İran-ABD Savaşında 84. Gün: Ateşkes Görüşmeleri İlerlerken Tehditler ve Ekonomik Yük Artıyor
İsrail, İran'la süren savaşta F-35I savaş uçaklarının menzilini artırmak için Elbit Systems'e 34 milyon dolarlık sözleşme verdi. Ordu en yüksek hazırlık seviyesinde beklerken, İran da müzakerelerin başarısız olması halinde çatışmayı yeniden başlatmaya hazır olduğunu duyurdu ve ABD-İsrail saldırılarının sürmesi durumunda çatışmayı 'bölgenin ötesine' taşıma tehdidinde bulundu. Bu arada BAE'de bir nükleer santrale insansız hava aracı saldırısı düzenlendiği, Suudi Arabistan'ın Irak hava sahasından gelen üç İHA'yı önlediği bildirildi. Hürmüz Boğazı'ndan geçişler İran Devrim Muhafızları kontrolünde sürüyor. Operasyon yaklaşık üç ay önce ABD'nin 'Epik Öfke Operasyonu' ile başlamış, kırılgan bir ateşkes altıncı haftasını doldurmuş durumda. Pakistan arabuluculuğunda yürütülen ABD-İran görüşmelerinde taraflar anlaşma taslakları üzerinde çalışıyor. Trump yönetimi müzakerelerin 'son aşamada' olduğunu, 48 saat içinde bir çerçeve anlaşmasının imzalanabileceğini belirtirken, İran nükleer programının ilk aşamada ele alınmayacağı 30-60 günlük bir müzakere takvimi öngörülüyor. İran yeni bir teklif sunsa da arabulucu kaynaklar ilerleme konusunda karamsar. ABD'de yapılan bir ankete göre halkın yüzde 60'ı savaşa karşı çıkıyor. Savaşın ekonomik etkileri derinleşiyor: Petrol ve gübre arzındaki daralma stagflasyon baskısı yaratırken, küresel tahvil faizleri yükseliyor. Artan maliyetler nedeniyle Dünya Merkez Mutfağı Gazze'deki sıcak yemek dağıtımını yarıya indirdi. Hürmüz Boğazı'nın yeniden açılmasına yönelik bir mutabakatın sonuçlanmak üzere olduğu bildiriliyor; ancak İran uranyum programından vazgeçmeyeceğini vurguluyor.
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en güncel: 25 May- Güvenlik14 May 13:46
Israel to extend F-35I range amid war with Iran
Elbit Systems was awarded the development contract, valued at approximately $34 million (100 million NIS).
- Güvenlik16 May 06:01
Iranian president praises pope’s stance on war with Israel and US
Iranian president praises pope’s stance on war with Israel and US Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian expressed appreciation for what he described as the “moral and logical position” taken by the leader of the world’s Catholics regarding the recent conflict involving Iran, according to Tasnim News Agency. In the message, Pezeshkian said, “The attacks of America and Israel are not only against Iran, but against the rule of law and human values.” He added that Iran had targeted “the goals and interests of the aggressors in the framework of legitimate defence” and stressed that “The Islamic Republic of Iran still adheres to diplomacy and peaceful solutions.” Pezeshkian also said the international community was expected “to act responsibly against America’s illegal actions.” Pope Leo XIV presides over the funeral of Cardinal Emil Paul Tscherrig at St Peter’s Basilica, Vatican, 15 May 2026 (Andreas Solaro/AFP)
- Diplomatik16 May 15:33
Iran warns of readiness for war and economic costs as US talks falter
Iranian leaders and TV have ramped up pressure on the US with a stream of messaging to domestic and foreign audiences.
- Güvenlik17 May 03:05
Israel says military at highest readiness level for possible Iran war
Israel says military at highest readiness level for possible Iran war Yedioth Ahronoth reported that Israeli officials believe the military is at its highest level of readiness for a possible resumption of fighting with Iran. According to the report, Israeli and United States officials are continuing coordination at senior levels as both sides prepare for the possibility of renewed conflict. The report said Israeli assessments suggest Iran has restored part of its missile capabilities and remains unwilling to abandon its nuclear programme in exchange for sanctions relief demanded by US President Donald Trump. Israeli officials reportedly believe Trump would be more likely to order limited strikes on infrastructure targets rather than pursue regime change.
