Breaking 11:24 Morocco advances green ammonia to secure fertilizer production 11:20 February 2026 ranks among hottest on record as storms hit western Europe 10:50 Defense stocks surge to record highs as US Iran war enters second week 10:20 Germany secures Patriot interceptor missiles from allies for Ukraine 09:50 Wall Street banks offer UAE staff temporary relocation amid Iran conflict 09:20 SAS raises fares as Iran war drives oil above $100 08:50 EU leaders clash over Iran war as divisions deepen across Europe 08:20 Volkswagen expects margin recovery in 2026 after difficult year 07:50 Ancient Egyptians used early white correction paint on papyrus manuscripts 07:20 EA cuts jobs across Battlefield 6 studios after record launch 07:00 Oil surge to $120 revives global push for renewable energy 16:15 Lebanon inspects markets to control fruit and vegetable prices 16:00 Oil above $100 fuels surge in global agricultural prices 15:45 Anthropic sues Pentagon to block AI blacklisting 15:40 G7 weighs record oil reserve release as war drives crude above $100 15:36 Love Brand 2025 | Audi among consumers’ Favorite brands in Morocco 15:30 Trump urges Australia to grant asylum to Iranian Women’s soccer team 15:20 Von der Leyen remarks on Iran war spark backlash among EU diplomats 15:15 South Korea plans fuel price cap amid Middle East tensions 15:00 Macron pledges support for Cyprus amid security tensions 14:50 India adds 24 billionaires, reaching 308 in latest global rich list 14:45 Sarkozy ordered to serve prison sentence in Bygmalion case 14:30 China’s inflation reaches three-year high as producer prices continue to fall 14:20 Iraq seeks World Cup playoff delay after players stranded by airspace closure 14:15 Tangier police seize 503 kilograms of cannabis resin at marina 14:00 Morocco shines on France Télévisions with new music travel show 13:50 Iraq extends airspace closure until March 10 amid regional war 13:45 Morocco emerges as key partner in EBRD green transition strategy for 2026–2030 13:30 Morocco launches Noor Atlas solar program with 305 MW capacity 13:21 Gunfire reported outside Rihanna’s Beverly Hills home, suspect arrested 13:20 Screen overuse raises alarms over child brain development 13:15 Love Brand 2025 | Mustapha Swinga among Moroccans’ favorite influencers 13:00 Several explosions heard in Doha amid escalating regional tensions 12:50 Saudi Arabia cuts oil production as Hormuz crisis disrupts Gulf exports 12:45 Casablanca police deny rumor about disappearance of two children 12:30 NATO intercepts second missile fired from Iran in Turkish airspace 12:20 McLaren criticizes Mercedes over data gap after disappointing Australian GP 12:00 General strike in Brussels: Royal Air Maroc cancels several flights on March 12 11:50 DJI Romo vacuum hack reveals global security risks

Iran denounces US nuclear test resumption as reckless and regressive

Friday 31 October 2025 - 08:20
By: Dakir Madiha
Iran denounces US nuclear test resumption as reckless and regressive

Iran’s foreign minister has publicly condemned the United States’ plans to restart nuclear weapons testing, describing the move as “regressive and irresponsible.” The remarks followed President Donald Trump’s surprise directive, issued via social media, ordering the Pentagon to immediately resume nuclear testing after more than three decades of moratorium.

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi criticized what he labeled as blatant hypocrisy, arguing that a “nuclear-armed aggressor” resuming atomic tests was the same power that actively demonizes Iran’s peaceful nuclear program. Araghchi, posting on X (formerly Twitter), highlighted that the US’s switch from a “Department of Defense” to a so-called “Department of War” further underlined the nation’s aggressive posture, claiming the very same US officials have threatened Iranian nuclear sites in violation of international norms.

Trump’s directive coincided with a meeting in South Korea with Chinese President Xi Jinping and was justified as a response to growing nuclear capabilities by Russia and China. The US president insisted his order was necessary to maintain parity after reports of new nuclear systems tested or displayed by both Moscow and Beijing. Experts argue, however, that the US already maintains a vast lead in nuclear warheads and that no compelling technical or military rationale exists for new tests.

The international community, including American allies and nonproliferation advocates, has widely criticized the shift, saying that it could unravel decades of progress on arms control and prompt rival states to resume their own nuclear weapons testing. Many analysts also warn that resuming US nuclear explosive tests would undermine the global nonproliferation regime, risking a new arms race and further escalating geopolitical tensions.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.