Israeli airstrikes target Iranian bases, proxies in Syria
The aftermath of an airstrike on Iran's diplomatic compound in Damascus on April 1, 2024
At least three Iran-affiliated fighters were killed, and ten others were injured in Israeli airstrikes on four military centers and weapons depots belonging to IRGC’s Quds Force and Iran-backed proxy forces in the outskirts of Homs and Hama on the night of Friday, August 23.
After nearly two weeks of repetitive speeches in the Iranian parliament, where most ministers had little to say about their plans, one minister finally made remarks that resonated within the context of Iran's political impasse.
Abbas Salehi, nominated for the position of Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance, emphasized the needfor “national accord” between the government and the people, calling for a restoration of trust in the government. He was endorsed in parliament on Wednesday, along with others proposed by Pezeshkian.
Addressing President Masoud Pezeshkian’s vaguely defined concept of national accord, Salehi argued that it should be established on two levels: among Iran’s political factions and, more importantly, between the government and the public.
Salehi was alluding to the deepening fragmentation within Iranian society, where trust in the government has eroded due to the regime’s heavy-handed response to public dissent, beginning with the aftermath of the 2009 disputed presidential election and intensifying with the protests that have persisted since 2017, which intensified in 2022.
Additionally, Salehi urged greater attention to the demands of Iranian women, noting that the situation for women in Iran has evolved in recent years and that the government must recognize and adapt to these changes.
However, the government continues to imprison women activists, disregarding their demands. Meanwhile, despite Pezeshkian’s promises to rein in the Morality Police and curb the violence of hijab enforcers, Iranian authorities have aired the forced confession of a woman who was shot and paralyzed by police in northern Iran.
The new minister warned that the Iranian government must not overlook the demands of women. Salehi emphasized that the government is facing a significant decline in social capital, with research from the past decade highlighting this issue as a serious concern.
He also noted the growing divide between officials and the public, including the estrangement of artists and media activists, whose demands for freedom of speech have been consistently ignored by the government. Whether the new Culture Minister can, or will, take meaningful steps to bridge this divide remains to be seen.
In recent years, officials have lamented that the public's primary sources of news and information have shifted abroad. Meanwhile, media activists have pointed out that hundreds of Iranian journalists have fled the country following nationwide protests and the government's crackdown on press freedom.
Salehi pledged to contribute to fostering national accord, but observers are skeptical. Even if his promise is sincere, decisions about media freedom in Iran’s tightly controlled environment ultimately rest with Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Whether Khamenei views increased media freedom as a threat to his government remains highly debatable.
The new minister highlighted that the percentage of Iranians with university degrees has risen from 2% in 1976 to over 20% in 2024, signaling the emergence of a middle class well-versed in critical thinking and culturally connected to the global community. He also noted that Iran now has 1.5 million female university students—a fiftyfold increase since 1976. “We simply cannot ignore that vast number,” he emphasized.
Salehi added, “Women have their own expectations and demands regarding their lifestyle and their individual and social rights, and this must be taken into account in shaping the relationship between the government and society.”
A woman who tricked and infiltrated Iran's ruling class is revealing new details about her encounters with some of the most powerful men in Iran - and shares a dire warning.
Catherin Perez-Shakdam, a French analyst, Middle East expert, who leads the advocacy group We Believe in Israel, came face-to-face with Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamanei in 2017 after being invited for a private visit by the top leader.
"He was very slow in his movements but it's very calculated," she spoke of Iran's Supreme Leader.
She described her encounter with him as an "out of body" experience where she was advised not to make eye contact with him.
Shakdam said she was asked by the establishment to write for Khamenei's website. That included conducting several interviews, one of them being with George Galloway, a British MP who had previously been criticized for his appearances on Iran-backed Press TV.
In 2022, Fars news website, affiliated with Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, published a statement to reject reports about Shakdam contributing to the English version of Khamenei’s website. The statement added that Khamenei.ir doesn’t have any columnist and Shakdam has no direct connection with the website.
However, it confirmed that Shakdam sent articles and opinion pieces on issues related to Islam and the Islamic Revolution to the website from about 2015 to 2017 that were published on the site.
How did a French Jew befriend Iran's ruling elite?
It was an encounter that was years in the making as she was groomed into becoming a mouth piece for the Islamic Republic by Nader Talebzadeh, Iran's chief propogandist who has since passed away.
He ensured that Skakdam's rise within Iran's government and IRGC ranks was met with no resistance, believing, she said that he could turn her into a pawn that he could control.
