Iranically Iran, Middle East’s Karen…

petros

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Hmmmmm. Sounds like a very American problem. So are the protestors MIGA?
"You have to work 3 hours to be able to afford a sandwich." - Our friend Zahra


Recent Iranian Protests (Late 2025–Early 2026)

Iran experienced widespread protests starting in late December 2025, primarily triggered by a severe economic crisis. The Iranian rial plummeted to a record low (around 1,445,000 to the USD), fueling inflation, rising prices, and shortages.

Demonstrations began with shopkeepers and merchants in Tehran's markets, spreading to universities and cities like Isfahan, Shiraz, and Mashhad. Protesters chanted anti-government slogans, including calls for regime change. These were the largest unrest since the 2022–2023 Mahsa Amini protests, though smaller in scale initially.

Mossad's Public Involvement
In a highly unusual move, a Farsi-language X (Twitter) account associated with Israel's Mossad intelligence agency posted direct encouragement to protesters on December 29–31, 2025:
"Go out together into the streets. The time has come."
"We are with you. Not only from a distance and verbally. We are with you on the ground/in the field." This was widely reported by Israeli media (e.g., Jerusalem Post, i24NEWS) as an official Mossad message, and echoed internationally (e.g., Al Arabiya, Times of India). Former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo referenced it, posting a New Year's message to "every Mossad agent walking beside" protesters.

The statement implies psychological support and possibly on-the-ground presence, aligning with Mossad's history of operations in Iran (e.g., sabotage and assassinations during the 2025 Israel-Iran war).

Iranian Government Response and Accusation

Iranian officials and state media (e.g., Tehran Times, Tasnim) accused Mossad and foreign entities of exploiting legitimate economic grievances to incite instability and regime change. They described goals as turning protests violent, polarizing society, and justifying external intervention. Prosecutor General warnings highlighted "externally-designed scenarios," citing Mossad's posts as evidence.

Historical Context: Earlier Protests (e.g., 2022 Mahsa Amini)
The 2022–2023 protests, sparked by Mahsa Amini's death in custody over hijab violations, were grassroots-driven, led by women and youth, with no substantiated Mossad orchestration. Iranian officials blamed foreign interference broadly, but independent reports (e.g., UN fact-finding, Wikipedia summaries) attribute them to domestic issues like mandatory hijab and repression. No direct Mossad encouragement was reported then.
Evidence of Direct Influence or Orchestration
Public encouragement and claimed presence: Clear in late 2025 protests via Mossad's X posts.

On-the-ground agents: Suggested by Mossad's wording and Pompeo's comment, but unverified independently. Mossad has conducted extensive operations in Iran (e.g., hundreds of agents during the 2025 war for sabotage).

Organizing/inciting from scratch: No concrete evidence. Protests stemmed from genuine economic woes (sanctions, currency collapse post-2025 war). Mossad appears to be amplifying/exploiting rather than creating them.

Past patterns: Israel has run influence campaigns (e.g., bot networks boosting opposition figures), but these are more propaganda than direct protest organization.
In summary, Mossad has openly influenced the 2025–2026 protests through public calls to action and hints of operational support, viewing them as an opportunity to weaken the Iranian regime. Iranian claims of deeper Mossad fueling go beyond verified facts, while the protests' roots are domestic economic hardship. This fits longstanding Israel-Iran enmity, with Mossad prioritizing regime destabilization.
 
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Ron in Regina

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United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran signaled Friday that security forces would crack down on protesters, directly challenging U.S. President Donald Trump’s pledge to support those peacefully demonstrating as the death toll rose to at least 62.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei dismissed Trump as having hands “stained with the blood of Iranians” as supporters shouted “Death to America!” in footage aired by Iranian state television. State media later repeatedly referred to demonstrators as “terrorists,” (but not Narco-Terrorists) setting the stage for a violent crackdown like those that followed other nationwide protests in recent years.

Protesters are “ruining their own streets ... in order to please the president of the United States,” the 86-year-old Khamenei said to a crowd at his compound in Tehran. “Because he said that he would come to their aid. He should pay attention to the state of his own country instead.” Etc…

Iran’s judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei separately vowed that punishment for protesters “will be decisive, maximum and without any legal leniency.”
There was no immediate response from Washington, though Trump has repeated his pledge to strike Iran if protesters are killed, a threat that's taken on greater significance after the U.S. military raid that seized Venezuela's Nicolás Maduro, etc…

Internet cut off. Despite Iran’s theocracy cutting off the nation from the internet and international telephone calls, short online videos shared by activists purported to show protesters chanting against Iran’s government around bonfires as debris littered the streets in the capital, Tehran, and other areas into Friday morning.

