant and supports International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspections at the facility.


Advanced US arms haven’t had “significant impact” in Ukraine war: Russian DM

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu stated Tuesday that the US-supplied High Mobility Artillery Rocket System, or HIMARS, are not having a “significant impact” on Russia’s war in Ukraine, despite reports that Kyiv is using them to target critical Russian military and logistical infrastructure in the country.

“Recently, HIMARS multiple launch rocket systems and long-range howitzers have been promoted by Westerners to the role of super weapons,” Shoigu told attendees at the Moscow Conference on International Security.

“They (HIMARS) did not have a significant impact on the situation,” he said, adding, “Russian weapons, however, confirmed their best qualities in battles.”

Ukrainian officials have previously noted HIMARS and other multiple rocket systems are “affecting the course of the war” — a view shared by top US military personnel and diplomatic officials.

“The Ukrainians are effectively employing these HIMARS strikes against Russian command and control nodes, their logistical networks, their field artillery and air to find sites and many other targets,” Mark Milley, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, told journalists in Washington in late July.

US Ambassador to Ukraine Bridget Brink told CNN on August 2 that it was clear that the weaponry provided by America, including the HIMARs, “have had an effect.”

HIMARS appear to have been used in a massive strike against a warehouse in the town of Nova Kakhovka in the southern Kherson region in July. The strike set off secondary explosions and caused widespread damage, according to satellite imagery. The imagery showed how precise the attack had been, leaving just one small crater.

In early August, the Pentagon announced an additional package of security assistance for Ukraine, which is being drawn from US stockpiles and includes 75,000 rounds of ammunition and an undisclosed amount of additional ammunition for the HIMARS.


Putin: Collective west purposely destroying European security system, NATO moving east

The collective West is purposely destroying the European security system with NATO moving further east, said Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, addressing the X Moscow Conference on International Security.

“Western globalist elites are provoking chaos by rekindling old and inciting new conflicts, implementing a policy of so-called containment, while in fact undermining any alternative, sovereign paths of development. Thus, they are desperately trying to preserve the hegemony and power that are slipping out of their grasp, trying to keep countries and peoples in the grip of a neo-colonial order,” Putin stated.

The Russian President emphasized that this “hegemony” was fraught with stagnation for the whole world, for the entire civilization.

“Any means are used. The United States and its vassals rudely interfere in the internal affairs of sovereign states by organizing provocations, coup d’état and civil wars. Threats, blackmail and pressure are resorted to in a bid to force independent states to submit to their will,” he added.

According to the Russian President, all this is done with one goal – to maintain global dominance.

“The so-called collective West is purposefully destroying the European security system, putting together new military alliances. The NATO bloc is expanding East, building up its military infrastructure, deploying missile defense systems and increasing the strike capabilities of its offensive forces,” Putin underscored.

The Russian President pointed out that these actions are being hypocritically justified by the need to strengthen security in Europe, but in reality, just the opposite is happening. At the same time, proposals on mutual security measures put forward by Russia in December last year were yet again ignored, he said.

According to the Russian leader, the collective West needs conflict to maintain hegemony. That is why the people of Ukraine were allotted the fate of “cannon fodder”.

“Implementing the “anti-Russia” project, they turned a blind eye to the spread of neo-Nazi ideology, the massacres of the inhabitants of Donbass, while continuously pumping the Kiev regime with weapons, including heavy armaments,” underlined Putin.

Under these conditions, stressed the Russian President, the decision was taken to launch a special military operation in Ukraine in full accordance with the Charter of the United Nations.

“The goals of this operation are clearly and precisely defined: to ensure the security of Russia and our citizens, to protect the inhabitants of Donbass from genocide,” he noted.

Referencing the current developments, the president pointed to glaring proof that the US was trying to prolong the Ukraine conflict.

Weighing in on the spiraling tensions around Taiwan, the Russian President said that the United States had yet again intentionally tried to “add fuel to the fire.”

“The American reckless gamble in relation to Taiwan is not just a visit by an individual irresponsible politician, but part of a purposeful, conscious US strategy to destabilize… the situation in the region and the world, a brazen demonstration of disrespect for the sovereignty of other countries and for its international obligations. We see this as a carefully planned provocation,” Putin added.

