Umarkarim

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Umarkarim

Umarkarim

@Umarkarim89

Researcher @unibirmingham. Fellow @ProjectSEPAD. Ass. Fellow @kfcris_en. Views my own. Working on Saudi Arabia/Middle East.

Birmingham, England Katılım Ağustos 2012
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Zeeshan Shah
Zeeshan Shah@zeeshan_shah_dc·
Great to meet up with my good friend Roberto Neccia the head of the South Asia Desk at the Italian Foreign Ministry tonight for dinner in Rome. Though we did miss our friends @danilogiurdanel and @BabakVahdad!
Zeeshan Shah tweet mediaZeeshan Shah tweet mediaZeeshan Shah tweet mediaZeeshan Shah tweet media
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Firas Maksad
Firas Maksad@FirasMaksad·
Saudi Arabia’s delicate dance with Iran. “From the onset of the war, the Saudis informed the Iranians what will force a reaction and why,” Maksad said. “Even when #Saudi Arabia retaliated, communication channels with #Iran remained open to limit runaway escalation.” “Riyadh’s aim has been to maintain deterrence without tipping over into open conflict with Tehran”. More via @FT & @cornishft ft.com/content/bbab4e…
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Gregory Brew
Gregory Brew@gbrew24·
China has been telling Iran in private that tolls are a no-go. Notable that they are willing to agree with the US on it, and to say so publicly. reuters.com/world/china/ch…
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First Squawk
First Squawk@FirstSquawk·
MOSSAD CHIEF VISITED UAE DURING IRAN BOMBING CAMPAIGN: WSJ
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Hiba Nasr
Hiba Nasr@HibaNasr·
A second call between Saudi Crown Prince and UAE President.
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ᴅʀ. ʜ.ᴀ. ʜᴇʟʟʏᴇʀ 🖖🏾 ⚜️
This new report raises the question as to why Tehran didn't publicise this earlier on - about Riyadh and Abu Dhabi, and possibly others. Possibly to avoid admitting to their own domestic audience that this led to deescalation
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Timour Azhari
Timour Azhari@timourazhari·
EXCLUSIVE — Saudi Arabia launched numerous, unpublicized strikes on Iran in retaliation for attacks carried out in the kingdom during the Middle East war, two Western officials briefed on the matter and two Iranian officials said. W/@PHREUTERS
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Reuters
Reuters@Reuters·
Exclusive: Saudi Arabia launched numerous, unpublicized strikes on Iran in retaliation for attacks carried out in the kingdom during the Middle East war, two Western officials briefed on the matter and two Iranian officials said reut.rs/4nprq1q
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Jon Gambrell | جون
Jon Gambrell | جون@jongambrellAP·
APNewsAlert: DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (@AP) — #Kuwait accuses #Iran of sending an armed Revolutionary Guard team to attack an island in the Middle East nation.
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Umarkarim
Umarkarim@Umarkarim89·
Nur Khan base is in Pakistani capital not a remote strip somewhere in Balochistan. Such a huge development would never have remained hidden from local journalists and people alike. This story seems doesn't make sense.
Joseph Haboush@jhaboush

US officials tell CBS News that Pakistan allowed Iran to park an RC-130 reconnaissance and intel-gathering aircraft, along with multiple other aircraft, at PAF Base Nur Khan days after last month’s ceasefire, potentially shielding them from possible American airstrikes

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Babak Vahdad
Babak Vahdad@BabakVahdad·
CBS News reports that, according to unnamed US officials, Iran moved several aircraft-including an Iranian Air Force RC-130 reconnaissance platform-to Pakistan’s Nur Khan Air Base near Rawalpindi shortly after the April ceasefire announcement. Personally, I have serious doubts about this report for several reasons. - Nur Khan is a highly important Pakistani military air base located near the country’s military and political nerve center in Rawalpindi. Allowing Iranian military aircraft, particularly an ISR platform, to openly operate or “park” there during a major regional crisis would represent an extraordinary step for Islamabad. - An RC-130 is not just a transport aircraft but an intelligence and reconnaissance platform, making the alleged deployment politically and strategically sensitive. - The report also appears difficult to reconcile with Pakistan’s broader balancing strategy during the crisis: maintaining channels with Tehran while simultaneously avoiding a direct rupture with Washington and Persian Gulf partners (i.e. KSA, which signed on September 2025 a mutual defense pact with Islamabad). This does not exclude quieter forms of coordination or temporary technical arrangements behind the scenes. But, from my point of view, the broader narrative presented in the report should be treated cautiously unless supported by stronger evidence. #Iran #Pakistan #US #Geopolitics
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Andrew Leber
Andrew Leber@AndrewMLeber·
"[The] attack took place in early April around the time President Trump was announcing a ceasefire in the war after a 5-week air campaign & sparked a large fire and knocked much of its capacity off line for months" @summer_said & @shelbyholliday for @WSJ wsj.com/articles/the-u…
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Waqas
Waqas@worqas·
Israel's National TV, CBS, with a really fun story today. So many holes in it you can filter water through it. For example, JD Vance and the entire US military contingent landed on that very airbase for the talks. If Iran was stashing planes there, they would've noticed.
Joseph Haboush@jhaboush