Iranian state media alleged “terrorist agents” of the U.S. and Israel set fires and sparked violence. It also said there were “casualties,” without elaborating.

So far, violence around the demonstrations has killed at least 62 people while more than 2,300 others have been detained, said the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency.

“What turned the tide of the protests was former Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi’s calls for Iranians to take to the streets at 8 p.m. on Thursday and Friday,” said Holly Dagres, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “Per social media posts, it became clear that Iranians had delivered and were taking the call seriously to protest in order to oust the Islamic Republic.”

When the clock struck 8 p.m. Thursday, neighborhoods across Tehran erupted in chanting, witnesses said. The chants included “Death to the dictator!” and “Death to the Islamic Republic!” Others praised the shah, shouting: “This is the last battle! Pahlavi will return!” Thousands could be seen on the streets before all communication to Iran cut out.
 

Ron in Regina

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President Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened to intervene in recent days and warned Iran’s rulers against using force against demonstrators. On Saturday, Trump said the U.S. stands “ready to help”.
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Israel has not signalled a desire to intervene in Iran as protests grip the country, with tensions between the two arch-foes high over Israeli concerns about Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.

Iran warned President Donald Trump on Sunday that any US attack against Iran would lead to Tehran striking back against Israel and regional U.S. military bases as "legitimate targets", Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf told parliament.
Iranians took to the streets in new protests against the clerical authorities overnight despite an internet shutdown, as rights groups warned on Sunday that authorities were committing a "massacre" to quell the demonstrations.

The protests, initially sparked by anger over the rising cost of living, have now become a movement against the theocratic regime that has ruled Iran since the 1979 revolution and have already lasted two weeks.

Videos posted to social media showed large crowds taking to the streets in new protests in several Iranian cities including the capital Tehran and Mashhad in the east, where images showed vehicles set on fire.

The videos filtered out despite a total shutdown of the internet in Iran that has rendered impossible normal communication with the outside world via messaging apps or even phone lines.
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The internet blackout "is now past the 60 hour mark... The censorship measure presents a direct threat to the safety and wellbeing of Iranians at a key moment for the country's future", monitor Netblocks said early Sunday.
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Ron in Regina

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This is unverified due to the Internet and long distance telephone blackout in Iran.
(YouTube & 1000s Killed As Iranian Government MASSACRES Protesters!)
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(YouTube & Jan. 11, 2025 | Iran protests leave over 500 dead, at least 10,000 arrested)

(YouTube & Hundreds of protesters killed in Iran, U.S. warned to stay out)
(YouTube & Iran protests continues as Trump renews warning of possible US intervention)
1768193448698.jpegThese protests in Iran have been happening longer than Delcy Rodríguez has been assigned to keep Nicolás Maduro’s seat warm, and yet Anti-government protests in Iran have continued as U.S. President Donald Trump threatens the Iranian leadership of U.S. intervention if they kill protesters like what’s happening.
(YouTube & Iran protests continues as Trump renews warning of possible US intervention)
?????????????????????
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uNoI9FJnlCc
(YouTube & Yeah it’s Jewish News but…How Close Is Iran’s Regime to the Breaking Point? | KAN 11)
Apparently, Starlink is working spottily, & some people have satellite phones.
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(YouTube & 'Thousands of Iranians have been killed by the regime')
CNN is unable to independently verify HRANA’s casualty numbers. Iran has been offline for more than 72 hours after authorities shut down internet access and telephone lines.
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Ron in Regina

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Two years ago…this was post number one, the very first paragraph to start this thread:
Iran has been in the news a lot lately, trying to “not” have violence spread into a larger Middle Eastern conflict, while spreading violence in the region into a larger Middle Eastern conflict…or at least it sure seems like it from the outside looking in.
…& here we are today…"Things here are very, very bad," a source in Tehran said on Sunday. "A lot of our friends have been killed. They were firing live rounds. It's like a war zone, the streets are full of blood.

They're taking away bodies in trucks."
The BBC counted about 180 body bags in footage from a morgue near Tehran. The US-based Human Rights Activist News Agency says it has verified the deaths of 495 protesters and 48 security personnel nationwide.

Another 10,600 people have been detained over the fortnight of unrest, the agency says.
During the day, state TV and official government bodies projected an air of normalcy, airing pro-government demonstrations and footage of people going about their business in neighbourhoods that were free of any protest actions.

At night, videos of protests raging through the streets leaked to the rest of the world, brought out at great effort by activists and shared with the Iranian diaspora abroad. Videos showed protesters braving the crackdown, with thousands marching through the streets across the country despite facing what appeared to be live fire from authorities.

On Sunday, a video of a large medical warehouse outside a makeshift morgue in the Kahrizak area of Tehran made its way to social media, bodybags stacked inside and lining an adjacent courtyard.

State TV insisted the bodybags contained people killed by protesters, claiming autopsies had shown bodies with stab wounds, not bullets.

Protests continued despite the crackdown, settling into a rhythm by Sunday, demonstrators gathering in the streets and rallying under the cover of night. The world watched as the Iranian people protested, unable to send their support to the demonstrators who were cut off from outside contact.

A protester from Tehran said: “With great difficulty, thousands of us managed to get online so I could get the news to you. We’re standing up for a revolution, but we need help.”
 

Ron in Regina

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Iran has weathered past waves of protests with crackdowns like the current bloody suppression. But this time the leadership is facing nationwide demonstrations that evolved from complaints about dire economic hardships to defiant calls for the fall of the clerical establishment, and with its regional clout much reduced.

Iran has not given an official toll and Reuters was unable to independently verify the tallies. The flow of information from Iran has been hampered by an internet blackout since Thursday.
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The protests began in response to soaring prices, before turning against the clerical rulers who have governed for more than 45 years.

Iranians have grown increasingly resentful of the powerful Revolutionary Guards, whose business interests including oil and gas, construction and telecommunications are worth billions of dollars.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
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About 2,000 people now including security personnel have been killed in protests in Iran, an Iranian official said on Tuesday, the first time authorities have acknowledged the high death toll from an intense crackdown on two weeks of nationwide unrest. Pics at the link.
The Islamic Republic's clerical authorities are facing the biggest demonstrations since 2022 and on Sunday a rights group said that unrest has killed more than 500 people. An Iranian official indicated on Tuesday it was higher, at around 2,000.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
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Iran’s government disconnected its 90 million people from the internet on Thursday, in a drastic effort to quell massive nationwide protests against the regime. The internet blackout extended to a partial jamming of the Starlink satellite service, which people in Iran have been using to circumvent official internet censorship, organize protests and communicate with the outside world.
 

Ron in Regina

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Iran’s Arab rivals across the Persian Gulf, led by Saudi Arabia, have been lobbying the Trump administration against a strike on Tehran, after the U.S. warned them to be prepared for such an attack.
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In public, Arab Gulf states have largely kept silent as protests have spread across the neighboring Islamic Republic and human-rights groups said thousands have died in the regime’s crackdown.
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But behind the scenes, Saudi Arabia, Oman and Qatar are telling the White House that an attempt to topple the Iranian regime would rattle oil markets and ultimately hurt the U.S. economy, according to Arab Gulf officials. Most of all, they fear the blowback at home.
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Trump on Tuesday made a direct appeal to Iranian protesters, calling on them to defy regime efforts to quell their demonstrations and urging them to take over state institutions. “HELP IS ON ITS WAY,” he posted on his Truth Social platform.
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Arab states fear strikes on Iran risk disrupting oil tankers moving through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway at the mouth of the Persian Gulf that divides Iran from its Arab neighbors and through which passes around a fifth of the world’s oil shipments.
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Saudi officials have assured Tehran that they wouldn’t get involved in a potential conflict or allow the U.S. to use their airspace for strikes, in an effort to distance themselves from and stave off U.S. action, according to Saudi officials.

Gulf states, many of which have suffered damage in attacks by Iran and its allies in the past few years, have little sympathy for Tehran. But they fear the impact on the economy and politics of their own countries in the event of an escalation in Iran—or should Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei fall.

