• Worldwide anger at state-run abduction 2026-01-04 21:07

    By staff writer

    Worldwide anger at state-run abduction

    The U.S. government’s unlawful abduction of Venezuela’s elected president has ignited protests and fierce condemnations across continents

    TEHRAN – The United States has crossed a dangerous line with its military assault on Venezuela and the kidnapping of President Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores. What Washington presents as justice is, in reality, a blatant violation of international law and Venezuela's sovereignty. By abducting a sitting head of state and declaring that the U.S. will "run the country," President Donald Trump has revived the darkest traditions of imperialism in Latin America.

  • Iran is not Venezuela: Play with fire, get burned

    By Shahrokh Saei

    Iran is not Venezuela: Play with fire, get burned

    TEHRAN – After the U.S. military strikes inside Venezuela early Saturday and the abduction of President Nicolás Maduro, Donald Trump appears convinced he can replay the same scenario in Iran.

  • We will not back down against the enemy: Leader

    We will not back down against the enemy: Leader

    TEHRAN – On the sacred occasion marking the birth anniversary of Amir al-Mumineen, Imam Ali ibn Abi Talib (pbuh), as well as the sixth anniversary of the martyrdom of General Qassem Soleimani, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, and their companions, the Leader of the Islamic Revolution held a meeting with the honored families of the martyrs from the 12-day War.

  • The law of the jungle: U.S. aggression tramples on Venezuelan sovereignty

    By staff writer

    The law of the jungle: U.S. aggression tramples on Venezuelan sovereignty

    TEHRAN – The early Saturday U.S. strike on Venezuela and the reported abduction of President Nicolás Maduro were not acts of justice or legitimate defense. They were manifestations of raw power politics — the law of the jungle — where might is imposed over right and international norms are discarded in favor of brute force. By bypassing international law and seizing a sitting president, Washington has spread instability across Latin America, undermining the very principles of sovereignty and self-determination.

  • Everything you need to know about recent protests in Iran

    By Faramarz Kouhpayeh 

    Everything you need to know about recent protests in Iran

    And what the anxious reactions from Washington and Tel Aviv reveal

    TEHRAN - When protests over currency market volatility first broke out among Iran’s bazaaris last Sunday, the Tehran Times wrote that the peaceful demonstrations could be exploited by the U.S. and Israel—regimes that view protest in Iran not as a healthy sign of a living democracy, but as a tool to overthrow the Islamic Republic.