Countries issue Middle East travel advisories amid rising US-Iran tensions
The countries include Cyprus, Poland, Sweden, Serbia, Australia, Singapore, India, and the United States, with the advisories ranging from warnings to diplomatic evacuations.
The countries include Cyprus, Poland, Sweden, Serbia, Australia, Singapore, India, and the United States, with the advisories ranging from warnings to diplomatic evacuations.
The Australian government has also offered voluntary departures to Australian diplomats' dependents in the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and Qatar.
The statement comes after Germany's foreign minister declared that Iran must end support for its proxies Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis, advising the Iranians to engage "constructively" in Geneva.
The project, dubbed by some as "Emirates City," will be constructed by Gaza-based Masoud & Ali Contracting Co, a firm already well-established in Gaza and the West Bank.
Leadership messaging points to internal discipline and network survival rather than renewed territorial expansion.
One protester told The Media Line: “Left or right, what is certain and inevitable is the inevitable destruction of the Islamic Republic.”
NATO member Turkey, which shares a border with Iran to its east, has said it opposes any military intervention on Iran and does not want destabilization in the region.
Hezbollah is on high alert as Syria’s new government opposes Iran and the group, raising tensions along the Lebanese border amid military buildup and regional uncertainty.
That question was put directly to four major AI platforms as part of a methodological exercise on how AI models respond under pressure. The Jerusalem Post is not predicting military action.
Outward appearances on the streets of Tehran have not changed, but there is internal anxiety.
An F-16 crash in western Turkey led to the temporary closure of the Istanbul-Izmir highway as officials probed the cause of the incident.