- Diplomatik17 May 02:58
Iran warns it is ready for renewed war if talks fail
Iran warns it is ready for renewed war if talks fail Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said Iran remains prepared to resume direct military confrontation with the United States if negotiations fail to produce what Tehran considers acceptable outcomes. In comments posted amid continued diplomatic tensions, Araghchi also argued that the war involving the US and Israel was having growing economic consequences inside the United States. Writing on X alongside an image showing rising US Treasury yields, Araghchi said: “Americans are told that they must absorb rocketing costs of war of choice on Iran.” The conflict, which began on 28 February, has disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a key route for global oil and gas exports.
- Güvenlik18 May 02:39
Iran-Israel war LIVE: 'Staggering' Iran toll drives up global executions: Amnesty
UAE reports drone strike at nuclear power plant; Saudi Arabia intercepts three drones from Iraqi airspace
- Güvenlik18 May 17:21
Iran makes new proposal for deal to end war, regional officials say
Tehran is said to have made or reiterated some concessions but source in mediator Pakistan appears pessimistic Middle East crisis – live updates Iran has made a new proposal for a deal to definitively end the war in the Middle East, officials in the region said on Monday, though there was no sign of any immediate breakthrough in the stalled peace negotiations. A ceasefire has paused most violence after six weeks of US-Israeli airstrikes and Iranian retaliation, but there has been little progress since Donald Trump said the ceasefire was “on life support”, and reports in Israeli media suggest a resumption of hostilities is imminent. Continue reading...
- Güvenlik20 May 13:04
Iran-Israel war LIVE: Iran Guards say allowed 26 ships to transit Hormuz in past 24 hours
IRGC Navy added that transit through the waterway was ongoing, with permits obtained and coordination carried out with the force
- Diplomatik20 May 14:06
Iran threatens to extend conflict ‘beyond the region’ if U.S. and Israel resume attacks
Iran's Revolutionary Guard on Wednesday threatened to extend the Middle East conflict "beyond the region" if the U.S. and Israel resume attacks against Tehran.
- Güvenlik20 May 20:31
Trump says Iran talks in 'final stages' to end war, as Tehran weighs proposal
Trump says Iran talks in 'final stages' to end war, as Tehran weighs proposal Sean Mathews on Wed, 05/20/2026 - 20:44 US president delivered another vague and contradictory message while Iran said US must end 'piracy' for any deal to be reached US President Donald Trump raises his fist as he attends the United States Coast Guard Academy commencement ceremony on Cadet Memorial Field in New London, Connecticut, on 20 May 2026 (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images/AFP) Off President Donald Trump said that negotiations with Iran were "in the final stages” as Iran said it was studying a new US proposal to end the war. "We're in the final stages of Iran. We'll see what happens. Either have a deal or we're going to do some things that are a little bit nasty, but hopefully that won't happen," Trump told reporters. Iran acknowledged that the US had made a new proposal, and said that Pakistan’s interior minister was in the country to facilitate communication with the US. Saudi Arabia welcomed what it described as Trump’s willingness to “give diplomacy a chance” and urged Tehran to make a deal. Middle East Eye reported exclusively that Trump called off a planned attack on Iran this week after being warned by Gulf allies and his own officials not to resume the war during the Hajj pilgrimage. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); Trump said he was dissuaded from attacking Iran on Tuesday by Gulf states. He told reporters that he would wait a few more days for the "right answer" from Iran. Trump also had a call with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, whose office said the Turkish leader welcomed the extension of a ceasefire and “believed a reasonable solution” to the conflict could be reached. Trump has whipsawed between claiming the US and Iran are on the cusp of a settlement and threatening to restart attacks. Control of the Strait of Hormuz Iran's chief negotiator said the US wanted to restart the war. Speaker of parliament Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf warned of a "forceful response” after Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said any renewed war would spread far beyond the Middle East. "The enemy's movements, both overt and clandestine, show