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🇮🇶 | Popular Mobilization Forces: Our Forces are dismantling the logistical networks of ISIS and destroying its strongholds in Saladin and Diyala provinces.
🔹@enemywatch
🔹@enemywatch
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✅ | Within hours and days, we are going to witness the domino fall in the political and social structures of European states, as mass resignations will begin once the names of those figures in the Epstein files are exposed one by one. Mossad has trapped them all. Two or three major faces have already resigned, with more to come.
This will not remain limited to individual careers collapsing; it will escalate into institutional crises, parliamentary paralysis, and deep legitimacy deficits across multiple European governments. What is unfolding is not a scandal but a systemic unmasking,...
🔹@enemywatch
This will not remain limited to individual careers collapsing; it will escalate into institutional crises, parliamentary paralysis, and deep legitimacy deficits across multiple European governments. What is unfolding is not a scandal but a systemic unmasking,...
🔹@enemywatch
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Enemy Watch — Official
✅ | Within hours and days, we are going to witness the domino fall in the political and social structures of European states, as mass resignations will begin once the names of those figures in the Epstein files are exposed one by one. Mossad has trapped them…
🏴☠️ | Series of resignations linked to Epstein scandal:
In the wake of the Jeffrey Epstein revelations, multiple senior officials have resigned across Europe and the UK. Tim Allan, Downing Street’s Director of Communications, stepped down amid the scandal, while Slovakia’s National Security Advisor Miro Lajčák resigned after messages with Epstein surfaced. Norway’s ambassador to Jordan and Iraq, Mona Juul, also resigned following what the Foreign Ministry called a serious lapse in judgment tied to prior contact with Epstein. These developments follow earlier resignations, including Labour Party figure Peter Mandelson, which can be said the far-reaching impact of Epstein-linked controversies on political and diplomatic leadership, More to come...
🔹@enemywatch
In the wake of the Jeffrey Epstein revelations, multiple senior officials have resigned across Europe and the UK. Tim Allan, Downing Street’s Director of Communications, stepped down amid the scandal, while Slovakia’s National Security Advisor Miro Lajčák resigned after messages with Epstein surfaced. Norway’s ambassador to Jordan and Iraq, Mona Juul, also resigned following what the Foreign Ministry called a serious lapse in judgment tied to prior contact with Epstein. These developments follow earlier resignations, including Labour Party figure Peter Mandelson, which can be said the far-reaching impact of Epstein-linked controversies on political and diplomatic leadership, More to come...
🔹@enemywatch
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🇮🇷 | Iranian security forces have arrested Hossein Karroubi, associate of infamous Mehdi Karroubi.
Hossein Karroubi is identified as the instigator, drafter, and publisher of Mehdi Karroubi’s recent “structure-breaking” statements. He has been linked to anti-revolutionary networks, including Saham News and Tahkim Mellat, and is alleged to have collaborated with certain overseas opposition elements.
Mehdi Karroubi, whose positions and statements are central to this case, served as Speaker of Parliament from 1989 to 1992 and from 2000 to 2004, and was a presidential candidate in the 2005 and 2009 elections. He has often been described as a “moderate” with a mostly rural base of support, considers himself a pragmatic reformist, and later emerged as one of the leaders of the Iranian Green Movement.
Karroubi was among the major figures behind the unrest in 2005. At that time, it was the leniency of the Iranian judiciary that allowed him and many others to operate with relative freedom. As of now, if such figures are not restrained, they will continue to gather influence and generate further problems for Iran’s internal security. A majority of these actors operated under the banner of the right to expression, yet repeatedly created instability for the state. They played significant roles in the formation and establishment of shadow micromanagement structures linked to foreign adversaries inside Iran, often by using their influence to grant licenses to cafés and NGOs that functioned as Trojan horses for Israel.
Iran has usually confined such individuals to house arrest. However, they have continued to enjoy dignified living conditions within legal procedures. It should be recalled that other infamous figures, such as Sadegh Rouhani and Sadegh Shirazi, were also placed under house arrest, yet were still able to pursue their shadow agendas with relative freedom. This is what distinguishes Iran from many regional and European countries.
One must remember the actions of these infamous networks so that, years later, it is not claimed that Khamenei suppressed people for speaking the “truth.” That so-called “truth” was, in reality, the script of Mossad.
🔹@enemywatch
Hossein Karroubi is identified as the instigator, drafter, and publisher of Mehdi Karroubi’s recent “structure-breaking” statements. He has been linked to anti-revolutionary networks, including Saham News and Tahkim Mellat, and is alleged to have collaborated with certain overseas opposition elements.
Mehdi Karroubi, whose positions and statements are central to this case, served as Speaker of Parliament from 1989 to 1992 and from 2000 to 2004, and was a presidential candidate in the 2005 and 2009 elections. He has often been described as a “moderate” with a mostly rural base of support, considers himself a pragmatic reformist, and later emerged as one of the leaders of the Iranian Green Movement.
Karroubi was among the major figures behind the unrest in 2005. At that time, it was the leniency of the Iranian judiciary that allowed him and many others to operate with relative freedom. As of now, if such figures are not restrained, they will continue to gather influence and generate further problems for Iran’s internal security. A majority of these actors operated under the banner of the right to expression, yet repeatedly created instability for the state. They played significant roles in the formation and establishment of shadow micromanagement structures linked to foreign adversaries inside Iran, often by using their influence to grant licenses to cafés and NGOs that functioned as Trojan horses for Israel.
