Russia To Punish U.S. Over Iran Strikes? 'Doomsday Radio' Sends Mysterious Activation Codes
TOI.in
/ Jun 23, 2025, 11:27PM IST
Russia's mysterious 'Doomsday Radio' channel has broadcast cryptic signals - PANIROVKA, KLINOK, and BOBINA - just hours after the U.S. bombed Iran's nuclear facilities. Western media linked the transmission to the infamous 'Dead Hand' nuclear system, capable of triggering an automatic retaliatory strike.

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Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
BJP leader Ram Madhav book launch event: Contemporary global scenario concerning for peace-loving nations, says Dhankhar
There has to be greater dialogue amongst political parties as we have no enemies in the country and the political temperature has to come down, Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar said on Monday even as he expressed concern about the 'contemporaneous global scenario' which he said is 'worrisome' for peace-loving nations like Bharat. Speaking at the launch of senior BJP leader Ram Madhav's book — 'New World: 21st Century Global Order in India' — in Delhi on Monday, Dhankhar also asserted that India's rise is benign as it has never engaged in expansionism. 'Evolution of policies must take place now with a little more representative character. India's think tanks, they are available in various formats, different political parties. It is required that there be convergence…the political temperature has to come down. There has to be greater dialogue amongst political parties. I firmly believe we have no enemies in the country. We have enemies outside… enemies within, a small fraction, are rooted to outside forces inimical to Bharat,' he said. Lauding Prime Minister Narendra Modi's leadership, Dhankhar said the road to the country's rise requires careful treading. 'There are forces that are determined to make our life difficult. There are forces within the country and outside. These sinister forces, pernicious to our interests, want to strike by dividing us on issues like language,' he said, adding that India can take pride in its language richness and that even MPs can express themselves in 22 languages inside Parliament. He pointed out that India has always stood for global peace and harmony and never engaged at any time in its history in expansionism. 'The contemporary global scenario today is alarmingly concerning and also equally worrisome, particularly for peace-loving nations like Bharat…As Bharat achieves universal well-being for all citizens, we become a role model for others,' he said. Referring to V D Savarkar as a 'celebrated thinker who stood at the wee hours of the post-war order', Dhankhar said the ideologue was prophetic. 'Savarkar, a staunch realist, believed in a post-war world where nations would act only in pursuit of their own interests not based on idealism, morality or international solidarity. Imagine how prophetic he has been. Look around last fortnight, last three months. All this has been seen by all of us. He rejected pacifist or utopian internationalism and emphasised that India must safeguard its sovereignty through strength, not by relying on Western-dominated institutions like the League of Nations or later the United Nations, both ignoring due place to one-sixth of humanity,' he said. The VP also said the Modi government has been 'steadfast, firm, non-negotiable, and notwithstanding the critics — it is spinally strong.' According to him, 'the nation has never ever projected its stand so firmly'. Senior Congress leader and Lok Sabha MP Manish Tewari, former foreign secretary Shyam Saran and former Union minister Suresh Prabhu also spoke at the event.

Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
‘Send Uranium To Russia': Ex-IDF Advisor's Message To Tehran As US Hits Iran Nuclear Sites
/ Jun 24, 2025, 01:49AM IST Major (Retired) Dan Feferman, former IDF advisor, made a bombshell statement on Iran's nuke program after US strikes. He warns this move could shift the balance in the ongoing conflict. Feferman's message comes as tensions escalate following recent US attacks targeting key nuclear facilities in Iran. Watch full interview to know more.

The Wire
2 hours ago
- The Wire
What Happens if Iran Withdraws From the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty?
