
Middle East crisis: Israel targets Iran's interal security headquarters; conflict enters day 8
IDF attacks Iran's internal security headquarters in Tehran.
The Middle East conflict between Israel and Iran entered eighth day with Israel Defence Forces (IDF) announcing on Friday that they have been targetting Tehran's 'special internal security unit'.
Israeli Air Force conducted strikes on Iran's 'Internal Security headquarters' and the headquarters of Iran's 'special internal security unit.'
Israeli intelligence branch-guided Air Force fighter jets carried out these operations, striking both the Internal Security Headquarters and the Special Units headquarters in the Tehran region. These security installations are integrated components of the Iranian regime's military structure.
The Israeli military reported that Iran deployed missiles with multiple warheads, creating new defensive challenges. These weapons systems are more complex to intercept than single-warhead missiles, potentially testing the capabilities of Israeli defense systems like Iron Dome.
The Washington-based organization Human Rights Activists reported Friday that Israeli strikes on Iran over the past week have resulted in 657 deaths and 2,037 injuries.
Iran's capital experienced an unusually quiet weekend on Friday, as many residents had left the capital following the Israeli airstrikes that began last week.
Streets were empty with little traffic. Shops stood closed. Those who remain in the city seem to largely be choosing to stay indoors as the war between Israel and Iran continues.
Iran's foreign minister says his country is not seeking negotiations with anyone as long as Israel continues its strikes on Iran.

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Indian Express
23 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Sheltering in a bunker, Iran's supreme leader names potential successors
Wary of assassination, Iran's supreme leader mostly speaks with his commanders through a trusted aide now, suspending electronic communications to make it harder to find him, three Iranian officials familiar with his emergency war plans say. Ensconced in a bunker, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has picked an array of replacements down his chain of miliary command in case more of his valued lieutenants are killed. And in a remarkable move, the officials add, Ayatollah Khamenei has even named three senior clerics as candidates to succeed him should he be killed, as well — perhaps the most telling illustration of the precarious moment he and his three-decade rule are facing. Ayatollah Khamenei has taken an extraordinary series of steps to preserve the Islamic Republic ever since Israel launched a series of surprise attacks last Friday. Though only a week old, the Israeli strikes are the biggest military assault on Iran since its war with Iraq in the 1980s, and the effect on the nation's capital, Tehran, has been particularly fierce. In only a few days, the Israeli attacks have been more intense and have caused more damage in Tehran than Saddam Hussein did in his entire eight-year war against Iran. Iran appears to have overcome its initial shock, reorganizing enough to launch daily counterstrikes of its own on Israel, hitting a hospital, the Haifa oil refinery, religious buildings and homes. Iran's top officials are also quietly making preparations for a wide range of outcomes as the war intensifies and as President Trump considers whether to enter the fight, according to the Iranian officials, who insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the ayatollah's plans. Peering inside Iran's closely guarded leadership can be difficult, but its chain of command still seems to be functioning, despite being hit hard, and there are no obvious signs of dissent in the political ranks, according to the officials and to diplomats in Iran. Ayatollah Khamenei, 86, is aware tateither Israel or the United States could try to assassinate him, an end he would view as martyrdom, the officials said. Given the possibility, the ayatollah has made the unusual decision to instruct his nation's Assembly of Experts, the clerical body responsible for appointing the supreme leader, to choose his successor swiftly from the three names he has provided. Normally, the process of appointing a new supreme leader could take months, with clerics picking and choosing from their own lists of names. But with the nation now at war, the officials said, the ayatollah wants to ensure a quick, orderly transition and to preserve his legacy. 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Since the war started, Ayatollah Khamenei has delivered to the public two recorded video messages, against a backdrop of brown curtains and next to the Iranian flag. 'The people of Iran will stand against a forced war,' he said, vowing not to surrender. In normal times, Ayatollah Khamenei lives and works in a highly secure compound in central Tehran called the 'beit rahbari' — or leader's house — and he seldom leaves the premises, except for special occasions like delivering a sermon. Senior officials and military commanders come to him for weekly meetings, and speeches for the public are staged from the compound. His retreat to a bunker shows how furiously Tehran has been struck in a war with Israel that Iranian officials say is unfolding on two fronts. One is being waged from the air, with Israeli airstrikes on military bases, nuclear facilities, critical energy infrastructure, commanders and nuclear scientists in their apartment buildings in tightly packed residential neighborhoods. Some of Iran's top commanders were summarily wiped out. Hundreds of people have also been killed and thousands of others injured, with civilians slain across Iran, human rights groups inside and outside the country say. But Iranian officials say that they are fighting on a second front, as well, with covert Israeli operatives and collaborators scattered on the ground across Iran's vast terrain, launching drones at critical energy and military structures. The fear of Israeli infiltration among the top ranks of Iran's security and intelligence apparatus has rattled the Iranian power structure, even Ayatollah Khamenei, officials say. 