Iran suspects Israel’s commitment to the ceasefire after the 12-day war; Demands the name of the United Nations

Six days in a delicate ceasefire by the United States, Iran said on Sunday that it does not trust Israel to maintain its end, as the two nations continue to reel with the most violent confrontation in their history. The 12-day war starting with an Israeli bombing campaign targeting Iran’s top nuclear scientists and commanders has already abandoned hundreds of dead, diplomatic efforts and fresh geopolitical mark on the stressful region.In a statement aired by the state’s television, Abdolahim Mausvi, head of Iran’s armed forces employees, said, “We have serious doubts about the enemy compliance with their commitments including the ceasefire.” “We are ready to respond with force on attacking again.”The conflict began on June 13, when Israel launched that it called Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, calling it a prior-bombing campaign. It claimed that the purpose of the strike was to prevent Iran from receiving nuclear weapons – an allegation Tehran has constantly denied.Iran accused us and Israel of aggressionIn a strongly stated letter to United Nations Secretary -General Antonio Guterres, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi officially urged Israel and United States of the United Nations Security Council that Tehran described as an act of aggression.“We officially request that the Security Council recognizes the Israeli rule and the United States as a creator of the Act of aggression and accepts his later responsibility, including compensation and payment of revaluation,” Araghchi wrote.The US Army joined the Israeli army in the campaign, carried out air strikes on three major nuclear facilities of Iran during the conflict. US President Donald Trump, who announced the ceasefire last week, also threatened further attacks if Iran resumed uranium enrichment at arms-grade levels.Nuclear talks derailed, number of casualties mountThe war has derailed nuclear dialogue between Iran and the United States, after the US return from the 2015 nuclear deal in 2018, there was already a thread -hanging conversation. According to the International Atomic Energy Agency, Iran enriched uranium up to 60% purity in 2021, which is beyond the original contract, but still a 90% decrease.Meanwhile, the human toll of war emerges. Iran’s Health Ministry said on Sunday that at least 627 civilians were killed and 4,900 injured in the Israeli air strike. According to Tel Aviv’s official data, in vengeance, Iranian missiles killed 28 people in Israel.Iran also arrested dozens of alleged Israeli detectives, claiming that they claimed to have seized arms, drones and monitoring equipment during their safety work done with their anti -counter military functions.‘Unacceptable’: Strike on Evin Jail criticizes globalThe most controversial attacks of the conflict were an Israeli missile attack on Tehran’s Evin Jail, which was confirmed by the Iran’s judiciary on Sunday that at least 71 people were killed. The victims were allegedly involved in jail guards, administrative employees, prisoners, relatives and citizens in nearby buildings.Iranian officials said the strike destroyed the part of the administrative block of the jail, causing an international outrage. French External Affairs Minister Jean-Noel Barot condemned the bombing as “unacceptable”, although confirmed that French citizens Seshila Koler and Jacks Paris were uncontrolled.Evin Jail, which has long been known to have political prisoners and double citizens, is also Nobel Peace Prize winning Nerges Mohammadi and many European citizens. Officials later stated that the prisoners were shifted, but did not disclose how many or where they were.Crack on foreign technology and internal dissatisfactionIn another sign of tightening internal controls, the Iran’s Parliament on Sunday passed a law banning the unauthorized use of communication equipment, including Elon Musk’s Starlink Satellite Internet service. This step follows the report of protesters and independent journalists using Starlinks to avoid state sensorship during conflict.