Iran has usually confined such individuals to house arrest. However, they have continued to enjoy dignified living conditions within legal procedures. It should be recalled that other infamous figures, such as Sadegh Rouhani and Sadegh Shirazi, were also placed under house arrest, yet were still able to pursue their shadow agendas with relative freedom. This is what distinguishes Iran from many regional and European countries.
One must remember the actions of these infamous networks so that, years later, it is not claimed that Khamenei suppressed people for speaking the “truth.” That so-called “truth” was, in reality, the script of Mossad.
🔹@enemywatch
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🇮🇷 | Breaking — Armed attack targets police in Khash, Iran:
In Khash, Sistan and Baluchestan, armed terrorists opened fire on a police vehicle, wounding two officers who were immediately transferred to a medical center. Authorities have launched operations to apprehend the attackers and implemented an intensified security plan in the surrounding area.
🔹@enemywatch
In Khash, Sistan and Baluchestan, armed terrorists opened fire on a police vehicle, wounding two officers who were immediately transferred to a medical center. Authorities have launched operations to apprehend the attackers and implemented an intensified security plan in the surrounding area.
🔹@enemywatch
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Middle East Spectator — MES
—❗️🇺🇸/🇮🇷 NEW: The chief of Iran's Atomic Energy Agency, Mohammad Eslami, says Iran could consider 'diluting' its stockpile of 60% enriched uranium, but only in exchange for a blanket removal of all economic sanctions Iran has previously offered this concession…
☑️ | People often dislike it, but we do not need nuclear weapons, and nuclear capability is not everything for Iran. It is an achievement and revolutionary development for the country's progress, and it will not be reduced to zero under pressure. However, in return for the removal of crushing economic sanctions, and with human (not the subhuman liars) mediators and guarantors, it can be resolved with relative ease. As the Leader said, “the issue is not nuclear.” We all know the issue is to demolish Iran.
So Iran is ready to fight the battle, but if the Americans calculate and want to step back, they must proceed on this basis. Though nothing will happen other than America remaining a permanent enemy, Iran will continue resisting and fighting. But keep in your mind-Nuclear is not everything!
🔹@enemywatch
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So Iran is ready to fight the battle, but if the Americans calculate and want to step back, they must proceed on this basis. Though nothing will happen other than America remaining a permanent enemy, Iran will continue resisting and fighting. But keep in your mind-Nuclear is not everything!
🔹@enemywatch
+
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Enemy Watch — Official
🏴 | This child, Ali Hassan Jaber, and his father, Hassan Jaber, were killed in a raid on Yanouh in southern Lebanon. 🔹@enemywatch
🟨 Breaking — Statement issued by Hezbollah regarding Israeli attacks on southern Lebanon:
Hezbollah condemns the serious aggression carried out by the Israeli enemy through its incursion into the town of Al-Hibariyeh in the Hasbaya District and the kidnapping of the Islamic Group official in the Hasbaya and Marjeyoun areas, brother Atwi Atwi, from his home, as well as the assault on him and his family, terrifying them. Hezbollah also condemns the two attacks: on a vehicle in the town of Yanouh, which led to the martyrdom of three people, including a child, and the martyrdom of a citizen in the town of Aita al-Shaab. These events confirm the criminal and brutal nature of the Israeli enemy, based on killing, terrorism, piracy, and its complete disregard for Lebanese sovereignty.
This dangerous development signals the beginning of a new phase of Israeli lawlessness and rampage, based on incursions, kidnappings, and hostage-taking, which exposes all southern residents to direct danger and puts them under constant threat, in the absence of any deterrent or protection against an enemy that violates all norms and respects no laws or international agreements.
In response to this blatant aggression, especially following the Prime Minister’s visit to the south and witnessing the suffering of our people and the occupation on our land, the Lebanese state is today required to assume its full national responsibilities, in accordance with its commitments in its ministerial statement. It must end its silence and incapacity, adopt deterrent measures, take firm and clear positions, and act immediately at all political, diplomatic, and legal levels. Serious efforts must be made to protect citizens and not rely merely on statements that fail to prevent the enemy from continuing its aggression and lawless actions.
🟡@enemywatch
Hezbollah condemns the serious aggression carried out by the Israeli enemy through its incursion into the town of Al-Hibariyeh in the Hasbaya District and the kidnapping of the Islamic Group official in the Hasbaya and Marjeyoun areas, brother Atwi Atwi, from his home, as well as the assault on him and his family, terrifying them. Hezbollah also condemns the two attacks: on a vehicle in the town of Yanouh, which led to the martyrdom of three people, including a child, and the martyrdom of a citizen in the town of Aita al-Shaab. These events confirm the criminal and brutal nature of the Israeli enemy, based on killing, terrorism, piracy, and its complete disregard for Lebanese sovereignty.
This dangerous development signals the beginning of a new phase of Israeli lawlessness and rampage, based on incursions, kidnappings, and hostage-taking, which exposes all southern residents to direct danger and puts them under constant threat, in the absence of any deterrent or protection against an enemy that violates all norms and respects no laws or international agreements.
