Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Iran Enters Geneva Talks as Trump Demands ‘Secret Words’ on Nuclear Renunciation

 By Palestine Chronicle Staff

Iran and the United States face renewed nuclear negotiations in Geneva amid parallel military signaling. (Photos: Twitter, Wikimedia Commons. Design: PC)

Iran detains foreign suspects, reinforces deterrence, and advances Geneva talks as US military pressure shadows diplomacy.

Key Developments

  • Iran arrested eight foreigners in the southeast for alleged links to “foreign intelligence services.”
  • Three additional foreign nationals were killed during a border security operation.
  • Authorities reported seizing RPGs, US-made rifles, and other weapons from safe houses.
  • Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi traveled to Geneva for a third round of indirect nuclear talks.
  • President Masoud Pezeshkian said he sees a “good horizon” for negotiations.
  • President Donald Trump reiterated he will “never allow” Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon.

Iran: Security Operation

On the eve of a new round of indirect nuclear negotiations between Tehran and Washington, Iranian authorities announced the arrest of eight foreign nationals in the country’s southeastern region for alleged links to “foreign intelligence services,” according to the Mehr News Agency.

The arrests followed a security operation conducted along Iran’s southeastern border, a sensitive area historically affected by cross-border smuggling networks and sporadic armed activity. During the same operation, three additional foreign nationals were killed, authorities said.

Officials did not disclose the nationality of those detained or killed. However, the characterization of the suspects as linked to “foreign intelligence services” places the operation within a broader national security framework, rather than a routine criminal matter.

Mehr reported that significant quantities of weapons were seized from targeted hideouts and safe houses. The reported arsenal included RPG-7 launchers, US-made M4 rifles fitted with night-vision devices, AK-47 rifles equipped with grenade launchers, and handguns.

Authorities further stated that during initial interrogations, the detained suspects admitted involvement in a recent attack on a police checkpoint in the central city of Kerman. That attack resulted in the deaths of three police officers and one civilian.

Iranian officials have previously attributed armed incidents in border regions to foreign-backed networks seeking to destabilize the country.

The announcement of the arrests, coming just one day before the Geneva talks, underscores the volatile security backdrop against which diplomacy is unfolding.

Geneva Track Advances

While Iranian security forces were conducting operations in the southeast, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi departed Tehran for Geneva to participate in the third round of indirect nuclear negotiations with the United States.

The talks, mediated by Oman, follow earlier rounds in Muscat and Geneva that both sides described as constructive. After the previous session, negotiators said they had agreed on “guiding principles” that could form the basis of a broader agreement.

Araghchi is accompanied by a high-level delegation that includes Deputy Foreign Minister for Political Affairs Majid Takht-Ravanchi and Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal Affairs Kazem Gharibabadi, as well as nuclear and legal experts.

Writing on X ahead of departure, Araghchi said the Iranian delegation would enter Geneva “with a determination to achieve a fair and equitable deal in the shortest possible time.”

He emphasized that the new round would be “pillared on the understandings forged in the previous rounds,” signaling continuity rather than a reset in negotiations.

Araghchi reiterated that Iran will “under no circumstances ever” develop a nuclear weapon, while maintaining that the Iranian people will not relinquish their right to “harness the dividends of peaceful nuclear technology.”

Takht-Ravanchi similarly stated that if political will exists on all sides, “an agreement can be reached very quickly.”

The American side is expected to be led again by US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.

The diplomatic process resumes amid heightened regional tensions and a significant US military buildup in the Persian Gulf.

Between Optimism and Warning

Iran’s senior political leadership has paired diplomatic optimism with explicit deterrent messaging.

President Masoud Pezeshkian said Wednesday that he sees “a good horizon regarding the negotiations,” adding that Iran’s leadership has sought to move beyond what he described as a prolonged “no war, no peace” equation.

Speaking during the inauguration of economic projects in northern Iran, Pezeshkian suggested that structured negotiations represent a deliberate effort to stabilize tensions while safeguarding national interests.

At the same time, Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf delivered a sharper warning. “All options are on the table,” he said. “Balanced diplomacy — or defense that will cause you regret.”

He warned that if Washington chooses “deception and aggression,” Iran would respond decisively. He also cautioned US President Donald Trump against relying on what he described as “incorrect information.”

The leadership’s dual messaging reflects a calibrated posture: readiness for diplomacy, but not at the expense of deterrence.

Pressure Elevated

In Washington, President Donald Trump addressed Iran directly during his State of the Union speech.

