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US strike stopped Iran from getting nuclear bomb before Gaza deal, Trump says

Oct 13, 2025, 08:01 GMT+1Updated: 00:14 GMT+0
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu welcomes US President Donald Trump at Ben Gurion International Airport, amid a U.S.-brokered prisoner-hostage swap and ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas, in Lod, Israel, October 13, 2025.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu welcomes US President Donald Trump at Ben Gurion International Airport, amid a U.S.-brokered prisoner-hostage swap and ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas, in Lod, Israel, October 13, 2025.

The United States’ destruction of Iran’s nuclear facility prevented Tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon just months before the Gaza peace deal, US President Donald Trump said Sunday, calling it key to achieving the current ceasefire framework.

“Had we not taken out Iran’s nuclear facility… it would have a really dark cloud over" the Gaza peace deal, "because in two months they would have had a nuclear weapon,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on his way to the Middle East.

He recalled that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had pleaded with former President Barack Obama and then–Vice President Joe Biden not to move forward with their Iran policy.

“Remember when Netanyahu came and he begged that Obama and Biden not do what they were doing with Iran? Begged him and they wouldn’t even listen to him. Everything they did was the opposite of what you should have done. Biden and Obama backed Iran,” Trump told reporters.

Iran’s president Masoud Pezeshkian has declined Egypt’s invitation to attend the Sharm el-Sheikh peace summit on Monday, where more than twenty world leaders are expected to discuss Gaza’s post-war future.

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi also announced he would not attend, citing continuing US sanctions and what he called “threats against the Iranian people.”

The summit, co-chaired by Trump and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, includes leaders or top diplomats from Germany, France, the UK, Italy, Spain, Qatar, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Jordan, Pakistan, and Indonesia.

“Iran wants to work on peace now,” Trump said earlier this month. “They’ve informed us they are totally in favor of this deal. We appreciate that, and we’ll work with Iran.”

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Everyone heads to Sharm el-Sheikh, but Tehran stays out

Oct 13, 2025, 05:17 GMT+1
•
Samira Gharaei

Invitation to the Islamic Republic to attend the Sharm el-Sheikh Peace Summit can be seen as one of the most significant signs of a shift in the strategy of the United States and its Arab allies toward Tehran.

The Islamic Republic has announced that it was invited by Egypt to participate in the summit, but the more important point is that Cairo does not act on such sensitive matters without coordination and a green light from Washington.

Therefore, this invitation should be analyzed within the broader framework of the US policy of “managing and consolidating the Middle East” — a policy that has entered a new phase following the de-escalation in Gaza and the Arab states’ move toward normalization with Israel.

On the surface, Washington suggests that Tehran, too, could be part of the peace process and even a potential signatory to the Abraham Accord. In reality, however, this message is not driven by a genuine desire to integrate the Islamic Republic into a new regional order, but rather to exert soft pressure on Tehran to move toward implicit recognition of Israel.

In other words, the invitation to Sharm el-Sheikh is a strategic test for the Islamic Republic: is Iran prepared, in exchange for an end to pressure and sanctions, to take a step — even indirectly — toward “recognizing Israel”?

Meanwhile, the Islamic Republic faces a situation where rejecting the invitation could also prove costly. Cornered and weakened, it finds its options reduced to a single question: to go or not to go to Sharm el-Sheikh.

Iran’s nuclear program has been indefinitely stalled — or, as Donald Trump put it, obliterated. Its missile program has also suffered heavy losses, with Israeli strikes inflicting serious damage on Iran’s arsenal and defense infrastructure.

In this context, the United States seeks to use Iran’s relative military weakness, mounting economic strain, the decline of its regional proxies, and Hamas’s defeat to make Tehran understand the kind of peace and stability Washington envisions for the region — a peace built on accepting the new Middle East security order, where Israel is no longer the enemy but a recognized, established power.

From Tehran’s perspective, however, attending such a summit would amount to implicitly accepting a fundamental shift in the Islamic Republic’s foreign policy.

Recognizing Israel — even indirectly, through participation in a joint conference — could create a deep rupture in the Islamic Republic’s ideological legitimacy. Yet refusing to attend would perpetuate the same policy of isolation and stagnation that has left the country politically and diplomatically paralyzed.

Since October 7, 2023, the Islamic Republic has repeatedly found itself in unviable positions.

Had Iran attended the Sharm el-Sheikh summit at the presidential level, it could have marked the beginning of a new chapter in its regional and even global relations.

