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Strong Iran-Saudi ties bring positive regional, global impact: Deputy FM

Iran and Saudi Arabia Flags

Kazem Gharibabadi made the remarks in an X post following a visit to Saudi Arabia aimed at deepening cooperation and coordination between the two regional heavyweights.

The deputy foreign minister stressed that Iran and Saudi Arabia, bound by many shared interests and mutual respect, are well-positioned to serve the common good of their peoples and advance regional peace.

Gharibabadi detailed his meeting with Saudi Arabia’s Deputy Foreign Minister for International Affairs, Abdulrahman al Rassi.

He said the discussions focused on bolstering collaboration within international, regional, and multilateral organizations, as well as advancing key areas like human rights and legal and judicial cooperation.

The officials also exchanged views on strengthening the pivotal role of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).

Gharibabadi added he emphasized the need for the OIC to play a stronger role in addressing critical issues, including condemning the crimes of the Israeli occupation in Gaza and its aggressions in the region, while expanding cooperation among member states.

The Iranian official expressed optimism for the future trajectory of Tehran-Riyadh ties, stating a desire for accelerated progress.

“We hope that through continued follow-up, communication, and ongoing dialogue between the two governments, the growing trend of relations between the governments and peoples of Iran and Saudi Arabia will continue with greater speed and quality,” he stated.

Iran and Saudi Arabia normalized relations under a China-brokered agreement signed in Beijing in March 2023, which stipulated the resumption of full diplomatic relations, including the reopening of embassies, within two months.

The renewed diplomatic engagement is seen as a step toward a more stable, self-managed regional security framework.

 

Trump reiterates nuclear threat

Trump last week ordered the US Department of War to commence preparations for nuclear testing “immediately.”

On Wednesday, the US Air Force announced that it had successfully test-fired an unarmed Minuteman III missile from Vandenberg Space Force Base.

“Because of other countries’ testing programs, I have instructed the Department of War to start testing our nuclear weapons on an equal basis. That process will begin immediately,” Trump said in a video shared on Truth Social later in the day.

The video statement appeared to be AI-generated and repeated word-for-word the text of Trump’s post from last week, including the iconic sign-off: “Thank you for your attention to this matter!”

It remains unclear whether it was posted by the president himself or one of his aides, as the White House declined to comment, citing staff shortages linked to the ongoing government shutdown.

Several clips shared at around the same time featured an identical background and similarly rehashed unrelated past statements.

Russian Defense Minister Andrey Belousov stated earlier in the day that Moscow “must respond to Washington’s steps” and “start preparing for full-scale nuclear tests immediately.” Putin, however, indicated that such a move was premature as long as Washington abides by the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty.

In the meantime, the Russian president instructed all relevant government agencies to analyze US plans and submit proposals on “the possible commencement of work on preparing for nuclear weapons tests.”

Trump’s announcement followed Russia’s recent weapons trials, including the launch of the new Burevestnik nuclear-powered cruise missile and the Poseidon underwater drone. However, neither of those tests involved actual nuclear detonations.

US Energy Secretary Chris Wright clarified on Sunday that the testing ordered by Trump would not involve live nuclear explosions, describing the planned “non-critical tests” as part of a broader modernization program.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov noted that Russia was informed in advance about the latest Minuteman III launch. He previously added that Moscow is still waiting for “clarifications from the American side” regarding the meaning and full implications of the US president’s remarks.

 

Iran open to negotiations if national interests are secured, says Foreign Minister Araghchi

Abbas Araghchi

Speaking during a gathering with students at Hamadan University, western Iran, Araghchi emphasized that Iran’s foreign policy principle of “neither East nor West” does not mean avoiding relations, but refusing dependency on any global power.

Araghchi noted that Iran seeks balanced engagement, explaning, “If cooperation with Eastern countries benefits Iran, we will not forgo it. Likewise, if dialogue with Western countries can secure our interests, we are not opposed to it.” However, he argued that past Western behavior has often undermined mutual trust.

He stressed that previous negotiations, including those during the Rouhani administration and later efforts under the late President Ebrahim Raisi to revive the 2015 nuclear deal, were all aimed at defending Iran’s national rights.

“We will pursue the removal of sanctions in a dignified and honorable manner,” he said.

Araghchi added that Iran does not place full trust in any foreign power. However, he confirmed that Tehran maintains strategic partnerships with countries such as China and Russia, based on long-term cooperation agreements, while insisting that the Iranian government relies primarily on its own people.

Israel sets up checkpoint in Syria’s Quneitra

State news agency SANA reported that two tanks and four military vehicles entered the town of Jabata al-Khashab in the Quneitra countryside on Wednesday, setting up the military post on the road leading to the village of Ain al-Bayda.

Damascus did not immediately comment but has repeatedly condemned Israel’s repeated violations of its sovereignty, highlighting Israel’s failure to adhere to the 1974 Disengagement Agreement that followed the 1973 war.