In response to this blatant aggression, especially following the Prime Minister’s visit to the south and witnessing the suffering of our people and the occupation on our land, the Lebanese state is today required to assume its full national responsibilities, in accordance with its commitments in its ministerial statement. It must end its silence and incapacity, adopt deterrent measures, take firm and clear positions, and act immediately at all political, diplomatic, and legal levels. Serious efforts must be made to protect citizens and not rely merely on statements that fail to prevent the enemy from continuing its aggression and lawless actions.
🟡@enemywatch
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🏴☠️ | An indictment has been filed against two brothers in their 20s from the occupied-Jerusalem area, accused of spying for Iranian intelligence services. According to the indictment, the two allegedly transferred various security-related information while fully aware that they were acting under the direction of Iranian agents, in exchange for money.
🔹@enemywatch
🔹@enemywatch
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🇮🇷 | 🔍| Major structural changes occurring in Iranian armed forces? (1/4):
There are major structural changes occurring in Iran related to the military and its associated organizations. Historically, significant events have revealed certain shortcomings in management due to a variety of reasons. These challenges show that, in some cases, evolution is necessary for improvement. The ongoing changes in Iran’s military structure can be understood in this context, as steps taken to address previous limitations and to adapt to new strategic requirements.
For example, Iran’s Defense Ministry has announced that new military achievements and capabilities will no longer be publicly unveiled, citing security considerations. Public unveilings and media announcements have been halted to maintain operational surprise, while the systems are already active in both offensive and defensive roles. The ministry continues to focus on technology, artificial intelligence, and cyber development to further strengthen the country’s defense power.
This rationale also explains why Imam Khamenei did not host the annual meeting with IRIAF pilots and generals. Such decisions are part of broader structural and managerial reforms designed to enhance security and ensure more effective oversight. Overall, these changes reflect a deliberate effort to modernize the military, improve management, and protect strategic capabilities from potential exposure.
🔹@enemywatch
+
There are major structural changes occurring in Iran related to the military and its associated organizations. Historically, significant events have revealed certain shortcomings in management due to a variety of reasons. These challenges show that, in some cases, evolution is necessary for improvement. The ongoing changes in Iran’s military structure can be understood in this context, as steps taken to address previous limitations and to adapt to new strategic requirements.
For example, Iran’s Defense Ministry has announced that new military achievements and capabilities will no longer be publicly unveiled, citing security considerations. Public unveilings and media announcements have been halted to maintain operational surprise, while the systems are already active in both offensive and defensive roles. The ministry continues to focus on technology, artificial intelligence, and cyber development to further strengthen the country’s defense power.
This rationale also explains why Imam Khamenei did not host the annual meeting with IRIAF pilots and generals. Such decisions are part of broader structural and managerial reforms designed to enhance security and ensure more effective oversight. Overall, these changes reflect a deliberate effort to modernize the military, improve management, and protect strategic capabilities from potential exposure.
🔹@enemywatch
+
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Enemy Watch — Official
🇮🇷 | 🔍| Major structural changes occurring in Iranian armed forces? (1/4): There are major structural changes occurring in Iran related to the military and its associated organizations. Historically, significant events have revealed certain shortcomings in…
+
(2/4):
According to some reports, a plan has been under review to merge Iran’s two main intelligence bodies, the Ministry of Intelligence and the Intelligence Organization of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), into a single unified entity called the National Intelligence Organization (SAMA). This move reflects ongoing efforts to streamline intelligence operations and reduce redundancy, aiming to strengthen coordination across the country’s security and military apparatus.
It should be noted that, based on experiences gained during past conflicts, and with Major General Seyyed Abdolrahim Mousavi serving as Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces, significant changes are expected at the top levels of the armed forces. These changes have reportedly been proposed by him and approved by the respected Commander-in-Chief, who sits at the apex of the military command structure. Such reforms aim to improve efficiency, prevent overlapping responsibilities, and adapt the armed forces to evolving strategic needs.
In line with these reforms, credible reports indicate that measures are being implemented to prevent duplication between the General Staff and the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters. Following consultations and proposals, a decision has reportedly been made to keep the structure of the Khatam al-Anbiya Headquarters intact while placing it under the authority of the General Staff. The head of this headquarters will serve as the deputy to the Chief of the General Staff, consolidating oversight and simplifying the chain of command. In addition, two positions within the General Staff—the Deputy for Operations and the Deputy for Intelligence—are being eliminated. Their responsibilities will instead be jointly assumed by the Operations and Intelligence Deputy of the Khatam al-Anbiya Headquarters. At the same time, Brigadier General Vahidi is reportedly moving from the position of Deputy Chief of the General Staff to become the Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the IRGC, replacing Brigadier General Fadavi.
Changes are also expected within the IRGC itself, affecting command and combat organization structures to enhance agility and operational efficiency. These adjustments are said to be based on detailed studies and lessons learned from confrontations with adversaries over recent years. All of these reforms will be implemented under the direct approval and orders of the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, Imam Khamenei, reflecting a comprehensive effort to modernize Iran’s military and intelligence structures while strengthening overall security.
🔹@enemywatch
+
(2/4):
According to some reports, a plan has been under review to merge Iran’s two main intelligence bodies, the Ministry of Intelligence and the Intelligence Organization of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), into a single unified entity called the National Intelligence Organization (SAMA). This move reflects ongoing efforts to streamline intelligence operations and reduce redundancy, aiming to strengthen coordination across the country’s security and military apparatus.
