Iran Launches Waves Of Missile Strikes On Israel, Occupied Territories; IDF Bombards Tehran
Read More
Hashtags

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


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
'You will be harmed': Israel's defence minister warns Khamenei; asks him not to threaten Israel
Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei speaks in a televised speech (Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader via AP) Israel's defence minister, Israel Katz, issued a direct and severe warning to Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Sunday, threatening "personal harm" if Khamenei continued to threaten the Jewish state. Speaking at the Ramon Air Base, Katz declared, 'I want to send a clear message to the dictator Khamenei: If you continue to threaten Israel, our long arm will once again reach Iran, with even greater force, and this time, it will reach you personally.'' "Do not threaten us, or you will be harmed," he added. The minister, alongside Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, praised the Israeli Air Force for its role in Operation Rising Lion, a military campaign launched on June 13 targeting Iran's nuclear and military infrastructure. "Thank you for the incredible work you did in Operation Rising Lion, when you opened the skies to Tehran, and removed threats of annihilation," he stated. Iran responded with Operation True Promise 3, sparking a 12-day war that ended on June 25, brokered by US President Donald Trump. During the conflict, Trump claimed the US knew Khamenei's whereabouts and even vetoed an Israeli plan to assassinate the Iranian leader. In the aftermath, Katz confirmed that Khamenei had been 'marked' for assassination by Israel but managed to avoid being targeted by going underground.

Hindustan Times
3 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei ‘spends the day sleeping and using drugs': Report
A social media account linked to Israel's intelligence agency Mossad has made allegations against Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, claiming he spends much of his day 'sleeping and using drugs.' Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has been accused of spending his days sleeping and using drugs by a Mossad-affiliated account.(REUTERS File) 'How can a leader lead when he sleeps half the day and the other half is a wreck from drug use? Water, electricity, life!' the account Mossad Farsi wrote on X (formerly Twitter). The post, originally written in Farsi and automatically translated, stopped short of naming Ayatollah Khamenei but was broadly seen as a reference to the 86-year-old Iranian supreme leader, reported Israeli news outlet ynetnews. The account behind it, @MossadSpokesman, is verified and regularly addresses Farsi-speaking users with content critical of Iran's leadership, often delivering political messages aimed at the regime in Tehran, the Israeli-based news outlet mentioned. The post on X has drawn over 1.9 lakh views, with its closing remarks seemingly referencing Iran's ongoing infrastructure and resource challenges, including widespread protests over water scarcity and power cuts. While Israel has not formally confirmed ownership, the Mossad Farsi has emerged as a provocative digital presence, widely seen as an unofficial outlet for the intelligence agency's messaging aimed at Iranian audiences. Mossad Farsi bio warns users to use VPN amid attacks on Iranian regime The account bio reads, 'To everyone contacting us through private messages, for your own security, please ensure you are using a VPN.' Over the past month, 'Mossad Farsi' has posted a series of barbed messages targeting Iran's leadership, including comments on Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's health. In one post, the account ridiculed the secrecy surrounding the newly appointed, unnamed commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya, a key military command within Iran's armed forces. After the semi-official Tasnim news agency reported that the commander's identity was being withheld for security reasons, the account claimed it already had the name and encouraged users to guess. When someone responded with 'Ali Abdollahi Aliabadi,' the account wrote back: 'Contact us privately to receive your prize.' The account's use of public taunts is an unusual departure from Mossad's typically covert and restrained communication style. Two intelligence experts told Israeli news outlet JFeed that the channel appears to be genuine. 'Some of the information it has shared could only have come from Mossad,' said Beny Sabti, a former IDF Persian-language officer and current Iran specialist at Israel's Institute for National Security Studies. Accusations about Khamenei's drug use have surfaced in the past as well. Fox News quoted a 2022 remark by Iranian academic Nour Mohamed Omara, who claimed on a Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated TV channel in Turkey, 'Many viewers do not know this, but Khamenei himself uses drugs.'
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
4 hours ago
- First Post
Iran executes 2 opposition members over alleged attacks on civilian targets, MEK ties
Iran said Sunday it has executed two members of the exiled opposition group Mujahedeen-e-Khalq after convicting them of carrying out attacks on public and civilian infrastructure. read more Iran said on Sunday that it has executed two people linked to the exiled opposition group Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (MEK), accusing them of orchestrating attacks against civilian and government infrastructure across the country. According to the judiciary's official outlet, Mizan Online, the executions of Behrouz Ehsani Eslamlou and Mehdi Hasani were carried out in the morning following their conviction for using improvised mortars to target residential zones, educational centres and government facilities. Eslamlou, whose association with MEK dates back to the 1980s, had previously served time in prison before re-joining the group upon release. Authorities said he was detained while attempting to cross into Turkey, allegedly carrying firearms, ammunition, components for mortar devices and disguise tools. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Further details reported by the semi-official Tasnim news agency claim that Eslamlou had been instructed by MEK leaders in Albania to infiltrate Iran and establish covert militant cells. His role reportedly included recruitment, training and directing operations aimed at both civilian and official targets. Iranian state media also alleged that the two men were engaged in acts of sabotage, intelligence-gathering and the filming of attacks for distribution through MEK-affiliated media platforms. Iranian courts charged the men with several offenses, including waging war against the state, conspiracy, sabotage and membership in a terrorist organization. Prosecutors accused them of plotting to destabilize national security and damage public property. The Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, once a Marxist-Islamist group that opposed Iran's monarchy, backed the 1979 Islamic Revolution but later broke with Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's government. It carried out a series of deadly bombings and assassinations in the 1980s and supported Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq war — stances that still provoke widespread resentment within Iran. The group is now largely based in Albania but claims to operate a clandestine network inside Iran. The last known execution of Mujahedeen-e-Khalq members before Sunday took place in 2009, following their conviction in connection with an attempted bombing in Tehran's central Enghelab Square. With inputs from agencies