'It is clear that we had a massive security and intelligence breach; there is no denying this,' said Mahdi Mohammadi, a senior adviser to Iran's speaker of Parliament, Gen. Mohammad Ghalibaf, in an audio recording analyzing the war. 'Our senior commanders were all assassinated within one hour.' Iran's 'biggest failure was not discovering' the months of planning Israeli operatives had conducted to bring missiles and drone parts into the country to prepare for the attack, he added. The country's leadership has been preoccupied with three central concerns, officials say: an assassination attempt against Ayatollah Khamenei; the United States' entering the war; and more debilitating attacks against Iran's critical infrastructure, like power plants, oil and gas refineries and dams. Should the United States join the fight, the stakes would multiply significantly. Israel says that it wants to destroy Iran's nuclear program, but experts say that only the United States has the bomber — and the enormous 30,000-pound bomb — that might be capable of penetrating the mountain where Iran has built its most critical nuclear enrichment facilities, Fordo. Iran has threatened to retaliate by attacking American targets in the region, but that would only risk a wider, and possibly more devastating, conflict for Iran and its adversaries. The fear of assassination and infiltration within Iran's ranks is so widespread that the Ministry of Intelligence announced a series of security protocols, telling officials to stop using cellphones or any electronic devices to communicate. It has also ordered all senior government officials and military commanders to remain below ground, according to two Iranian officials. Almost every day, the Ministry of Intelligence or the Armed Forces issue directives for the public to report suspicious individuals and vehicle movements, and to refrain from taking photographs and videos of attacks on sensitive sites. The country has also been in a communication blackout with the outside world. The internet has been nearly shut down, and incoming international calls have been blocked. The Ministry of Telecommunications said in a statement that these measures were to find enemy operatives on the ground and to disable their ability to launch attacks. 'The security apparatus has concluded that, in this critical time, the internet is being abused to harm the lives and livelihoods of civilians,' said Ali Ahmadinia, the communications director for President Masoud Pezeshkian. 'We are safeguarding the security of our country by shutting down the internet.' On Friday, the Supreme National Security Council took it a step further, announcing that anyone working with the enemy must turn themselves into the authorities by the end of the day on Sunday, hand over their military equipment and 'return to the arms of the people.' It warned that anyone discovered to be working with the enemy after Sunday would face execution. Tehran has largely emptied out after orders by Israel to evacuate several highly populated districts. Videos of the city show highways and desolate streets that are typically clogged with bumper-to-bumper traffic. In interviews, residents of Tehran who remained in the city said security forces had set up checkpoints on every highway, on smaller roads and at entry points in and out of the city to conduct ad hoc searches. Mohammad Ali Abtahi, a reformist politician and a former vice president, said in a telephone interview from Tehran that Israel had miscalculated Iranians' reaction to the war. Mr. Abtahi said that the deep political factions that are typically in sharp disagreement with one another had rallied behind the supreme leader and focused the country on defending itself from an external threat. The war has 'softened the divisions we had, both among each other and with the general public,' Mr. Abtahi said. Israel's attacks have set off a resurgence of nationalism among many Iranians, inside and outside the country, including many critical of the government. That sense of common cause has emerged in a torrent of social media posts and statements by prominent human rights and political activists, physicians, national athletes, artists and celebrities. 'Like family, we may not always agree but Iran's soil is our red line,' wrote Saeid Ezzatollahi, a player with Iran's national soccer squad, Team Melli, on social media. Hotels, guesthouses and wedding halls have opened their doors free of charge to shelter displaced people fleeing Tehran, according to Iranian news media and videos on social media. Psychologists are offering free virtual therapy sessions in posts on their social media pages. Supermarkets are giving discounts, and at bakeries, customers are limiting their own purchases of fresh bread to one loaf so that everyone standing in line can have bread, according to videos shared on social media. Volunteers are offering services, like running errands to checking on disabled and older residents. 'We are seeing a beautiful unity among our people,' said Reza, 42, a businessman, in a telephone interview near the Caspian Sea, where he is taking shelter with his family. Using only one name to avoid scrutiny by the government, he added: 'It's hard to explain the mood. We are scared, but we are also giving each other solidarity, love and kindness. We are in it together. This is an attack on our country, on Iran.' Narges Mohammadi, a Nobel Peace Prize winner and the country's most prominent human rights activist, has spent decades in and out jail, pushing for democratic change in Iran. But even she warned against the attacks on her country, telling the BBC this past week that 'Democracy cannot come through violence and war.'


