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🚨🇮🇷 IN ZAHEDAN, IRAN, ARMED FORCES REPORTEDLY STARTED SHOOTING PROTESTERS. STRAIGHT FROM MOSQUE TO MASSACRE Reports from Zahedan: IRGC and Basij forces exited mosque after prayers, opened fire directly on protesters. That's Iran's Revolutionary Guards and volunteer paramilitary finishing Friday prayers, stepping outside, and shooting people in the street....

27,722 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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The ayatollah gave a direct order to kill protesters. The death toll has crossed one thousand Protesters in Iran report that security forces opened fire on crowds without warnings or attempts to disperse them. “They were simply killing people, over and over again,” a Tehran resident told the BBC. After Ali Khamenei declared that the regime would “not retreat”, the violence escalated sharply. The IRGC and the Basij militia were deployed to the streets — ideologically indoctrinated fanatics loyal to the ayatollah. Witnesses from Tehran, Ferdows, Karaj, and Mashhad describe the same scenes: ambushes in side streets, shootings from unmarked vehicles, and large numbers of bodies lying in the streets. The internet has been almost completely shut down for several days, making it impossible to verify the full scale of the killings. The regime cut connectivity not only to prevent protesters from coordinating, but also to ensure that the security forces’ atrocities are not seen by the world. Death toll estimates vary. Reuters reports around 2,000 killed, while opposition media cite significantly higher numbers. The regime labels the protests “terrorism” and blames the United States and Israel. The order to shoot protesters was personally given by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and approved by Iran’s entire leadership. Despite the unprecedented scale of repression, the protests continue and threaten to bring down the regime. It looks like Trump may need to intervene — now.

NEXTA

151,139 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад

Internet cut off, death toll in the thousands: Iran shuts itself off from the world SpaceX has made Starlink free in Iran amid mass protests and an almost total internet blackout. Authorities cut communications on January 8, even though Starlink is officially banned in the country. Tehran is fast-tracking the construction of a closed “national internet” — only state-approved search engines, maps, messengers, and streaming platforms are allowed, all under strict censorship. According to sources, a “skeleton version” is already operating and is even more isolated from the outside world than China’s model. Meanwhile, the number of victims of the crackdown by security forces is rising rapidly. CBS, citing sources inside Iran, reports 12,000–20,000 killed. Opposition media speak of figures as high as 50,000. These numbers cannot be verified due to the communications blackout. Hospitals are overwhelmed. Doctors are forced to choose whom to save because of a shortage of operating rooms. One physician said that at some point the injuries suddenly became much more severe — as if security forces had been ordered to use live ammunition. The US has requested intelligence from European allies on potential targets in the event of a strike on Iran, The Washington Post reports. Trump has promised help, but without specifics. Saudi Arabia, Oman, and Qatar are urging Washington not to strike now — the oil monarchies fear chaos and a possible closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Israel is also advising patience, believing the ayatollahs’ regime is not yet weakened enough for a decisive blow.

NEXTA

32,229 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад

🚨12 HOUR NEWS RECAP 1.⁠ Trump has not yet decided whether the U.S will participate in attacks on Iran's nuclear and military programs. The option was discussed during a national security team meeting, though he reportedly hopes the threat alone will force Iran to accept U.S demands in nuclear negotiations. 2.⁠ ⁠Iran’s Supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, is due to address the nation as it enters the 6th day of its war with Israel. His last public address was during Friday prayers last week shortly after Israel attacked. 3.⁠ The UN nuclear watchdog confirmed Israeli airstrikes hit 2 key sites: the Tehran Research Center and TESA Karaj workshop. One building producing advanced centrifuge rotors was hit in Tehran; 2 buildings making other components were destroyed in Karaj. 4.⁠ Iran launched multiple missile volleys overnight, targeting central and northern Israel. 94 people were treated for injuries, and fires broke out from impacts and interceptor debris, according to Israel’s Health Ministry. 5.⁠ The IDF confirmed that Iran downed one of their Hermes 900 drones. It marks the first time Iran has successfully downed one of the high-value drones - each worth up to $20 million. 6.⁠ Netanyahu’s office revealed that Iran has launched over 400 missiles and hundreds of drones since the war began last Friday. Around 40 impacts have hit across Israel, killing 24 people, wounding 800+, and forcing over 3,800 to evacuate. 7.⁠ Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said Tehran is confident Arab neighbors won’t allow U.S forces on their soil to strike Iran. 8.⁠ Israel’s supply of "Arrow" missile interceptors is reportedly dwindling. The advanced, high-altitude defense systems are critical to countering long-range ballistic missile threats, like those launched from Iran. 9.⁠ A key radar system in Hamedan province, in western Iran, near the borders with Iraq and Turkey, has been replaced after being taken out. The Soubashi radar provided vital air defense coverage for western, northwestern, and southwestern Iran. 10.⁠ El Al resumed operations into Israel with a flight from Larnaca, Cyprus, landing at Ben Gurion Airport for the first time since the war with Iran erupted last Friday. The mission is part of Operation Safe Return, launched by Israel’s Transport Ministry to bring back the estimated 100,000 citizens currently stranded overseas.

Mario Nawfal

188,541 просмотров • 1 год назад

There is a moment in revolutions- a precise and historically recognizable sweet spot- when an old, brutal, and hardened regime still deploys its forces, yet something breaks in its resolve. You can sense it, and then the public senses it: fear has shifted sides. The oppressors are no longer as certain as they once were in using force. They cannot compete with sheer numbers, with masses filling the streets. Crucially, their own men begin to hesitate. Security forces grow reluctant to shoot at demonstrators; many have family members among them, or doubt that the regime they are defending will survive. This dynamic is well documented across revolutionary cases. In Iran in 1978–79, the Shah’s regime retained overwhelming military superiority, yet its paralysis came from fractured loyalty within the armed forces and police. In Eastern Europe in 1989, regimes collapsed not because protesters defeated the state militarily, but because security elites lost confidence that repression would restore control - most famously in Berlin Wall’s fall, when orders were issued but no one was willing to enforce them. Similar patterns appeared during the early stages of the Arab uprisings, especially in Tunisia and Egypt, where the army’s refusal to fully suppress mass protests proved decisive. That moment is also when regimes begin to change their language. They make offers. They issue statements acknowledging the “legitimate concerns” of protesters or opposition figures. They float proposals for dialogue or negotiations. Far from signaling strength, these shifts repeatedly mark the point at which a revolutionary situation reaches its peak. Such gestures often confirm what protesters already suspect: that the regime’s primary tools, fear and violance, are no longer functioning. That the state is dying. Political science research on authoritarian breakdown supports this pattern. Revolutions rarely succeed because of popular mobilization alone; they succeed when coercive institutions fragment. Once uncertainty spreads within the security apparatus the regime’s collapse becomes a question of timing. The Islamic Republic still possesses formidable repressive capacity. Yet the signals- hesitation, mixed messaging, demonstration of fear by cutting internet- suggest a leadership aware that it may no longer be able to rely on obedience. Historically, that awareness is one of the clearest indicators that an authoritarian system is entering its most dangerous and potentially decisive phase. It does feel very close.

נדב איל Nadav Eyal

618,226 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад