Cleverly: We Will Continue to Take Action to Prevent Iran’s Destabilizing Activity in the Region 

British Foreign Secretary to Asharq Al-Awsat: Putin’s Actions Have Isolated Him on the World Stage 

British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly speaks at the Manama conference. (International Institute for Strategic Studies)
British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly speaks at the Manama conference. (International Institute for Strategic Studies)
TT
20

Cleverly: We Will Continue to Take Action to Prevent Iran’s Destabilizing Activity in the Region 

British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly speaks at the Manama conference. (International Institute for Strategic Studies)
British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly speaks at the Manama conference. (International Institute for Strategic Studies)

British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly stressed that London will continue to work with its allies to “take the necessary measures to prevent Iran’s destabilizing activities in the region.” 

“We will continue to take action both to prevent that destabilizing activity in the region and also very specifically target with sanctions those individuals who are responsible for that behavior,” he told Asharq Al-Awsat in an interview on the sidelines of the IISS Manama Dialogue on Sunday 

Asked about whether security measures are in place to protect London-based “Iran International” television from Iranian threats, the minister replied: “We take the security of people in the UK incredibly seriously. We take the importance of free, honest and open journalism incredibly seriously and when we believe there are threats on the UK mainland obviously, we respond.” 

Moreover, he stressed that the UK will remain committed to preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, saying: “It is now up to Iran to respond meaningfully to the negotiations that we have put forward.” 

Security arrangements are in place at “Iran International” offices in London. Are the Iranian threats genuine? By stepping-up security, what kind of message are you sending to the Iranians? 

We take the security of people in the UK incredibly seriously. We take the importance of free, honest and open journalism incredibly seriously. When we believe there are threats on the UK mainland obviously, we respond.  

We want to send a message to people that they should feel safe and secure in the UK and that they will be protected by the UK. We want to send a message, as we did when we summoned the Iranian charge d’affaires, that threats to journalists are unacceptable and we will respond.  

That’s why we’ve taken action to protect people in the UK from what we are perceiving to be threats from Iran because it is incredibly important that people feel able to speak openly and honestly about what is going on in Iran. 

In your speech at Manama Dialogue, you said that Russia and Iran are threats to the security of the Arab region. The UK has imposed sanctions and summoned the charge d’affaires. Are these measures enough to send a message to the Iranians? 

We are putting very targeted sanctions in response to the specific actions of individuals. So, when we discovered that Iranian drones were being sold to Russia and those drones were then used to attack civilians and civilian targets in Ukraine, we put in very specific sanctions for companies and individuals responsible for those drone exports to Russia. 

When we saw Iranian women being brutalized by the Iranian regime, we put specific sanctions against the so-called “morality police”.  

We want the Iranian leadership to listen to the Iranian people and we will make sure that when members of the Iranian leadership do things which are unacceptable, we target those individuals and those entities very timely with our sanctions to deter them. 

What about Iran’s role in the region? 

When we find out that Iran is attempting to destabilize its neighbors, we take action. For example, British warships have intercepted the missile systems or engines for missile systems coming from Iran and will continue to take action both to prevent that destabilizing activity in the region and also very specifically target with sanctions those individuals who are responsible for that behavior.  

Would you say that nuclear negotiations with Iran are over and finished now? 

We put a very credible deal to the Iranians back in March of this year, they are still yet to respond. In the intervening period, we have now seen them take brutal reprisals against the Iranian women who are speaking out against the regime. We’ve seen them exporting drones to Russia being used against civilian targets.  

We remain committed to preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, but it is now up to Iran to respond meaningfully to the negotiations that we have put forward. The ball is very much in Iran’s court and has been for a while now and they should really respond.   

Does that mean negotiations are over? 

As I said, the negotiations we put, the offer we put forward was a sensible and pragmatic. The Iranians thus far have not engaged properly with that. I also believe that the message I may send to the Iranian leadership is that it is in their hands to take action which would engage better with this process. We put a deal forward, it is a very good deal and the Iranians should engage with that.  

Turning to Ukraine, at the G20 summit was Russian President Vladimir Putin as isolated as London and its allies wanted him to be?  

