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Ukraine leader a ‘maniac’ to demand NATO nuclear weapons: Russia

Volodymyr Zelensky

Zelensky reiterated his nuclear aspirations in an interview with British television host Piers Morgan on Tuesday, in which he lamented that Kiev traded off Soviet-era deterrence “for nothing” in the 1990s. He called on NATO to deploy nuclear weapons in Ukraine as a stopgap measure against Russia, while Kiev awaits accession to the US-led military bloc.

“Will we be given nuclear weapons? Then let them give us nuclear weapons,” Zelensky told Morgan.

“What missiles can stop Russia’s nuclear missiles? That is a rhetorical question.”

Responding on Wednesday, Zakharova wrote: “Zelensky’s latest statements that he wants to possess a nuclear capability expose him as a maniac, who considers the planet as an object for his sick delusions. They also prove that for him nuclear power stations are not a source of peaceful energy, but a dirty weapon that the Kiev regime needs for blackmail.”

Ukrainian nuclear rhetoric predates the outbreak of hostilities with Russia. Zelensky suggested that Kiev could build atomic weapons in a speech at the Munich Security Conference in February 2022, days before the escalation of the conflict.

Russian officials have expressed concern over Ukraine potentially developing a dirty bomb amid its battlefield setbacks. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN’s nuclear watchdog, has reported no diversion of declared radioactive materials in the country.

Ukraine inherited a well-developed civilian nuclear industry from the USSR, and currently operates three nuclear power plants and two research reactors.

Contrary to Zelensky’s assertion, independent Ukraine lacked a true nuclear deterrent as it did not possess the unilateral capability to launch Soviet weapons deployed on its soil in response to an attack. The disarmament of Ukraine, along with Belarus and Kazakhstan, was part of a broader nuclear reduction initiative in the 1990s. Western nations incentivized the host nations with aid programs.

Ayatollah Khamenei pardons over 3,000 Iranian prisoners

Ayatollah Sayyed Ali Khamenei

Ayatollah Khamenei agreed on Wednesday to pardon or commute the sentences of the Iranian convicts upon a proposal from Judiciary Chief Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejei who had requested the Leader’s clemency for prisoners with specific conditions.

The amnesty was granted in honor of the 46th anniversary of the victory of the Islamic Revolution, which toppled the Pahvali dynasty on February 11, 1979, and also in honor of the anniversary of Eid al-Mab’ath and the Eids of the months of Sha’ban.

Article 110 of the Constitution grants the Leader the right to pardon or reduce the sentences of convicts upon a recommendation from the head of the Judiciary.

The clemency, however, does not apply to certain types of convicts, including those who have been sentenced for their role in the armed smuggling of narcotics, arms trafficking, kidnapping, acid attacks, rape, armed robbery, bribery, embezzlement, counterfeit money forgery, money laundering, disruption of economy, smuggling of alcoholic drinks, and organized smuggling of commodities.

Pentagon developing plans to withdraw US forces from Syria: NBC News

US Troops

According to the officials, President Donald Trump and officials close to him recently showed interest in withdrawing troops from Syria, prompting the Pentagon to start drafting plans for a complete pullout within 30, 60, or 90 days.

Meanwhile, Trump’s newly appointed national security adviser, Mike Waltz, spent Friday at the US Central Command headquarters in Tampa, Florida and there, he met with senior military leaders and received briefings on the Middle East, the defense officials said.

A White House official stated that the potential reduction of US forces in Syria was not a subject of the briefings or the purpose of Waltz’s visit.

“It’s good for NSA Waltz to visit CENTCOM to get a sense of the entire region,” the White House official said, noting that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited the White House Tuesday and that Jordan’s King Abdullah is scheduled to visit next week.

Last week, Trump had stated the US “will make a determination” regarding the troops in Syria following a report that said he intends to withdraw American forces.

“I don’t know who said that, but we’ll make a determination on that,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

“We’re not involved in Syria. Syria is in its own mess. They’ve got enough messes over there. They don’t need us involved.”

