Iranian president met Uber CEO during New York visit - magazine
Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi
President Masoud Pezeshkian held a meeting with Iranian-born Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi during his trip to New York in September for the UN General Assembly, reform-leaning Tehran-based magazine Agahi-e No reported on Tuesday.
Neither party had publicized their alleged meeting at the time and it was not clear what the relative moderate president and the head of the successful worldwide ride-hailing app discussed.
Pezeshkian spoke with Khosrowshahi in Persian, the report said, which the executive still remembered despite leaving Iran at age 9.
It added that the meeting was part of Pezeshkian’s wider efforts to engage with prominent Iranians abroad and its plan to encourage expatriates to return to Iran.
The magazine's editor Mohammed Ghouchani is considered close to the president's advisors and well informed about his activities.
Uber did not immediately respond to an Iran International request for comment.
In early June before US-Israeli strikes on Iran, Trump had joked about Khosrowshahi being put in charge of nuclear negotiations with Iran.
“We’ll have Dara get up and negotiate,” Trump said speaking alongside Khosrowshahi at an event with business leaders at the White House.
In addition to meeting with Khosrowshahi, the publication said Pezeshkian also interacted with several high-profile diaspora figures during the trip.
These included Abdolkarim Soroush, a philosopher and religious intellectual with visiting posts at Harvard, Princeton, Yale and the University of Maryland, and Mohsen Kadivar, a reformist theologian, Islamic scholar and ex-cleric who is a research professor at Duke University.
In July, Pezeshkian called for the return of Iranians living abroad and urged coordination between the judiciary and intelligence services to ease concerns, despite past detentions of returnees.
“We must create a framework for Iranians abroad to return comfortably and without fear, and this requires coordination with the judiciary and the Ministry of Intelligence,” Pezeshkian said at a meeting at the foreign ministry.
Yet the president's invitation came against a record that has left many Iranian expatriates wary. In recent years, dual and foreign-based nationals returning to Iran have faced arrests, lengthy interrogations, and prison sentences.
Khosrowshahi moved to America after his family fled Iran on the eve of the Islamic Revolution in the late 1978.
In May, Khosrowshahi spoke at a livestreamed event organized by the Washington-based National Union for Democracy in Iran (NUFDI), where the group unveiled its “Iran Prosperity Project” (IPP), a diaspora-led initiative that outlines economic and political plans for a future Iran post–Islamic Republic.
Iran’s judiciary said on Tuesday that prosecutors have filed charges against a former member of parliament and media figure who alleged that President Masoud Pezeshkian sent a message to US President Donald Trump through Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
According to the judiciary’s media center, Tehran prosecutors accused the former lawmaker of “spreading false information” about the content of a letter Pezeshkian sent to the Saudi crown prince.
Earlier this week, the foreign ministry said the letter was a routine diplomatic message concerning coordination for the annual Hajj pilgrimage.
The announcement comes days after former lawmaker Mostafa Kavakebian told Iranian media that Pezeshkian had, with the approval of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, sent a message through the Saudi crown prince offering to resume talks with Washington. Reuters had earlier reported that the letter urged Riyadh to help persuade Trump to restart nuclear negotiations — a report Tehran denied.
Foreign ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei dismissed the reports, saying “the president’s message to the Saudi crown prince had purely bilateral content,” and accused some domestic figures of fueling “baseless speculation.”
Reports of Saudi mediation
The Lebanese newspaper al-Akhbar reported on Tuesday that Trump had authorized the Saudi crown prince to manage contacts aimed at opening dialogue with Tehran. The paper said bin Salman believed a US-Iran understanding was necessary to reduce regional tensions, though there has been no confirmation from either Washington or Tehran.
Iran’s state news agency IRNA said speculation about third-party mediation misses the broader issue, arguing that the main obstacle is the lack of a shared framework for talks with the United States.
The International Atomic Energy Agency wants to fully reengage with Iran to restore access to its nuclear sites and verify the country’s enrichment activities, Director General Rafael Grossi said on Tuesday, after the UN watchdog’s board censured Tehran for restricting access.
Grossi told reporters in Manila that the agency’s aim was to “restore continuity of knowledge” and reestablish full verification inside Iran. His comments followed last week’s decision by the UN watchdog’s 35-member Board of Governors calling on Tehran to inform it “without delay” about the status of its enriched uranium stock and sites hit in June strikes.
The board’s resolution, backed by the United States, Britain, France and Germany, deepened tensions with Tehran, which condemned the vote as “illegal and unjustified.” Iran said the move nullified a September inspection accord reached in Cairo with Grossi through Egyptian mediation.
Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said at the time the Western powers had “killed” the Cairo accord and accused them of seeking escalation rather than diplomacy. Iran insists its cooperation with the IAEA remains within the limits of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty but says access to bombed facilities cannot resume until safety and legal issues are addressed.
Iranian lawmakers have said Tehran is considering suspending or withdrawing from the NPT in response to the censure. Amir Hayat-Moghaddam, a member of parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee, said the option was “on the table” and under expert review.
He said a final decision would be coordinated between parliament and the Supreme National Security Council. Another lawmaker said a draft bill had been prepared to boost what he called Iran’s “nuclear and sanctions-related deterrence.”
