World Desk
OSINT narrative-framing analysis: how state-aligned, regional-independent, allied, exile, and Western-mainstream sources frame the same world events.
AI-generated analysis from Apprised's automated desks, synthesized from cited sources and editorially accountable to J.A. Watte. How we report · Corrections.
Chart auto-generated from this brief's structured fields. See methodology for how the underlying data is collected.
The U.S.-Iran war has entered its 131st day with a collapsed ceasefire: Trump declared the interim deal 'over' and launched fresh strikes on at least six Iranian coastal and military sites, triggering Iranian retaliatory strikes on Kuwait and Bahrain — home to U.S. bases — while the Strait of Hormuz, carrying roughly one-fifth of the world's oil, remains the active battleground.
Bias-reviewed: MODERATE Independently rated by Kimi for political-lean, source-diversity, and framing bias before publish. Final orchestration and the published call are made by Claude, a U.S. model.
Executive Summary
The dominant narrative collision of July 9 is not whether the U.S. struck Iran — that is consensus across every source type — but what the strikes mean and who bears responsibility for the ceasefire collapse. Iranian state media frames the attacks as an unprovoked 'Zionist-American' war crime against a sovereign nation mourning its Supreme Leader, while U.S. and Western outlets center CENTCOM's shipping-protection rationale and Trump's 'ceasefire is over' declaration as the organizing logic. The secondary collision is geographic: Iran's retaliatory strikes hit Kuwait and Bahrain — both hosting U.S. military installations — a regional escalation that Gulf state media is covering with notable restraint, suggesting political pressure on those governments to stay quiet. Beneath the Iran war, two underreported threads deserve attention: Beijing's simultaneous pressure campaign on Taiwan's international space (flagged by ASPI with no Chinese state media acknowledgment) and the Mekong heavy-metal contamination crisis, where China is calling for a joint Thai-Myanmar probe while DVB-sourced activists are protesting outside the Chinese Embassy in Bangkok — a framing gap that exposes Beijing's attempt to position itself as arbiter rather than source of the pollution.
Narrative Collisions
U.S. launches fresh strikes on Iran targeting Strait of Hormuz-adjacent sites; Iran retaliates against Kuwait and Bahrain Consensus
- STATE-IRAN IRNA (irna.ir), Press TV (presstv.ir)
- IRNA describes the strikes around Ahvaz as an attack by the 'Zionist-American regime' that 'martyred' three people and wounded several others. Press TV leads with mass mourning in Karbala for the 'martyred Leader,' implicitly fusing the military attack narrative with a religious grief frame — presenting Iran as a nation under simultaneous spiritual and military assault.
- WESTERN-MAIN NYT (nytimes.com), Axios (axios.com), Reuters via Prothom Alo (en.prothomalo.com)
- U.S. Central Command said it was 'protecting shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.' Axios reports the White House is preparing for a 'multi-day or even multi-week exchange of fire' and that the campaign's length 'hinges entirely on Tehran's next moves.' NYT frames it as day 131 of a war that began with nuclear and missile degradation goals but has 'evolved into an open-ended fight over the world's most important energy chokepoint.'
- ALLIED-PRESS NDTV (ndtv.com), Dawn (dawn.com), El País English (english.elpais.com)
- NDTV leads with Trump sharing a video captioned 'Begging for Deal' and claiming strikes '20 times bigger'; Dawn notes the U.S. and Iran 'traded strikes for the second day running' over Hormuz and lists Iranian hits on Bandar Abbas, Bushehr, Chabahar, and Konarak. El País frames Trump as 'calling Iranian leaders garbage' and executing his own threat — emphasizing the personalized, escalatory rhetoric as the story's driver.
- REGIONAL-INDIE BBC Urdu (bbc.com/urdu), BBC Bengali (bbc.co.uk/bengali)
- BBC Urdu reports Kuwait's air defense system encountered 'enemy missiles and drones' within hours of U.S. strikes, and Bahrain sounded sirens directing civilians to shelters — details Western main headlines underplay. BBC Bengali asks whether Trump has 'any option other than negotiating with Tehran,' framing U.S. coercive capacity as real but its ability to force Iranian capitulation as unproven.