A Pezeshkian flight to Cairo would have symbolized the collapse of the Islamic Republic’s ideological core and suggested a historic turn toward negotiation and compromise. But repeating the old pattern — avoiding such openings — once again leaves Tehran isolated, or perhaps worse, on the verge of collapse.

Thus, the real meaning of the invitation lies not in goodwill or mutual respect, but in the pressure and testing designed by the United States and its allies to define the Islamic Republic’s future course.

Today, the Islamic Republic faces a historic choice: to adapt its regional policy and join the emerging order, or to persist in its old path and bear the growing costs of isolation, economic decline, and security erosion. So far, its choice — and the fate it leads to — has become increasingly clear.

US says ‘ball in Iran’s court’ after Tehran snubs Trump’s peace summit

Oct 13, 2025, 03:19 GMT+1
•
Samira Gharaei

Washington remains ready for “serious and direct dialogue” with Tehran, the US state department told Iran International on Sunday, hours after Iranian leaders declined invitations to attend a Gaza peace summit in Egypt chaired by President Donald Trump.

“We are ready to talk directly,” a state department spokesperson said. “The United States has kept the door open for serious and direct dialogue, even as Iran has consistently rejected negotiations.”

“Should the Iranians want to negotiate, the ball is in their court,” the spokesperson added, quoting President Trump. “They are the ones that stand to benefit from the negotiation.”

Iran’s president Masoud Pezeshkian turned down Egypt’s invitation to attend the Sharm el-Sheikh peace summit scheduled for Monday, where more than twenty world leaders are expected to discuss a post-war framework for Gaza.

Foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said he too would skip the meeting, citing ongoing US sanctions and what he called “threats against the Iranian people.”

The summit, co-chaired by Trump and Egyptian counterpart Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, will bring together leaders or foreign ministers from Germany, France, the UK, Italy, Spain, Qatar, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Pakistan and Indonesia.

'Betrayal'

Iran’s inclusion was met with conflicting reactions in Tehran.

Moderates urged the president to seize what they described as a rare diplomatic opening, while hardliners denounced any participation as a betrayal of the Palestinian cause and a tacit recognition of Israel.

Responding to Iran International’s query after Tehran’s refusal, the US state department reaffirmed Washington’s readiness for “full cooperation” in exchange for Iran suspending its nuclear program.

“Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon,” the spokesperson said. “Beyond that … it is not in our national interest to negotiate these issues publicly.”

Trump said last week that Iranian authorities had “been in contact” to express their support for the Gaza deal.

“Iran wants to work on peace now. They’ve informed us they are totally in favor of this deal,” the president told reporters on October 9. “We appreciate that, and we’ll work with Iran.”

Tehran summons Oman envoy over reports linking deaths to Iranian products

Oct 12, 2025, 22:33 GMT+1

Iran’s foreign ministry says it summoned Oman’s acting chargé d’affaires in Tehran on Sunday to protest what it called groundless media reports linking the deaths of two people in Oman to bottled water imported from Iran.

The summons came after state-affiliated Oman Observer cited Royal Oman Police as saying the country banned the import of bottled water from Iran after two people died from drinking a contaminated batch.

Abdolrasoul Shabibi, director of the ministry’s second Persian Gulf department, formally protested what he described as “unfounded and negative media coverage” of Iranian products and urged Omani authorities to clarify the facts swiftly.

Shabibi added that the incident had nothing to do with the Iranian company’s drinking water and was in fact “a family-related criminal case driven by revenge.”

The Emirati website The National quoted Oman's police as saying an expatriate woman died on September 29, and an Omani man died in hospital on October 1, after being in critical condition for two days.

The source of the poisoning was traced to a contaminated batch of Uranus Star bottled water from Iran, the report said.

It said laboratory tests confirmed the contamination after samples were collected.

It added that Oman's authorities began withdrawing the product from local markets and warned the public not to drink Uranus Star water.

Ex-security chief says Rouhani knew of Ukrainian jet downing

Oct 12, 2025, 11:38 GMT+1

Iran’s former top security official Ali Shamkhani has said then-president Hassan Rouhani was promptly informed after the Revolutionary Guards downed a Ukrainian passenger jet in 2020, contradicting public denials by Rouhani’s aides.