Putin told the gathering that Russia will continue to strengthen its armed forces, ensure national interests and protect allies, while also taking other steps to build a more democratic world.

Putin stressed that only a multipolar world built on international law opens up new opportunities for combating common threats, reducing global tension and ensuring sustainable development of all countries. To achieve this, it is necessary to restore respect for international law, its fundamental norms and principles, and strengthen the positions of such universal structures as the United Nations and other international dialogue platforms, he concluded.


“Partial success” for Russian forces in eastern Ukraine: Military

Russian forces have had “partial success” in eastern Ukraine after making limited gains near the villages of Solodke and Novomykhailivka in the Donetsk region, the Ukrainian military announced Tuesday.

“The hostilities continue,” the military’s general staff said in a situation update.

Ukrainian troops have been able to hold its ground in other parts of the Donetsk region, the general staff added.

Russian forces launched assaults in the directions of Volodymyrivka-Bakhmutske and Striapivka-Soledar, where Ukrainian soldiers pushed the invaders back, according to the general staff.

“Fighting continues on the Pokrovsk–Bakhmutske and Horlivka–Zalizne directions,” the general staff said.

Near the city of Avdiivka, the Russians shelled the areas of Krasnohorivka, Spartak and Nevelske with barrel artillery, the general staff added.

Fighting is also ongoing near Staromykhailivka–Nevelske and the settlement of Ivano Dariivka, it added.

Ukraine said it had been able to repel a Russian assault in the south. “An attempt to improve the tactical position by assault actions in the direction of Zeleny Hai–Novohryhorivka ended with significant losses and a retreat for the enemy,” the general staff added.

Meanwhile, Kyiv’s troops stationed near the border with Belarus are on high alert because there is “still a threat” that Russia could launch air and missile strikes with support from Minsk, the Ukrainian military noted. Belarus is an ally of Russia and has been used as a launch point for Russian troops into Ukraine.


Russia has no need to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine: DM

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu has stated during a speech at the Moscow international security conference that Russia had no need to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine.

Shoigu also alleged that Ukrainian military operations are being planned by the United States and Britain, and that NATO had increased its troop deployment in Eastern and Central Europe “several times over”.


Putin says Western countries want NATO-like system in Asia-Pacific

Russian President Vladimir Putin has noted that Western countries were seeking to extend a “NATO-like system” into the Asia-Pacific region.

Delivering the welcome address at the Moscow international security conference, Putin stated that the United States was trying to “drag out” the conflict in Ukraine, and that US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan earlier this month had been “a thoroughly planned provocation”.


Russian army says munitions explode at Crimea depot

Munitions exploded during a fire at an arms depot in the town of Mayskoye in Russian-annexed Crimea, the Russian defence ministry has said, adding that there were no serious casualties in the explosion

The fire erupted around 6:15 am local time (0315 GMT) at a military storage site near the village of Mayskoye in the Dzhankoi district, causing ammunition to detonate, the ministry announced in a statement carried by Russian news agencies.


Ukraine says it has defused 180,000 explosive devices since beginning of war

The Ukrainian government says its demining forces have detected and defused more than 180,000 explosive devices since the beginning of Russia’s invasion in February.

Yevhenii Yenin, the first deputy interior minister, said on Ukrainian television Monday that “one-fifth of the territory of Ukraine was contaminated with shells, mines and aerial bombs that did not explode.

“Since the beginning of the war, our services have detected and defused more than 180,000 explosive devices. Over 68,000 hectares have already been surveyed,” Yenin continued.

The official stated technicians were surveying about 500 hectares every week.

“In the Kyiv region, 1,000 explosive objects are still being defused every day,” he added.


UN denies Russian claims it blocked nuclear watchdog agency visit to Zaporizhzhia plant

The United Nations has denied allegations by Russians it blocked or canceled a visit by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in southern Ukraine.

Here is the full statement by Stéphane Dujarric, spokesperson for the UN secretary-general:

“In the past few days, there have been repeated comments by various Russian officials accusing the United Nations Secretariat of having either cancelled or blocked a visit by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant.

I want to clarify a few points. First, the IAEA is a specialized agency that acts in full independence in deciding how to implement its specific mandate.