"The sad duty of politics is to establish justice in a sinful world.' – Reinhold Niebuhr, Moral Man and Immoral Society: A Study in Ethics and Politics, New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1932. The US's bombing of Iran's nuclear facilities – Natanz, Isfahan and Fordow – is not merely a dangerous escalation of force. It is the symbolic destruction of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) as a credible international regime. What unfolded under the cover of night was not just the targeting of technical infrastructure – it was a precision strike against the very idea that international law offers protection to those who comply with it. Iran has remained a signatory to the NPT for decades. Even after the 1979 revolution and the cascade of Western hostility that followed, it did not withdraw. It subjected itself to surveillance, inspection, and historic levels of constraint under the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) – an accord later dismantled not by Tehran but by Washington. And still, it was bombed. The implications are profound, and we must fully grasp their gravity. The NPT regime is no longer merely fragile – it is broken. By launching an unprovoked attack on a treaty-bound state without legal justification, the United States has severed the last thread of credibility holding the non-proliferation order together. The signal to the region – and beyond – is unmistakable: treaties do not shield; they expose. Compliance is not rewarded; it is punished. This act is not just a policy failure. It is a proliferation catalyst. Regional powers, such as Turkey and Saudi Arabia, which have long hedged their positions, now face a stark choice. The logic of restraint has collapsed. The bomb, once considered a threat, has become the only viable shield. Non-nuclear status, once a pillar of global consensus, now reads as strategic vulnerability. And for what? The tactical gains, if any, are illusory. No bomb can erase knowledge. No missile can obliterate scientific memory. Technical capacity, once acquired, is not so easily destroyed. Infrastructure can be rebuilt; expertise is retained. If the objective was to delay Iran's nuclear capability, the more probable result is to accelerate it – this time in total opacity. Iran's exit from the NPT now appears not just plausible but imminent. Outside that framework, there will be no inspections, oversight or restraint. What was once visible to the international community will go dark. Meanwhile, more than 40,000 U.S. troops stationed across the region now sit within the blast radius of asymmetric retaliation. Iran's networks – from the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps to Hezbollah to regional militias – are vast, experienced and unpredictable. This will not be a limited skirmish. It will be a cascade of drone strikes, assassinations, cyber sabotage, and insurgent backlash. The fantasy of a "contained" strike is the fiction of those who mistake war for theatre. Escalation is not a possibility – it is the architecture in motion now. The neoconservative fantasy The US's bombing also clarifies what this confrontation has always been about. Not uranium enrichment. Not latency thresholds. The deeper objective is regime degradation. A non-nuclear, diplomatically integrated Iran is more threatening to the regional status quo than an isolated, sanctioned one flirting with a breakout capacity. The JCPOA, though technocratic in its substance, posed a political risk: it worked. It capped enrichment, reduced stockpiles, and established a model of rigorous verification and inspection. But it also offered a path to normalisation. That was the red line. For Iran's adversaries, the most successful blows have not been overt airstrikes but covert operations: the targeted assassinations of scientists, the infiltration of supply chains and the sabotage of facilities. These quieter wars have done more to undermine Iran's autonomy than any jet-fueled spectacle. The bombing is not a strategy – it's theatre. It is a spectacular punctuation to a long campaign designed to deny sovereign technological development. And now, the neoconservative fantasy is realised. John Bolton did not achieve this war under George W. Bush. Nor under Obama. It was Donald Trump – who campaigned as the anti-war populist – who delivered it. After decades of lobbying, position papers and strategy memos from think tanks and pressure groups, it was Trump who authorised what others resisted. The spectacle of "America First" has now resolved into something far darker: America, conscripted as the enforcer of another state's maximalist ambitions. This is not strength. It is submission in uniform. The context matters. The US-Iran relationship is long and bitter: the CIA-led coup of 1953; support for Saddam Hussein in the Iran-Iraq War, even as chemical weapons were unleashed; the 1979 hostage crisis; decades of sanctions, cyberwarfare, and targeted assassinations. But this moment marks a departure. This is the first direct US strike on Iranian territory. And it is unlikely to be the last. Yet the rituals remain. After the missiles fall, the press conferences follow. Generals return to their podiums, and diplomats to their scripts. They speak of "restraint" as though it were still on the table. They call for peace while standing in the rubble of its foundations. They burn your house and then ask you to host the next round of negotiations. This is not diplomacy. It is imperial satire. What was destroyed was not only steel and stone – but the belief that treaties can provide shelter. That multilateralism is anything more than a façade. That power can, even marginally, be disciplined by law. The logic of enrichment To understand Iran's nuclear posture, one must listen carefully to those who have studied its internal logic. In Iran's Grand Strategy: A Political History, Vali Nasr, among the most