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Iran says will deploy new missiles if confronted by adversaries

Iran Missile

Brigadier General Aziz Nasirzadeh, Minister of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics, made the remarks during a meeting with foreign military attachés in Tehran on the occasion of “Defense Industry Day.”

He noted that the missiles used in the recent 12-day conflict with Israel were designed several years ago, but Iran now possesses weapons with significantly greater capabilities.

General Nasirzadeh emphasized that during the war, Iran faced not only Israel but also extensive US logistical, intelligence, and support efforts.

He said all weapons used were domestically produced and stressed that Iranian missiles successfully struck their targets, despite Israel’s censorship of battlefield outcomes.

According to him, Israel deployed several advanced air defense systems, including the Iron Dome, Arrow, and US-supplied Patriot and THAAD systems. However, he pointed out these defenses failed to stop most Iranian missiles, with strike accuracy improving as the conflict progressed.

The minister also highlighted defense diplomacy as a key strategy, saying Iran maintains constructive relations with many countries in pursuit of peaceful military cooperation.

Russia says won’t commit to Putin-Zelensky meeting

Putin and Zelensky

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov argued Tuesday that any summit between the leaders should be prepared “step by step, gradually, starting from the expert level and then going through all the necessary stages.”

Lavrov, who attended last week’s summit between Trump and Putin in Alaska, made the remarks in an interview with state-run television Rossiya-24.

The foreign minister said the Kremlin is not turning down negotiations with Ukraine and added that the U.S. president has the invitation from Moscow to visit Russia. Trump was accompanied by Secretary of State Marco Rubio and special envoy Steve Witkoff in Anchorage.

Trump spoke with Putin on Monday from the White House, calling the Russian leader as he was hosting Zelensky along with seven European leaders, including the secretary-general of NATO, in Washington. The European officials and Zelensky were not in the room when Trump called Putin.

“I didn’t do it in front of them — I thought that would be disrespectful to President Putin. I wouldn’t do that, because they have not had the warmest relations,” Trump stated Tuesday while on Fox News’s “Fox & Friends.”

The conversation between the U.S. president and Putin lasted around 40 minutes, with Trump saying the call was “good” and that he told the Russian leader that “we’re going to set up a meeting with President Zelensky, and you and he will meet.”

“And then after that meeting, if everything works out OK, I’ll meet and we’ll wrap it up,” the president added.

Yuri Ushakov, Putin’s foreign policy adviser, said on Tuesday that Trump and the Kremlin head had a “quite frank and constructive” conversation, discussing the “prospect of exploring opportunities for drawing higher-ranking officials from both Ukraine and Russia into these direct talks.

Trump, who has been pushing to end the three-and-a-half-year Russia-Ukraine conflict, has floated providing air support for Ukraine as part of security guarantees. The president said Washington will assist Europe in forming security guarantees for Kyiv to fortify the potential peace treaty between Russia and Ukraine.

“We’re willing to help them with things, especially, probably, if you talk about by air because nobody has stuff we have,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News.

The president has instructed his national security team to “come up with a framework for these security guarantees that can be acceptable to help ensure a lasting peace and end this war,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters during Tuesday’s press briefing.

“I won’t, certainly, rule out anything as far as military options that the president has at his disposal, I’ll let him do that,” she stated, adding that Trump has “definitively” ruled out U.S. service members being on the ground in Ukraine.

Trump says no US forces in Ukraine

Asked during an interview with Fox News on Tuesday what assurances he could provide that US troops would not be deployed to defend Ukraine’s borders, Trump said: “You have my assurance, and I am president. I am just trying to stop people from being killed.”

Trump stated that European countries were willing to provide troops to bolster Ukraine’s security, but the US could provide support “by air”.

“We’re willing to help them with things, especially, probably if you talk about by air, because there’s nobody that has the kind of stuff we have,” Trump told the Fox & Friends programme.

“I don’t think it’s going to be a problem.”

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt later reiterated that US troops would not be part of any peace deal between Moscow and Kyiv, but that Washington would assist with “coordination” and “perhaps provide other means of security guarantees”.