It should be noted that, based on experiences gained during past conflicts, and with Major General Seyyed Abdolrahim Mousavi serving as Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces, significant changes are expected at the top levels of the armed forces. These changes have reportedly been proposed by him and approved by the respected Commander-in-Chief, who sits at the apex of the military command structure. Such reforms aim to improve efficiency, prevent overlapping responsibilities, and adapt the armed forces to evolving strategic needs.
In line with these reforms, credible reports indicate that measures are being implemented to prevent duplication between the General Staff and the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters. Following consultations and proposals, a decision has reportedly been made to keep the structure of the Khatam al-Anbiya Headquarters intact while placing it under the authority of the General Staff. The head of this headquarters will serve as the deputy to the Chief of the General Staff, consolidating oversight and simplifying the chain of command. In addition, two positions within the General Staff—the Deputy for Operations and the Deputy for Intelligence—are being eliminated. Their responsibilities will instead be jointly assumed by the Operations and Intelligence Deputy of the Khatam al-Anbiya Headquarters. At the same time, Brigadier General Vahidi is reportedly moving from the position of Deputy Chief of the General Staff to become the Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the IRGC, replacing Brigadier General Fadavi.
Changes are also expected within the IRGC itself, affecting command and combat organization structures to enhance agility and operational efficiency. These adjustments are said to be based on detailed studies and lessons learned from confrontations with adversaries over recent years. All of these reforms will be implemented under the direct approval and orders of the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, Imam Khamenei, reflecting a comprehensive effort to modernize Iran’s military and intelligence structures while strengthening overall security.
🔹@enemywatch
+
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Enemy Watch — Official
+ (2/4): According to some reports, a plan has been under review to merge Iran’s two main intelligence bodies, the Ministry of Intelligence and the Intelligence Organization of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), into a single unified entity called…
+
(3/4):
According to Tabnak, citing the Jomhouri Eslami newspaper, this issue remained hidden within the deeper layers of defense policy for decades. Today, under the pressure of rapidly unfolding regional developments, economic crises, and costly international decisions, it has turned into a strategic question: Is the current structure of Iran’s armed forces aligned with the requirements of national security and the country’s long-term interests, or not?
Recently, I reviewed the memoirs of Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani. In an entry dated the second day of Farvardin 1368 (March 22, 1989), he wrote:
“I went in the afternoon to visit Imam [Khomeini]. I explained the situation of the Army and the IRGC, raised the problem of duality within the armed forces, the excessive costs of parallel organizations and duplicate forces, and the necessity of cohesion. Imam was concerned that merging the Army and the IRGC would provoke anger among the forces and lead to conflict. Although he accepted that they would eventually have to become one, he did not consider the timing appropriate. However, he did not oppose the merger of the Ministry of Defense and the Ministry of the IRGC.”
After the victory of the Islamic Revolution, given the revolutionary conditions, widespread insecurity, and the weakness of inherited structures from the past, various institutions emerged alongside official bodies. Many of these played decisive and vital roles at critical moments. However, as the country moved beyond emergency conditions and entered a phase of stabilization, the continued existence of parallel institutions gradually revealed its consequences. After the end of the war, the first serious step toward integrating the country’s defense structures was taken. While this decision appeared administrative on the surface, in practice it signaled a shift in the country’s decision-making approach from dispersed revolutionary management to structured and centralized governance. The merger of the Ministry of the IRGC into the Ministry of Defense, approved by parliament, aimed at creating unified management of defense and military support affairs and became a turning point in organizing the nation’s defensive capabilities, opening a clearer horizon for the future of the armed forces.
At that time, three main institutions responsible for order and security—the Police (Shahrbani), the Gendarmerie, and the Islamic Revolution Committees—despite their extensive and sometimes decisive services, faced significant overlap and parallelism in their missions. On one hand, society encountered three different security authorities, and on the other, this fragmented structure often acted not as complementary but as competing entities, leading to operational conflicts. The decision to merge these three bodies, under the direct management of Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani and with the cooperation of the armed forces and the government, ultimately led to the formation of the Law Enforcement Force of the Islamic Republic of Iran (NAJA).
Among all areas discussed for structural reform, the merger of the Army and the IRGC held a uniquely sensitive position. The experience of the imposed war clearly demonstrated that unity of command and coherence in decision-making structures were essential for survival and success in national defense. This necessity was explicitly stated in the historic decree appointing Hashemi Rafsanjani as Deputy Commander-in-Chief, issued by Imam Khomeini on June 2, 1988, which explicitly included the integration of parallel forces and the organization of institutions with overlapping responsibilities among his missions. This decree reflected not only the need for unified command but also the leadership’s determination to pursue structural reforms in the defense sector. Based on this mandate, intensive sessions, prolonged negotiations, and detailed studies were conducted to reach a joint operational model among the forces. Ayatollah Hashemi seriously began efforts to merge the two.
🔹@enemywatch
+
(3/4):
According to Tabnak, citing the Jomhouri Eslami newspaper, this issue remained hidden within the deeper layers of defense policy for decades. Today, under the pressure of rapidly unfolding regional developments, economic crises, and costly international decisions, it has turned into a strategic question: Is the current structure of Iran’s armed forces aligned with the requirements of national security and the country’s long-term interests, or not?