Also, Israel’s official public broadcasting Kan had reported that “senior White House officials conveyed a message to their Israeli counterparts indicating that President Trump intends to pull thousands of US troops from Syria.”

According to a Pentagon announcement in December, the US has some 2,000 troops deployed in Syria.

Trump urges ‘nuclear peace deal’ with Iran

Trump

In a post on his Truth Social platform on Wednesday, Trump said reports that the US and Israel were preparing to “blow Iran into smithereens” were “greatly exaggerated”.

“I would much prefer a Verified Nuclear Peace Agreement, which will let Iran peacefully grow and prosper. We should start working on it immediately, and have a big Middle East Celebration when it is signed and completed. God Bless the Middle East!”

In an executive order on Tuesday, Trump signalled a return to a “maximum pressure” sanctions policy to try to pressure Tehran to “end its nuclear threat”.

The order promised a “robust and continual campaign” by the US Treasury and other agencies to “drive Iran’s export of oil to zero, including exports of Iranian crude to the People’s Republic of China”.

Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araqchi has asserted that another round of deployment of the “maximum pressure” policy on the part of the United States against Iran will only lead to another defeat.

“The policy of maximum pressure has already proven to be a failure, and any attempt to revive it will only lead to another defeat,” the top diplomat told reporters on the sidelines of a cabinet meeting on Wednesday.

Araghchi added, “If the main issue is that Iran should not pursue nuclear weapons, this is achievable and not a difficult matter.”

“Iran’s stance is clear, and it is a member of the NPT (Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty), and there is also the fatwa (religious decree) of the Leader, which has clarified the matter for us,” he continued.

Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei’s has prohibited pursuance, attainment, and storage of such non-conventional arms through an official decree as per religious and moral grounds.

“The Leader’s fatwa has made Iran’s position crystal clear,” the minister concluded.

West Bank’s Jenin heading in ‘catastrophic direction’: UN

Israel Palestine

“The residents of this particular camp have endured the impossible,” UNRWA spokeswoman Juliette Touma told a media briefing on Tuesday.

She said Israeli explosives and bulldozers have destroyed dozens of houses and streets since January 21.

“Large parts of the camp were completely destroyed in a series of detonations by the Israeli forces. It is estimated that 100 houses were destroyed or heavily damaged.”

The Israeli military also uses drones to bomb houses in the West Bank.

Touma further stated that the destruction of basic infrastructure had taken a toll on the education system.

“When it comes to UNRWA, 13 schools in the camp and the surrounding areas continue to be closed. That affected 5,000 kids in that area.”

UNRWA announced it received no warning from the Israeli side prior to the detonation of its facilities.

Touma referred to a recent such action, on February 2, and added the detonation “was when children were supposed to go back to school.”

Israel has banned operations by UNRWA in the occupied Palestinian territories. UNRWA’s contact with the regime’s authorities has also been prohibited since January 30.

Elsewhere in her remarks, Touma stressed that UNRWA’s services inside Jenin have come to a full stop in early December.

Earlier on Monday, Palestinian authorities raised “ethnic cleansing” accusations while a UN special rapporteur blamed Israel for “genocidal intent” in killing at least 70 Palestinians in Jenin since the start of the year.

In a statement released on Tuesday, the Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs strongly condemned Israeli attacks in the northern part of the occupied West Bank, particularly in Jenin, Tulkarem, Tubas, Far’a and Tammun.

The ministry said civilians are forcibly displaced from homes under armed threat, while entire neighborhoods are being destroyed with explosives, “which results in the forced alteration of Palestinian geography.”

The ministry called this a “flagrant violation of international law, international humanitarian law, and the Geneva Conventions.”

The statement also added it reflects an official Israeli policy to deepen the gradual annexation of the occupied West Bank for the benefit of settlement expansion.

The ministry urged urgent action by the international community to rein in Israel.

“The ministry holds the Israeli regime fully responsible for the consequences of these policies and calls on the international community to break its silence and fulfill its legal and moral obligations to put an end to this aggression.”