I think the fact he did not feel able to go to the G20 sends an important signal. We saw the communique coming out from the G20 where the majority of countries there were condemning Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, we saw the United Nations 143 countries condemning Russia’s illegal annexation of eastern and southern oblasts in Ukraine, so Putin’s actions are seeing him isolated on the world stage.  

It is clear that he felt it was not credible for him to travel to Indonesia to attend the G20 and voices across the world, including countries that have had long standing and close relationships with Russia, are telling him that this invasion was a terrible mistake. They are calling on him to bring it to a conclusion. Many countries, as I said, the majority of countries in the UN voted to condemn his actions. Putin has made himself isolated on the world stage. 

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak visited Kyiv. What is your vision for the endgame in Ukraine? Is it along the Crimea 2014 or pre-February 24 lines, or are we talking about new lines? 

Sunak visited Kyiv to demonstrate our ongoing solidarity with the Ukrainian people and the Ukrainian leadership including President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The prime minister made it clear that we will continue supporting Ukrainians as they defend themselves against Russian aggression.  

It is also a reminder to the world that it is up to Ukraine to decide when they are ready to come to the negotiating table and under what conditions they might be willing to accept peace agreement.  

It is not for other countries to in any way dictate the Ukrainians what a peace agreement might look like, that is for the leadership of Ukraine and we are committed to support them until they prevail against this attack.  

At the G20 summit you tried to isolate Putin, but tried to negotiate with Chinese President Xi Jinping. So, is the West willing to work with China to form the new world order? 

We will continue to work with China on the areas where we have mutual interest and indeed where the needs of the world are important. For example, China has a huge role to play in moving from hydro-carbon energy to green energy. But when we speak with China, as I did when I met my counterpart Wang Yi in New York, we are honest with them about the areas where we have deep disagreement, for example their treatment of the Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang, their response to the Covid outbreak, their unwillingness to abide by the agreements in Hong Kong and the sanctioning that has been imposed against British parliamentarians. 

So, we will work with China where there is an opportunity to work with them but we will also make clear our opposition to the actions that we disagree. 

What about Syria? Is it forgotten? Can this country, with so much humanitarian suffering, and five armies involved (the US, Russia, Türkiye, Iran and Israel) be forgotten? 

Syria is still very much in our thoughts. We see millions of Syrian refugees in countries around the region and we do thank those countries for supporting those Syrian refugees. We still see a significant number of Syrians in camps within Syria displaced from their homes. 

We will continue to work to try and bring some resolution to the conflict there so that Syrians can go back home and Syria can once again be the sophisticated, vibrant, economically prosperous country that it once was. 

But even though many people in the world are talking about Russia and Ukraine, and that is absolutely right, I can assure you, and any of the Syrian readers of this interview, that we still do a lot of thinking about Syria. We discuss with the regional neighbors about the protection of Syrians that have been displaced and we will keep working towards bringing a proper meaningful peace to Syria once again.  



Countries Evacuating Citizens from Iran and Israel 

Expats, including diplomats from different nationalities, who were stranded in West Bank and Israel, wait as they hold belongings while being evacuated through the King Hussein Bridge crossing, in South Shuna, Jordan June 19, 2025. (Reuters)
Expats, including diplomats from different nationalities, who were stranded in West Bank and Israel, wait as they hold belongings while being evacuated through the King Hussein Bridge crossing, in South Shuna, Jordan June 19, 2025. (Reuters)
TT
20

Countries Evacuating Citizens from Iran and Israel 

Expats, including diplomats from different nationalities, who were stranded in West Bank and Israel, wait as they hold belongings while being evacuated through the King Hussein Bridge crossing, in South Shuna, Jordan June 19, 2025. (Reuters)
Expats, including diplomats from different nationalities, who were stranded in West Bank and Israel, wait as they hold belongings while being evacuated through the King Hussein Bridge crossing, in South Shuna, Jordan June 19, 2025. (Reuters)

Countries around the world are taking measures to evacuate their citizens from Israel and Iran as the two nations enter the seventh day of their air war and airspace in the region remains closed.

A week of Israeli air and missile strikes against its major rival has wiped out the top echelon of Iran's military command, damaged its nuclear capabilities and killed hundreds of people, while Iranian retaliatory strikes have killed at least two dozen civilians in Israel.