that despite economic and political pressure, it has not abandoned its military objectives and is seeking to start a new war," Ghalibaf said in an audio message carried by Iranian media. Exclusive: Trump postponed US attack on Iran after 'Hajj warning' Read More » As the two sides positioned with statements, there appeared to be some movement in the Strait of Hormuz, where Iran and the US have imposed competing blockades on each other in a bid to assert their dominance over the waterway. Three supertankers carrying six million barrels of oil destined for Asia were crossing the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday. The oil is from Kuwait and Iraq. Two of the vessels are linked to China, and the third, South Korea. Shipping data company Windward showed the vessels sailing at the northern end of the strait, a route along which Iran has guided ships in order to inspect their cargo and impose tolls. US crude prices dropped six percent on Wednesday to around $98 per barrel amid the peace talks and transits through Hormuz. Control of the Strait of Hormuz has emerged as a centrepiece of the peace talks. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said on Wednesday that Tehran wants to establish a mechanism to ensure “sustainable security” in the Strait of Hormuz alongside Oman. It has previously sought recognition of its control over the waterway in the form of a toll. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); The US continued its campaign of seizing Iranian vessels in international waters. The US military said on Wednesday that US Marines had boarded an Iranian-flagged oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman. "American forces released the vessel after searching and directing the ship's crew to alter course," US Central Command, which oversees US forces in the region, wrote on X. Baghaei said that the US had to end its "piracy" against Iranian ships as part of any deal. "Despite the negative record of the other side over the past year-and-a-half, Iran is pursuing the path of negotiations with seriousness and good faith, but it has strong and reasonable suspicion over America's performance," he said. War on Iran News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0
- Diplomatik20 May 21:57
Trump says Iran talks are nearing an end but warns of more strikes
US President Donald Trump said his administration’s negotiations with Iran were “in the final stages” on Wednesday, while simultaneously warning of further attacks, as a fragile ceasefire concluded its sixth week with no sign of an end to the war. The US launched “Operation Epic Fury” close to three months ago, in a war that began with strikes inside Iran alongside key ally Israel, which has since spread across the wider Middle East region, killing thousands and disrupting global supply...
- Güvenlik22 May 00:00
Iran war live: Signs of progress amid efforts to reach US-Iran peace deal
A new opinion poll in the US suggests that 60 percent of Americans now oppose President Donald Trump's war on Iran.
- Diplomatik22 May 06:55
Iran war day 84: US-Iran talks advance amid mediation push
US and Iran continue mediated talks, exchanging draft proposals aimed at reaching a formal agreement.
- Ekonomik21 May 21:30
Not even a quick end to Iran war can save AI stock bubble now
The Iran war has baked in stagflation and starvation through big reductions in the supply of oil and fertilisers. This inflationary pressure will only increase. As inflation sucks liquidity out of financial markets and into the real economy, bond yields are being pushed up across the world. If bond yields rise by more than a percentage point, a likely scenario before the year’s end, the liquidity diversion could be big enough to pop the AI bubble. The US-Israeli war on Iran has disrupted the...
- Güvenlik22 May 17:23
World Central Kitchen halves Gaza meals as Iran war drives up costs
World Central Kitchen halves Gaza meals as Iran war drives up costs World Central Kitchen says it has cut its hot meal distribution in Gaza by half, warning that soaring food and fuel costs linked to the war on Iran have made its operations impossible to maintain at previous levels. The aid group, the largest provider of hot meals in Gaza, has reduced daily servings from one million to 500,000. The cut threatens Palestinians already pushed to the edge by Israel’s devastating assault and blockade, with Gaza’s population almost entirely dependent on aid to survive. It remains unclear whether other aid groups can fill the gap. The UN says its agencies also face funding shortages and rising costs, while one in five people in Gaza now eats just one meal a day.