Shakdam first gained attention from the Iranian regime after she wrote an opinion piece for the Yemen Observer, where she criticized U.S. intervention in Iraq. In 2009, she moved to Yemen after marrying a Yemeni man, with whom she had two children. The couple has since divorced.
She said she was asked to appear as a commentator on Iranian state-media channels. She slowly started to get connections, befriending the upper elite, gaining their trust where they began to invite her to Iran on more official visits. She said they thought she could be manipulated to spread their message to Yemen and the western world too.
Once she had her in, she said she became Iran's 'favorite' Yemeni expert, featured on several Iran state media outlets, and was also featured as an Op-ed write from Russia Today (RT). Talebzadeh, she said, was involved.
"I was always very careful to let them lead. If you come up on the invitation of the leadership no one at the airport would ever dare question you."
She also said being a women meant she wasn't seen as a threat.
That led to more meetings with the likes of Qasem Soleimani, a top General, who was killed by a US airstrike in January 2020. He was regarded as a powerful man and even hailed as a hero by IRGC sympathizers.
Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, once called him a “living martyr of the revolution.” In the West, he was viewed as ruthless and was the head of the Revolutionary Guards’ Quds Force, which was deemed to be a foreign terrorist organization by the US and Canada.
She met with Soleimani in Southern Iraq, again under the invitation of Talabzadeh.
Shakdam told Iran International her interaction with him was brief at someone's house in Karbala. He reportedly spoke of his efforts to push ISIS out of some parts of Syria and Iraq.
"It wasn't a very comfortable conversation...he scared me. He was terrifying."
From right to left: Catherine Perez-Shakdam, Zaynab Mughniyeh, and Zaynab Soleimani (General’s Soleimani’s daughter)- Karbala, Iraq 2017
She also met with two of Iran's former presidents.
Her motivation, why do this?
Shakdam says what motivated her was not curiosity, but anger.
Over time, she developed resentment in Yemen as a Jewish woman who wore a hijab and felt that her children's identity was being stripped from them. Shakdam said she felt antisemitism growing inside the country.
She also saw shifts in Yemeni society with a growing influence of the Islamic Republic spreading an ideology she described as a "cancer." Shakdam attributes Iran's perceived infiltration of the country to growing sectarian violence that has led to its downfall.
"I saw it as a form of colonization through indoctrination," she said.
Yemen is the site of civilian suffering amid a civil war. Many analysts say the fighting, which is now more than seven years old, has turned into a proxy war with Iran-backed Houthis, who overthrew the Yemeni government, against a coalition led by Saudi Arabia.
Going undercover in Iran as a sympathizer, she said, helped her understand the threat. Just how effective has it been an thwarting the threat has yet to be determined, but she can at least share her knowledge and her warnings.
"I wanted to establish what is it they [Iran] wanted?"
Speaking about her experiences on Eye for Iran, Shakdam said the Iranian establishment is after Western civilization in a bid to subvert democracy and hijack institutions. She said the nation has already managed to infiltrate Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Iraq - and that it can be done here too.
She said Iran has established networks of influence in the West like in the United Kingdom, which is where she currently resides, through the guise of British education centres, think-tanks and charities.
"Wake up world, " she said "When they [Islamic Republic] say death to American, this is death to democracy."
Iran has doubled down on its promise to avenge Israel's killing of Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh despite concerted efforts by European governments to dissuade Tehran from escalating tensions in the Middle East.
The British, French, and German foreign ministers all talked to Iran’s new foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, on Friday, calling on him to help prevent the escalation of tensions with Israel.
French Foreign Minister Stéphane Séjourné "expressed his deep concern about the rise in tensions in the region," calling on his counterpart to do "everything possible to avoid a regional conflagration, which would be of no interest to anyone, including Iran," the French Foreign Ministry said.
Séjourné called on Iran to urge the destabilizing actors it supports in the region to exercise maximum restraint, saying he passed messages to all the actors concerned during his recent trip to the region to call for a de-escalation, in particular between Israel and Lebanon.
Araghchi is known to be "open" to the west and has expressed his desire to “rebuild” relations with European powers. In his conversations with top European diplomats, however, he reiterated the position set by Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei that responding to Israel’s killing of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran is an “absolute right.”
Haniyeh was killed in his residence on July 31, having attended the inauguration ceremony of Iran’s president, Pezeshkian. Iranian officials blamed Israel for the targeting and Khamenei vowed to “avenge his blood.”