Trump reiterated that he prefers resolving disputes through diplomacy but declared that he will “never allow” Iran to develop a nuclear weapon.

He stated that negotiations are ongoing but said he has not heard what he described as the “secret words” — an explicit Iranian renunciation in Washington’s preferred formulation.

Meanwhile, the United States has expanded its military presence in the Persian Gulf region, deploying additional naval and air assets.

In parallel, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has conducted large-scale drills along the southern coastline and near strategic waterways.

The convergence of active diplomacy and sustained military signaling has created a tense but controlled environment, with both sides calibrating escalation without crossing red lines.

Our Strategic Assessment

The developments surrounding this round of Geneva talks do not suggest simple de-escalation. Rather, they point to a carefully managed phase of controlled escalation.

Diplomacy is active. Structured negotiations are underway under Omani mediation. Iranian officials speak of a “fair and equitable deal.” Washington publicly states it prefers diplomacy.

Yet the military architecture surrounding the talks tells a parallel story.

The United States has not reduced its military posture in the region. Trump’s State of the Union reaffirmed that diplomacy is being pursued from a position of force. The insistence on hearing the “secret words” reflects Washington’s effort to preserve leverage.

The key question, therefore, is not whether war is being abandoned, but whether it is being recalibrated.

Iran enters these talks in a markedly different position than during earlier negotiation cycles. Years of sanctions have not collapsed its state institutions. Its missile capabilities, layered deterrence infrastructure, and regional alignments have altered the cost calculus of direct confrontation.

The arrests in the southeast, continued IRGC drills, and firm rhetoric from Tehran’s leadership demonstrate strategic compartmentalization: diplomacy and deterrence are operating simultaneously, not sequentially.

The broader regional environment — ongoing Israeli operations, Red Sea tensions, and US deployments — forms the backdrop to the nuclear track. Any direct US-Iran confrontation would ripple across multiple theaters.

Washington appears to be maintaining the war option as structured pressure rather than immediate intent.

Iran, meanwhile, appears confident that time, resilience, and deterrence depth strengthen its negotiating position. That confidence is rooted not in rhetoric but in decades of adaptation under sanctions and isolation.

Geneva is therefore less a breakthrough moment than a stress test.

Whether coercive diplomacy can evolve into reciprocal agreement — or whether the region will remain suspended between negotiation and confrontation — will depend on what emerges from this decisive round.

For now, diplomacy proceeds. Military signaling remains. And the corridor between war and agreement remains narrow — but intact.

(Mehr, Anadolu, Al Mayadeen, Palestine Chronicle, Al Jazeera, Reuters, INA)

The Tehran Tangle: Why Washington’s Pressure Fails

By Mohamad Hammoud

The Tehran Tangle: Why Washington’s Pressure Fails

US President Donald Trump has reportedly grown frustrated that Iran is not backing down under the renewed “maximum pressure” campaign. Fox News points out that Tehran has stayed firm, and The Wall Street Journal notes the White House has not received any counteroffer, even with more US forces in the Gulf. This deadlock shows a key misunderstanding: Iran sees military strength as vital protection against outside threats, especially those tied to “Israel” and Western allies. Every new sanction or deployment only makes Iran more determined.

For years, US leaders believed that economic pressure would force Tehran to give in. But history shows the opposite: Iran has often used external pressure to accelerate its military and technological development. While Washington sees this as defiance, Tehran views it as patient endurance, measuring success by resilience and waiting for a long-term advantage.

Lessons from the Twelve-Day War

The Iranian military’s confidence today partly comes from the June 2025 Twelve-Day War. Al Jazeera reported that this conflict revealed weaknesses in traditional air defenses, prompting the Islamic Revolutionary Guard to adopt mobile, decentralized systems. Now, drones, precise missiles, and advanced electronic tools are central to Iran’s defense strategy, focusing on survival rather than matching other armies directly.

This shift also affects Iran’s naval strategy. According to The Associated Press, the Leader of the Islamic Revolution His Eminence Imam Sayyed Ali Khamenei has stressed that US naval power can be challenged with drone swarms and electronic warfare. Iranian state media has showcased homegrown encryption and jamming systems meant to cut off the command links that American carriers depend on. In tight areas like the Strait of Hormuz, even small disruptions could cause major problems. Iran’s goal is not to defeat a stronger force outright, but to make any intervention so costly that it is not considered.

