Iran war: What is happening on day 51 of the US-Israeli conflict?
Tehran says it will keep the strategic Strait of Hormuz closed until Washington ends its blockade of Iranian ports.
Tehran says it will keep the strategic Strait of Hormuz closed until Washington ends its blockade of Iranian ports. Grouped from 5 articles across 2 sources.
Ranked reports inside the event cluster. Open any publisher link to read the original coverage.
Tehran says it will keep the strategic Strait of Hormuz closed until Washington ends its blockade of Iranian ports.
Iran closes Strait of Hormuz again until US lifts its ports blockade, hours after Trump said he was optimistic of deal.
Trump is racing against the midterms, Iran is betting on endurance, and Netanyahu needs a war with no end.
Prospects of an all-out peace deal between Iran and the US remain very slim.
From Gulf energy shocks to divisions among allies, the conflict has made strategic ambiguity harder to sustain.
Nearby clusters pulled from title, summary, and keyword similarity in PostgreSQL.
Redi Tlhabi speaks to economist Mariana Mazzucato on the Iran war's economic fallout and who’s really paying the price. Grouped from 2 articles across 2 sources.
The Congolese government stresses those expelled from the US are only in the country temporarily. Grouped from 3 articles across 3 sources.
Iran's navy shut down the Strait of Hormuz just one day after declaring it open. Tehran is vowing the shutdown will continue until the U.S. blockade is lifted – another hurdle for continuing peace talks. Correspondent… Grouped from 35 articles across 11 sources.
This blog is now closed. Our latest main story on the Middle East crisis is here. Separate to the Pakistani army chief’s trip to Iran (see post at 07:53 ), the Pakistani prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, and foreign…
Military journals provide tantalising glimpses into what Tehran’s military thinks and its priorities, including drones
More than 227,000 people have fled conflict in Lebanon for Syria. But there they have found a lack of housing, economic hardship and no real state services. Despite a new ceasefire, many say they will stay in Syria.