Time of India
28 minutes ago
- Time of India
Ukraine says received Russian bodies in war dead exchanges
Kyiv received the bodies of 20 Russian soldiers instead of Ukrainian ones during exchanges of war dead with Moscow, President Volodymyr Zelensky said in remarks made public Saturday. He accused Russia of "not checking" who they were sending, and suggested Moscow might be doing it on purpose to conflate the number of Ukrainian bodies they had. The repatriation of fallen soldiers and the exchange of prisoners of war has been one of the few areas of cooperation between the warring sides since Moscow invaded Ukraine in February 2022. Play Video Pause Skip Backward Skip Forward Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration 0:00 Loaded : 0% 0:00 Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 1x Playback Rate Chapters Chapters Descriptions descriptions off , selected Captions captions settings , opens captions settings dialog captions off , selected Audio Track default , selected Picture-in-Picture Fullscreen This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Text Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Caption Area Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Drop shadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Nunca use o saca-rolhas para abrir um vinho. O motivo vai te surpreender Blog Amo Vinhos Undo Moscow and Kyiv agreed earlier this month during talks in Istanbul to exchange the bodies of 6,000 soldiers each. "It has already been confirmed during repatriations that the bodies of 20 people handed over to us as our deceased soldiers are Russian," Zelensky said in remarks released on Saturday. Live Events "Sometimes these bodies even have Russian passports," he added. An "Israeli mercenary" fighting for Moscow was also among those sent, he said. Tens of thousands of soldiers have been killed on both sides since the war began. Neither country regularly releases information on military casualties. Zelensky said there were currently "695,000 Russian troops" on Ukrainian territory.


India.com
29 minutes ago
- India.com
Not Iran, Russia to help THIS Muslim nation in its nuclear ambitions; the country is..., not Pakistan
Russia will help build a nuclear power plant in Kazakhstan. (File) Kazakhstan nuclear power plant: Earlier this month, Israel triggered the Israel-Iran war when it launched deadly airstrikes on Iranian cities on the pretext of Tehran being close to developing a nuclear weapon. However, there is another little-known Muslim country which has nuclear ambitions of its own, and Russia has announced open support for its nuclear endeavor. Kazakhstan to build nuclear power plant with Russia's help The country in question is Kazakhstan, a former constituent of the erstwhile Soviet Union, who is reportedly working on setting up a nuclear power plant in collaboration with Russia's state-owned nuclear energy giant Rosatom, according to officials of the Central Asian Countries Authority. Kazakhstan, one of the most resource-rich countries in Central Asia, is the world top producer of uranium, and now looks to utilize its vast uranium resources to develop its own civilian nuclear program with Russia's help. The country supplies supplying 43 percent of the world's uranium consumption, but does not have enough electricity production to meet its domestic needs. As per details, the Kazakhstan nuclear power plant was approved in 2024, and will be built in a village near Ulken near Lake Balkhash, the country's second largest lake. China and France also made bids Notably, China, France and South Korea had also tried secure the deal for the Kazakhstan nuclear power plant, but the bid was ultimately won by Russia. According to media reports, China's National Nuclear Corporation, French EDF and South Korean Hydro and Nuclear Power Company had placed bids, but Rosatom secured the deal. However, Kazakhstan officials said that these three companies will also be included in a consortium led by Rosatom. Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev said the country aims to maintain good relations with both Russia and China, adding that Rosatom has offered to finance the entire project. Tokayev's statement comes at a time when Chinese President Xi Jinping is set to visit Kazakhstan for the upcoming China-Central Asia Summit. Interestingly, Kazakhstan had several nuclear power plants and hosted Soviet nuclear weapons, as well as being a nuclear testing site, when it was part of the Soviet Union. However, after the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, Kazakhstan, along with other former Soviet states like Belarus and Ukraine, gave up its nuclear weapons and closed the power plants.