Recently, I reviewed the memoirs of Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani. In an entry dated the second day of Farvardin 1368 (March 22, 1989), he wrote:
“I went in the afternoon to visit Imam [Khomeini]. I explained the situation of the Army and the IRGC, raised the problem of duality within the armed forces, the excessive costs of parallel organizations and duplicate forces, and the necessity of cohesion. Imam was concerned that merging the Army and the IRGC would provoke anger among the forces and lead to conflict. Although he accepted that they would eventually have to become one, he did not consider the timing appropriate. However, he did not oppose the merger of the Ministry of Defense and the Ministry of the IRGC.”
After the victory of the Islamic Revolution, given the revolutionary conditions, widespread insecurity, and the weakness of inherited structures from the past, various institutions emerged alongside official bodies. Many of these played decisive and vital roles at critical moments. However, as the country moved beyond emergency conditions and entered a phase of stabilization, the continued existence of parallel institutions gradually revealed its consequences. After the end of the war, the first serious step toward integrating the country’s defense structures was taken. While this decision appeared administrative on the surface, in practice it signaled a shift in the country’s decision-making approach from dispersed revolutionary management to structured and centralized governance. The merger of the Ministry of the IRGC into the Ministry of Defense, approved by parliament, aimed at creating unified management of defense and military support affairs and became a turning point in organizing the nation’s defensive capabilities, opening a clearer horizon for the future of the armed forces.
At that time, three main institutions responsible for order and security—the Police (Shahrbani), the Gendarmerie, and the Islamic Revolution Committees—despite their extensive and sometimes decisive services, faced significant overlap and parallelism in their missions. On one hand, society encountered three different security authorities, and on the other, this fragmented structure often acted not as complementary but as competing entities, leading to operational conflicts. The decision to merge these three bodies, under the direct management of Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani and with the cooperation of the armed forces and the government, ultimately led to the formation of the Law Enforcement Force of the Islamic Republic of Iran (NAJA).
Among all areas discussed for structural reform, the merger of the Army and the IRGC held a uniquely sensitive position. The experience of the imposed war clearly demonstrated that unity of command and coherence in decision-making structures were essential for survival and success in national defense. This necessity was explicitly stated in the historic decree appointing Hashemi Rafsanjani as Deputy Commander-in-Chief, issued by Imam Khomeini on June 2, 1988, which explicitly included the integration of parallel forces and the organization of institutions with overlapping responsibilities among his missions. This decree reflected not only the need for unified command but also the leadership’s determination to pursue structural reforms in the defense sector. Based on this mandate, intensive sessions, prolonged negotiations, and detailed studies were conducted to reach a joint operational model among the forces. Ayatollah Hashemi seriously began efforts to merge the two.
🔹@enemywatch
+
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Enemy Watch — Official
+ (3/4): According to Tabnak, citing the Jomhouri Eslami newspaper, this issue remained hidden within the deeper layers of defense policy for decades. Today, under the pressure of rapidly unfolding regional developments, economic crises, and costly international…
+
(4/4):
Given Abdullah Nouri’s experience in the merger and formation of the Law Enforcement Force, responsibility for this integration was also entrusted to him.
However, following the passing of Imam Khomeini and the beginning of Ayatollah Khamenei’s leadership, only a few days later he ordered that the sessions related to the Army–IRGC merger plan be halted. He stated that he did not believe in merging the Army and the IRGC, emphasizing that they were two armed pillars of the Revolution and the Islamic Republic of Iran and should remain as such, continuing their duties in cooperation with one another according to the law. This decision defined a path of cooperation while maintaining separate responsibilities, and the leadership instructed the General Staff of the Armed Forces to delineate the respective missions of the Army and the IRGC through formal sessions.
At the time, this decision was understandable and even necessary to preserve stability and calm within the armed forces. The problem began when the separation of missions gradually drifted away from legal frameworks and overarching policies and was not fully and systematically implemented in practice. The expanding presence of military institutions in areas beyond purely military missions—from the economy and politics to media and even forms of diplomacy—opened a path inconsistent with both the philosophy of the armed forces’ existence and the vision of the founder of the Islamic Republic. The result was not an increase in national power or strategic cohesion, but rather the emergence of a controversial, factional, and multifaceted image of a military institution. Domestically, this became a source of political disputes, and internationally, it provided a pretext for pressure, sanctions, and costly and unnecessary decisions against Iran’s national interests.
Perhaps a significant portion of today’s problems, from the economy to foreign policy, stems from this confusion of roles—where military institutions enter arenas for which they were neither designed nor capable of managing the consequences. Today, what can both stabilize national security and help the country move beyond costly deadlocks is the rational unification of power and a return of each institution to its legally defined roles. Such a return to the logic of law and institutional division of labor may well pave the way for containing hostile enemies more effectively, while also reducing the accumulated burdens placed on the people.
The writings presented are based on reports and information received from various sources. What we expect are the best possible outcomes if any changes are implemented. We appreciate and endorse steps taken to maintain secrecy and strategic discretion. In this regard, repeated public exposure of missile cities is not a sound strategy. Likewise, revealing the identities of armed positions and those responsible for holding or managing them is counterproductive. These tactics need to be reconsidered and adjusted.