What it reveals: The 'Zionist-American regime' formulation in IRNA is a deliberate rhetorical move to internationalize Israeli culpability and delegitimize the strikes as colonial aggression rather than a shipping-protection operation — a framing aimed at Muslim-majority audiences globally. Meanwhile, Western outlets are largely omitting the Bahrain and Kuwait retaliatory strikes from their top-line framing, which understates how far the conflict has spilled into Gulf partner territory.
Khamenei funeral draws millions in Najaf and Karbala as Iran mourns Supreme Leader Contested
- STATE-IRAN Press TV (presstv.ir)
- Press TV leads with 'millions of mourners flooded the streets of the holy city of Karbala' for the 'martyred Leader of the Islamic Revolution,' using the word 'martyred' throughout — a loaded Shia theological term that frames the death as sacred sacrifice rather than natural or political circumstance, and implicitly connects the Leader's death to the ongoing American military campaign.
- WESTERN-MAIN BBC (bbc.co.uk/amharic via translation)
- BBC Amharic reporting notes that Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei was absent from his own father's funeral — a conspicuous detail Press TV omits entirely — and that President Pezeshkian and IRGC chief Ahmad Vahidi attended in his place. This absence signals possible internal political turbulence or security concerns that state media is suppressing.
What it reveals: Press TV's 'martyred' framing is a deliberate sacralization tactic: by theologically encoding the Supreme Leader's death, Tehran elevates any military response to the level of religious duty. The BBC-sourced detail of Mojtaba Khamenei's absence from the funeral is the single most politically significant data point in today's corpus that state media is actively suppressing — it points to succession instability at exactly the moment Iran is absorbing military strikes.
Iranian Parliament Speaker Qalibaf declares Strait of Hormuz will only open under 'Iranian arrangements' Consensus
- STATE-IRAN IRNA (irna.ir) via Asharq Al-Awsat Arabic summary (aawsat.com)
- Qalibaf issued a formal warning that 'any American attack will be met with a similar response' and that the Strait will reopen only on Iranian terms — a sovereignty maximalist position that frames Hormuz as Iranian territorial leverage rather than international waterway.
- WESTERN-MAIN Axios (axios.com), The American Conservative (theamericanconservative.com)
- Axios frames the Hormuz fight as an 'open-ended' campaign whose endpoint is undefined by Washington; The American Conservative — notably skeptical of the war — labels this 'Day 131' and notes Trump declared the interim deal over at the NATO summit in Ankara, contextualizing the Qalibaf statement as one in an escalating series of mutual ultimatums neither side is backing away from.
What it reveals: The Hormuz sovereignty framing by Iranian officials is a pressure tactic aimed at oil-importing nations (especially in Asia) who would be most harmed by a prolonged closure — it is simultaneously a threat to Washington and a signal to Beijing, Tokyo, and Seoul that Tehran controls the valve. The 'open-ended' U.S. framing from Axios suggests Washington has no clear off-ramp, which makes both framings strategically accurate and mutually reinforcing in their danger.
NATO Ankara Summit concludes with defense spending and Ukraine commitments; Trump threatens troop withdrawals over Greenland Consensus
- WESTERN-MAIN Atlantic Council (atlanticcouncil.org), Foreign Policy (foreignpolicy.com), Irish Times (irishtimes.com)
- Foreign Policy's headline — 'Trump Hands NATO a Mixed Bag' — captures the Western mainstream read: the Alliance wanted cohesion, Trump disrupted it with Greenland demands and troop withdrawal threats. The Irish Times notes NATO Secretary General Rutte called U.S. attacks on Iran 'absolutely necessary,' signaling Alliance alignment on the Iran war even as intra-NATO tensions over burden-sharing persist.
- STATE-RUSSIA RT (rt.com)
- RT leads its NATO-adjacent coverage not with the summit declaration but with Trump's offer to let Ukraine produce Patriot missiles domestically — framing it as a hollow gesture that Ukraine 'will not be able to' exploit, and citing Responsible Statecraft's skeptical analysis to give the critique a veneer of Western credibility.