Here are some of the countries whose citizens have left:

AUSTRALIA The Australian government evacuated by land a small group of the 1,200 Australians seeking to leave Israel on Wednesday, Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said on Thursday. Around 2,000 Australians in Iran have registered for assistance.

AUSTRIA 48 Austrians have left Israel or neighboring Jordan, out of the 200 who reported to the Tel Aviv embassy, the Foreign Ministry said. Around 100 Austrians have requested to leave Iran. 44 Austrian and EU citizens have been evacuated towards Türkiye and Armenia, it added.

BULGARIA Bulgaria has evacuated 17 diplomats and their families from Iran to Azerbaijan and will repatriate them by land and air, the Bulgarian government said. An administration at the Bulgarian embassy in Tehran is moving temporarily to Baku.

CHINA China has evacuated more than 1,600 citizens from Iran and hundreds more from Israel, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said on Thursday. Several thousand Chinese nationals are thought to reside in Iran, according to state media reports.

CZECH REPUBLIC A flight with 66 people evacuated from Israel had landed near Prague, Czech Defense Minister Jana Cernochova said.

FRANCE France will arrange a convoy by the end of the week from Iran to the Turkish or Armenian borders, French foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot said on Thursday. French citizens in Israel can board buses starting Friday morning from the Jordanian border, with a flight chartered from Amman, Barrot said.

GERMANY 345 German citizens have left the Middle East region, the foreign ministry said, after the country provided charter flights to Germany.

GREECE Greece has evacuated 16 nationals and their families by land from Iran to Azerbaijan and is now working on their repatriation to Greece, the foreign ministry said on Thursday.

INDIA India said on Wednesday it has launched "Operation Sindhu" to evacuate Indian nationals from Iran. 110 Indian students have been evacuated from northern Iran into Armenia on June 17, India's foreign ministry said.

ITALY Italy is organizing a charter flight from Egypt on June 22 to allow its citizens to leave Israel if they want to. 29 of the about 500 Italian nationals leaving in Iran already left the country on Wednesday with assistance from the government, a diplomatic source said.

JAPAN Japan's government said on Thursday it would send two Self-Defense Forces transport aircraft to Djibouti in preparation for the evacuation of Japanese nationals from Iran and Israel.

NEW ZEALAND New Zealand temporarily closed its Tehran embassy and evacuated two staff and their families by land to Azerbaijan.

POLAND A group of Polish citizens evacuated from Iran landed in Warsaw on Thursday morning, ending the evacuation from the country, the Foreign Ministry said. The first plane evacuated from Israel landed in Warsaw on Wednesday morning and a second one was expected on Thursday afternoon from Amman, with 65 people on board.

PORTUGAL Portugal has temporarily shut its embassy in Iran and evacuated four of its citizens via Azerbaijan. It has received 130 repatriation requests from citizens in Israel and is organizing a repatriation flight, expected to land in Portugal later on Thursday, the foreign ministry said.

SERBIA A group of 100 Serbs have fled Israel via Egypt, ambassador Miroljub Petrovic said on Thursday.

SIERRA LEONE 36 citizens were evacuated to Armenia, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.

SLOVAKIA The first evacuation flight with 73 people, 25 tourists and five family members of Slovak diplomats working in Tel Aviv arrived in Bratislava on Monday, Slovak authorities said. The foreign ministry said on Friday it would temporarily close its embassy in Tehran and was fully evacuating staff from the country.

SOUTH KOREA Eighteen South Korean nationals and two of their family members who are Iranian nationals were evacuated by land from Iran, South Korea's foreign ministry said.

TAIWAN 36 Taiwanese have been evacuated from Israel via the land crossing with Jordan, while three Taiwanese have left Iran via the land border with Türkiye, Taiwan's foreign ministry said.

UNITED STATES The United States is working to evacuate US citizens wishing to leave Israel by arranging flights and cruise ship departures, US ambassador Mike Huckabee said in a post on X on Wednesday.

VIETNAM Vietnam's foreign ministry told its citizens in Israel and Iran to get ready for evacuation and 18 Vietnamese citizens have already been evacuated from Iran.