The UN human rights office has also announced that the daily Israeli assault on the occupied West Bank indicate “ongoing violations of the international law,” urging Israel to meet its obligations.

“Our Office has repeatedly raised concerns about the large-scale operation underway in the West Bank, and the devastating impact this is having on Palestinian communities, both in terms of violence and displacement,” spokesperson Jeremy Laurence told Anadolu in a statement.

“Daily reports of airstrikes and associated fatalities with thousands forcibly displaced indicate ongoing violations of international law,” Laurence said.

He noted that since the start of the operation, now ongoing in Jenin, Tubas, and Tulkarem, Israeli security forces killed 39 Palestinians, including three children.

“We remind Israel of its international legal obligations and call on it to cease and investigate all serious violations of international law, including all killings, and ensure meaningful accountability,” he concluded.

The Israeli escalation in the occupied territory came after a ceasefire and prisoner exchange deal took hold in Gaza on Jan. 19 following 15 months of Israel’s genocidal war that killed 62,000 Palestinians and reduced the enclave to rubble.

Since the beginning of Israel’s war on Gaza on Oct. 7, 2023, at least 905 Palestinians have been killed across the occupied West Bank in attacks by Israeli forces and settlers, according to the Health Ministry.

Iran FM: No rush to resume ties with Syria under current ruler

Syria War

Araghchi, who attended a meeting of the National Security and Foreign Policy Committee of the Iranian Parliament to discuss regional developments, emphasized that Iran is closely monitoring the situation in Syria.

He noted, “Iran is patient and waiting for the developments in Syria to take shape before deciding on its policy towards the country.”

Araghchi added, “We seek stability, peace, and the preservation of Syria’s territorial integrity, as well as resistance against foreign occupation, especially the Zionist regime, and the formation of a government desired by the Syrian people.”

“This is the clear stance of the (Iranian) Foreign Ministry regarding Syria, and we have announced it multiple times,” he asserted.

After the fall of Iran’s former ally in Syria, Bashar al-Assad in December last year, ties between Iran and the anti-Assad opponents under the current ruler Ahmed al-Sharaa, known as Julani, are shrouded in ambiguities.

Iranian first vice president on Trump-Pezeshkian meet: Not currently on Iran’s agenda

Pezeshkian and Trump

Speaking to reporters on Wednesday after a cabinet meeting, Aref made the remarks in reaction to Trump’s floating the possibility about negotiating with Pezeshkian.

Aref emphasized that the strategic policies of Iran are transparent and consistent, particularly in defense matters.

He highlighted that Iran has a clear stance on nuclear weapons, underscored by a religious decree by the Iranian Leader that prohibits the development and use of non-peaceful nuclear activities.

He noted that if Trump believes Iran should not pursue nuclear weapons, he can rest assured, as Iran’s longstanding policy and religious decree firmly support this stance.

British MPs call on government to send team to inspect Israeli prison sites

Israel Prison

In the letter, sent to Foreign Secretary David Lammy on Monday, Scottish National Party MP Chris Law and other signatories ask whether Labour will commission a delegation led by UK judges and lawyers to “inspect Israeli detention sites”.

The move comes in light of documented evidence of the widespread torture and abuse of Palestinian detainees.

In May 2024, David Cameron, the foreign secretary under the previous Conservative government, negotiated a deal with Israel in which two UK legal observers would visit Palestinian detainees.

The letter sent by Law urged Lammy to send a team to “gather evidence and document testimony from freed Palestinian abductees, hostages and prisoners.”

It also asked for a “parliamentary fact-finding mission to assess and report on the current situation with regard to the detention conditions of Palestinian prisoners”.

On Sunday, the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society said that the majority of Palestinians released from Israeli-run prisons as part of the Gaza ceasefire deal are being subjected to “systematic torture days before their release”.

In recent reports, the monitor group has noted severe forms of torture and abuse, including burning detainees with boiling water and urinating on them.

Last August, the Israeli rights group B’Tselem accused Israeli authorities of systematically abusing Palestinians in torture camps, subjecting them to severe violence and sexual assault.