- REGIONAL-INDIE Enab Baladi (english.enabbaladi.net), Tirana Times (tiranatimes.com), YLE Finland (yle.fi)
- Enab Baladi frames the Ankara Declaration as straightforwardly backing Ukraine. Finnish President Stubb publicly called for a 'European NATO' and announced France joining the Forward Land Forces battlegroup in Finland — a detail absent from most Western main coverage, suggesting European allies are quietly accelerating autonomous defense posture in parallel with the public summit messaging.
What it reveals: RT's focus on the Patriot license as a 'foolish' gesture is a textbook amplification tactic — citing a real Western skeptic (Responsible Statecraft) to validate a Russian-preferred conclusion without generating original analysis. The more substantive signal is Stubb's 'European NATO' language, which Western mainstream outlets underplayed: it suggests Finland and France are no longer waiting for U.S. reliability to be resolved before hedging toward European strategic autonomy.
Beijing intensifies campaign to narrow Taiwan's international space in 2026 Developing
- ALLIED-PRESS ASPI Strategist (aspistrategist.org.au)
- ASPI assesses that in 2026 Beijing is 'making international engagement with Taiwan more costly' through a sustained campaign to narrow Taiwan's diplomatic space and make unification appear inevitable 'without resorting to force' — a grey-zone coercion strategy that operates below the threshold of military action.
- STATE-CHINA Xinhua, Global Times, CGTN
- No Chinese state media coverage of this specific ASPI assessment appears in the corpus; the independent model read flags that three stories were China-filtered from the input, consistent with Beijing's standard practice of not amplifying assessments of its own coercive tactics against Taiwan.
What it reveals: The absence of Chinese state media coverage of Taiwan pressure tactics is itself the signal — Beijing's information posture on Taiwan in non-crisis periods is deliberate silence on the coercion campaign combined with aggressive framing only when Taiwan makes a visible diplomatic gain. The corpus gap (three China-filtered stories) is analytically significant and warrants conservative rating.
China calls for joint Thailand-Myanmar probe into Mekong heavy-metal contamination while activists protest Chinese Embassy in Bangkok Contested
- STATE-CHINA Thai PBS China via Mizzima (eng.mizzima.com)
- China calls for a joint Thailand-Myanmar investigation into 'heavy metal contamination of Mekong' — positioning Beijing as a cooperative problem-solver rather than a responsible party, and notably framing it as a bilateral Thai-Myanmar issue.
- EXILE DVB (english.dvb.no)
- Environmental defenders and NGO-COD networks converged on the Chinese Embassy in Bangkok demanding 'immediate accountability from Beijing for toxic transboundary pollution destroying northern Thailand's waterways' — directly attributing the contamination to Chinese mining operations and framing Beijing's call for a joint probe as deflection.
What it reveals: This is a textbook sovereignty-laundering move: China proposing a Thai-Myanmar joint investigation inserts Beijing as mediator of a crisis it is alleged to have caused, while simultaneously making Myanmar — a Chinese-aligned junta — a co-equal party in the probe. DVB's exile framing, grounded in ground-level protest reporting, directly contradicts the cooperative-partner narrative Chinese state media is advancing.
South Korea and Ukraine agree on North Korean POW fate; Lee-Zelensky summit in Kyiv Developing
- EXILE NK News (nknews.org)
- South Korean President Lee Jae Myung and Zelensky agreed to resolve North Korean POW fates 'in accordance with international law and their personal wishes' — NK News frames this as a meaningful sovereignty-respecting commitment for soldiers who may not wish to return to a state that sent them to fight an unauthorized war.
- ALLIED-PRESS Yonhap (en.yna.co.kr)
- Yonhap covers the summit through the lens of an ex-Trump official warning that South Korean nuclear armament 'would lead to heightened tension' — a separate but contextually linked story showing Seoul is simultaneously managing its relationship with Kyiv and navigating U.S. pressure on nuclear self-reliance.