Trump’s comments came a day after he hosted Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and top European leaders at the White House in his latest push to bring an end to the three-and-a-half-year-long conflict.

While Zelensky and European leaders cast Monday’s meeting as positive and productive, the question of how to ensure Ukraine’s post-war security remains a major sticking point in the negotiations on ending the war.

Although Trump has suggested that Russian President Vladimir Putin could agree to the deployment of Western troops in Ukraine to uphold a peace deal, Moscow has repeatedly dismissed the idea.

Russia and Ukraine also appear to be far apart on the issue of territorial concessions and implementing a ceasefire in advance of a comprehensive peace deal.

Trump on Tuesday also elaborated on his plans for a bilateral summit between Putin and Zelenskyy, telling conservative radio host Mark Levin that “they’re in the process of setting it up”.

While Zelensky has said he is ready to meet Putin, Moscow has not confirmed that the Russian leader will attend a summit.

On Tuesday, Switzerland’s foreign affairs minister, Ignazio Cassis, told the national broadcaster that his country would be willing to host a Putin-Zelensky summit despite the International Criminal Court’s outstanding arrest warrant for the Russian leader.

After attending Monday’s talks at the White House, French President Emmanuel Macron said he was pushing for Geneva to be the location for a summit between the two leaders.

Iran, Armenia ink 10 MoUs during Pezeshkian’s visit

The documents were signed by high-ranking officials of the two countries on Tuesday following a private meeting between the chief executive and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in the Armenian capital Yerevan.

The MoUs, signed on the second day of Pezehskian’s visit, address diplomacy, economy, mines and industries, road and urban development, healthcare, environment, education, culture, social interaction, and tourism.

The trip took place following the conclusion of a United States-mediated agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which triggered warnings about Washington’s interventionist intentions concerning the region.

Additionally, Pezeshkian and Pashinyan issued and signed a joint statement.

Earlier in the day, an official reception ceremony was held in honor of the Iranian president at the Armenian president’s official residence in Yerevan.

The chief executive is being accompanied on the trip by Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi as well as other top figures, including several other ministers.

A day earlier, Pezeshkian had met in Yerevan with elite Iranologists and Armenia-based Iranians, besides partaking in a meeting of the countries’ business leaders.

Upon departing for Armenia, he had identified the purpose of the trip as the enhancement of bilateral ties between the “friendly neighboring” nations. His administration, the president also noted, had accorded priority to the development of cooperation between the Islamic Republic and the countries whose foreign policy standing was aligned with that of Tehran.

The visit came less than two weeks after Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev signed a “peace deal” at the White House in US President Donald Trump’s presence.

The deal has reportedly included a plan to set up a transit road, which could connect Azerbaijan and Armenia.

In reaction to the agreement, the Islamic Republic has welcomed regional peace, but invariably warned about the repercussions of foreign intervention in the region, stressing that it constantly observes ongoing regional developments as a means of guarding against uncalled-for meddling.

Pezeshkian had dismissed media “overstatements” concerning the matter, saying “the demands of the Islamic Republic have been met” as far as the issue was concerned.

At the time, the chief executive identified those demands as respect for regional countries’ sovereignty, respect for their territorial integrity, and opposition to any change in regional borders.

UN says record 383 aid workers killed in 2024

United Nations

The 2024 figure was up 31 percent on the year before, the UN said on World Humanitarian Day, “driven by the relentless conflicts in Gaza, where 181 humanitarian workers were killed, and in Sudan, where 60 lost their lives”.

It said state actors were the most common perpetrators of the killings in 2024.

The UN added most of those killed were local staff, and were either attacked in the line of duty or in their homes.

Besides those killed, 308 aid workers were wounded, 125 kidnapped and 45 detained last year.

“Even one attack against a humanitarian colleague is an attack on all of us and on the people we serve,” said UN aid chief Tom Fletcher.

“Attacks on this scale, with zero accountability, are a shameful indictment of international inaction and apathy.”