US officials tell CBS News that Pakistan allowed Iran to park an RC-130 reconnaissance and intel-gathering aircraft, along with multiple other aircraft, at PAF Base Nur Khan days after last month’s ceasefire, potentially shielding them from possible American airstrikes

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Umarkarim
Umarkarim@Umarkarim89·
This is simply not correct !
Jennifer Jacobs@JenniferJJacobs

Scoop via @CBSNews: As Pakistan positioned itself as a diplomatic conduit between Tehran and Washington, it quietly allowed Iranian military aircraft to park in its country, potentially shielding them from US airstrikes, sources told @JimLaPorta and me. Days after Trump announced the ceasefire in early April, Tehran sent multiple aircraft to Pakistan Air Force Base Nur Khan. Among the military hardware was an Iranian Air Force RC-130, a reconnaissance and intelligence-gathering variant of the Lockheed C-130 Hercules tactical transport aircraft. cbsnews.com/news/pakistan-…

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Mehran Haghirian
Mehran Haghirian@MehranHaghirian·
A clear divide within the GCC on Iran: Saudi Arabia remains diplomatically engaged with the Islamic Republic, now with 6 calls since the war started. Along with: Oman: 5 calls & 2 meetings Qatar: 5 calls Practically no engagement: UAE: 1 call (VP-Ghalibaf) Kuwait: 0 Bahrain: 0
وزارة الخارجية 🇸🇦@KSAMOFA

سمو وزير الخارجية الأمير #فيصل_بن_فرحان @FaisalbinFarhan يتلقى اتصالاً هاتفياً من معالي وزير خارجية الجمهورية الإسلامية الإيرانية عباس عراقجي.

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Umarkarim@Umarkarim89·
Paris in clouds !
Umarkarim tweet media
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Randa Slim
Randa Slim@rmslim·
Spot on. “Any agreement with #Iran is unlikely to include meaningful restrictions on its missile program or regional proxy network, and will almost certainly acknowledge, at least implicitly: Iran’s right to enrich uranium, and its Hormuz straits control.”
Danny (Dennis) Citrinowicz ,داني سيترينوفيتش@citrinowicz

I hope these messages sink in within the administration: A. Iran does not believe it lost this confrontation. On the contrary, from Tehran’s perspective, it proved resilience and strategic staying power. B. Iran has no intention of capitulating or accepting Washington’s demands, not now, and not in the foreseeable future. C. No matter how much Trump threatens “the end of civilization,” Iran is unlikely to back down. Even if military confrontation resumes, Tehran is not expected to reverse course under pressure alone. D. The only realistic paths to an agreement are either: compromising on key Iranian demands, or pursuing regime change in Iran. If the administration is unwilling to commit the enormous military, political, and economic resources required for regime change, then it likely lacks the leverage to force Tehran to accept maximalist terms. E. Neither sanctions, blockades, nor other “silver bullet” pressure tactics are likely to compel Iran to fundamentally alter its negotiating position. Claims otherwise are increasingly detached from reality. F. Iran and its regional proxies retain significant capacity to inflict economic and strategic pain on Gulf states, particularly in the energy and maritime domains. G. Any agreement with Iran is unlikely to include meaningful restrictions on its missile program or regional proxy network, and will almost certainly acknowledge, at least implicitly: Iran’s right to enrich uranium, and its Hormuz straits control. H. Most Gulf states are deeply concerned about escalation and understand that toppling the Iranian regime would be extraordinarily difficult and destabilizing. I. The United States did not achieve a decisive strategic victory. Despite operational successes by both the U.S. and Israel, the broader strategic balance in the region has not fundamentally changed. J. Iran is not Venezuela. It is a far larger, more institutionalized, ideologically committed, and strategically resilient state with deep regional networks and a much higher tolerance for prolonged confrontation. The bottom line us simple: There is an illusion in Washington that Iran emerged weakened, isolated, and ultimately cornered by military pressure, sanctions, and the threat of escalation. From Tehran’s perspective, the recent confrontation did not end in defeat. Quite the opposite. The Islamic Republic believes it demonstrated resilience, survivability, and an ability to absorb enormous pressure without surrendering politically. In the eyes of Iran’s leadership, simply enduring against the combined pressure of the United States and Israel reinforces the regime’s central narrative: that resistance works. The administration must recognize an uncomfortable reality: coercion has limits. If the United States truly seeks to compel Iran to abandon its core strategic doctrine, there are only two possible paths. The first is compromise, meaning accepting that any sustainable agreement will have to accommodate at least some Iranian red lines. The second is regime chang. No more no less.No middle ground. #Iran #IranWar

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FT Energy
FT Energy@ftenergy·
Qatari gas shipment clears Strait of Hormuz after Pakistan-Iran talks ft.trib.al/bztpjft
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