The New Axis of Support

As the global balance shifts, Tehran has gained strong allies who want to see less American influence in the Middle East. Reuters reports that Russia and China have stepped up their "technical cooperation" with Iran, offering everything from advanced satellite imagery to microprocessors that circumvent Western sanctions. China has also provided high-end AI parts that help Iranian missiles make last-minute moves, making them much harder for systems like Iron Dome or Aegis to stop. This partnership means Iran is no longer isolated, but now plays a key role in a global alliance challenging Western power and intelligence.

Iran’s military buildup is supported by a homegrown industry that has learned to succeed under tough restrictions. CNN reports that Iran now makes its own fast "stealth" boats and underwater UUVs that can lay smart mines, which tell the difference between civilian and military ships. This technological leap has shifted the power balance in the Gulf, with Imam Khamenei even mocking the "impunity" Western fleets once enjoyed there. By combining Chinese radar with Russian-style missiles, Iran has built a "denial of access" zone that makes US planners think twice about direct action.

Trump’s Domestic Trap

Domestic politics make the situation even more complex. Politico notes that some conservatives oppose getting involved abroad if it seems to serve outside interests instead of US priorities. A long conflict with Iran could widen splits in the Republican Party, especially with elections coming up.

Economic issues make things even harder. Bloomberg reports that any trouble in the Strait of Hormuz could trigger a global energy shock, raising fuel prices and worsening inflation at home. These pressures force a choice between showing strength overseas and maintaining stability at home, limiting what the administration can do.

The Future of the Standoff

According to The New York Times, intelligence reports suggest Iran may be dragging out tensions on purpose to test how long the US and its allies can hold together. Instead of giving in, Tehran seems to believe that time and political fatigue are on its side. As a result, the maximum-pressure strategy has led to an unexpected outcome: Iran is now a stronger and more determined opponent.

Washington’s mistake is thinking that pressure alone will force Iran to give in. In Iran’s view, ongoing pressure only proves the need to resist. Whether US leaders change their approach or keep increasing force will decide the region’s future. The standoff continues not because Iran misunderstands US power, but because its defense strategy is built to withstand it.

Iran: Nuclear Justice and Peace

By: Haroon Aziz, Quantum Physicist, South Africa

The media wing of the USA military-industrial-media complex has created confusion over nuclear threat – serious and noisy threats. The serious ones are easy to contend with because they are based on scientific truth. The noisy ones are the difficult ones because they are based on opinions. They are used to manipulate public fears to generate raw profits for the complex.

Part One:

Introduction

At the heart of the ongoing struggle of the Islamic Republic of Iran against imperialism is its right to non-negotiable national sovereignty, security, and territorial integrity. It includes the right to peaceful nuclear power as a means to a modern, industrial, technological, 6G-Plus, and knowledge-based economy.

In November 1979 – barely nine months after the historic Islamic Revolution – USA banned the import of Iranian goods and froze $12-billion of its assets. It began developing sanctions as a weapon of war – now in its 47th year.

Unilateral sanctions

In the period 1979-1997 USA imposed five sanctions on Iran (Atlantic Council: 8 May 2018).

In the period 2001-2025 USA imposed additional 258 sanctions (United States Institute of Peace: 24 February 2025). They totalled only 263, according to USA sources. There is a period of silence in 1998-2000. Some Executive Orders are sub-divided into many ‘sub-orders’, which are counted as parts of the main Executive Orders.

But according to Dr Fatima al-Smadi at the ‘Iran and Palestine 1979-2026 Webinar: Masar Badil’ (12 February 2026), there are 8000 sanctions in four stages between 1981-2026. She is a professional researcher at the Al Jazeera Centre for Studies specializing in Iranian affairs.

These sanctions are the most comprehensive in modern history. There are also supporting sanctions imposed by European countries, Canada, and Japan. Why?

Gaza: the tiny aperture

Gaza is the tiny aperture-of-test through which worldwide decolonization has to pass to ultimate victory. Iran is the only state that fully supports the test. It gives USA excuse to destroy Iran.

USA is heavily invested in maintaining Israel as an artificial state to secure oil supply for itself.

Black Zionist Obama

President Obama pledged ‘unshakeable commitment’ to provide ‘security assistance’ to Israel. The ‘multifaceted cooperation’ MOU is for ten years (2019-2028). It is the ‘largest single pledge of military assistance in U.S. history.’ It is valued at $38-billion, payable in equal amounts annually. It ties USA and Israel in an incestuous military relationship, in which Israel is enabled ‘to acquire additional advanced military capabilities from the United States.’ 