“As the humanitarian community, we demand — again — that those with power and influence act for humanity, protect civilians and aid workers and hold perpetrators to account,” he added.

Provisional figures from the Aid Worker Security Database show that 265 aid workers have been killed this year, as of August 14.

The UN reiterated that attacks on aid workers and operations violate international humanitarian law and damage the lifelines sustaining millions of people trapped in war and disaster zones.

“Violence against aid workers is not inevitable. It must end,” stated Fletcher, the UN emergency relief coordinator and under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs.

Meanwhile the UN’s World Health Organization said it had verified more than 800 attacks on health care in 16 territories so far this year, with more than 1,110 health workers and patients killed and hundreds injured.

“Each attack inflicts lasting harm, deprives entire communities of life-saving care when they need it the most, endangers health care providers, and weakens already strained health systems,” the WHO announced.

World Humanitarian Day marks the day in 2003 when UN rights chief Sergio Vieira de Mello and 21 other humanitarians were killed in the bombing of the UN headquarters in Baghdad.

US does not oppose Israeli development of West Bank settlements: Envoy

Israeli settlement

While Mike Huckabee’s comments referred to the occupied Palestinian territory in totality, he also specifically addressed the proposed settlement of the E1 area of occupied Jerusalem.

“Whether or not there should be massive development in E1 is a decision for the government of Israel to make,” Huckabee said.

“We would not try to evaluate the good and the bad of that, but simply just say that, as a general rule, it is not a violation of international law.”

“It’s also, I think, incumbent on all of us to recognise that Israelis have a right to live in Israel,” he added.

Omar Shakir, the Israel and Palestine director at Human Rights Watch, told Middle East Eye that settlement expansion was a violation of international law and a war crime.

“The answer is yes – the transfer of an occupying power’s civilian population to a militarily occupied territory violates the Fourth Geneva Convention and, under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, is a war crime.”

Shakir also stated the US was a signatory to the Geneva Convention, but the Fourth Geneva Convention has “the status of customary international law, making it applicable universally”.

In 2020, the European Union and 15 European countries denounced the plans to develop E1 in a protest letter, the second of its kind.

“Settlements are illegal under International Humanitarian Law. Any further settlement construction in this strategically sensitive area will have a devastating impact on a contiguous Palestinian State, as well as severely undermining the possibility of a negotiated two-state solution in line with internationally agreed parameters,” the letter said.

Huckabee maintained in the interview that “the US would not interfere in how Israel runs its country”.

“We will not dictate to Israel what to do, we will not interfere in the running of the country. It would be very strange to say that others can live in this area but Israelis cannot.”

Mike Huckabee’s comments come after Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich announced on Thursday that he was planning to relaunch the E1 area settlement project that would see the construction of thousands of new housing units in the E1 area, east of Jerusalem.

Doing so would unite Jerusalem with the illegal Ma’ale Adumim settlement – several kilometres to the east – and cut the occupied West Bank in two, isolating Palestinian communities.

During his announcement, Smotrich praised the proposal as “a reality that buries the idea of a Palestinian state, because there’s nothing to recognise and no one to recognise it”.

“This is Zionism at its best – building, settling and strengthening our sovereignty in the Land of Israel,” he added.

The initial idea for E1 settlement was first touted decades ago, but was buried because of international condemnation – from both states and human right organisations.

The Israeli government expected to approve construction plans for E1 this week. The United Nations urged Israel to not start any work on the settlement.

The UN’s spokesperson for the secretary-general, Stephane Dujarric, told reporters that illegal E1 settlement expansion “would put an end to prospects of a two-state solution”.

“Settlements go against international law… [and] further entrench the occupation,” Dujarric stated.

Quds Network described the proposal as a “death sentence to establishing the Palestinian state”.

Iranian news agency retracts report on alleged Mossad safe house in Tehran

Iran Police

In its correction, published Tuesday, the agency said that while several drones were indeed found in a house in the capital, there was no evidence linking the site to Israel’s spy agency. “Parts of the earlier report were not accurate,” the agency admitted, adding that subsequent checks with “reliable sources” clarified the situation.