Second, the UN Secretariat has no authority to block or cancel any IAEA activities.

Third, in close contact with the IAEA, the UN Secretariat has assessed that it has in Ukraine the logistics and security capacity to be able to support any IAEA mission to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant from Kyiv, should both Russia and Ukraine agree.”

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu held a phone call with UN Secretary General António Guterres on Monday, when the two discussed conditions for safe operation of Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, according to the statement published by the Russian defense ministry.

According to the statement, Shoigu and Guterres also spoke on the functioning of the “fact-finding mission” regarding the attack on a pre-trial detention center in Olenivka. They also discussed UN initiatives to simplify conditions for export of Russian food products and fertilizers.


Zelensky calls for strict sanctions against Russia for “nuclear blackmail” around Zaporizhzhia plant

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky called on the world to introduce tough sanctions as a response to Russia’s “nuclear blackmail” around the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant.

“Provocative shelling of the territory of the plant continues. Under cover of the plant, the invaders are shelling nearby towns and communities. The Russian military hides munitions and equipment at the facilities of the plant. The station is de facto mined,” Zelensky said during his evening video address on Monday.

“It is necessary to move from discussions and calls to new tough sanctions against Russia, against ‘Rosatom’ and the entire nuclear industry of the terrorist state. All Russian forces must immediately withdraw from the territory of the station and neighboring areas without any conditions,” he added.

Ukraine’s president claimed that Russia “ignores” the security demands of 42 countries that called on it to withdraw its forces from the station.

“Any radiation incident at the Zaporizhzhia NPP can be a blow to the countries of the European Union, and to Turkey, and to Georgia, and to countries from more distant regions. Everything depends on the direction and strength of the wind. If a catastrophe occurs due to Russia’s actions, the consequences can hit even those who remain silent for the time being,” Zelensky said.

“And if now the world lacks the strength and determination to protect one nuclear plant, it means that the world will lose. Lose to terrorists. Yield to nuclear blackmail,” he added.


Norway delivers all the gas it can to Germany: Norway PM

Norway is delivering all the gas it can to Germany, according to Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store.

“Norway delivers as much gas as possible to Germany,” Store told a joint news conference with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.


Russia’s DM, UN chief discuss safe functioning of Zaporizhzhia plant

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu has held a phone call with United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to discuss conditions for the safe functioning of Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, according to the ministry.

During the call, Shoigu and Guterres also discussed initiatives to ease conditions for exports of Russian food products and fertilisers, the Russian ministry added in a statement.


Separatist court charges five foreigners as mercenaries

A Russian-backed separatist court in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk has charged five foreign nationals, who were captured fighting with Ukrainian forces, with being mercenaries on Monday, saying three could face the death penalty, according to Russian media.

UK national John Harding, Croatian Vjekoslav Prebeg and Swedish citizen Mathias Gustafsson, who were apprehended in and around the port city of Mariupol, face a possible death sentence, Russian state-owned news agency TASS reported.

TASS cited the judge as saying that the trial would resume in early October.


UN can facilitate IAEA visit to power plant if Russia, Ukraine agree

The United Nations has announced “it has in Ukraine the logistics and security capacity to be able to support any IAEA mission to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant from Kyiv, should both Russia and Ukraine agree”.

The power plant, Europe’s largest, was seized by Russian soldiers in the opening days of the invasion of Ukraine and has remained on the front line ever since.

The plant has come under shelling in recent days, with both Moscow and Kyiv accusing each other of risking a nuclear accident.


Explosive item kills three swimmers off Ukrainian Black Sea beach

Three civilians have been killed and two others wounded by an explosive device while swimming in the Black Sea in Ukraine’s southwestern region of Odesa, according to local police.

Police said the accident happened on Sunday when several people working on a construction site ignored barriers and warning signs on the beach and went swimming in the sea in the Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi district.

“In the water, as a result of an explosion of an unknown object, three men aged 25, 32 and 53 years old … were killed,” the police said in a written statement.

The statement added that another man and a woman had been wounded.

Ukrainian authorities closed sea beaches in recent months amid Russia’s invasion. Ukraine’s military also planted mines along the coast in case of a Russian amphibious assault, cordoning off beach entrances with red and white tape.