What it reveals: The North Korean POW agreement is quietly consequential: it implies both Seoul and Kyiv acknowledge some DPRK soldiers may defect or request asylum rather than repatriation — a scenario that would produce the most significant North Korean defector cohort in decades and create a direct propaganda crisis for Pyongyang. This story is receiving no coverage in Western mainstream outlets today despite its strategic significance.
Regional Pulse
Middle East
U.S.-Iran war enters active Hormuz battle phase with strikes on at least six Iranian sites and Iranian retaliation against U.S. partner Gulf states.
BBC Urdu and Prothom Alo report that Kuwait's air defense system engaged Iranian missiles and drones within hours of the U.S. strikes, and Bahrain activated civilian shelter sirens — details that Western main coverage is not centering but that represent the most significant geographic spillover of the conflict to date. Iranian Parliament Speaker Qalibaf's statement that Hormuz will only open under 'Iranian arrangements' is being reported in Arabic-language press (Asharq Al-Awsat) but is absent from most English-language top lines.
- BBC Urdu
- Prothom Alo
- Asharq Al-Awsat
- Dawn
Europe
NATO Ankara Summit concludes with defense spending pledges and Ukraine backing, but Trump's Greenland troop-withdrawal threat and Turkish FM's antisemitism controversy shadow the communiqué.
Finnish President Stubb's public call for a 'European NATO' and announcement of French troops joining the Finland battlegroup — reported by YLE but absent from major Western outlets — signals that Nordic and Baltic allies are not waiting for U.S. reliability questions to be resolved. Notes from Poland reports hospital reform scandals amid a Polish public health crisis, a domestic story with EU-level implications that gets no cross-border pickup.
- YLE Finland
- Notes from Poland
- Tirana Times
- Enab Baladi
Southeast Asia
Bangkok Governor Chadchart Sittipunt wins re-election by breaking his own record margin; Thai parliament passes Peaceful Society Act without Section 112 amnesty.
BBC Thai reports Chadchart won a second term while the People's Party secured 22 Bangkok council seats — a significant consolidation of progressive urban political power in Thailand that Western press is ignoring entirely during Iran-war saturation. The Peaceful Society Act passage (306-141 with the Senate's version, excluding lèse-majesté amnesty) represents a formal legislative defeat for pro-democracy activists who sought Section 112 reform.
- BBC Thai
- Malaysiakini
East Asia
Apple supplier Luxshare slips in Hong Kong's biggest IPO of 2026; South Korea's parliament schedules July 22 hearing on football federation after World Cup exit.
Nikkei Asia's report on Luxshare's weak debut in Hong Kong's largest 2026 listing reflects investor caution about Chinese tech supply chains amid the Hormuz crisis and broader U.S.-China tensions — a financial signal Western business press is not connecting to the geopolitical context. South Korea's parliamentary football hearing, covered by Korea Times, is domestically significant as a proxy for broader accountability pressure on national institutions following the World Cup.
- Nikkei Asia
- Korea Times
- NK News
Sub-Saharan Africa
Ebola outbreak continues expanding in DRC and Uganda as EU Commissioner Lahbib addresses European Parliament; Nigeria's security dialogue convenes political and cultural leaders.
The EU Commission speech at Strasbourg flags Ebola spreading 'rapidly in a region marked by conflict, displacement and fragile health systems' — a 'crisis within a crisis' framing — but the corpus contains no direct DRC or Ugandan independent media coverage of the outbreak's ground-level impact. Premium Times Nigeria's national security dialogue is the only Sub-Saharan African institutional story with domestic political weight in today's corpus; West African coverage remains thin.
- EC.europa.eu
- Premium Times Nigeria
- BBC Hausa
Latin America
Venezuela earthquake humanitarian response continues; Caracas Chronicles documents collapse of Chávez's civic-military union under crisis pressure.
