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France: Iran Must Concede After Losing Its Leader

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said escalation with Iran must stop, urged Tehran to make concessions after losing its leader, backed Gulf states hit by missiles, and said US-Israel action should have been debated at the UN Security Council.

March 02, 2026Clash Report

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France called for an immediate halt to military escalation, as tensions with Iran widened across the Middle East following the loss of the Iranian leadership and continued missile and drone attacks in the region. Speaking at the Foreign Ministry in Paris, Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said the situation required urgent de-escalation and a shift toward political negotiations.

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Barrot stated that “the military escalation must stop as soon as possible” and said that “the Iranian regime, which has now lost its leader, must end its attacks.” He added that Tehran must accept “major concessions and a radical change of posture so that a political solution can be found.”

The remarks came during a press conference held on March 2, 2026, at Quai d’Orsay, where the minister addressed the expanding conflict involving Iran, the United States, Israel, and several Gulf countries. According to Barrot, the scale of the crisis has increased as missile and drone strikes spread across multiple states in the region.

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He listed Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Iraq, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, and Jordan as countries that had been targeted by missiles and drones launched by the Revolutionary Guards, describing them as states drawn into a conflict they had not chosen.

Collective Defense Commitments Activated

France signaled readiness to support regional partners under existing security agreements, emphasizing that any action would follow international law and the principle of collective self-defense. Barrot said France expresses “full support and full solidarity” with the countries targeted and is prepared, in accordance with agreements binding France to its partners, to participate in their defense.

He stressed that these states had been deliberately hit by missile and drone attacks and that the situation now involved at least eight countries across the Middle East. The minister said the strikes created a regional security crisis requiring coordination among allies and partners.

The reference to collective self-defense reflects the legal framework under which states can assist each other when facing armed attacks, a principle frequently invoked in multinational operations. France’s position indicated support for defensive measures while continuing to call for de-escalation.

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At the same time, France criticized the way the initial strikes on Iran were decided, arguing that the use of force should have been discussed in international institutions. Barrot said the intervention carried out by Israel and the United States “would have deserved to be debated in the collective bodies provided for this purpose.”

He added that responsibility should be taken within the United Nations system, stating that “it is only by confronting the Security Council that the use of force can assume the necessary legitimacy.”

The comments reflected France’s position that even during a rapidly escalating crisis, major military action should be examined within the UN framework before being carried out. The statement also highlighted the balance Paris is trying to maintain on March 2, 2026: supporting allies under collective defense rules, calling for concessions from Iran, and insisting on international legitimacy for the use of force.

France: Iran Must Concede After Losing Its Leader