That said, there are indications that positive developments are underway.
May Allah bless the Islamic Republic and its people, and may Allah bless the leadership and the armed forces.
🔹@enemywatch
(4/4):
Given Abdullah Nouri’s experience in the merger and formation of the Law Enforcement Force, responsibility for this integration was also entrusted to him.
However, following the passing of Imam Khomeini and the beginning of Ayatollah Khamenei’s leadership, only a few days later he ordered that the sessions related to the Army–IRGC merger plan be halted. He stated that he did not believe in merging the Army and the IRGC, emphasizing that they were two armed pillars of the Revolution and the Islamic Republic of Iran and should remain as such, continuing their duties in cooperation with one another according to the law. This decision defined a path of cooperation while maintaining separate responsibilities, and the leadership instructed the General Staff of the Armed Forces to delineate the respective missions of the Army and the IRGC through formal sessions.
At the time, this decision was understandable and even necessary to preserve stability and calm within the armed forces. The problem began when the separation of missions gradually drifted away from legal frameworks and overarching policies and was not fully and systematically implemented in practice. The expanding presence of military institutions in areas beyond purely military missions—from the economy and politics to media and even forms of diplomacy—opened a path inconsistent with both the philosophy of the armed forces’ existence and the vision of the founder of the Islamic Republic. The result was not an increase in national power or strategic cohesion, but rather the emergence of a controversial, factional, and multifaceted image of a military institution. Domestically, this became a source of political disputes, and internationally, it provided a pretext for pressure, sanctions, and costly and unnecessary decisions against Iran’s national interests.
Perhaps a significant portion of today’s problems, from the economy to foreign policy, stems from this confusion of roles—where military institutions enter arenas for which they were neither designed nor capable of managing the consequences. Today, what can both stabilize national security and help the country move beyond costly deadlocks is the rational unification of power and a return of each institution to its legally defined roles. Such a return to the logic of law and institutional division of labor may well pave the way for containing hostile enemies more effectively, while also reducing the accumulated burdens placed on the people.
The writings presented are based on reports and information received from various sources. What we expect are the best possible outcomes if any changes are implemented. We appreciate and endorse steps taken to maintain secrecy and strategic discretion. In this regard, repeated public exposure of missile cities is not a sound strategy. Likewise, revealing the identities of armed positions and those responsible for holding or managing them is counterproductive. These tactics need to be reconsidered and adjusted.
That said, there are indications that positive developments are underway.
May Allah bless the Islamic Republic and its people, and may Allah bless the leadership and the armed forces.
🔹@enemywatch
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🇮🇷 | Breaking — Reformist figure Ali Shakouri Rad arrested:
Ali Shakouri Rad, a member of the Central Council of the Motalefeh Party and former campaign manager for Mostafa Moin in the 2005 Iranian presidential election, has been arrested by Iranian authorities. Shakouri Rad previously served in the Iranian Parliament from 2000 to 2004 but was disqualified by the Guardian Council from running in the 2004 elections. Despite the clear stance of Reza Pahlavi and his support for riots, he rejected it and often led networks linked to recent coup-like riots. That is the severity of the incident, which explains why figures of this stature are now under arrest.
🔹@enemywatch
Ali Shakouri Rad, a member of the Central Council of the Motalefeh Party and former campaign manager for Mostafa Moin in the 2005 Iranian presidential election, has been arrested by Iranian authorities. Shakouri Rad previously served in the Iranian Parliament from 2000 to 2004 but was disqualified by the Guardian Council from running in the 2004 elections. Despite the clear stance of Reza Pahlavi and his support for riots, he rejected it and often led networks linked to recent coup-like riots. That is the severity of the incident, which explains why figures of this stature are now under arrest.
🔹@enemywatch
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Enemy Watch — Official
🇮🇷 | Breaking — Reformist figure Ali Shakouri Rad arrested: Ali Shakouri Rad, a member of the Central Council of the Motalefeh Party and former campaign manager for Mostafa Moin in the 2005 Iranian presidential election, has been arrested by Iranian authorities.…
✅ | Iran, under the shadow pressure of internal disturbances and external enemies, has historically been lenient; pardoning, allowing, and often rebuking and releasing a majority of such individuals over the past two decades. This has created a collective of potential threats. However, in the current scenario, with the U.S. armada on the coast of Iran and the threat clearly present, the first priority is the arrest of all proven instigators of coup-like riots, which have previously damaged Iran by an ISIS-pattern massacres.
🔹@enemywatch
🔹@enemywatch
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🇮🇷 | Final sentences of Shakouri Rad, Ghorban Behzadian-Nejad, and Hossein Karroubi carried out:
The final judicial sentences for Ali Shakouri Rad, Ghorban Behzadian-Nejad, and Hossein Karroubi, which had been confirmed by the Court of Appeals, have been executed.
By order of the judicial authority, the mentioned convicts were arrested in recent days and transferred to prison to serve their sentences.
🔹@enemywatch
The final judicial sentences for Ali Shakouri Rad, Ghorban Behzadian-Nejad, and Hossein Karroubi, which had been confirmed by the Court of Appeals, have been executed.
By order of the judicial authority, the mentioned convicts were arrested in recent days and transferred to prison to serve their sentences.