In that war, Syria was unable to retake the occupied Golan Heights. The 1974 agreement saw the establishment of a United Nations-patrolled buffer zone, which Israel has violated since the fall of Bashar al-Assad last December

Israel has previously announced the 1974 agreement is void since al-Assad fled, breaching Syrian sovereignty with air strikes, ground infiltration operations, reconnaissance overflights, the establishment of checkpoints and the arrests and disappearances of Syrians. Syria has not reciprocated attacks.

Back in September, Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa stated that Israel had conducted more than 1,000 air strikes and more than 400 ground incursions in Syria since al-Assad was overthrown, describing the actions as “very dangerous”.

Numerous villages in Quneitra, southern Syria, have experienced Israeli incursions, according to Syrian outlet Enab Baladi.

Syria and Israel are currently in talks to reach an agreement that Damascus hopes will secure a halt to Israel’s air strikes on its territory and the withdrawal of Israeli troops who have pushed into southern Syria.

In the background, the United States has been pushing diplomatic efforts to restore the 1974 deal. On Saturday, Trump’s special envoy Tom Barrack said the two sides are expected to hold a fifth set of de-escalation discussions.

Amid Israel’s continued belligerence and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s promotion of his vision for a “Greater Israel“, al-Sharaa has been forging closer ties with the US.

On Monday, he is heading to Washington for talks with President Donald Trump, marking the first visit by a Syrian president to the White House in more than 80 years.

Barrack noted on Saturday that Syria is expected to join the US-led anti–ISIL (ISIS) coalition, describing it as “a big step” and “remarkable”.

Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad Hassan al-Shaibani stated earlier this week that al-Sharaa was also expected to discuss Syria’s reconstruction with Trump.

 

Macron, Pezeshkian discuss new negotiation framework between Iran and West

Pezeshkian Macron

Macron underlined the need for continued dialogue to promote transparency and mutual trust.

He noted that this could lead to an agreement, the lifting of sanctions, and the expansion of bilateral relations between Iran and France.

Pezeshkian reaffirmed that Iran has always welcomed dialogue and engagement but stressed that it is now the Western side that must respect Iran’s rights and avoid excessive demands.

“It is not Iran that must prove its honesty”, he said, “but rather the US and Europe that should demonstrate sincerity to gain Iran’s trust.

Referring to Iran’s nuclear policy, Pezeshkian reiterated that, based on the Iran’s Leader’s fatwa and the country’s defense doctrine, Tehran does not seek nuclear weapons.

He added that resolving misunderstandings through logic and dialogue, not through pressure and threats, is the principled policy of the Islamic Republic.

US to share draft UN resolution on Gaza with most of Security Council

Gaza War

Representatives for Egypt, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates will join the U.S., “showing clear regional support,” the official added.

Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas agreed a month ago to the first phase of Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza: a ceasefire in their two-year war and hostage-release deal.

The United States has drafted a U.N. Security Council resolution that would approve a two-year mandate for a Gaza transitional governance body and an international stabilization force in the Palestinian enclave, according to the text seen by Reuters.

It was not immediately clear if any changes have been made to the draft that will be shared with the 10 elected Security Council members. A resolution needs at least nine votes in favor and no vetoes by Russia, China, the U.S., Britain or France to be adopted.

It was not immediately clear if the U.S. has yet shared a copy of the draft resolution with Russia and China.

The two-page text seen by Reuters would authorize a Board of Peace transitional governance administration to establish a temporary International Stabilization Force (ISF) in Gaza that could “use all necessary measures” – code for force – to carry out its mandate.

Washington asks UN to lift sanctions on Syria’s president ahead of US visit

United Nations

The draft resolution would also lift sanctions on Syria’s Interior Minister Anas Khattab. It was not immediately clear when it could be put to a vote.

A resolution needs at least nine votes in favor and no vetoes by Russia, China, the U.S., France or Britain to be adopted.

Washington has been urging the 15-member Security Council for months to ease Syria sanctions.

After 13 years of war, Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad was ousted in December in a lightning offensive by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS).

Formerly known as the Nusra Front, HTS was al Qaeda’s official wing in Syria until breaking ties in 2016. Since May 2014, the group has been on the U.N. Security Council’s al Qaeda and Islamic State sanctions list.

A number of HTS members are also under U.N. sanctions – a travel ban, asset freeze and arms embargo – including its leader Sharaa and Khattab.

A Security Council sanctions committee has been regularly granting Sharaa travel exemptions this year, so even if the U.S.-drafted resolution is not adopted before Monday, the Syrian president is still likely to be able to visit the White House.

Trump announced a major U.S. policy shift in May when he stated he would lift U.S. sanctions on Syria.

United Nations sanctions monitors have seen no “active ties” this year between al Qaeda and HTS, according to a U.N. report, seen by Reuters in July.