Caracas Chronicles — a Venezuela-focused independent outlet — reports that the June 24 earthquake exposed the fundamental failure of the Bolivarian State's civic-military union promise, with the military failing to perform the social cohesion role Chávez designed it for. The U.S. State Department meanwhile touts a 'humanitarian air bridge' to Venezuela — a rare instance of Trump administration engagement with a leftist-governed country, driven by disaster optics rather than political alignment.
- Caracas Chronicles
- State.gov
- Tal Cual Digital
Pacific
Solomon Islands and Japan sign 3-billion-yen development policy loan; CARAT Thailand 2026 opens U.S. Navy partnership exercise.
Solomon Star News reports the Japan-Solomon Islands loan (approximately SBD 150 million) for fiscal and economic resilience — a quiet but strategically significant deepening of Japanese Pacific engagement that directly competes with Chinese infrastructure influence in the region. The DVIDS-reported CARAT Thailand exercise, beginning July 6, is the U.S. military's counter-narrative to any perception of Pacific disengagement during the Iran war.
- Solomon Star News
- DVIDSHUB
State Media Coordination
Framing U.S. strikes on Iran as 'Zionist-American' joint aggression
Both IRNA and Press TV independently use the compound formulation 'Zionist-American regime' (رژیم صهیونیستی-آمریکایی) to describe the strikes — a coordinated rhetorical device that attributes Israeli agency to U.S. military decisions, aimed at mobilizing Shia and pan-Islamist audiences by inserting the Israeli-Palestinian frame into what CENTCOM describes as a Hormuz shipping operation.
Underreported
Analyst Roundtable
The Counter-Narrative Watch What state media is amplifying that Western press is underplaying, and the reverse
Iranian state media's most consequential amplification today is not the strike casualty figures — it's the religious framing. By embedding the Hormuz war inside the Khamenei funeral narrative, IRNA and Press TV are constructing a sacred-war frame: every U.S. bomb becomes desecration of a mourning nation. Western press is completely missing this rhetorical architecture and treating the strikes as a standalone operational story. In the reverse direction, the corpus's most underplayed Western story is the Bahrain and Kuwait retaliatory strikes. Every English-language wire lead I can find centers CENTCOM's Hormuz operation; the fact that Iranian missiles and drones engaged Kuwait's air defense system within hours — the first direct Iranian strike on a Gulf Arab state in this conflict — is buried in BBC Urdu and Dawn. That is not a footnote; it is a potential coalition-fracture event. Gulf states hosting U.S. bases are now directly in Iranian crossfire, and their silence in state media (WAM, SPA, KUNA produce nothing on the strikes in today's corpus) is itself a signal of how uncomfortable that position is.
The Bias Decoder Side-by-side comparison of one major story's framing across 3-4 source types
Take the single event: U.S. strikes on Bandar Abbas, Bushehr, Chabahar, Konarak, Sirik, and Iranshahr. STATE-IRAN (IRNA): 'Three martyrs and several injured in the attack of the Zionist-American regime around Ahvaz.' The word 'martyred' (شهید) does triple work — it sacralize the dead, frames the perpetrator as a religious enemy, and mobilizes the audience. WESTERN-MAIN (NYT/Axios): 'CENTCOM said it was protecting shipping in the Strait of Hormuz... the campaign's length hinges on Tehran's next moves.' Passive voice, operational framing, no Iranian dead named. ALLIED-PRESS (NDTV): 'Trump shares video of 20-times bigger strikes, says Iran is begging for a deal.' Personalizes to Trump's social media behavior, captures the psychological-warfare dimension Western wires underplay. REGIONAL-INDIE (Dawn): Lists every target city by name and notes Bushehr — home to Iran's nuclear power plant complex — was among locations hit, with power knocked out. This is the most operationally specific framing in the corpus and the most useful for an analyst trying to understand what was actually struck. The lesson: Western wires give you the political frame, NDTV gives you the leader's psychology, Dawn gives you the target list, and IRNA gives you the mobilization pitch. You need all four to understand what happened.
