
Iran's internet blackout leaves public in dark and creates an uneven picture of the war with Israel
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — As the war between Israel and Iran hits the one-week mark, Iranians have spent nearly half of the conflict in a near-communication blackout, unable to connect not only with the outside world but also with their neighbors and loved ones across the country.
Civilians are left unaware of when and where Israel will strike next, despite Israeli forces issuing warnings through their Persian-language online channels. When the missiles land, disconnected phone and web services mean not knowing for hours or days if their family or friends are among the victims. That's left many scrambling on various social media apps to see what's happening — again, only a glimpse of life able to reach the internet in a nation of over 80 million people.
Activists see it as a form of psychological warfare for a nation all-too familiar with state information controls and targeted internet shutdowns during protests and unrest.
'The Iranian regime controls the information sphere really, really tightly,' Marwa Fatafta, the Berlin-based policy and advocacy director for digital rights group Access Now, said in an interview with The Associated Press. 'We know why the Iranian regime shuts down. It wants to control information. So their goal is quite clear.'
War with Israel tightens information space
But this time, it's happening during a deadly conflict that erupted on June 13 with Israeli airstrikes targeting nuclear and military sites, top generals and nuclear scientists. At least 657 people, including 263 civilians, have been killed in Iran and more than 2,000 wounded, according to a Washington-based group called Human Rights Activists.
Iran has retaliated by firing 450 missiles and 1,000 drones at Israel, according to Israeli military estimates. Most have been shot down by Israel's multitiered air defenses, but at least 24 people in Israel have been killed and hundreds others wounded. Guidance from Israeli authorities, as well as round-the-clock news broadcasts, flows freely and consistently to Israeli citizens, creating in the last seven days an uneven picture of the death and destruction brought by the war.
The Iranian government contended Friday that it was Israel who was 'waging a war on truth and human conscience.' In a post on X, a social media platform blocked for many of its citizens, Iran's Foreign Ministry asserted Israel banned foreign media from covering missile strikes.
The statement added that Iran would organize 'global press tours to expose Israel's war crimes' in the country. Iran is one of the world's top jailer of journalists, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, and in the best of times, reporters face strict restrictions.
Internet-access advocacy group NetBlocks.org reported on Friday that Iran had been disconnected from the global internet for 36 hours, with its live metrics showing that national connectivity remained at only a few percentage points of normal levels. The group said a handful of users have been able to maintain connectivity through virtual private networks.
Few avenues exist to get information
Those lucky few have become lifelines for Iranians left in the dark. In recent days, those who have gained access to mobile internet for a limited time describe using that fleeting opportunity to make calls on behalf of others, checking in on elderly parents and grandparents, and locating those who have fled Tehran.
The only access to information Iranians do have is limited to websites in the Islamic Republic. Meanwhile, Iran's state-run television and radio stations offer irregular updates on what's happening inside the country, instead focusing their time on the damage wrought by their strikes on Israel.
The lack of information going in or out of Iran is stunning, considering that the advancement of technology in recent decades has only brought far-flung conflicts in Ukraine, the Gaza Strip and elsewhere directly to a person's phone anywhere in the world.
That direct line has been seen by experts as a powerful tool to shift public opinion about any ongoing conflict and potentially force the international community to take a side. It has also turned into real action from world leaders under public and online pressure to act or use their power to bring an end to the fighting.
But Mehdi Yahyanejad, a key figure in promoting internet freedom in Iran, said that the Islamic Republic is seeking to 'purport an image' of strength, one that depicts only the narrative that Israel is being destroyed by sophisticated Iranian weapons that include ballistic missiles with multiple warheads.
'I think most likely they're just afraid of the internet getting used to cause mass unrest in the next phase of whatever is happening,' Yahayanejad said. 'I mean, some of it could be, of course, planned by the Israelis through their agents on the ground, and some of this could be just a spontaneous unrest by the population once they figure out that the Iranian government is badly weakened.