Russia to take ‘reciprocal measures’ if US resumes nuclear tests: Putin

The Russian leader told his Security Council on Wednesday that should the US or any signatory to the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) conduct nuclear weapons tests, “Russia would be under obligation to take reciprocal measures”, according to a transcript of the meeting published by the Kremlin.

“In this regard, I instruct the Foreign Ministry, the Defence Ministry, the special services, and the corresponding civilian agencies to do everything possible to gather additional information on this matter, have it analysed by the Security Council, and submit coordinated proposals on the possible first steps focusing on preparations for nuclear weapons tests,” Putin said.

Moscow has not carried out nuclear weapons tests since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. But tensions between the two countries with the world’s largest nuclear arsenals have spiked in recent weeks as Trump’s frustration with Putin grows over Russia’s failure to end its war in Ukraine.

The US leader cancelled a planned summit with Putin in Hungary in October, before imposing sanctions on two major Russian oil firms a day later – the first such measures since Trump returned to the White House in January.

Trump then stated on October 30 that he had ordered the Department of Defense to “immediately” resume nuclear weapons testing on an “equal basis” with other nuclear-armed powers.

Trump’s decision came days after he criticised Moscow for testing its new Burevestnik missile, which is nuclear-powered and designed to carry a nuclear warhead.

According to the Kremlin transcript, Putin spoke with several senior officials in what appeared to be a semi-choreographed advisory session.

Defence Minister Andrei Belousov told Putin that Washington’s recent actions significantly raise “the level of military threat to Russia”, as he said that it was “imperative to maintain our nuclear forces at a level of readiness sufficient to inflict unacceptable damage”.

Belousov added that Russia’s Arctic testing site at Novaya Zemlya could host nuclear tests at short notice.

Valery Gerasimov, the Chief of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces, also cautioned that if Russia does not “take appropriate measures now, time and opportunities for a timely response to the actions of the United States will be lost”.

Following the meeting, state news agency TASS quoted Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov as saying that Putin had set no specific deadline for officials to draft the requested proposals.

“In order to come to a conclusion about the advisability of beginning preparations for such tests, it will take exactly as much time as it takes for us to fully understand the intentions of the United States of America,” Peskov added.

Russia and the US are by far the biggest nuclear powers globally in terms of the number of warheads they possess.

The Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation (CACNP) estimates that Moscow currently has 5,459 nuclear warheads, of which 1,600 are actively deployed.

The US has about 5,550 nuclear warheads, according to the CACNP, with about 3,800 of those active. At its peak in the mid-1960s during the Cold War, the US stockpile consisted of more than 31,000 active and inactive nuclear warheads.

China currently lags far behind, but has rapidly expanded its nuclear warhead stockpile to about 600 in recent years, adding about 100 per year since 2023, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

France, Britain, India, Pakistan and North Korea comprise the remaining nuclear-armed countries.

The US last exploded a nuclear device in 1992, after former Republican President George HW Bush issued a moratorium on nuclear weapons testing following the collapse of the Soviet Union a year earlier.

Since 1996, the year the CTBT was opened for signatures, only three countries have detonated nuclear devices.

India and Pakistan conducted tests in 1998. North Korea has carried out five explosive tests since 2006 – most recently in 2017 – making it the only country to do so in the 21st century.

Such blasts, regularly staged by nuclear powers during the Cold War, have devastating environmental consequences.

Trump has yet to clarify whether the resumption he ordered last week refers to nuclear-explosive testing or to flight testing of nuclear-capable missiles, which would see the National Nuclear Safety Administration test delivery systems without requiring explosions.

Security analysts say a resumption of nuclear-explosive testing by any of the world’s nuclear powers would be destabilising, as it would likely trigger a similar response by the others.

Iranian composer Aria Aziminezhad Performs “Love Through the Ages” in Paris

The performance offered a fresh interpretation of love in Iranian culture and literature, featuring Aziminezhad’s live music alongside narration by French actress Séjeanel, delivered in French.

The show was staged at the prestigious and historic Eiffel Theater.
It played to a full house and received an enthusiastic response from the Parisian audience.

IAEA condemns Trump’s nuclear test plan

IAEA

Speaking to France’s LCI TV channel on Tuesday, Grossi described Trump’s announcement as a “manifestation of profound unease, tension, and increasing fragmentation,” adding that it undermines both global peace and the non-proliferation regime.

Last week, Trump ordered the US Department of War to begin preparations for nuclear testing, claiming that the US is “the only country that doesn’t test” and accusing Russia and China of conducting “secret” nuclear explosions. Both Moscow and Beijing have refuted the allegations.

Grossi questioned the veracity of Trump’s claims, emphasizing that any nuclear detonations by other nations would be detected by the international monitoring system established under the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty. The IAEA chief noted that the organization responsible for overseeing compliance “can immediately record such phenomena.”

Grossi called for the restoration of the United Nations’ role in maintaining global peace and safeguarding the nuclear non-proliferation system amid rising tensions.