- Güvenlik23 May 15:39
Iran, US could be close to breakthrough in talks for draft deal to end war
Senior US and Iranian officials said on Saturday they could be close to a breakthrough in talks to strike a draft deal to end the war in the Middle East. Iran said gaps remain between the parties, and the dispute over its nuclear programme would not be part of the initial talks. But US Secretary of State Marco Rubio expressed optimism, just as Pakistan’s army chief, a key go-between between the United States and Iran, left Tehran after two days of talks with senior Iranian leaders. “There is a...
- Güvenlik23 May 17:04
US and Iran 'getting a lot closer' to an agreement to end war, Trump says
The US and Iran are close to signing a Pakistan-drafted framework agreement to end the war, with a decision expected within 48 hours, according to officials who spoke in anonymity. The proposal sets a 30-to-60-day window to negotiate details, though nuclear issues are excluded.
- Güvenlik24 May 13:43
Trump turnaround: Open the straits, close the war
A new understanding with Iran is emerging to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. This comes after weeks of military escalation. The United States seeks to prevent global economic disruption from energy shipment issues. An agreement is reportedly nearing finalization, though details remain unclear. Iran denies commitments to give up uranium or unconditionally reopen the straits.
- Güvenlik25 May 10:00
Press review: EU must recognize Ukraine crimes as US-Iran deal unlikely end conflict
Top stories from the Russian press on Monday, May 25th
- Siyasi25 May 10:32
Iran's Jews: From ancient roots to the modern day
Iran's Jews: From ancient roots to the modern day Amara Sophia Elahi on Mon, 05/25/2026 - 09:53 Iran’s government is often perceived as antisemitic, but the country has a longstanding Jewish community dating back 2,700 years Photos of Etan Mabourakh's family in Iran in the pre-Islamic Revolution era (Etan Mabourakh) Off When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed the joint sessions of the US Congress in March 2015, just as President Obama was about to sign a nuclear deal with Iran, he misquoted the Biblical story of Esther in an attempt to thwart the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action from being signed, and to set out his case that Iran posed an existential threat to Jews and the state of Israel. In his speech, Netanyahu said the ancient Jewish people in Iran were almost killed by a Persian viceroy. However, it was an Amalekite official to the Persian court, Haman, who wanted to kill the Jews, but his plan was foiled by Queen Esther and her cousin Mordecai. The Persian King Ahasuerus instead ordered Haman to be killed and saved the Jewish people. It is said that the remains of Queen Esther and her cousin Mordecai lie in a tomb in the western Iranian city of Hamedan, which became an important pilgrimage site for Jews. In 2008, the Iranian government, under President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, designated it a national heritage site. Although Iran is perceived in the West as an antisemitic country, Jews have lived there for 2,700 years. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); “Compared to many countries in the region and certainly in the West, Iran has not had a history of anti-Jewish sentiment,” says Professor Farhang Jahanpour, a former dean of the Faculty of Languages at the University of Isfahan. “Most Iranian Jews regard Iran as their home and have a strong feeling of affinity for Iranian culture, literature, music and cooking.” This is true for Etan Mabourakh, who comes from a Jewish Iranian family that lived in the country for centuries until Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi’s reign (1941-79). “There’s a deep pride for Iranian Jews in our cultural heritage, and distinct traditions that we hold on to,” he says. “My father’s side hail from Hamedan, and we have a Hamedani cookbook with traditional Jewish recipes that I still cook dishes from to this day - on Passover we still practice the Jewish Iranian tradition of beating each other with scallions when we sing Dyenu. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); “These traditions are a real source of pride for us.” An ancient community Jews have been in Iran since the Babylonian exile in the sixth and seventh centuries BCE, when they were driven out of the ancient kingdom of Judea, part of modern-day Israel, by King Nebuchadnezzar II. They initially settled in what is Isfahan today, but Jewish settlements also spread out across the Iranian plateau. This exodus to Iran is recounted in the Bible, where there are also numerous references to Jewish prophets whose tombs and landmarks still exist in Iran today. “The Hebrew Bible speaks very highly of ancient Persians and reveals very close Jewish connections with ancient Iran and its kings,” Jahanpour explains. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); With the advent of Islam, the Jewish population in Iran continued to increase. Trade routes were a major appeal to Jewish migration there. “We have testimonies of Jews from the period when Islam came to Iran that they were actually very pleased to see the Muslim army coming,” Lior Sternfeld, professor of History and Jewish Studies at Pennsylvania State University, tells MEE. “The message of Islam and the recognition of the people of the book was quite liberating for Iranian religious minorities. They believed it might bring positive change to their status and protections.” Between the arrival of Islam in the seventh century and the acceptance of Shia Islam in 1501 as the state religion, there were times of stability and periods of repression for Jews in Iran, but by the 17th century, Jews were a tolerated and protected minority group in the country. Sanctuary, recognition and protection In 1906, Iran underwent the Constitutional Revolution under the Qajar dynasty (1789-1925), which resulted in the establishment of a parliament in the country. Jews were granted a parliamentary seat, which was a significant step because it meant that they were now officially protected and recognised in the country. “It ostensibly put them on the same level as the Muslim citizens,” Sternfeld said. Previously, they had experienced varying levels of discrimination under the Qajars. In 1839, a pogrom took place in the northeastern city of Mashhad, where Jews were forced to convert to Islam or leave. Jews in other areas also experienced harassment and violence. Their new status within Iran attracted Jews from other countries to migrate there under the Pahlavi dynasty, from 1925 onwards. Influential Jewish professionals from Germany started arriving in Iran in the 1930s. They emigrated because they were removed from their jobs after the Nazi’s race laws came into effect. Many Iranian Jews spoke multiple languages, making them valuable assets as Iran began expanding its economy and establishing diplomatic ties around the world. Photos of Etan Mabourakh's family in Iran in the pre-Islamic Revolution era (Etan Mabourakh) Jews from Iraq also started arriving in Iran in 1941, following the Farhud pogrom that killed more than 500 people. “The ethnic composition of the Jewish community in Iran at this time is very interesting - there are Persian, Kurdish, Iraqi and mountain Jews, as well as the Ashkenazis who were German and Polish,” Sternfeld said. The Ashkenazi Jews established their own synagogue in Tehran, which is still in existence today. During World War II and the Holocaust, Iran offered sanctuary to around 300,000 Polish refugees, of which between 5,000 and 20,000 were Jews. They settled in camps on the outskirts of Tehran, Isfahan and Ahvaz. Around 780 Polish orphan refugees, known as The Children of Tehran, were transported to Mandatory Palestine. “The decision to take in Jewish refugees from Europe was not a decision of the Iranian government - it was imposed by the Brits, and it caused some serious hardships for the Iranian people because all of a sudden there were food shortages and famine developed because of the large number of outsiders suddenly coming in,” Sternfeld explained. “Most accounts talk about the hospitality of the Iranians towards Polish refugees and Jews, however.” By the 1940s, Iran’s Jewish community became central to the Shah’s ambitions for the country. “Jews were well-positioned to integrate into the nation-building project of the Shah - the growing state bureaucracy, Iranian trade and sciences - and in a very short time they became visible and central to urban middle and upper classes,” Sternfeld explained. At this point, there were around 100,000 Jews in Iran, and the community continued to grow over the next three decades. The establishment of Israel When Israel was established in 1948, only a minority of Jews left Iran - numbers range from 17,000 to 20,000 from 1949 to 1953. In the 1960s, Jewish migration out of Iran effectively stopped. Iran was an early supporter of the Jewish state and maintained strong diplomatic ties, as well as supplying it with oil. In return, the Israeli army trained the Savak, the notoriously brutal secret police force under Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi. Life for Jews under the shah was not always harmonious. “The generation that came of age during Mohammed Reza’s time no longer carried the burden of Jewish persecution on their shoulders and they became much more Iranian,” Sternfeld said. Photos of Etan Mabourakh's family in Iran pre-Islamic revolution (Etan Mabourakh) “They went to universities, became involved in political activism and they shared the grievances of their fellow Iranians about the shah’s dictatorship. “They were also over-represented in opposition movements, and the shah didn’t cut slack for Jews in