The US government, which has consistently prioritized unconditional support for the Israeli regime, has so far suppressed many professors and students in various ways for supporting the Palestinian people.
While the United States is recognized as the central hub of the global, inhumane human trafficking industry, the presence, share, and role of American governments and politicians in this human rights violation have deep historical roots.
Since mid-October, the Israeli regime has launched an assassination campaign in Gaza, and informed sources say the regime is seeking to evade its ceasefire obligations.
Referring to the fact that inspections are carried out within a framework determined by the Supreme National Security Council and the law passed by the Islamic Consultative Assembly suspending cooperation, the spokesman of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) said that so far, permission has been granted to inspect only facilities that were not targeted or damaged.
As the deadline approached, the U.S. Department of Justice released the first batch of documents related to the Jeffrey Epstein case—documents that are expected to once again spark widespread controversy and scandal, particularly for high-profile figures such as Donald Trump.
The establishment of a ceasefire agreement has failed to put an end to Israel’s campaign of genocide in Gaza and its attacks, as schools sheltering displaced Palestinians continue to be bombed.
The death sentence of Aqil Keshavarz, convicted of espionage in favor of the Zionist regime, intelligence communication and cooperation with the regime, and photographing military and security sites, was carried out after being upheld by the Supreme Court and following completion of legal procedures.
U.S. sanctions against the International Criminal Court (ICC), imposed in support of the Zionist regime, constitute an open attack on the independence of this international judicial body.
Data from the Israeli Tax Authority show that in just 12 days of fighting with Iran, the authority paid out $8.7 million in compensation for 56,766 claims—an unprecedented figure for a security incident in the occupied territories that lasted less than two weeks.