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Strikes set back Iran’s nuclear program as Tehran hardens underground sites - WSJ

Feb 26, 2026, 00:39 GMT+0

US strikes have set Iran’s nuclear program back by an estimated one to two years, with Tehran now focusing on fortifying underground facilities rather than quickly restarting enrichment, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.

Satellite imagery shows soil and concrete being poured over tunnel entrances and deep networks expanded beneath mountains near key sites, including areas close to Natanz Nuclear Facility.

“Analysts say Iran appears to be prioritizing survivability over speed, reinforcing hardened locations instead of visibly rebuilding centrifuge halls at Natanz or Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant,” the report said.

While experts believe Tehran may have concealed equipment that could support a smaller rebuilt operation in the future, there is no clear sign it has resumed uranium enrichment or moved toward a rapid weapons “breakout,” the report added.

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100 days after carnage: Iran economy reels from war, inflation, unemployment
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100 days after carnage: Iran economy reels from war, inflation, unemployment

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Ghalibaf defends Iran-US talks amid hardline backlash

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A nation in limbo: 100 days after the massacre, has the world moved on?

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100 days on: why Iran’s January protests spread across social classes

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    War-hit homeowners feel abandoned as Iran’s reconstruction aid fades

  • 100 days on: the anatomy of Iran’s January crackdown
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    100 days on: the anatomy of Iran’s January crackdown

  • Ghalibaf defends Iran-US talks amid hardline backlash
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    Ghalibaf defends Iran-US talks amid hardline backlash

  • 100 days on: why Iran’s January protests spread across social classes
    ANALYSIS

    100 days on: why Iran’s January protests spread across social classes

  • From instability to influence: Pakistan’s pivotal role in US-Iran diplomacy
    ANALYSIS

    From instability to influence: Pakistan’s pivotal role in US-Iran diplomacy

  • A nation in limbo: 100 days after the massacre, has the world moved on?
    INSIGHT

    A nation in limbo: 100 days after the massacre, has the world moved on?

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White House weighing Iran strike but prefers Israel hit first - Politico

Feb 26, 2026, 00:08 GMT+0

Senior aides to President Donald Trump privately argue that it would be politically easier to sell a war with Iran if Israel launches the first strike and Tehran retaliates against US forces, even as the administration masses firepower in the region and dispatches negotiators to Geneva to test one last diplomatic route, politico reported on Wednesday.

Despite this political calculus, the likeliest military scenario under discussion is a jointly launched US-Israel operation, even as special envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump’s son‑in‑law Jared Kushner head to Geneva on Thursday to try to reach a deal with Tehran over its nuclear program, the report said.

A senior official involved in the talks said those closest to the president still expect, “we’re going to bomb them,” and options range from limited “leverage” strikes on nuclear and missile sites to broader attacks that could include a “decapitation strike” against Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and top IRGC commanders, the report added.

Iran remains a 'very grave threat' to the United States, Rubio says

Feb 25, 2026, 23:29 GMT+0

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Wednesday that Iran continues to pose a “very grave threat” to the US, citing both its nuclear ambitions and extensive missile and naval capabilities.

“Iran poses a very grave threat to the United States, and has for a very long time…First and foremost, after their nuclear program was obliterated, they were told not to try to restart it, and here they are. You can see them always trying to rebuild elements of it. They're not enriching right now, but they're trying to get to the point where they ultimately can,” Rubio said.

“The other thing I would point you to, however, is that Iran possesses a very large number of ballistic missiles, particularly short range ballistic missiles, that threaten the United States and our bases in the region, and our partners in the region, and all of our bases in the UAE and Qatar and Bahrain. And they also possess naval assets that threaten shipping and try to threaten the US Navy. So I want everybody to understand that. And beyond just the nuclear program, they possess these conventional weapons that are solely designed to attack America and attack Americans if they so choose to do so,” he added.

Iran surges oil shipments amid US military buildup - Bloomberg

Feb 25, 2026, 23:03 GMT+0

Iran has sharply ramped up loading oil onto tankers at its main export terminal as the United States builds up military forces in the Middle East, a move that analysts say could signal Tehran’s efforts to secure crude before any potential disruption to exports, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday.

Shipments from Iran’s Kharg Island terminal surged to about 20.1 million barrels over February 15–20, nearly triple the volume handled in the same period a month earlier and equivalent to more than 3 million barrels a day – far above the country’s usual export pace, Bloomberg reported.

The rush to load tankers underscores Iran’s urgency to move crude before any potential disruption and highlights mounting geopolitical risk for global oil markets as tensions with Washington continue to simmer, the report added.

Evidence shows Iran tried to advance nuclear weapons, VP Vance says

Feb 25, 2026, 22:38 GMT+0

US Vice President JD Vance said on Wednesday that Washington has seen evidence suggesting Iran is attempting to rebuild its nuclear program, underscoring the stakes ahead of scheduled talks.

"Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon if they try to rebuild a nuclear weapon that causes problems for us, and in fact, we've seen evidence that they have tried to do exactly that. So the President sending those negotiators to try to address that problem, as the President has said repeatedly, he wants to address that problem diplomatically. But of course, the President has other options as well," he said at the White House.

Confront or concede: Iran’s brinkmanship reaches its limits

Feb 25, 2026, 21:47 GMT+0
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Farzin Nadimi

After decades of ideological expansion abroad and coercive control at home, Tehran’s rulers face a narrowed choice between two treacherous paths: Concession of power or deeper confrontation.

For forty-seven years, the Islamic Republic has anchored Iran to an ideology that promised dignity and independence but delivered isolation, economic decay and recurring crisis. What began as a revolutionary project hardened into a theocratic system sustained by confrontation abroad and repression at home.

Today, that closed strategic loop appears to be under strain.

January marked what many observers describe as a point of rupture. Security forces killed, wounded and arrested thousands during a nationwide crackdown whose brutality shocked even a society long accustomed to state violence.

The state crossed a political and social threshold, relying more visibly than ever on coercion to maintain control. Whatever legitimacy the regime ever claimed has gone.

Iran now faces a convergence of pressures: economic exhaustion, widespread public frustration, continued international isolation and a credible threat of force from the United States. The familiar formula—delay and deflect diplomatically, escalate through regional partners and expand military capabilities—no longer guarantees stability.

At the center of this crisis lies ideological overreach that has become financially burdensome and strategically counterproductive.

Tens of billions of dollars (or over $100 billion if we consider the entire economic burden) have been invested in uranium enrichment to preserve what officials describe as a “nuclear option.” Rather than delivering security, this path has triggered successive rounds of sanctions and intensified isolation.

Billions more have gone into hardened missile infrastructure and underground facilities designed to project deterrence beyond Iran’s borders.

Supporters call these systems defensive; critics see them as instruments of coercion that have deepened confrontation without producing durable stability.

The same logic shaped Tehran’s network of allied militias across the Middle East. Built to extend influence and encircle adversaries, this proxy architecture was intended to provide strategic depth at relatively low cost. Instead, it has drawn Iran into repeated confrontations with militaries vastly more powerful than its own and entrenched a cycle of escalation.

At home, the Revolutionary Guard and Basij remain the state’s primary instruments of control. Their central mission has increasingly been the suppression of domestic unrest.

Each protest wave met with force further widens the gap between state and society.Continued reliance on coercion risks destabilizing Iranian society and the wider region.

Meanwhile, the United States has shifted into what appears to be a posture of sustained coercive pressure. Strike aircraft supported by aerial tankers; strategic bombers waiting at home to embark on global strike missions; intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) aircraft; layered air and missile defenses, and a reinforced naval presence including two carrier strike groups near critical waterways signal both capability and resolve.

Washington now possesses credible means to target Iran’s air defenses, command structures, missile forces, naval assets and military and nuclear industries for major effects without repeating the large-scale ground wars of the past.

The message, however, is not that war is inevitable. Rather, it is that Iran’s long-standing brinkmanship strategy may be reaching its limits. It is time for Tehran to decide. This does not necessarily mean surrender, but strategic realism.

In 1988, after eight devastating years of war with Iraq, the Islamic Republic’s founder and first supreme leader Ruhollah Khomeini accepted a ceasefire he described as “drinking from poisonous chalice.” The decision was politically humiliating for many within the revolutionary establishment, yet it prevented further destruction and preserved the state.

Iran may now confront a comparable moment of transformation. Accepting strategic capitulation would not necessarily mean dismantling the state or abandoning national defense. It would mean relinquishing powers and institutions, such as IRGC and Basij, that have contributed to oppression and prolonged isolation, halting uranium enrichment, placing missile programs under verifiable constraints, severing relations with proxy militias as instruments of foreign policy and ending existential rhetoric toward regional adversaries.

In return, Iran could pursue what many of its citizens have long sought: economic recovery, sanctions relief and diplomatic normalization.

Yet, after the events of January 2026, those gains alone may not satisfy public expectations. A growing segment of Iranian society is demanding fundamental political change and a credible path toward secular democracy and free elections in Iran.

The alternative is military attrition layered atop economic fragility and domestic unrest. Infrastructure would degrade further. Isolation would deepen. Public anger would intensify. Repression might temporarily contain dissent but would likely compound long-term instability.

History is ruthless with rulers who mistake ideological stubbornness for strength.

Those ruling Iran still have a narrowing window to prioritize real national interests over ideological expansion. Durable power rests not only in centrifuge halls and missile tunnels, but in legitimacy, prosperity and social cohesion.

For decades, the Islamic Republic framed confrontation as strength and resistance as destiny. Now the shadow of war hangs over Iran. Whether it chooses a peaceful concession of power or renewed escalation with unforeseen consequences may determine not only its own future, but the trajectory of the country and the nation it currently governs.

The path less treacherous for Iran appears clear: stepping back from confrontation and allowing Iranians to choose their future, even if that means the end of an era for those ruling the country.