In a 90-minute video interview published Sunday on YouTube by filmmaker Javad Mogouei, Shamkhani, former secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, addressed sensitive military and intelligence matters, including the former President Ebrahim Raisi helicopter crash and Iran’s nuclear policy. The video was briefly removed from the channel before being restored.

Shamkhani said then-armed forces chief Mohammad Bagheri called him after the downing of the jet and said “the guys mistakenly shot down the Ukrainian plane.” Shamkhani said he immediately relayed the message to Rouhani.

Ukraine International Airlines flight PS752 was struck by two IRGC missiles on January 8, 2020, shortly after takeoff from Tehran, killing 176 people. In May 2025, Mahmoud Vaezi, Rouhani’s former chief of staff, said Rouhani only found out two days later during a national security meeting.

Shamkhani said there was pressure within the Supreme National Security Council to blame the crash on US electronic warfare. “There was no reason for secrecy,” he said. “It would have come out, and no one would benefit from hiding it.”

Helicopter crash “may exceed technical diagnosis”

The former security chief also addressed speculation around the May 2024 helicopter crash that killed president Ebrahim Raisi and foreign minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian.

Although military investigators concluded “nothing happened” during the flight, Shamkhani said suspicions of an assassination attempt increased after the 12-day war with Israel.

“Technically it was reviewed, and no foreign involvement was found,” he said. “But it’s possible the cause lies beyond our technical ability to detect.”

Elsewhere in the interview, Shamkhani said he regretted Iran had not pursued a nuclear bomb under president Mohammad Khatami. “If I went back to that period, I would definitely seek an atomic bomb,” he said.

On threats to close the Strait of Hormuz, he said such action would require extreme escalation. “We haven’t reached that point yet.”

Scorsese urges streaming giants to spotlight Iranian filmmakers

Oct 12, 2025, 02:00 GMT+1

Martin Scorsese and Jafar Panahi shared the stage at the New York Film Festival, where Scorsese appealed to streaming platforms to promote Iranian cinema and Panahi reflected on exile, censorship, and the resilience of Iranian artists.

The event, postponed for a week because of visa delays, coincided with the US premiere of Panahi’s It Was Just An Accident, his Cannes Palme d’Or-winning feature, which was filmed secretly and inspired by his imprisonment, according to the Deadline website.

After winning the prestigious Palme d'Or, Panahi returned to Iran where he is banned from filmmaking. However, the ban has not kept him from doing his job.

The discussion between the two prominent filmmakers quickly turned to the condition of Iranian cinema and the challenges facing its filmmakers.

Scorsese asked about the exodus of major Iranian directors in recent years. Panahi said the loss had been devastating for the nation’s film culture.

“It was really difficult to bear … All the backbones of Iranian filmmaking are out. I really miss all those films that they could have made in Iran and they never did,” he said through a translator.

“I don’t have the courage and I don’t have the ability to leave Iran and stay out of Iran. I have stayed there and I’m going to work there.”

Scorsese urged distributors, festivals, and streamers to step in. “These films would have to be supported,” he said. “Streaming platforms have a lot of room. And they throw things … There’s no reason why, you know, a Criterion, Mubi, and Amazon, all of that, couldn’t show these films.”

Platforms should “curate them a bit” so audiences can find and understand them, he added.

Change and defiance

Panahi recalled being banned from filmmaking for 20 years following his arrest. “When they told me that I could not make films for 20 years, or write, or give interviews, or leave Iran for 20 years, I was in shock,” he said.

“50% of your energy and your strength goes into finding the way to … make a film. And you only have 50% left for creativity and for the work itself.”

Reflecting on the Woman, Life, Freedom protests, Panahi said the movement had permanently altered Iran’s public and artistic life.

“In my opinion, the history of these Islamic Republic is divided into before and after … This had affected everything. Of course it would affect cinema too.”

At this year's Academy Awards, four Iranian directors are competing in the Best International Feature Film category, each representing a different country, with a shortlist of finalists due to be announced on March 2.

Iran submitted Cause of Death: Unknown by Ali Zarnegar after a selection process that excluded films by independent and dissident filmmakers.

Among those left out was the critics’ favorite It Was Just an Accident, secretly filmed by internationally acclaimed director Jafar Panahi, who is banned from filmmaking.

Panahi's drama was in turn submitted to the Oscars by France while fellow dissident filmmaker Alireza Khatami’s The Things You Kill will represent Canada.

Shahram Mokri’s Black Rabbit, White Rabbit has also been selected by Tajikistan.