Russia will ‘do everything necessary’ to facilitate IAEA visit to Zaporizhzhia plant

Russia will do “everything necessary” to allow specialists from the United Nations nuclear watchdog to visit the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine, a spokeswoman for the country’s foreign ministry has said.

“In close cooperation with the Agency and its leadership, we will do everything necessary for the IAEA [International Atomic Energy Agency] specialists to be at the station and give a truthful assessment of the destructive actions of the Ukrainian side,” Maria Zakharova stated in a statement.

Zakharova also called for Kyiv’s Western allies, including the United States and the 27-member European Union, to force a stop to what she claimed was persistent Ukrainian shelling of the site and nearby areas.

The Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, the biggest in Europe, was captured by Russian forces in March. It has come under shelling in recent weeks, with both Moscow and Kyiv accusing each other of being behind the attacks and risking a major nuclear accident.

Water outage hits Iranian city after flooding

Iran Flood

The water outage began after flooding in the city caused the potable water there to get muddy and unhealthy for drinking.

This has also caused difficulties for water supply to the city of Shahre Kord, the provincial capital.

Iranian Minister of Energy Ali Akbar Mehrabian says the problem will be resolved within the next couple of days.

Mehrabian has also urged residents of Kouhrang to save water so that the reservoirs of the city will grow in water reserves and will be able to get water to all people in Kouhrang.

Shahre Kord’s representative at the Iranian parliament has blamed the problems on poor infrastructure in the region.

Iranian president calls for changing cultivation patterns

Iran President Ebrahim Raisi

President Raisi was speaking at the ministry of agriculture.

Raisi said the modified cultivation patterns must be based on reduced water consumption and production of better produce in larger quantities.

The president added that the key mission of the ministry of agriculture is to provide sustainable food security for Ian.

He noted that the ministry must be able to provide healthy, quality and inexpensive food for Iranians with an emphasis on self-sufficiency and independence of the country.

Iranian environment officials and water experts have long implored water authorities and farmers to review their policy of growing water-intensive crops.

They stress that Iran must come to terms with the realities of living in an arid region and with the fact that its resources aren’t deep enough to allow the country to grow crops that gobble up water like watermelons.

Experts say Iran’s water scarcity will hit crisis level by 2025, when available renewable water will be less than 1,000 cubic meters per capita, down from 2,000 cubic meters in 1950.

They also say if water consumption patterns do not change in the near future, many parts of Iran will turn into barren desert and the entire towns and villages will become uninhabitable.

Report: Iran’s top negotiator attends meeting with President Raisi on EU’s proposed deal

Ali Bagheri Kani

According to Nour News, a media outlet affiliated with Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, Bagheri outlined the latest round of talks with the P4+1 group and gave a thorough explanation about the ideas of European Union Deputy Foreign Policy Chief Enrique Mora in the discussions in Vienna.

Bagheri said the Iranian negotiators in Vienna pushed for an end to political accusations about safeguards issues and made an effort to obtain assurances from the other sides that Iran will enjoy sustainable economic benefits following a deal.

He added that numerous meetings have been held to study Mora’s ideas after the return of the Iranian delegation to Tehran and experts are summing up their views.

At the meeting, the members of the Iranian Supreme National Security Council underlined the need for the continuation of measures by the Iranian delegation and other relevant bodies until a final result is obtained.

Iranian official: 22% increase in exports to neighbors

Iran Trade

Rouhollah Latifi added that these figures show an 18% rise compared to the same period in the year 1400.

As for exports, Latifi said some 20,711,657 tons of goods worth $8,871,733,655 accounted for Iran’s exports in the first 4 months of this year.

He added that Iran has imported 6,323,540 tons of goods from neighbors during the period which shows a 13 percent increase compared to the same period last year.

The current Iranian government has based its foreign policy on expansion of ties with neighbors and regional countries.

This has resulted in a rise in trade transactions between Iran and those nations at a time when the country is under harsh US sanctions.

Iranian VP: Tehran’s frozen assets return

Iran Oil Tanker

Hosseini added that Iran is now selling over a million barrels of oil per day and exports from the country to Europe have more than doubled over the past year when President Raisi took office.