Saudi Arabia is especially sensitive to the increasing precariousness of the situation, analysts say. The kingdom directed local media to limit both its coverage and support of the demonstrations to avoid Iranian retaliation. Uh-oh…I smell a tariff coming…

“They have no love for the Iranian regime in any way, shape or form, but they also have a great aversion to instability,” said Michael Ratney, who served as U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia under the Biden administration. “Once you open up a Pandora’s box of regime change (like what apparently didn’t happen in Venezuela), either organic from the inside or instigated from the outside, you’re creating a huge amount of uncertainty at a moment when that is the last thing they want.”
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While Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states aren’t opposed to Iran’s military and nuclear capabilities being weakened, they worry about the alternatives if Khamenei is toppled.
Good thing or bad thing?
No idea. Depends what fills the power vacuum.
“You might get something equivalent or worse, like the IRGC,” taking power, Ratney said, referring to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, a powerful branch of Iran’s military.
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“Or you get chaos and splintering and regionalization,” Ratney said. The control exerted by the Iranian regime at least provides the Gulf with some predictability, he said. “Once that’s gone, then it becomes very dangerous.” ???
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Iran’s Arab rivals across the Persian Gulf, led by Saudi Arabia, have been lobbying the Trump administration against a strike on Tehran, after the U.S. warned them to be prepared for such an attack.
View attachment 32757
In public, Arab Gulf states have largely kept silent as protests have spread across the neighboring Islamic Republic and human-rights groups said thousands have died in the regime’s crackdown.
View attachment 32755
But behind the scenes, Saudi Arabia, Oman and Qatar are telling the White House that an attempt to topple the Iranian regime would rattle oil markets and ultimately hurt the U.S. economy, according to Arab Gulf officials. Most of all, they fear the blowback at home.
View attachment 32754
Trump on Tuesday made a direct appeal to Iranian protesters, calling on them to defy regime efforts to quell their demonstrations and urging them to take over state institutions. “HELP IS ON ITS WAY,” he posted on his Truth Social platform.
View attachment 32756
Arab states fear strikes on Iran risk disrupting oil tankers moving through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway at the mouth of the Persian Gulf that divides Iran from its Arab neighbors and through which passes around a fifth of the world’s oil shipments.
View attachment 32752
Saudi officials have assured Tehran that they wouldn’t get involved in a potential conflict or allow the U.S. to use their airspace for strikes, in an effort to distance themselves from and stave off U.S. action, according to Saudi officials.

Gulf states, many of which have suffered damage in attacks by Iran and its allies in the past few years, have little sympathy for Tehran. But they fear the impact on the economy and politics of their own countries in the event of an escalation in Iran—or should Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei fall.

Saudi Arabia is especially sensitive to the increasing precariousness of the situation, analysts say. The kingdom directed local media to limit both its coverage and support of the demonstrations to avoid Iranian retaliation. Uh-oh…I smell a tariff coming…

“They have no love for the Iranian regime in any way, shape or form, but they also have a great aversion to instability,” said Michael Ratney, who served as U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia under the Biden administration. “Once you open up a Pandora’s box of regime change (like what apparently didn’t happen in Venezuela), either organic from the inside or instigated from the outside, you’re creating a huge amount of uncertainty at a moment when that is the last thing they want.”
View attachment 32758
While Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states aren’t opposed to Iran’s military and nuclear capabilities being weakened, they worry about the alternatives if Khamenei is toppled.


“You might get something equivalent or worse, like the IRGC,” taking power, Ratney said, referring to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, a powerful branch of Iran’s military.
View attachment 32753
“Or you get chaos and splintering and regionalization,” Ratney said. The control exerted by the Iranian regime at least provides the Gulf with some predictability, he said. “Once that’s gone, then it becomes very dangerous.” ???
Smart.

12,000 killed.

Good guys or bad guys or both?
 
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Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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Smart.

12,000 killed.

Good guys or bad guys or both?
12,000 or 1,200 or 2,400 or some other total isn’t confirmed, let alone whom.
Reuters was unable to independently verify the tallies.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
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"Metrics show #Iran remains offline as the country wakes to another day of digital darkness," said internet monitor Netblocks on Wednesday in a post on X, adding that the blackout had lasted 132 hours.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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12,000 or 1,200 or 2,400 or some other total isn’t confirmed, let alone whom.
Reuters was unable to independently verify the tallies.
Rumours have it agent provocateurs are handing out guns to protesters to go take out leadership.

This is externally driven.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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