News

Iranians tell Newsweek the capital feels unrecognizable, as fear of more strikes, and possible U.S. involvement, hangs ...
Some parts of it were what you might call “visibly invisible”: Everyone in Tehran knows about Evin Prison, perched on the ...
Large flames illuminated the night sky as airstrikes pummeled the Iranian capital, residents said. Later on Tuesday morning, ...
Read: The invisible city of Tehran. ... I felt calm as I headed for the home of a friend on Jeyhoon Street—one who had decided to remain in Tehran and said I could spend the night.
Fear and worry grip Iranians as Israel vows to continue attacking the Islamic Republic over its nuclear program, with many ...
It took a CBS News crew more than 14 hours to drive south from Turkey to Tehran, a nearly 600-mile trip made longer by ...
Seyyed Ahmad Khomeini, a descendant of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, told The Times that the legacy of his family name was at stake in the conflict.
In the middle of an empty street in Tehran, a young man stood playing the violin. As fear of Israeli air strikes drove people ...
The city’s ancient Grand Bazaar was closed, something that’s rarely done, like during demonstrations or during the height of the coronavirus pandemic. On the roads out of Tehran to the west ...
One Tehran is filled with apartments and parks, evening picnics and bus rides, laughter and prayer and disappointment—the “city of man,” in Augustine’s sense, full of contradictions and grace.