He also said the administration of President Ebrahim Raisi faced many crises but quickly withstood them one after another through taking necessary measures.

Hosseini also spoke about other successes of the Raisi administration. He said at a time when the world was grappling with a food crisis, the Iranian government managed to make guaranteed purchases of wheat.

According to the Iranian vice president, the country’s wheat reserves are in a good situation as Tehran has bought 7 million tons of it from farmers.

He said some huge development projects are underway in Iran and the government is trying to expand the productive sectors of the economy like industries and agriculture.

Hosseini underlined that President Raisi carried out some economic reforms that had been neglected for three decades.

Israeli troops shoot dead Palestinian youth in East al-Quds

Israeli Forces Aqsa Mosque

Local sources said Mohammad Ibrahim Shaham, in his twenties, was killed by a bullet to the head early on Monday after Israeli forces violently broke into his family home in Kafr ‘Aqab neighborhood of East al-Quds.

His father stated an Israeli soldier shot Mohammad, who was born in the nearby Qalandia refugee camp, with a live round from point-blank range the moment he opened the door. The soldiers then forced their way into the house and ransacked all properties.

The Israeli force left the young Palestinian man bleeding on the ground for about 30 minutes before they took his corpse and withdrew from the neighborhood.

Mohammad’s family roundly dismissed the Israeli military allegations that the Palestinian youth attempted to stab the soldiers, adding that such unfounded claims are just meant to justify his cold-blooded murder.

Skirmishes broke out afterwards between Israeli soldiers and undercover officers on one side and local residents on the other, as Israeli forces fired live rounds and tear gas canisters to disperse the protesting crowd.

At least six young men were struck by live bullets in their legs, while a large number of locals suffered breathing difficulties due to inhaling tear gas fired by the Israeli troops.

Bassem Saadi was arrested on August 1 by Israeli troops in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin. The Islamic Jihad at the time announced it was declaring a state of alert.

The Israeli regime also carried out a new massacre in the Gaza Strip on August 5, killing 49 people, including Taysir al-Jabari, a senior commander of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad resistance movement.

The Israeli airstrikes prompted the al-Quds Brigades, the Islamic Jihad’s military wing, to respond by firing hundreds of rockets toward the occupied territories, pushing the regime forces on the back foot.

The strong retaliation, as was pledged by the resistance group, forced Tel Aviv to accept an Egyptian-mediated ceasefire, which took effect late on August 7.

Funerals held in Cairo as Egyptians mourn 41 killed in church fire

Egyptians mourn 41 killed in Cairo church fire

The blaze on Sunday, blamed on an electrical fault, hit the Abu Sifin church in densely populated Imbaba, a working-class district west of the Nile River, part of Giza governorate in Greater Cairo.

Hundreds gathered to pay their respects in and around the two Giza churches on Sunday evening where clergymen prayed for the victims.

Pallbearers pushed through crowds of weeping mourners who reached for the coffins, including that of a priest at the church, Father Abdel-Messih Bekhit.

The Egyptian Coptic Church and the health ministry reported 41 dead and 14 injured in the blaze before emergency services brought it under control.

Witnesses to the fire on Sunday morning described people rushing into the multistorey house of worship to save those trapped, but the rescuers were soon overwhelmed by heat and deadly smoke.

Copts are the largest Christian community in the Middle East, making up at least 10 million of Egypt’s 103 million Muslim-majority population.

A statement from the public prosecutor’s office indicated that asphyxiation caused the deaths, as there were “no visible injuries”.

The interior ministry announced “forensic evidence revealed that the blaze broke out in an air-conditioning unit on the second floor of the church building” which also houses social services.

President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi wrote on his Facebook page that he had “mobilised all state services” in response. He later said he had “presented his condolences by phone” to Pope Tawadros II, the head of the Coptic Orthodox Church.

He also directed the Armed Forces Engineering Authority to “take over the reconstruction and renovation” of the church, the presidency announced in a statement.

A statement from the office of United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres offered his “deepest condolences” to the families of the victims.

Accidental fires are not uncommon in the sprawling megalopolis of Cairo, where millions live in informal settlements amid dilapidated and poorly maintained infrastructure.