US pledges 'unwavering' support for Iranians' rights fight
The United States on Friday expressed solidarity with Iranian people, saying in a message marking the fifth anniversary of Tehran's execution of wrestler Navid Afkari that Washington backed their struggle for freedom.
"Five years ago today, the authorities of the Islamic Republic of Iran executed Navid Afkari after years of torture and a sham trial," the State Department said in a post on its Persian X account.
The State Department said Navid Afkari’s case "reflects a broader pattern of systematic impunity for torture, forced confessions, and executions carried out without due process in Iran’s judiciary."
Afkari was arrested in 2018 and later sentenced to death for killing government employee Hassan Torkaman during antigovernment protests in Shiraz.
Before being executed in 2020, Afkari sent several audio messages from prison in which he said he had confessed to the murder only under physical and psychological duress.
"Through sham judicial procedures, this regime seeks to create the illusion of justice while denying fairness, fair trial, and accountability," the State Department said in its post on X.
"The United States condemns these actions and reaffirms its unwavering support for the Iranian people in their pursuit of justice, freedom, and human dignity."
At the height of Iran’s 2022 protests against the Islamic Republic, Donald Trump praised the demonstrations by the Iranian people.
“The people of Iran are bravely protesting against their corrupted and brutal regime, courageously facing down violence, persecution, jail, torture, and even death... we are with you and we will always be with you.”
Two US senators sounded the alarm over the violation of NATO-member Poland's airspace on Tuesday by pilotless aircraft from Russia and Belarus, as Moscow steps up fusillades against Ukraine with Iranian-designed drones.
Speaking to Iran International, the lawmakers hit out at the escalation to the war in Ukraine after Poland said 19 Russian drones reportedly violated its airspace on Tuesday but were thwarted by Polish and NATO jets and air defenses.
Russia has stepped up blitzes on Ukraine in recent weeks involving hundreds of drones each and including Iranian-designed Shahed kamikaze drones. It was not immediately clear if they were among the drones intercepted over Poland.
“Iran has, over the last several years, been a critical and active partner in Russia’s aggression against Ukraine,” Democrat Senator Chris Coons said.
“By providing drone technology and even producing drones inside Russia for use against Ukraine, Tehran has enabled Putin’s war machine.”
U.S. Senator Chris Coons (D-DE) speaks during a press conference following the weekly Senate caucus luncheons on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 12, 2024.
Moscow denied any intent to violate Polish airspace, saying it did not seek to strike any targets in Poland and questioning whether the drones came from Russia at all.
The Chairman of the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee said facts are still emerging but said Russia had erred in piercing NATO air space.
“Russia is playing with fire here. Putin has made a lot of mistakes, and this could be the worst one he’s made yet," Republican Senator James Risch told Iran International. "We’ll see how this unfolds.”
US Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman Jim Risch (R-ID) talks to the media on Capitol Hill in Washington, January 30, 2019.
'Open conflict' near
Poland, a former member of the Eastern Bloc under Moscow's tutelage for much of the twentieth century has become a staunch Western ally and base for NATO troops as the alliance's relationship with Iran, Russia and China has soured.
The drone incursion rattled its leadership, which warned of a dire escalation.
"This is the closest we have been to open conflict since World War II, but there is no reason to believe we're on the brink of war," Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk told parliament.
Iran provides drone technology to Russia for its war against Ukraine, prompting a series of punitive sanctions from the United States and European Union.
Belarus, a close ally of Russia, confirmed the drones had entered Polish airspace, calling it an accident after the drones' navigation systems were jammed.
Western leaders have frequently warned against what they see as deepening security cooperation among their Eurasian adversaries Russia, Iran, China and North Korea.
After the incidents, Warsaw invoked Article 4 of NATO's charter which enables closer coordination with all NATO member states. A UN Security Council meeting to discuss the developments is scheduled for Friday.
Poland closed all border crossings with Belarus ahead of the joint Russia-Belarus Zapad 2025 military exercises, citing alleged security risks and Russian aggression.
Talks on a prisoner swap between Iran and France were in their final stage, state media reported late Thursday, and potentially involve French detainees in Iran and an Iranian woman jailed in Paris.
Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told state television the process was moving forward. “Negotiations are in their final stages,” he said. “We hope the process will be completed in the coming days.”
The detainee in France is Mahdieh Esfandiari, 39, who has been held in Fresnes prison near Paris since March on charges of glorifying terrorism. Prosecutors said she posted messages on Telegram in support of Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack in Israel, which they considered incitement to terrorism and insults against the Jewish community.