Iran has appointed Brigadier General Kioumars Heydari as deputy commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, a top joint operational command that plans and coordinates the country’s armed forces, Iranian media reported on Monday.
Heydari had led Iran’s Army Ground Forces for more than seven years before being replaced on November 22 by Brigadier General Ali Jahanshahi, as part of a wider reshuffle across Iran’s military following the June war.
Iran’s Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters is the unified combatant command under the Armed Forces General Staff, responsible for operational design and coordination across the army and the Revolutionary Guards.
The deputy post was previously held by Major General Hossein Hassani Sa'di, according to Iranian news agency ISNA, while Major General Ali Abdollahi Aliabadi currently commands the headquarters.
US President Donald Trump has asked Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to manage a channel aimed at opening dialogue between Washington and Tehran as the kingdom seeks to avert further regional escalation, the Lebanese newspaper al-Akhbar reported on Tuesday.
Citing what it described as Western sources, the Beirut-based daily said Trump authorized bin Salman to manage contacts aimed at brokering an agreement with Tehran covering the nuclear file and sanctions.
According to the report, bin Salman argued to Trump that a US-Iran understanding was necessary for stability across the Middle East and warned that Israel could try to derail any diplomatic track through renewed military action.
Sources told the outlet that bin Salman had asked Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, during their September meeting in Riyadh about Tehran’s stance on a Saudi initiative toward Washington on a possible agreement with Iran. They said Larijani later sent a positive reply, while stressing that Tehran was not ready to make concessions.
Al-Akhbar also reported that Saudi officials contacted Iran’s leadership after the crown prince’s November 18 visit to the White House and agreed to hold a senior Saudi-Iranian meeting in Paris within 24 hours, to be followed by Saudi shuttle contacts between the United States and Iran.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi is due in Paris on Wednesday for talks with French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot focused on Iran’s nuclear program and the status of two French citizens who, though released from prison, remain under travel restrictions and are staying at the French embassy in Tehran, France’s foreign ministry said.
There has been no indication of any parallel Saudi-Iranian meeting in Paris. Iran International could not independently verify al-Akhbar’s account.
The report comes as Iranian officials push back against reports that President Masoud Pezeshkian asked the Saudi crown prince to help revive nuclear talks with the United States.
Iran says Pezeshkian’s letter to the crown prince was a routine message on Hajj coordination, while Reuters reported last week, citing two sources familiar with the exchange, that the letter urged bin Salman to use his influence with Trump to restart stalled nuclear diplomacy.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said, “The president’s message to the Saudi crown prince had purely bilateral content,” and added that persistent “baseless speculation about it does nothing to advance national interests.”
Baghaei’s comments follow a rising domestic debate over whether Tehran is exploring indirect channels to Washington after a former lawmaker, Mostafa Kavakebian, said Pezeshkian had sent a message to Trump through bin Salman offering talks without preconditions with the permission of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
‘Mediator talk is secondary to US approach'
The government’s news agency IRNA said on Tuesday that the flurry of talk about third-party mediation reflects a broader tendency to read every letter, trip or phone call as a signal of imminent Iran-US negotiations, but argued that mediation is not the core issue.
In its analysis, the state news agency said Iranian officials view the real obstacle as the absence of a shared understanding with Washington on what talks would look like, adding that Tehran wants “equal and fair” diplomacy rather than what it describes as US attempts to dictate terms.
IRNA added that, from Iran’s perspective, questions about mediators such as Saudi Arabia or Egypt are secondary to whether the United States changes its approach and shows seriousness about balanced negotiations.
A blaze which had devastated a unique forest ecosystem in northern Iran has been brought under control after weeks of firefighting efforts, an environmental official said on Tuesday.
But when pressed on state television about the extent of damage to the ancient Hyrcanian Forest, head of Iran’s Natural Resources and Watershed Management Organisation Reza Aflatouni on Monday declined to respond.
“State TV should not make the sweetness of such management bitter for people’s taste,” he said.
Aflatouni said that the main phase of the blaze, which reignited on 15 November is now extinguished, with only isolated smoldering spots left under close monitoring.
The Elit wildfire has burned through parts of Iran’s ancient Hyrcanian Forests, a UNESCO World Heritage site dating back 25–50 million years and home to over 3,200 plant species and endangered wildlife, including Persian leopards.
In a report on Sunday, the semi-official ISNA news agency wrote that the fire has been burning for about 20 days. However, the head of natural resources in Mazandaran province rejected this, insisting two separate fires occurred 10 to 15 days apart.
ISNA's said local residents insist the blaze has continued without interruption since November 1, with smoke showing it never fully went out.
“The fire in the Hyrcanian forests is not merely an environmental disaster; it is a symbol of managerial backwardness, social neglect and a weak environmental culture,” the news website Rouydad24 wrote.
“Without urgent action, the continuation of this trend could destroy large parts of Iran’s natural heritage and cause irreparable damage to the country’s society and economy,” the report added.
Mazandaran Governor Mahdi Younesi estimates around eight hectares have been destroyed so far.