Intense diplomatic efforts ensued, led by the Biden administration, warning Iranian officials of the dire “consequences” if a large-scale attack against Israel were to materialize.
The attack was said to be “imminent” for more than a week, but then the intelligence assessment in Israel and the US downgraded the threat, saying that Iran seemed to have decided to “delay” – but not call off – its retaliation.
“The US believes Iran is still prepared to do something if they choose to," White House national security spokesman John Kirby told reporters Friday, referring to Iran's potential attack against Israel. “The US continues to monitor Iran, and is not taking anything for granted,” he added.
Iranian officials have said many times that the assassination of Haniyeh in Tehran “cannot and will not go unpunished.” The diplomatic efforts of the US, EU, and regional leaders, seems to have succeeded in cooling down the crisis.
A key factor in Iran’s reevaluation seems to be the ongoing talks towards a ceasefire agreement in Gaza, which Iranian officials say is a priority.
The Biden administration has been hard at work to get Hamas and Israel to sign a ceasefire agreement that would ensure the release of remaining hostages in Gaza. Some US officials have suggested that a Gaza ceasefire might avert Iran’s retaliation. Iranian officials have rejected the notion, while admitting that they don’t want their response to jeopardize the negotiations.
“The timing, conditions, and manner of Iran’s response will be meticulously orchestrated to ensure that it occurs at a moment of maximum surprise,” Iran’s UN missions said Wednesday in a statement to the Wall Street Journal. “Perhaps when their eyes are fixed on the skies and their radar screens, they will be taken by surprise from the ground—or perhaps even by a combination of both,” the statement added.
An IRGC spokesman, Ali-Mohammad Naini, echoed the sentiment. “Time is on our side, and the waiting period for this response may be prolonged,” indicating a strategic shift from Tehran’s earlier threats of immediate and severe retaliation.
In a surprising volte-face, Iranian lawmaker Mojtaba Zonnour, who once symbolically burned a copy of Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal in parliament, has now expressed support for the accord, provided there is consensus on its revival.
Zonnour, previously known for his staunch opposition to the agreement, made these remarks just days after the parliament unanimously approved Masoud Pezeshkian’s cabinet. In his final defense, the new president revealed that the list of ministers had already been pre-approved by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
Zonnur emphasized that the decision on the future of the Iran nuclear deal, or JCPOA, is a collective one, involving various state bodies and officials. "Whether the nuclear deal moves forward or not is a supra-governmental decision," he said. "It's not up to one individual or one institution, but rather a collective decision involving bodies like the Supreme National Security Council and the heads of the three branches of government."
A group of Iranian lawmakers burning a copy of the JCPOA
However, the decision about the revival of the nuclear deal has always been a collective one. This didn't stop Zonnour, who was the chairman of the parliament's Committee for National Security and Foreign Policy, from previously calling for the execution of then-President Hassan Rouhani during his term when the JCPOA was signed.
Zonnour also stated that he would support whatever decision the Islamic regime makes—whether it’s to continue negotiations, halt them, or revive the nuclear deal. This significant departure from his previous stance has raised eyebrows among observers, sparking speculation about the reasons behind his apparent change of heart.
The lawmaker's comments come amid increasing speculation about a potential shift in Iran's foreign policy. Some analysts suggest that Zonnour's reversal could signal a broader consensus within the Iranian establishment, leaning toward a more flexible approach to nuclear negotiations and possibly even toward the West.
In an unprecedented development earlier in the day, the chairman of Iran National Development Fund called on Pezeshkian to re-establish US consular services at the venue of former American embassy in Tehran.
"Now that all the pillars of the regime are supporting you and your government, please, if you see fit, implement a few tasks that have been left unfinished for many years. It might be better to do these before the honeymoon period ends," said Mehdi Ghazanfari, appointed by former hardline president Ebrahim Raisi.
While nothing is certain, it appears that hardliners may be aligning themselves with the broader consensus within the regime, especially after Pezeshkian confirmed publicly that Khamenei is behind the main decisions in his administration.
Amid swirling rumors of a shift in Iran's foreign policy, the world still holds its breath against the backdrop of a high-stakes diplomatic game to prevent any escalation in the Middle East.
US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Friday said he had spoken with his Israeli counterpart to discuss a range of issues in the region, including the ongoing exchanges of fire on the Israel-Lebanon border.
In a post on X, Austin said he also discussed the risk of escalation from Iran and Iran-backed groups in the call on Thursday and told Israeli Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant that the United States is well postured across the region.