The Tradecraft Analyst Propaganda techniques visible in today's adversarial coverage — repetition, framing devices, omissions, manufactured urgency
Three techniques are visible in today's Iranian state media output. First, compound attribution laundering: the phrase 'Zionist-American regime' (رژیم صهیونیستی-آمریکایی) appears in IRNA's Ahvaz strike report as a fixed compound noun — not 'the U.S. and Israel' but a single fused entity. This collapses two separate actors into one, allowing Iran to invoke anti-Israel sentiment in audiences who might otherwise distinguish between U.S. military operations and Israeli policy. Second, martyrdom sacralization: Press TV's use of 'martyred Leader' for Khamenei is not accidental grief language — it is a specific Shia theological category (شهید) that implies dying in defense of the faith. Applying it to a Supreme Leader who died during a U.S. bombing campaign is a deliberate attempt to generate religious obligation for retaliation. Third, strategic omission of the new Supreme Leader's absence from the funeral: Press TV runs extensive funeral coverage without once noting that Mojtaba Khamenei — the man who now holds supreme power — did not attend his father's funeral in Karbala. That absence is the most politically significant fact in today's Iranian domestic story, and suppressing it is a clean example of omission-as-narrative-control. RT's technique today is different: citation laundering — quoting Responsible Statecraft's skeptical analysis of the Patriot license to give a Russian-preferred conclusion (Ukraine can't actually use this) a veneer of non-Russian credibility.
The Bullhorn Tracker Coordination signals — synchronized topic spikes across state outlets, near-identical phrasing, talking-point handoffs
One clear coordination signal in today's corpus: the 'Zionist-American regime' compound formulation appears identically in both IRNA's Farsi-language Ahvaz strike report and is consistent with Press TV's English-language framing of the strikes. This is not coincidental synonym choice — it is a standardized formulation distributed across Persian and English-language state outlets simultaneously, indicating central messaging coordination from the Islamic Propaganda Organization or equivalent. The coordination is aimed at two separate audiences (Persian-speaking domestic and diaspora; English-speaking Global South) with the same attribution frame. What's notable is the absence of Chinese state media coordination today on Iran: Xinhua, Global Times, and CGTN are either silent or running neutral wire-style copy on the strikes — not amplifying Iran's victimhood frame, not endorsing U.S. operations, maintaining studied ambiguity. That restrained posture is itself a signal: Beijing is not willing to publicly back Tehran during an active shooting war with a country it still needs for trade and technology access, but it is also not going to be seen legitimizing American military action in the Persian Gulf.
The OSINT Chair Synthesize the above into 3 actionable intelligence takeaways for a U.S. decision-maker reading this with their morning coffee
Takeaway one: The Bahrain and Kuwait strikes are the escalation threshold nobody is discussing. Iran hitting Gulf Arab states that host U.S. military bases is categorically different from Iran hitting U.S. forces directly — it forces Gulf governments into an impossible position and risks fracturing the informal coalition Washington relies on for basing access. Watch for any GCC statement or private diplomatic communication in the next 48 hours; the silence from WAM and SPA today is a warning sign, not reassurance. Takeaway two: Mojtaba Khamenei's absence from his father's Karbala funeral is the highest-priority succession intelligence gap in today's corpus. If the new Supreme Leader is unable or unwilling to appear publicly during the war's most emotionally charged moment, there are serious questions about his consolidation of power, internal IRGC dynamics, and whether Iran's decision-making structure is functioning coherently enough to receive or process a negotiated off-ramp. Any back-channel communication strategy needs to account for the possibility that the addressee is not yet fully in command. Takeaway three: The India-Indonesia BrahMos deal and Japan's Pacific loan to Solomon Islands are the week's most strategically underweighted developments. Both happened during Iran-war media saturation. Both represent Indo-Pacific partners making concrete, irreversible security commitments without U.S. facilitation. This is the 'alliance autonomy' trend accelerating in real time — not as a rejection of the U.S., but as hedging against U.S. distraction. A decision-maker focused entirely on Hormuz this week may miss the structural shift happening in the Pacific.