astute of these voices, articulates a critical truth: Iran's nuclear program is not a step toward Armageddon but a bid for emancipation. It is a strategy of autonomy – not aggression. Enrichment, in Tehran's calculus, is not about weaponisation; it is about leverage. The centrifuge spins not toward annihilation but toward dignity. Enrichment is Iran's answer to coercion, its insurance against regime change, and its shield against extortion. Even the so-called moderates – Hassan Rouhani and Mohammad Javad Zarif – defended the program not out of dogma but because they understood the alternative: dependency or defeat. The JCPOA was, for Iran, not capitulation but calibrated detente – a temporary compromise to preserve long-term sovereignty. Its collapse merely confirmed what many within Tehran already suspected: that diplomacy, absent deterrence, is performance. That compliance, in a system shaped by brute force, is a liability. The centrifuge, then, becomes not a provocation but a necessity. A message in enriched uranium: We will not be ruled from afar. Forward defence Iran's foreign policy, Nasr argues, is shaped less by ideology than by trauma. Its doctrine – what he terms "forward defence" – is not expansionist but prophylactic. It is a shield built from memory: the 1953 coup, the eight-year war with Iraq, chemical weapons raining from the sky with international impunity, and the economic throttling of sanctions. This is not the strategy of zealots. It is the logic of a state besieged. Iran's support for regional allies is not a project of exporting revolution but rather a strategic buffer. Its regional posture is not a bid for empire but for deterrence. Its nuclear policy is cut from the same cloth. Enrichment serves as a hedge – a calculated deterrent against existential threats. This is precisely why the bombing strikes at something far more dangerous than uranium. It targets the entire doctrine of deterrence. And in doing so, it ensures its opposite. A strategic catastrophe What is now celebrated by some as a tactical success will be remembered as a strategic catastrophe. The precedent is grim. In 1981, Israel bombed Iraq's Osirak reactor, claiming to halt Baghdad's nuclear ambitions. In reality, it merely drove the program underground, beyond the IAEA's scrutiny, accelerating it in secret. Force did not bring compliance. It deepened resolve. A similar dynamic now begins. Iran will not fold. It will fortify. The line between hedge and imperative will vanish. And across the region, the message is unmistakable: to be non-nuclear is to be vulnerable. Deterrence is the new diplomacy. In Ankara, Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, and Cairo, officials are not recalibrating their policies due to Iran's ambitions. They are recalibrating because of America's message: treaties are expendable; force is the rule. The JCPOA was not flawless, but it worked. It capped enrichment, reduced stockpiles, and subjected Iran to a verification regime more intrusive than any in history. Even Israeli intelligence conceded its efficacy. But for hawks in Washington, Tel Aviv and Tehran, its success was intolerable. Not because it failed to constrain Iran but because it threatened to normalise relations with it. Now, with Iran poised to withdraw from the NPT, the treaty is at risk of collapse. With Russia and China unlikely to oppose such a move, the regime's universality dissolves. What replaces it will not be a new consensus – it will be a void – a world governed not by law but by power. And in that vacuum, proliferation will flourish. The logic has already shifted. The treaty does not protect non-nuclear states – they are punished within it. The bomb, once a taboo, is now a tool of sovereignty. The post-NPT world is no longer theoretical. It is emergent. The irony is brutal: scientific knowledge cannot be unlearned. Enrichment capacity, once achieved, becomes permanent. Bombs can destroy hardware, but not capability. Once a nation crosses the technical threshold, the only tools left are sustained diplomacy – or permanent occupation. Bombing is neither. It is not a solution. It is provocation dressed in policy. And yet, from the capitals of the West, the exact hollow phrases emerge. Calls for "restraint". Appeals for "stability". They speak as if they were not the arsonists. They applaud destruction, then draft communiqués on reconstruction. This is not diplomacy. It is theatre, staged atop the rubble of international law. The NPT was never flawless. But it was built on a promise: that the powerful would restrain themselves, and their fidelity would protect the weak to the law. That promise is now in ashes. India, Israel, and Pakistan never joined the treaty – and faced no consequences. North Korea withdrew – and built a bomb. Iran stayed – and was bombed. What remains is the truth beneath the wreckage: Iran followed the rules. And it was targeted for doing so. This is not the end of the nuclear story. But it is the end of the pretence. The bombing of Iran is not a blow against proliferation – it is the ignition of its next chapter. The NPT was not undone by Iranian duplicity. It was dismantled by great-power hypocrisy. And in that hypocrisy lies the deeper threat – not just to Iran, but to the world order. The idea that law can restrain might. That diplomacy can mediate power. That treaty can provide sanctuary. To bomb Iran is not just to degrade centrifuges. It is to declare that peace is conditional. That order is optional. That compliance is suicidal. The architects of this war may call it a victory. But history will recognise its proper name: proliferation. To bomb Iran is to bomb the NPT – and peace itself. Narendra Pachkhédé is a global affairs specialist and essayist working across London, Toronto, Paris, and Geneva. His writing engages with geopolitics, cultural criticism, and the shifting architecture of the international order.