On Friday, outgoing French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said Paris was demanding the “immediate and unconditional” release of its nationals. “France has always called for the immediate and unconditional release of our compatriots in Iran,” he told France Inter radio, declining to comment on Araghchi’s remarks.
Among those imprisoned are Cecile Kohler and her husband, Jacques Paris, detained in May 2022. Iranian authorities accused them of spying for Israel and trying to stir labor protests, charges their families call baseless.
They have been held for more than three years under conditions family members describe as harsh, with limited access to lawyers and relatives.
Kohler's sister Noemie told Iran International that the family had not been informed about any progress and was wary of the reports.
"Unfortunately, we have no information beside what is said in the media," she said. "We are very cautious regarding this statement."
A third detainee is 19-year-old dual national Lennart Monterlos, who disappeared in Iran in June while cycling. Araghchi confirmed his arrest in July without specifying the charges.
Araghchi said Iran’s judiciary and security agencies were involved in the process and that practical steps would follow once legal procedures were complete. Tehran rejects Western accusations that it detains foreign nationals as leverage in disputes.
Rights groups say Iran has a record of detaining foreigners for political ends. Human Rights Watch and others have described such cases as “state hostage-taking.”
A onetime Iranian security chief whom a lawsuit accuses of torturing anti-Shah dissidents transferred more than $20 million abroad before fleeing to the United States in 1978, the Guardian reported on Thursday citing leaked diplomatic documents.
Parviz Sabeti later westernized his and his wife’s names to Peter and Nancy after settling in Florida, the report said. The lawsuit against him by three plaintiffs describing themselves as former political prisoners seeks $225 million in damages.
Using those aliases, Sabeti established a successful real estate development company in central Florida, while he, his wife and their two daughters were listed as directors of several active firms, the report said.
The family own at least eight properties in Orange County, including a $3.5m mansion in a community called Windermere purchased in 2005, it added
Sabeti served as a top official in Iran's secret police, SAVAK, from 1973 to 1978. He resurfaced publicly during Iran’s widespread 2022 protests after decades out of view.
Sara Colón, an attorney for the plaintiffs, welcomed the Florida court’s rejection of Sabeti’s dismissal motions and its order to preserve her clients’ anonymity, telling the Guardian the ruling was a “positive result for survivors of torture who are seeking accountability and justice.”
Colón added that plaintiffs had been subjected to death threats and intimidation since filing the lawsuit.
An advocacy group for victims of torture and their families, The Iranian Collective for Justice & Accountability, said it hoped the Sabeti case would help end a “cycle of violence.”
“All victims deserve justice, and everyone engaged in torture and repression should be held accountable,” the Guardian quoted a spokesperson for the group as saying.
Conservative organizer and activist Charlie Kirk, who was killed by an unknown assassin on Wednesday, had praised the Iranian-American community and supported US attacks on the Islamic Republic in June while generally supporting its foe Israel.
A video clip of him debating on a university campus has been widely shared by Iranians on social media and depicts him lauding immigrants from Iran as hardworking and successful in any field they pursue in the United States.
Kirk was engaging with students on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) and asserted that Iranians fleeing their homeland succeeded admirably due in America's free-market economy and merit-based system.
“Iranians, Persians, you guys do not need DEI. You are the most successful immigrant group in America by far, because you are some of the smartest, hardest-working people, and you did that without any favors or handouts,” Kirk said.
“Persians have benefited from the idea: do not give me anything, do not give stuff, just give me a chance. And because of that, Persians or former Iranians are some of the wealthiest groups in the history of America,” he added.
The American left would seek to class Iranians as white, Kirk said, to deprive them of their deserved status and privilege other minorities.
'NO WAR'
Despite opposing US military entanglements in the Middle East for years, Kirk broke with some of US President Trump's other staunch supporters by strongly supporting his decision to launch attacks on three major nuclear sites on June 22.
In 2020, Kirk had warned against a war with Iran following Trump's move to assassinate Iranian general Qassem Soleimani in a drone strike in Iraq.
"Iran is an evil regime It was correct to meet an embassy attack with force. Critical we remain restrained and disciplined against another endless, reckless war in the region. Our future is not in the Middle East Sand and death will further bankrupt us," he said. "NO WAR with Iran!"
A week after Israel launched its surprise military campaign on Iran in June but less than two days before Trump's intervention, Kirk was dubious about confronting Tehran.
