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US forces must leave region, Iran’s parliament speaker says

Mar 17, 2026, 06:49 GMT+0

The US military presence in the Middle East does not bring security and regional countries would shape a new order without Washington, Iran’s parliament speaker said on Tuesday.

Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said in a recorded video that security in the region should be established by regional countries and added that US forces needed to leave.

“The face and order of the Middle East will change, but not according to US plans,” he said. “We, the Islamic countries of the region, will establish regional order and security in the economic and security dimensions.”

He also said Iran had changed the design and system of its missile launchers after the 12-day war and that “the enemy cannot hit them.”

Ghalibaf also said the only goal the adversaries had achieved was the killing of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, adding that a “young Khamenei” has replaced him.

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Pay delays hit Iran security units as morale declines

Mar 17, 2026, 06:30 GMT+0

Signs of discontent, low morale, financial strain and desertion are spreading among parts of Iran’s security and military forces, Iran International has learned.

Members of the Special Units Command received a notice on Friday saying salary payments for some units had run into problems, according to people familiar with the matter. The delay marked the third time this year that wages for those forces had been paid late.

Following the delays, some personnel refused to attend pro-government gatherings, the sources said, causing disruptions in deployment in some major cities.

Retirees and some army personnel have also not been paid for a second straight month.

Some senior commanders accuse the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps of using the financial crisis at Bank Sepah to weaken the police force and strengthen other institutions, especially bodies tied to the clerical establishment.

Widespread overnight blasts heard across several Iran cities

Mar 17, 2026, 05:47 GMT+0

Explosions were reported in multiple cities across Iran early on Tuesday, including Tehran, Karaj, Shiraz and Abadan, according to witness accounts sent to Iran International.

Several blasts were heard around 05:15 local time in Karaj, while an explosion was reported earlier at 05:00 in Hashtgerd, west of Tehran.

In northern Tehran areas including Tajrish, Darband and Jamaran, loud explosions were heard between 02:45 and 03:05, with no fighter jet activity reported.

Further south, residents in Abadan and Khorramshahr reported dozens of explosions around 04:00.

In Shiraz, several blasts were heard starting at 03:40, with continued explosions reported in the nearby city of Sadra. Multiple explosions were also reported in Lar in Fars province.

In southeastern Iran, a strong explosion in Chabahar at 05:34 shook buildings, witnesses said.

Naval escorts cannot fully secure Hormuz shipping, IMO chief says

Mar 17, 2026, 05:08 GMT+0

Naval escorts through the Strait of Hormuz would not fully guarantee the safety of commercial shipping, the head of the International Maritime Organization told the Financial Times.

IMO Secretary-General Arsenio Dominguez said military assistance could reduce the risk to vessels using the waterway, but would not eliminate it.

“It reduces the risk, but the risk is still there. The merchant ships and seafarers can be affected,” Dominguez told the newspaper.

He also said naval protection was not a long-term or sustainable solution for keeping the strait open.

Iran seeks to shift World Cup matches out of US

Mar 17, 2026, 04:51 GMT+0

Iran is hoping to move its World Cup matches out of the United States and into Mexico, football chief Mehdi Taj said Monday, days after President Trump raised doubt about Iranian players trip to the US.

Taj said the federation is in discussions with FIFA about relocating the fixtures.

“When Trump has explicitly stated that he cannot ensure the security of the Iranian national team, we will certainly not travel to America,” Taj said in a post shared via the Iranian embassy in Mexico’s X account.

Iran’s sports minister said last week it would not be possible for the team to participate in the United States following US-Israeli airstrikes on Iran that killed the country’s supreme leader.

Tehran press turn to survival as war upends Iranian New Year

Mar 17, 2026, 04:23 GMT+0
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Behrouz Turani

In a normal year, Iranian newspapers would now be filled with stories celebrating Nowruz, the Persian New Year beginning March 20. But with war raging across Iran, front pages are instead dominated by headlines about security and survival.

After two weeks of upheaval — including the death of a supreme leader, the appointment of a successor and a war that has touched much of the country — Tehran’s newspapers are increasingly focused on the daily struggle of Iranians trying to make ends meet under fire.

Across the press, economic anxiety is now front and center.

The economic daily Donya-ye Eghtesad warned of a “red alert for the economic situation,” while Jomhouri Eslami struck a more pragmatic tone with the headline: “The need to be honest with the people in an emergency situation,” urging officials to “separate people’s livelihoods from politics.”

Coverage of the Strait of Hormuz also featured prominently on Monday’s front pages. The hardline Kayhan, whose editor is appointed by the Office of the Supreme Leader, vowed that “Iran’s response will make the enemies regret their actions in this war of wills.”

Ettela’at, another newspaper linked to that office, called on the government to “prevent looming famine and scarcity of goods,” taking a markedly different line from Kayhan’s “jihad economy” — a concept long promoted by the late leader Ali Khamenei.

It even suggested rationing essential goods during the Nowruz holidays, which typically last up to two weeks.

Economists quoted in several papers attributed part of the market turmoil to conflicting political signals and the Central Bank’s efforts to stabilize prices in the final days of the year.

Two key articles published Sunday, in Ettela’at and Jomhouri Eslami, captured the broader mood.

Ettela’at argued for “the priority of bread and ethics over political disputes,” criticizing political factions for turning people’s livelihoods into a battleground even during wartime. It urged officials and media to end factional infighting and focus on stabilizing prices to prevent further erosion of social trust.

Jomhouri Eslami, for its part, advised officials to remove advisers who mislead them and distract from the public’s real problems.

Three broad camps emerged in the press over the weekend.

Hardline outlets like Kayhan blamed the crisis on the war and called for resistance. Reformist papers including Etemad and Sharq described a deadlock and urged major change, including national reconciliation.

More centrist titles such as Ettela’at and Jomhouri Eslami framed the moment as a test of governance, calling for transparency, responsiveness and effective market control.

Despite their differences, nearly all newspapers agree on one point: the coming Iranian year, beginning March 20, is likely to be decisive for the country’s economy, its leadership and its social stability.