The report, titled “Welcome to Hell”, was based on 55 testimonies from former detainees from the Gaza Strip, the occupied West Bank, East Jerusalem and Israel, the overwhelming majority of whom were held without trial.

The letter from the MPs to the foreign secretary highlights “inhumane conditions and human rights violations facing Palestinian abductees, detainees and prisoners held in Israeli prisons and detention facilities”.

It suggests there is a “significant perception of a lack of meaningful action, responsiveness, and impartilaity” on the part of the government when it comes to human rights violations suffered by Palestinians.

“Extensive documentation” showing the “widespread use of sexual violence and humiliating treatment” has been shared with the foreign office by Palestinian and Israeli rights groups, the letter further notes.

It asks to what extent the government “is aware of the use of torture by Israel”.

“Will you give an undertaking that your department will closely monitor and engage with the situation of Palestinian detainees, and demand that Israel, as the Occupying Power, and the Israeli Prison Services ensure and uphold Palestinian prisoners’ right to life and the highest attainable standard of health and mental health?”

The letter was signed by MPs Law, Shockat Adam, Paula Barker, Jeremy Corbyn, Colum Eastwood, Lord Hain, Graham Leadbitter, Seamus Logan, Zarah Sultana, Nadia Whittome and Pete Wishart.

According to the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society, over 11,400 arrests were made in the West Bank since the Hamas attack of 7 October 2023. In Gaza, the numbers are estimated to be in the thousands.

Zelensky says ready for talks with Putin to end war

Zelensky Putin

He made the remarks during an interview with British journalist Piers Morgan, with excerpts published on Tuesday. Asked if he is prepared to meet with the Russian president, Zelensky indicated that he is.

“If that is the only setup in which we can bring peace to the citizens of Ukraine and not lose people, definitely we will go for this setup, for this meeting,” he said.

“What is my attitude to him [Putin]? I will not be kind to him and I… consider him an enemy. And to be honest, I believe he considers me an enemy as well,” he added.

The remarks appear to reflect a shift in Zelensky’s stance. He has refused to negotiate with Putin in the past and even signed a decree banning any negotiations with Moscow, and Putin specifically. Last month, Zelensky stated the ban applies to all Ukrainian officials except himself, while the original 2022 decree only stated that negotiations are “impossible” without specifying any individuals or entities prohibited from engaging in them.

Last week, Putin reiterated Moscow’s position that Zelensky lacks the legitimacy to sign agreements, given that his presidential term expired in May 2024 and no constitutional mechanism exists to extend it. However, the Russian president said he is willing to send negotiators to talk to Zelensky if he is open to discussions.

“It’s possible to negotiate with anyone. However, due to his illegitimacy, [Zelensky] has no right to sign anything. If he wishes to participate in talks, I will deploy people who will conduct such negotiations,” Putin stated.

The Ukrainian decree banning negotiations with Russia remains an obstacle to meaningful talks between Kiev and Moscow, Putin added. He pledged to deploy a team of legal experts to assess the authority of any Ukrainian negotiating team and determine whether they have the proper legal standing to sign an agreement.

“If we start negotiations now, they will be illegitimate… Because when the current head of the regime – that’s the only way to call [Zelensky] today – signed this decree, he was a somewhat legitimate president. But now he can’t cancel it because he is illegitimate. That’s the trick, the catch, the trap,” Putin explained.

Atomic chief: Iran has no nuclear weapons program

Speaking to Iran’s SNNTV, Mohammad Eslami said, “Trump’s statement that Iran should not have nuclear weapons is clear. Iran has never had, does not have, and will not have a nuclear weapons program. Our approach is clear.”

Eslami emphasized that Iran’s nuclear program is purely peaceful and operates within the framework of safeguard regulations and the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

“Iran’s peaceful nuclear program is being conducted within the framework of safeguard regulations and the NPT,” he noted.

The statement comes in response to Trump’s demand on Tuesday that Iran should not possess nuclear weapons.