The terror attack on an Iranian military parade over the weekend has changed the diplomatic calculus for Iran, regional countries and the United States.
Harsh reactions by hardline Iranian media and an odd unity between opposition and regime in condemning the terror attack on a military parade on September 22.
U.S. and United Nations officials condemned the attack on a military parade in southwestern Iran that state media said killed at least 25 people and wounded 60, an assault the country’s supreme leader blamed on “puppets of the United States.”
At least three people were killed and 20 people wounded in an attack on a military parade in Iran.
After 29% annual growth in 2017, net oil export revenues of OPEC members are expected to rise again by 30% to $736 billion in 2018, the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimated.
A political ally of Rouhani tells him to resign or get active and deal with the economy.
Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif says he and President Hassan Rouhani will go to New York next week to take part at the UN General Assembly meeting.
An advisor to Iran’s oil minister says, “If the United States has experience in imposing sanctions, we have experience in circumventing them”.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a September 16 tweet, "many countries are taking actions to leave Iran" as "a different set of rules" would apply to "anyone who wants to engage in economic activity with the regime in Iran”.
Iran's former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has levelled damning charges against IRGC Intelligence Chief calling him "psychologically imbalanced" and thus not fit for the job.
Claiming that Iran has the “upper hand” in the region, the deputy commander of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) has dismissed the possibility of a U.S. attack against Iran.
Load more