Source Diversity Audit
Blind spots: Gulf Arab state media (WAM, SPA, KUNA) is conspicuously absent from the corpus despite Kuwait and Bahrain being directly struck by Iranian missiles — their silence is analytically significant but means we are reading it as inference rather than confirmed editorial posture. Sub-Saharan African coverage is structurally thin: the Ebola outbreak in DRC/Uganda has no direct regional independent sourcing, and West African security dynamics (Nigeria dialogue notwithstanding) are underrepresented relative to their strategic weight.
Independent Cross-Check — Kimi
Consensus 10
US launches new strikes on Iran Consensus
Iran attacks Kuwait and Bahrain Consensus
Trump says Iran ceasefire is 'over' Consensus
Samsung showcases AI in education at ISTELive 2026 Consensus
Graham Platner suspends Senate campaign after sexual assault allegation Consensus
North Korea revises criminal procedure law, mandates defense counsel Consensus
China calls for joint Thailand-Myanmar probe into Mekong pollution Consensus
US Military Races To Harden Strategic Nuclear Bases With Counter-Drone AI Shield Consensus
Justin Bieber joins Madonna, Shakira and BTS for Fifa World Cup final half-time show Consensus
Ethiopia’s ‘Sunday Morning’ Wins at Annecy, Draws Disney Consensus
Sources
- Marcotti's Mini World Cup Musings: Messi is supern...
- Samsung Advances AI-Powered, Personalized Learning at ISTELive 2026
- Trump must not abandon his promise to people of Iran as collapse of Tehran deal looms - editorial
- S.629
- ইরানে কঠোর হামলার হুমকি ট্রাম্পের, দ্বিগুণ প্রতিশোধের হুঁশিয়ারি দিল তেহরান
- 청주 동물원 암컷 호랑이 ‘호순’이 하늘로…20살 생일날 안락사
- After huge Najaf funeral, millions more pay tribute to Iran’s martyred Leader in Karbala
- Apple supplier Luxshare slips in Hong Kong's biggest listing of 2026
- ผลเลือกตั้งผู้ว่าฯ กทม. “ชัชชาติ สิทธิพันธุ์” ทุบสถิติตัวเองเป็นผู้ว่าฯ สมัย 2 พรรคประชาชนคว้า ส.ก. 22 ที่นั่ง
- ایران پر امریکی حملوں کا نیا سلسلہ، کویت میں بھی میزائل اور ڈرون حملے
- Ba za mu taɓa miƙa wuya ba - Iran
- Parliamentary hearing on football federation set for July 22
- China calls for joint Thailand-Myanmar probe into Mekong pollution
- ইরানে আবারও হামলার যে কারণ দেখাচ্ছে যুক্তরাষ্ট্র
- German court jails Chinese doctor over ‘Driving School’ rape network
- Debutant named at No.10 as Wallabies playmaker merry-go-round takes another spin
- Iran War Live Updates: U.S. Launches New Strikes on Iran, Military Says
- גלעד קריב: "מנסור עבאס יכול להיות שר הבריאות. רבבות ערבים יצביעו לדמוקרטים"
- US military carries out fresh strikes on Iran, prompting Iran attacks on Kuwait and Bahrain
- What’s with Trump’s sudden fixation on communism?
- ایران پر حملے، سخت بیانات اور اسلام آباد معاہدے کے مستقبل پر سوال: کیا ٹرمپ کے پاس تہران سے مذاکرات کے علاوہ کوئی اور راستہ ہے؟
- U.S. forces strengthen Pacific security partnerships at CARAT Thailand 2026
- Ex-Trump official says S. Korea's nuclear armament would lead to heightened tension
- Estados Unidos cumple la amenaza de Trump y lanza duros ataques contra Irán
- Harapan-BN 'breakup' more tactical than permanent, say experts
- Graham Platner suspends Senate campaign after sexual assault allegation
- Sony Announces An End To PlayStation Discs & Everyone Hates It
- Del “bromance” en Dortmund a rivales en un Mundial: Haaland y Bellingham, un choque histórico
- South Korea, Ukraine agree to respect North Korean prisoners’ wishes on release
- Pro-Israel Democrat slams Netanyahu, anti-Israel candidate rails at AIPAC in Michigan Senate debate