The dialogue happened a few hours after US Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh emphasized on the US significant military buildup in the region, trying to portray it as a stark warning to Iran that any aggression would be met with unwavering force.
Houthi-affiliated media outlets reported Friday two US-British airstrikes on the Iran-backed group's positions west of Taiz governorate, southwest of Yemen.
Despite all this, Iran's new Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, in conversations with French and British counterparts, stressed Tehran’s right to retaliate against the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran in July.
A senior police officer in Iran’s restive Sistan-Baluchestan province was killed by unknown assailants near his house on Friday, IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News reported.
The Sunni Islamist militant group Jaish ul-Adl has claimed responsibility for the assassination of Hossein Piri, a deputy chief of Public Security Police Department of Khash.
The group has a history of carrying out such attacks in Sistan-Baluchestan, including ambushes and bombings, killing dozens of Iranian civilians and armed personnel. Both Iran and the US, as well as some international bodies, have designated Jaish ul-Adl as a terrorist organization
The Friday assassination seems to follow a familiar pattern where local officials are targeted in ‘revenge’ for ‘brutalizing residents.’
The officer killed Friday, Piri, is said to have been “involved in harassing, abusing, and violently arresting” people in the area, according to a report by Haalvsh, a local organization focused on human rights abuses in Sistan- Baluchestan.
“Piri had raided a residential home in… Khash, where he violently arrested two Baloch citizens, while also shooting and using offensive language,” Haalvsh quoted an unnamed source. “He was targeted and shot by armed individuals after leaving his home… and was killed.”
Abdolghaffar Naghshbandi, a former Friday prayers leader in Rask, alleged that Piri's agents had "killed" two Baloch women a few days ago. "This is how the cost of assaulting women across Iran is paid," he tweeted shortly after the assassination.
According to Tasnim, Piri was killed after attending Friday prayers on a mission in plainclothes. “An investigation has been launched into his killing,” Sistan-Baluchestan prosecutor said Friday.
Sistan-Baluchestan is located in southeastern Iran, bordering both Afghanistan and Pakistan. It is one of Iran’s more deprived and brutalized provinces where the Sunni majority suffers persistent human rights abuses, including extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrests, and religious discrimination.
According to the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, among the targets of these attacks were a weapons depot in northwestern Hama, the command center of Brigade 47, and an air defense facility in Mount Maraan, where members of the IRGC's Quds Force, along with Syrian and non-Syrian militants supported by Iran, are stationed.
Additionally, Israeli forces targeted fuel depots belonging to Syrian members of Hezbollah in the west of the Homs refinery, as well as another site south of Mount Maraan, which served as the command center for the Iran-backed Rapid Response Group.
The air defense system stationed at the Hama military airport responded to the attacks but was unsuccessful in intercepting the Israeli missiles. As a result, a weapons depot and fuel tanks were destroyed, causing thick smoke to rise from the targeted sites due to the ignition of the fuel depots.
SANA, Syria's state news agency, confirmed the Israeli airstrike and reported that "seven civilians were injured, and damage was caused."
23 IRGC officers killed in Israeli attacks on Syria in 8 months
Since 2013, Israel has conducted numerous attacks against the IRGC's Quds Force and Iran-backed proxy forces in Syria, primarily targeting their military bases, weapons depots, and infrastructure to prevent the transfer of advanced weapons and equipment to Iran's proxy groups or to reduce their presence in Syria. These attacks have become more frequent in recent years.
In early April, an air strike on a building in Iran’s diplomatic compound in Damascus, killed seven Revolutionary Guard officers, including two generals. The incident led the Iranian military to undertake an unprecedented retaliatory drone and missile strike against Israel on April 13. Almost all of the 350 projectiles were shot down by Israeli air defense and allied warplanes.
According to reports from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Israel has conducted at least 60 air and missile strikes on targets in Syria since the beginning of 2024.
Reports indicate that these attacks, carried out in at least nine Syrian cities, have destroyed nearly 124 targets, including buildings, weapons and ammunition depots, centers, and vehicles belonging to the IRGC's Quds Force and Iran-backed proxy forces.
These strikes have resulted in the deaths of 181 military and militia personnel and injuries to 113 others.
Among those killed, at least 23 were Iranian officers of the IRGC's Quds Force, 116 were Lebanese, Syrian, and Iraqi members of Iran-backed proxy forces, and 42 were Syrian military personnel.