___
Associated Press writers Sarah El Deeb in Beirut and Julia Frankel in Jerusalem contributed to this report.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
11 minutes ago
- CNN
Hundreds of Americans have fled Iran and others face difficulties leaving as Trump weighs US military action
Hundreds of Americans have fled Iran as the conflict with Israel has escalated, an internal State Department report said. The detail in the Friday situation report underscores that US citizens in Iran are at risk as President Donald Trump weighs US military action. The exact number of Americans in Iran is not known, and the State Department does not require US citizens to register their presence abroad. Unlike in Israel, where the US is working to establish transportation options out of the country for the estimated hundreds of thousands of Americans there, no such options are available for US citizens in Iran. The US does not have a diplomatic presence there. 'We do not anticipate offering direct US government assisted departure from Iran,' State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce noted at a press briefing Friday. The situation report described some Americans facing difficulties leaving Iran. 'Security alerts also note Americans seeking to depart should be prepared to encounter checkpoints and questioning from authorities,' it states. 'Numerous US citizens have described delays and harassment along their exit route.' It also notes that two Americans were reportedly detained while attempting to depart the country. One source trying to get a US citizen family member out of Iran expressed frustration at the State Department earlier this week, saying the agency seemed to defer everything to seemingly overwhelmed US embassies. This person wanted to see the department apply more pressure to Iran's neighboring countries to approve Americans' entrance. They also suggested dispatching embassy officials closer to the Iranian border to help. More than 25,000 people have sought information from the State Department about the 'situation in Israel, the West Bank and Iran,' Bruce said Friday. Bruce said that the people were seeking 'general information,' and some of them might be inquiring about departure. The department has launched a 'crisis intake form' for Americans in Israel and Iran wanting to know how to get out of those countries as the conflict continues. 'Americans seeking departure should take advantage of existing means to leave,' Bruce noted at the press briefing. Meanwhile, US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee said Thursday that the US is 'working to get military, commercial, charter flights & cruise ships' for evacuation from Israel. Trump on Thursday opened a two-week negotiating window before deciding whether to strike Iran, setting off an urgent effort to restart talks that had been deadlocked when Israel began its bombing campaign last week.
Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
With USS Nimitz deployment, the US surges air and sea assets to the Middle East
The aircraft carrier USS Nimitz is heading to the Middle East, and that will bring the total number of carriers in the region to two, a U.S. official told Task & Purpose on Monday. The U.S. military is also moving aircraft to the European and Central Command theaters in case they are needed to support U.S. installations in the region, and also provide options to government leaders, a second U.S. official said. The move comes after Israel began striking Iran on June 13 with the intent of crippling Iran's nuclear program. Iran has fired hundreds of ballistic missiles at Israel in response. On Monday evening, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth posted the following statement on X: 'Over the weekend, I directed the deployment of additional capabilities to the United States Central Command Area of Responsibility. Protecting U.S. forces is our top priority and these deployments are intended to enhance our defensive posture in the region.' An official announcement that the Nimitz will join the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson in the region is expected soon. On Monday, Fox News reporter Jennifer Griffin posted on X that the Nimitz, which was initially expected to replace the Carl Vinson in the Middle East, is heading to the region ahead of schedule, so the U.S. military can have two aircraft carriers in the Middle East at the same time. News of the Nimitz's deployment comes as flight tracking software showed on Sunday evening that at least 28 Air Force tankers had taken off from their bases and begun flying over the Atlantic Ocean, according to The War Zone. The tankers are used to refuel U.S. military fighters and bombers while in flight. President Donald Trump has not publicly ruled out the possibility that the United States could join Israel's ongoing campaign against Iran. 'We're not involved in it,' Trump said during a recent interview with ABC News' Rachel Scott. 'It's possible we could get involved. But we are not at this moment involved.' Iran's Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant is built into a mountain and is buried deep underground. Israel does not have the 30,000-pound GBU-57/B Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP) bombs or the strategic aircraft than can carry them that would likely be needed to destroy the facility. UPDATE; 06/16/2025; this story was updated with a statement from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Sailors who can't deploy will be moved to empty jobs under Navy program Air Force relieves commander of pilot training squadron US military's highest ranking transgender officer says separation process is broken Army bringing in big tech executives as lieutenant colonels Trump reverts 7 Army bases to former names with new honorees, including Delta Force soldier
Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
2 aircraft carriers, 9 destroyers, and multiple fighter wings gather in the Middle East