these groups, so many ended up being in exile or in prison.” Anyone suspected of harbouring communist or socialist sentiments was arrested, prosecuted or tortured by the Savak. Mabourakh’s family had to leave Iran when Pahlavi was in power. They fled to Israel and the US. “They were treated like second-class citizens,” he said. For Mabourakh, any restoration of the Pahlavi family in Iran would not materially benefit Jewish Iranians. “Reza Pahlavi has been reframed as this figure to bring Iran back to greatness, but the more you read about the brutal oppression of the Savak under his father, the more you realise it’s no better than what exists today.” Post-Islamic revolution When Ruhollah Khomeini, the Islamic Republic's first supreme leader, returned to the country after being in exile, hundreds of Iranians with links to the former shah were put on trial and executed, including Habib Elghanian, a prominent Jewish businessman, in 1979. This sent fear through Iran’s Jewish community, and its leadership travelled to the religious city of Qom the day after Elghanian’s execution to meet with Khomeini and establish what the status of Jews in Iran would be under him. This resulted in Khomeini issuing a fatwa separating Iranian Jews from Zionists. “The fatwa states that Iranian Jews are part of the nation and Zionists are not even Jews, they are a political movement that goes against divine messages, and so Iranian Jews are protected and Zionists are the enemy,” Sternfeld explained. Nevertheless, after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, Jewish migration out of Iran recommenced, and almost half of the community left over the next decade. Only a minority of Jews went to Israel, however - around 70 percent emigrated to Los Angeles in the US. Jews who chose to remain in Iran after the revolution had mixed experiences under successive Iranian governments, with some administrations allowing them more rights and inclusion than others. President Hassan Rouhani (2013-2021) was more open to embracing the Jewish community than his predecessors, and helped to push through legislation around inheritance and Jewish attendance in schools on Saturdays, which Jews recognise as the day of Shabbat. Iranian Jews today The number of Jews in Iran today ranges from 10,000 to 15,000. The country has the third-largest Jewish population in the Middle East - after Israel and Turkey - with most of them living in Tehran, as well as sizeable communities in the southern city of Shiraz and in the central city of Isfahan. Although this is a fraction of what it used to be, there is still a community that chooses to live there, that identifies as Iranian, and that is very much part of the fabric of Iranian society. With about 60 synagogues, Jewish schools, kosher butchers, bakeries and restaurants, Jews are allowed a comparatively high degree of religious freedom in Iran. While they cannot freely express any positive sentiment towards Israel, they have a more nuanced relationship with the Jewish state. “They make the separation between Israel as a holy place and Iran as their political homeland,” Sternfeld said. 'There is little which is Jewish about Israel': Haim Bresheeth on antisemitism and Gaza Read More » When an Israeli air strike on Tehran hit the Rafi-Nia synagogue last month, Iran's Jewish community publicly condemned the act, pledging their loyalty to the government and their commitment to defending their homeland. “The Zionist regime with its brutal ambitions has not only attacked the Muslim community but also the Jewish community,” said Homayoun Sameh, the Jewish representative to Iran’s parliament. Rabbi Younes Hamami Lalehzar, a Jewish community leader in Iran, similarly denounced the attack. “Beyond being an inhumane and terrorist act, this clearly shows that all the claims made by the Israeli regime about defending Jews are nothing more than a shameful lie.” Mabourakh, who works with the National Iranian American Council, expressed similar sentiments. “I felt disgusted that the synagogue had been blown up in a war that my tax dollars are funding. “The fact that so much infrastructure has been targeted - these are war crimes and we should call them out.” Mabourakh believes the response from the Iranian government after the synagogue bombing shows respect towards Jews in the country. “The Jewish community asked the rescue mission not to use heavy machinery to clear the rubble, to avoid damaging Torah scrolls and other items, so the teams used their hands to retrieve them,” he said. “I think there is a genuine respect from Iranian authorities towards people of the book, and this is not communicated in the West.” Inside Iran News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0
- Güvenlik25 May 13:29
Could Israel sabotage US-Iran deal?
As the US and Iran move closer to a peace deal, Israel vows to keep striking what it calls regional and nuclear threats.