The monetary value of it ‘includes $33-billion in Foreign Military Financing (FMF) funds and an unprecedented $5-billion commitment in missile defence assistance.’ It includes updating the fighter aircraft fleet and acquisition of outdated F-35s (to be superseded by F-47). It prohibits Israel to spend 26.3% of its annual FMF package within Israel on non-U.S. products and the purchase of fuel. The aim is to compel Israel to preserve its ‘Qualitative Military Edge’ amongst regional countries (mainly Iran).

(White House: Office of Press Secretary: Fact Sheet: Memorandum of Understanding reached with Israel: September 14, 2016)

The historic antagonisms

The origin of the antagonism between Iranian people and British colonialism dates back to 1890 when the Shah of Iran sold tobacco concession rights to Britain for £15000. Later, it secretly paid £500000 with borrowed British loan at an annual interest rate of 6% as damages to cancel the concession. It led to mass uprising.

The next major antagonism was against USA imperialism in 1953 when the CIA together with MI5 overthrew the democratically elected Mohammed Mossadegh government because it had nationalized the oil industry. USA and Britain re-privatized it.

The epochal antagonism

The year 1979 was the beginning of a new epoch in world history, viz., the Islamic Revolution in Iran. It overthrew the 2500-year-old feudal mode of ownership, production, distribution, exchange, and consumption of worldly goods – in Ten Days of Dawn (1-11 February 1979). And with it, it also overthrew the Pahlavi family monarchy, the structure of which was definitively broken by the industrial strike by oil workers in 1978 that halted exports of oil and throttled state revenue. Imam Khomeini (R.A.), through his unique hindsight, insight, and foresight functioned as the physical embodiment of unity – as the mobilizing ideological power.

The Revolution’s unique feature was that its birth was from within the Islamic ecosystem – free of Eurocentric concepts. It prioritized the creation of new human beings as human capital to manage society in new ways through seminal statecraft.

Islam and the primacy of knowledge

As Islam prioritizes knowledge, the Islamic Revolution initiated the ongoing renewal of the human mind. It shifted its illiteracy rate of 67.2% of men and 87.8% of women under the monarchy (UNESCO: 1966) to overall 98% literacy (UNESCO: 2023).

It had established the Literacy Movement Organization on 28 December 1979 for continuing education. Today it has 50000 instructors and 6000 administrators with branches located in 300 rural villages in 28 out of its 31 provinces. Today it has 843 universities for a population of 92.4-million (UNPF: 2025).

The Revolution still has its support base in the rural population and the peasants who migrated to urban areas as workers. It has the capacity to mobilize 20-million volunteers in its defence as demonstrated during the CIA-instigated proxy war of Saddam Hussein (1980-1988). This Sacred Defence War shaped Iranian national identity, as an aspect of patriotism to Iran/Islam, which sociologist Ali Shariati described as ‘sacred consciousness’.

What USA cannot understand

Islamic Revolution grew completely outside neo-colonialism and its ideology of western ‘human rights’, ‘liberal’ democracy, orientalism, and genderism. It has its own philosophical system.

USA fears that the present Muslim population of 2-billion is projected to grow to 2.8-billion in 2050 (Pew Research: 2025), outside of the present dying world order of colonized nation-states created by the Berlin Conference of 1884.

In 1839 Oxford University developed the idea of a so-called ‘commonwealth’ of nations to grant racist independence to ‘White’ Canada to subdue resistance by indigenous Indians. Cambridge University and British Foreign Office developed the idea further into neo-colonialism and ‘constitutionalism’ in the 1950s and 1960s in granting political independence to resistant countries in Africa and Asia.

(A Commonwealth approach to decolonization: Melanie Torrent: Cairn Info Journal: pp347-362: 2012/3 Vol.65).

What USA cannot manage!

Modern USA still does not know how to manage the new unanticipated phenomenon of Islamic Revolution. As imperial power shrivels up it becomes more vicious, fascistic, and militaristic at home and abroad. It resorts to militaristic diplomatic bullying that conceals its jitteriness. 

Iranians oppose what they ideologically call Gharbzadegi (Westoxification). They have demonstrated that modernization is possible without westernization.

A new sociological phenomenon

There is now the emergence of a new sociological phenomenon in world bourgeois history, viz., the Epsteinian/Trumpian billionaire class of paedophiles with raw economic/military power, which is averse to morals, ethics, and basic human decency. It made Gaza Genocide possible. It has captured foreign policy to serve its own private interests.