As fighting between Israel and Iran carries on for a second week, the United States continues to build up its already large presence in the Middle East. For the last 20 months, U.S. forces have sent ground, air, and naval assets into the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility, both as deterrents against Iran and as part of more than a year of fighting against the Houthis in Yemen. There are approximately 40,000 U.S. troops in the area currently, including a Navy carrier strike group with another on the way, several fighter squadrons and two of the United States' Terminal High Altitude Area Defense or THAAD systems, one of its most advanced missile defense interceptors. The Pentagon recently sent additional air and naval assets to the area, as the Trump administration threatens to potentially attack Iran, out of the stated intent of stopping Tehran from getting a nuclear bomb, though American intelligence found in March that the country is not pursuing development of nuclear weapons. The military maintains 10 bases in the region, including major installations in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates, as well as smaller outposts in Jordan and Syria, among others. There are also additional forces and support infrastructure in Turkey and Djibouti, although those are not under CENTCOM's purview, which covers the Middle East, Egypt, and much of Central Asia, including Afghanistan and Pakistan. There are currently 2,500 service members in Iraq and roughly 1,500 in Syria. They are there primarily as part of Operation Inherent Resolve, the ongoing anti-ISIS fight. American forces are starting a drawdown from Syria but still maintain posts in the country's south and east. In Iraq, U.S. soldiers have at least two MIM-104 Patriot surface-to-air missile batteries — one in Irbil in Iraqi Kurdistan and another at the al-Asad airbase in the country's west. Both have seen action in past interception missions over the Middle East. Additionally, two THAAD air defense systems, operated by roughly 100 American soldiers each, are deployed to Israel. The USS Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group is in the Arabian Sea. Along with the carrier and its embarked Carrier Air Wing 2, the task force includes the guided-missile cruiser USS Princeton and the Arleigh Burke-class destroyers USS Sterett and USS William P. Lawrence. Carrier Air Wing 2 includes close to 50 fighters and strike aircraft across three squadrons of F/A-18E/F strike fighters and one squadron each of F-35C fighters and E/A-18G Growler electronic warfare fighters. Three other destroyers, the USS Sullivans, the USS Arleigh Burke, and the USS Thomas Hudner, are in the eastern Mediterranean. The USS Thomas Hudner had previously taken part in interceptions of Houthi missiles in late 2023. Another pair of independent destroyers are in the Red Sea, per USNI News. In Bahrain, the headquarters of the 5th Fleet, the Navy also has four anti-mining vessels. Soon to join the Carl Vinson is the USS Nimitz, whose deployment to the region was moved up earlier this month. The Nimitz, on its final operational deployment before being decommissioned, will arrive with four guided-missile destroyers and similar air power to the Vinson with Carrier Air Wing 17. Originally meant to replace the Carl Vinson, the two carrier groups will overlap in their deployment to the CENTCOM area of responsibility, a tactic that has been regularly used in the last 20 months. The U.S. Air Force also maintains a strong presence at some of CENTCOM's major bases. Ali al-Salem Air Base in Kuwait hosts the 386th Air Expeditionary Wing, while the 379th Air Expeditionary Wing is in Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. Both installations include dozens of combat aircraft as well as military drones such as the MQ-9 Reaper. Air Force jets proved to be a major part of the successful interception operation in April 2024, when American and other partner forces shot down dozens of Iranian drones and ballistic missiles aimed at Israel. In the last week, more than two dozen Air Force refueling tankers flew across the Atlantic to the Middle East and Europe, in a buildup of logistical support. Earlier this week, Reuters reported that an unspecified number of F-16, F-22, and F-35 fighter jets were being sent over. Outside of the CENTCOM area of responsibility, U.S. forces also maintain bombers and other aircraft at their Indian Ocean base on the island of Diego Garcia. That strategic outpost — jointly operated with the United Kingdom — is a staging base for B-2 bombers. B-2s were briefly sent over earlier in the spring. Their ability to be based there has been a major discussion point this week as the U.S. weighs targeting Iranian nuclear facilities — the Fordo nuclear site is several hundred feet underground, too deep for most bombing campaigns but within the destructive range of the GBU-57 bunker buster bombs, which only the B-2 can carry. If the ongoing fighting in the Middle East were to spread, many of these installations and vessels in the region could be at risk. Many were targeted by pro-Iran militias inside Iraq over the last two years, as regional violence picked up as the Israeli war in Gaza began. In his own warning amid back-and-forth threats, Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, posted to social media this week that 'The harm the U.S. will suffer will definitely be irreparable if they enter this conflict militarily.' During the two stages of fighting around Yemen over the past 20 months, Houthis repeatedly fired one-way attack drones and missiles towards Navy ships, which were all intercepted. Meanwhile, several militias active in Syria and Iraq fired multiple barrages of rockets and drones at various American and coalition bases in multiple countries in the area. Dozens were injured, including receiving traumatic brain injuries as a result. The dangers of shorter-ranged attacks were already proven last year, when three Army reserve soldiers were killed at Tower 22 in Jordan and several more were injured. Given the rise in small rocket and drone barrages on bases in the regions, troops deploying to the Middle East have begun training on simulators on how to respond to such an attack. Sailors who can't deploy will be moved to empty jobs under Navy program Air Force relieves commander of pilot training squadron US military's highest-ranking transgender officer says the separation process is broken Army bringing in big tech executives as lieutenant colonels Trump reverts 7 Army bases to former names with new honorees, including Delta Force soldier