🔹@enemywatch
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Forwarded from Fotros Resistance
Well well well… how interesting & convenient!
It looks like Twitter (X) has suspended the account of Mansoor Azari at the same time of her arrest.
It’s like they didn’t want her posts/DMs to be accessed during her trials, and this thanks to Twitter themselves! Makes you wonder…
@FotrosResistancee
It looks like Twitter (X) has suspended the account of Mansoor Azari at the same time of her arrest.
It’s like they didn’t want her posts/DMs to be accessed during her trials, and this thanks to Twitter themselves! Makes you wonder…
@FotrosResistancee
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Forwarded from Geopolitics Prime | Epstein files updates
A depraved exchange about women between Jeffrey Epstein and ex-EU bureaucrat, former Sarkozy-era diplomat and financier Olivier Colom has been uncovered by Geopolitics Prime.
Olivier Colom is a former French diplomat who served as a diplomatic advisor to former French President Nicolas Sarkozy.
He also worked in the office of UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, and was a member of the executive committee of the Edmond de Rothschild Group from 2013 to 2016.
💬 Corresponding with Colom, Epstein boasted, "[I’m] on my island in the Caribbean, with an aquarium full of girls."
During the exchange, the high-profile convicted sex offender crudely revealed his predatory mentality, saying, "some are like shrimp; you throw away the head and keep the body."
Colom replied with enthusiastic, like-minded support — cloaked in similarly-coded responses,
💬
"I like shrimp. But not so much if it's too pink, although I'm definitely more into white than into any other color... I like your philosophy."
These messages are directly linked to Epstein’s elite network.
Colom notes that "Ariane is in the Bordeaux vineyards," confirming this conversation was held within the orbit of the powerful Rothschild banking dynasty.
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Enemy Watch — Official
🇮🇷 | Seizure of smuggled weapons at Kurdistan border: The Kurdistan province border guard announced the discovery and confiscation of 42 firearms, 729 rounds of ammunition, and 7 handheld radios in the border town of Sarvabad. The operation was conducted…
🔔 | Regional Updates:
Iran— #MossadHunt
• 86 main elements and leaders of recent riots in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province were identified and legally dealt with for destroying public property, harming shopkeepers and merchants, and firing at law enforcement officers.
• Three main riot elements from other provinces who had fled to Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad were also identified and arrested.
• Confiscated from detainees: 5 military weapons, a large quantity of ammunition, and 43 Molotov cocktails.
• The IRGC Navy announced the deployment of AI-equipped drones, including Mohajer‑6 and Ababil‑5 armed with Qiam and Almas missiles, to monitor and target hostile naval vessels.
• Oil prices rose by one dollar after US‑flagged ships were warned to stay away from Iranian waters in the Strait of Hormuz.
• Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi held phone conversations with the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Egypt regarding recent negotiations with the US.
• Ali Larijani, Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, will meet Sultan Haitham bin Tariq of Oman and Foreign Minister Al‑Busaidi during his visit to Muscat.
• Iran’s Foreign Minister to the US: “Your mobilization in the region does not intimidate us.”
• An Iranian Boeing 747 cargo aircraft landed in Tehran from Moscow, while another Boeing 747 departed Tehran for an unknown destination in China.
Occupied Syria
• israeli ground forces infiltrated between the villages of Kodneh and Barika in the countryside of Quneitra.
Lebanon / israel / US Entity
• Al‑Akhbar reported a secret military meeting in Florida between Lebanese and Israeli representatives, involving Simon Karam and an Israeli envoy, alongside five strict conditions imposed on Lebanon.
• The report has fueled political debate in Lebanon over sovereignty, transparency, and national interests amid rising regional pressure.
• Israeli forces fired live bullets at a citizen in Aita Al‑Shaab, resulting in martyrdom.
• Hostile aircraft dropped sonic bombs on Aita Al‑Shaab, Al‑Zaloutiyeh, Yarin, and Kfarkela.
• Machine‑gun fire targeted the outskirts of Kfarkela, Blida, and Adeisa.
• A drone strike targeted a car in Yanouh, killing three citizens.
• Israeli forces infiltrated Al‑Habariyah at dawn and kidnapped one citizen.
• Two mortar shells were fired toward the outskirts of Aayton.
• A hostile drone broadcast audio messages in Al‑Wazzani to terrorize farmers.
US Entity / Morocco / Mauritania / Algeria / Polisario Front
• The US held a secret high‑level meeting in Madrid proposing a framework granting Morocco autonomy over Western Sahara.
• Algeria’s participation signaled a potential shift in position, while the Polisario Front rejected the proposal.
israel / Indonesia / Gaza
• Indonesian forces are expected to be the first to deploy to Gaza as part of an International Stabilization Force.
• Forces will be stationed between Rafah and Khan Yunis, with facilities to be established within weeks.
West Bank / Palestine
• Settlers attacked Palestinian vehicles near the Shilo settlement between Ramallah and Nablus.
• Occupation forces stormed multiple towns and villages including Shweika, Al‑Bathan, Azun, Sa’ir, Beit Ummar, Siris, Al‑Shuyukh, Husan, Qusra, Bal’a, and Beit Dajan.
• Live ammunition was used during several raids, with widespread home invasions and arrests.
• Israeli settlers attacked electricity lines supplying the Shakara community near Duma, southeast of Nablus.