According to Mehr, the drones recovered were neither operational military systems nor part of an espionage network, but instead “used and research-oriented models.”

No indication was provided about the house’s ownership or the circumstances of the discovery.

The agency issued an apology to its readership for releasing the initial claim without sufficient verification.

Iran, Armenia agree on new transport projects, including Nordooz Bridge, Persian Gulf-Black Sea link

Speaking on Tuesday, Sadegh said the two sides agreed to expand the existing Nordooz crossing and build an additional bridge to ease freight traffic between the two countries.

She noted that Iran and Armenia also plan to reorganize border terminals and finalize a broader transit package within the next two months to reduce costs for Iranian truck drivers.

The minister highlighted ongoing efforts to establish a strategic railway corridor linking the Persian Gulf to the Black Sea.

“The rail line currently extends to Jolfa, and its continuation through Nakhchivan to Yerevan has been agreed in principle. With further trilateral cooperation among Iran, Armenia, and the Republic of Azerbaijan, this route could become a key link to Europe,” she said.

Sadegh also pointed to new initiatives in air transport, logistics, and technical-engineering services, stressing the strong track record of Iranian contractors working on construction and infrastructure projects in Armenia.

30 countries working on security guarantees for Ukraine: NATO chief

NATO

Speaking to FOX News after talks at the White House with US President Donald Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and several European leaders, Rutte described the discussions as “very successful” and said the countries are focused on security guarantees that could take effect after a ceasefire or, preferably, a full peace deal between Russia and Ukraine.

“So over the last couple of months, under the leadership of Keir Starmer, the British prime minister, and Emmanuel Macron, the French president, a group of now 30 countries, including Japan and Australia, are working on this concept of security guarantees,” he said.

“What the US has now said is that the United States wants to get involved in this. Exactly what is meant by US involvement will be discussed over the coming days.”

According to Rutte, Trump held a phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday which resulted in an agreement to hold a meeting between Putin and Zelenskyy ahead of a trilateral summit.

“He was able, in a conversation with President Putin, to have Putin agree to first a meeting between Putin and Zelenskyy. So they will now discuss where that would be,” he added.

Asked whether territorial concessions by Ukraine were addressed, Rutte said the issue was not discussed in Washington.

He also stressed that NATO membership for Ukraine was not part of the current talks.

“The official NATO position since the summit of 2024 is that there is an irreversible path for Ukraine into NATO,” he said, adding, “But what we are discussing here is not NATO membership. What we are discussing here is Article 5-type security guarantees for Ukraine.”

Rutte’s remarks came after Trump hosted him, Zelenskyy and several European leaders at the White House to discuss the next steps in diplomatic efforts to end the conflict.

Leaders attending Monday’s talks included UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Finnish President Alexander Stubb.

Iranian president holds private talks with Armenian PM in Yerevan

The meeting took place shortly after an official reception ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Yerevan.

Pezeshkian arrived in the Armenian capital on Monday, at the invitation of Pashinyan for a two-day official visit.
He was welcomed at Zvartnots Airport by Deputy Prime Ministers and the Armenian Foreign Minister before the start of high-level talks.

The visit comes amid Tehran’s stern opposition to a new US-mediated deal between the Republic of Azerbaijan and Armenia over the strategic Zangezur corridor that cuts off Iran’s access to Armenia.

The Iranian president is accompanied by senior cabinet officials, including Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, Roads and Urban Development Minister Farzaneh Sadegh, Culture and Tourism Minister Seyyed Reza Salehi Amiri, Industry and Trade Minister Seyyed Mohammad Atabak, and Vice President for Planning and Budget Seyyed Hamid Pourmohammadi.

As part of his program, Pezeshkian also met with Iranologists, members of the local Iranian community, and attended a joint business forum aimed at expanding economic cooperation.

Before his departure from Tehran, he underlined that strengthening ties with neighboring countries is a central priority of his administration’s foreign policy.