The MAGA project seeks to worm itself into ‘western civilization’ project in domestic and international affairs. In domestic affairs it has created ‘migration’ as a new metaphor for racism that aims to get rid of foreign Blacks, Browns, and others. In international affairs it aims to supplant European countries, which have become a burden on USA since WWII. It is forcing them to pay for their own NATO security. It is trying to extract money from them through tariffs, as a new form of extractive economy. It is also trying to decouple ‘free trade’ for itself from international rules-based order.

Munich Security Conference 2026

USA Secretary of State Marco Rubio addressed the Conference on 13 February 2026. The title of his prescriptive address was, Secretary of State calls on European leaders to defend Western Civilization. He said:

  • ‘Controlling who and how many people enter our countries is not an expression of hate or xenophobia. It is a fundamental act of national sovereignty. And the failure to do so is not just an abdication of one of our most basic duties owed to our people. It is an urgent threat to the fabric of our societies and the survival of our civilization itself.’
    ‘Mass migration is not, was not, isn’t some fringe concern of little consequence. It was and continues to be a crisis which is transforming and destabilizing societies all across the West.’

(U.S. Department of State: 14 February 2026)

Geneva negotiations

At the nuclear power negotiations in Geneva on 17 February 2026 Iran entered indirect discussions with circumspection and emerged with cautiousness to move deliberatively forward on technical, nuclear, legal, economic, and sanction issues – with trust-building – in the primary interests of the heroic and self-sacrificing Iranian nation.
 •     •     •

Part Two

The media as ‘soft’ war

The media wing of the USA military-industrial-media complex has created confusion over nuclear threat – serious and noisy threats.

The serious ones are easy to contend with because they are based on scientific truth. This forms the substance of Part Two.

The noisy ones are the difficult ones because they are based on opinions. They are used to manipulate public fears to generate raw profits for the complex. This forms the substance of Part One.

Science before opinions

Before forming opinions on nuclear power, there is a need to know the basic science of:

  1. Civilian nuclear power
    Military nuclear power
    The difference between fission and fusion
    The limits of uranium enrichment
    International law. 

Civilian nuclear power

This kind of power is used to produce electricity, nuclear medicine, medical diagnostic tools, radiopharmaceuticals and more for beneficial use by human beings.

Military nuclear power

This kind of power is used to produce bombs for the destruction of human life.

Fission 

This process is used to produce civilian nuclear power:
Heat is used to boil water è to produce steam è to turn the turbines è to run the generator è to produce electricity è through the light water reactor ç the splitting of nuclei produces large amount of energy from the uranium fuel.

Light water reactors use isotopes, enriched to 3-5% for commercial viability of the generation of electricity. For the research reactors, enrichment is up to 20%.

Light water is used to obtain controlled chain reaction. The splitting of one atom triggers only one more fission. Energy release is controlled.

(Note: Technical terms are used minimally in order not to distort truth from a set of facts in a historical context.)

Fusion

This process is used to produce military nuclear power. It produces bombs.
It requires uranium enrichment of more than 90%, which takes 15-20 years.
It involves light nuclei fusing together to make one heavier nucleus. Nuclear bomb making requires uncontrolled chain reaction.

The burdensome demands of bomb-making

To make bombs Iran would have to develop new processes and design and build new facilities to convert uranium gas to uranium metal. Then fabricate two fifty-pound (22.7kg) components and assemble them with high explosives for a gun-type weapon. Its explosive power would be equal to one kiloton (1000 tons of TNT).

This is comparable to USA’s tactical weapon. It would take Iran many years to make a low-yield weapon.

High-yield bombs have an implosive power of 20000 tons of TNT, which was demonstrated in 1945 by the USA army in Nagasaki, Japan. Testing of high explosives is needed for the design of complex bombs.

Production of nuclear bomb

For Iran to move into the extended phase of the production of nuclear bomb it would have to develop new processes, facilities, capacity, expertise, and technology to convert uranium gas to uranium metal and then enter into the overextended phase of fabricating metal and assembling them with high explosives into a gun-type weapon before entering the phase of manufacturing plutonium bombs. Finally, they need prior testing to its actual use on targets. They cannot be done in secret – thanks to satellite and seismic technology.

International law

International law permits Iran the right to nuclear energy that includes uranium enrichment.

Conclusion

The people who are on the side of nuclear justice place science before opinions.

Will the final agreement be curative or preventative diplomacy?
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Haroon Aziz is the author of the book, The Science & Politics of Iran’s Nuclear Power (2013). It was used by some diplomats at UNSC and IAEA in support of Iran’s right to nuclear power. He is a former prisoner and member of the armed wing of ANC.