Gaza / Palestine
• Four Palestinians, including a child, were killed after Israeli airstrikes targeted a residential building sheltering displaced families in western Gaza City.
• Abu Ubaydah, spokesperson for the Al‑Qassam Brigades, vowed to eliminate Israeli‑backed militias operating in Gaza that coordinate with Israeli forces.
🔹@enemywatch
+
Iran— #MossadHunt
• 86 main elements and leaders of recent riots in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province were identified and legally dealt with for destroying public property, harming shopkeepers and merchants, and firing at law enforcement officers.
• Three main riot elements from other provinces who had fled to Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad were also identified and arrested.
• Confiscated from detainees: 5 military weapons, a large quantity of ammunition, and 43 Molotov cocktails.
• The IRGC Navy announced the deployment of AI-equipped drones, including Mohajer‑6 and Ababil‑5 armed with Qiam and Almas missiles, to monitor and target hostile naval vessels.
• Oil prices rose by one dollar after US‑flagged ships were warned to stay away from Iranian waters in the Strait of Hormuz.
• Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi held phone conversations with the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Egypt regarding recent negotiations with the US.
• Ali Larijani, Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, will meet Sultan Haitham bin Tariq of Oman and Foreign Minister Al‑Busaidi during his visit to Muscat.
• Iran’s Foreign Minister to the US: “Your mobilization in the region does not intimidate us.”
• An Iranian Boeing 747 cargo aircraft landed in Tehran from Moscow, while another Boeing 747 departed Tehran for an unknown destination in China.
Occupied Syria
• israeli ground forces infiltrated between the villages of Kodneh and Barika in the countryside of Quneitra.
Lebanon / israel / US Entity
• Al‑Akhbar reported a secret military meeting in Florida between Lebanese and Israeli representatives, involving Simon Karam and an Israeli envoy, alongside five strict conditions imposed on Lebanon.
• The report has fueled political debate in Lebanon over sovereignty, transparency, and national interests amid rising regional pressure.
• Israeli forces fired live bullets at a citizen in Aita Al‑Shaab, resulting in martyrdom.
• Hostile aircraft dropped sonic bombs on Aita Al‑Shaab, Al‑Zaloutiyeh, Yarin, and Kfarkela.
• Machine‑gun fire targeted the outskirts of Kfarkela, Blida, and Adeisa.
• A drone strike targeted a car in Yanouh, killing three citizens.
• Israeli forces infiltrated Al‑Habariyah at dawn and kidnapped one citizen.
• Two mortar shells were fired toward the outskirts of Aayton.
• A hostile drone broadcast audio messages in Al‑Wazzani to terrorize farmers.
US Entity / Morocco / Mauritania / Algeria / Polisario Front
• The US held a secret high‑level meeting in Madrid proposing a framework granting Morocco autonomy over Western Sahara.
• Algeria’s participation signaled a potential shift in position, while the Polisario Front rejected the proposal.
israel / Indonesia / Gaza
• Indonesian forces are expected to be the first to deploy to Gaza as part of an International Stabilization Force.
• Forces will be stationed between Rafah and Khan Yunis, with facilities to be established within weeks.
West Bank / Palestine
• Settlers attacked Palestinian vehicles near the Shilo settlement between Ramallah and Nablus.
• Occupation forces stormed multiple towns and villages including Shweika, Al‑Bathan, Azun, Sa’ir, Beit Ummar, Siris, Al‑Shuyukh, Husan, Qusra, Bal’a, and Beit Dajan.
• Live ammunition was used during several raids, with widespread home invasions and arrests.
• Israeli settlers attacked electricity lines supplying the Shakara community near Duma, southeast of Nablus.
Gaza / Palestine
• Four Palestinians, including a child, were killed after Israeli airstrikes targeted a residential building sheltering displaced families in western Gaza City.
• Abu Ubaydah, spokesperson for the Al‑Qassam Brigades, vowed to eliminate Israeli‑backed militias operating in Gaza that coordinate with Israeli forces.
🔹@enemywatch
+
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Enemy Watch — Official
🇮🇷 | Seizure of smuggled weapons at Kurdistan border: The Kurdistan province border guard announced the discovery and confiscation of 42 firearms, 729 rounds of ammunition, and 7 handheld radios in the border town of Sarvabad. The operation was conducted…
+
israel
• Israeli Prison Service has begun preparations to implement the death penalty against Palestinian prisoners.
• Plans include establishing a special execution complex, training specialized cadres, isolating prisoners, and prioritizing elite and West Bank detainees.
• Authorities are studying international models and may send a delegation abroad for technical guidance.
Russia
• Moscow's ambassador to Washington, Alexander Darchiev: Putin and Trump issued directives to diplomats to restore Russian-American relations to their former state.
🔹@enemywatch
+
israel
• Israeli Prison Service has begun preparations to implement the death penalty against Palestinian prisoners.
• Plans include establishing a special execution complex, training specialized cadres, isolating prisoners, and prioritizing elite and West Bank detainees.
• Authorities are studying international models and may send a delegation abroad for technical guidance.
Russia
• Moscow's ambassador to Washington, Alexander Darchiev: Putin and Trump issued directives to diplomats to restore Russian-American relations to their former state.
🔹@enemywatch
+
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