“This was Persia. This is a very proud country. It’s a big country; it’s two and a half times the size of Texas. 92 million people," Kirk said in a podcast interview. "So President Trump has to weigh all of this. He has earned our trust and, I believe, he’s gonna bring this to completion for the betterment of all Americans,”
Kirk argued against US military involvement, citing Iran's historic resistance to outside powers.
“They were a great power for a thousand years. Not even the Romans could defeat Persia. Now, I’m not saying they’re comparable to our Marines or to our Air Force, but is that really the battle that we want in front of us?” Kirk said.
Still, Kirk swiftly praised the attacks dubbed "Operation Midnight Hammer" which Trump promptly said had obliterated Iran's nuclear program.
"America stands with President Trump," he wrote on X. "President Trump has been navigating this quite well in fact, he could potentially declare victory," he added in a video testimonial posted online.
"He went after the nuclear program, no US troops killed in the way, pretty remarkable when you think about it."
Key allies of Trump on the right including Georgia congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene and commentator Tucker Carlson criticized the move.
Despite raising some doubts about Israel's conduct of a nearly two-year-old war in Gaza, Kirk expressed frequent support for the Jewish state and described it as a bulwark of what he called Judeo-Christian civilization against violent Islamism.
As the third anniversary of Mahsa Jina Amini’s death in Iranian morality police custody approaches, activist Mercedeh Shahinkar says only a mass uprising, not dialogue nor piecemeal reform, can win genuine change.
Amini died under circumstances which remain unexplained shortly after her arrest on Sept. 16, 2022, sparking a wave of protests nationwide dubbed the Woman, Life, Freedom movement which was ultimately quashed with deadly force.
Shahinkar and her mother joined a Tehran protest on Oct. 15, in which security forces shot her in the face with non-lethal munitions, leaving her blind in one eye.
Now living in exile in the United States, she believes the movement has moved far beyond opposition to the hijab mandated by Tehran's theocracy toward demanding the total downfall of the ruling system.
“Our youth were not killed and people like me were not blinded — many in one eye, many in both eyes, many raped and tortured in prisons — just to settle for superficial reforms,” Shahinkar told Iran International.
Her comments come as tensions fester inside Iran. According to Iran Human Rights, authorities executed Mehran Bahramian, a protester arrested during the 2022 demonstrations, just weeks before the anniversary.
Repression continued
Thousands of people in Iran face the risk of execution amid what Amnesty International on Wednesday called a deepening execution crisis.
The rights group said more than 800 people had been executed in 2025 so far, nearly double the pace of last year, and warned that dozens of other detainees linked to the protests remain at imminent risk of execution following what it describes as unfair trials and forced confessions.
Shahinkar says families of those killed or arrested during the unrest with whom she remains in touch tell her about renewed harassment, saying they have received summonses by security services to discourage public commemorations.
The protests, Shahinkar said, sparked visible social change but she believes the state allows it as a form of controlled freedom.
'We want evil rule gone'
A top Tehran decision-making body in May ordered the parliament not to enforce a contentious law mandating stricter hijab regulations.
“We see women singing in the streets, people taking relative freedoms. But they allow a bit of space only to avoid triggering another protest, Shahinkar said.
"We don’t want small freedoms meant to silence people. We want the Islamic Republic gone — its evil removed from our country."
Iranian-American psychotherapist Azadeh Afsahi, who works with survivors of torture through her nonprofit Iran House, says she hears this same shift from many Iranians she counsels.
“The definition of justice is not available when we talk with survivors, because we don’t know when they will see accountability. But what stands out is their willingness to fight, even after everything," Afsahi told Iran International.
Shahinkar insists that only mass resistance will make a difference.
“The Islamic Republic won’t fall through kindness or dancing. It takes anger and massive numbers in the streets — more than 50% of society, not just 20 or 30.”
Struggle goes on
Despite the risks, she says fear no longer holds her back.
“At first, I was terrified when I saw security forces. But over time, the fear disappeared… Even with one eye, we can celebrate freedom.”
The anniversary of Amini’s death is being marked by vigils and demonstrations abroad, while inside Iran, rights groups say authorities have tightened restrictions on gatherings. The United States and several European countries have issued statements honoring Amini’s memory and calling for accountability.
For Shahinkar, however, symbolic gestures abroad are not enough; she maintains that the future depends on Iranians themselves realizing their strength and carrying the struggle beyond hijab into a demand for systemic change.