Iranian military talks tough while government blesses nuclear diplomacy
Meeting of senior IRGC commanders with President Masoud Pezeshkian, July 2024
Iran’s military leaders ramped up their rhetoric against Israel on Thursday and promised retaliation for air strikes on the country last month even as the government said it was open to diplomacy over Iran' nuclear program.
The suicide of 42-year-old journalist Kianoosh Sanjari on Wednesday has sent shockwaves through Iranian society, sparking outrage among many who hold the Islamic Republic directly responsible for his death.
In a tweet on Tuesday, Sanjari - who was also a former political prisoner - threatened to take his own life if authorities did not release four political prisoners he named by 7:00 pm the following day. Ahead of the deadline, he posted a photo from the top of a shopping complex in central Tehran and, in a subsequent post, expressed his determination to follow through with his decision.
“No one should be imprisoned for expressing their beliefs. My life will end after this tweet but let’s not forget that we die because of our love for life, not death. I hope that Iranians will awaken one day and overcome oppression,” he wrote.
Thousands tried to convince Sanjari in the comments to his tweets not to give up his life while some others mocked him and called him a coward for making what they said was only an empty threat.
Many activists said they attempted to contact him but received no response. Only Two reported visiting him at his home to prevent his suicide. They said his therapist came to meet him when they left Sanjari's house. They added that he later left with the therapist to continue their conversation.
Minutes after Sanjari’s last tweet, some activists announced in their X posts that he had jumped to his death from atop the building. Within minutes, two videos emerged on social media that showed a male victim on a wet pavement in central Tehran. One of the videos showed a woman and a man performing CPR to revive him. The victim was quickly identified as Sanjari in X posts.
Discussion of Sanjari’s suicide has overtaken the Persian-language social media, with most users condemning the Islamic Republic for driving Sanjari to take his own life.
Since 1999, when he was just seventeen, Sanjari was arrested nine times for his political activities and endured extended periods of solitary confinement in prison.
In 2019, he was transferred from prison to a psychiatric facility, where he later reported being repeatedly subjected to painful and debilitating electric shocks and injected with unknown substances.
His funeral will take place on Friday and a large turnout by mourners cannot be ruled out.
An official of Tehran Criminal Court, Mohammad Shahriari, told the media Thursday that the incident was being investigated as a suspicious death and that the police were reviewing CCTV footage from the building.
Shahriari also said that Sanjari’s unnamed therapist who was present at the scene told the authorities that she had spent time with Sanjari that day until a few minutes before the incident when he told her he had changed his mind about taking his life and parted ways.
According to Shahriari, the therapist became suspicious minutes later when Sanjari did not answer her call and returned to the compound to search for Sanjari with the help of the building’s security only to find that he had already jumped to his death.
The Iranian Supreme Leader’s special envoy traveled to Syria and is due to meet President Bashar al-Assad as their mutual foe Israel launched more air strikes on the capital Damascus.
Ali Larijani was meeting with the head of Syria's Supreme National Security Council when a nearby building was hit with three air strikes, according to an unconfirmed report by the Jamaran news website in Iran, which added that Larijani was unhurt.
Several people were killed and injured on Thursday in Israeli airstrikes targeting two residential buildings in the suburbs of Syria's capital, Damascus, according to the state news agency SANA.
Israel's military radio reported that the strikes targeted assets and the headquarters of the Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad.
While Israel has conducted airstrikes on Iran-linked targets in Syria for years, it has significantly intensified these operations following the October 7 attack last year by the Palestinian group Hamas, which ignited the Gaza war.
Iran Supreme Leader Special Envoy Ali Larijani met with Speaker of the People's Assembly of Syria Hammouda Sabbagh on November 14, 2024.
Larijani held talks with Hammouda Sabbagh, the Speaker of the Syrian People's Assembly on Thursday afternoon but Iran’s foreign ministry gave no detailed explanation of the itinerary and goals of his trip.
Smoke rises as people gather at a damaged site after what Syrian state news agency said was an Israeli strike in Damascus suburb of Mazzeh, Syria November 14, 2024.
Now, operating outside Iran’s traditional diplomatic framework, his Syria visit may be a sign that Khamenei is again relying on direct emissaries to manage critical foreign policy matters.
Bashar al-Assad, whose government survived a rebellion beginning in 2011 largely due to Iranian military and financial backing, occupies a pivotal position in Tehran’s regional security calculus.
Syria’s geographic proximity to Israel and Lebanon makes it a key base for Iran's Lebanese ally Hezbollah in its conflict with Israel.
Over the past year, Israeli strikes have repeatedly targeted Iranian-linked forces and infrastructure in Syria, with high-ranking Iranian and Hezbollah commanders among those killed.
Although Assad has maintained close ties with Iran, he has occasionally distanced himself from Tehran’s broader regional conflicts. Notably, he has managed to mend relations with Saudi Arabia and rejoined the Arab League in 2023 after years of diplomatic isolation.
Assad’s restrained response to the recent escalation following Hamas’ October 7 attack on Israel suggests a cautious approach, even as Syria remains a key theater in Iran’s regional strategy.
The envoy’s meeting with Assad and other officials is being seen as part of Iran’s efforts to consolidate its position in Syria amid heightened regional tensions.
Iranian officials have repeatedly signaled plans for retaliation against Israel for its attack on Iran on October 26 but have refrained from detailing their timeline or approach.
In April and October 2024, Iran launched unprecedented missile attacks on Israel, with the October 1 assault involving around 200 ballistic missiles targeting military installations and urban centers, marking the largest direct attack by Iran on Israel.
These strikes were retaliatory responses to earlier Israeli operations, including airstrikes on Iranian-linked targets in Syria.
In response, on October 26 Israel launched a series of airstrikes against Iranian military assets, including missile facilities and Revolutionary Guard units, aiming to weaken Iran’s capabilities and deter further aggression.
This escalation marked a shift from proxy warfare to direct confrontation between the two nations.
Larijani's visit will mark his second meeting with Assad. The first occurred in February 2020, shortly after the assassination of Qassem Soleimani by US forces in Iraq, a trip that underscored his role as Khamenei’s trusted emissary during critical periods.
As the region braces for further developments, the visit signals Iran’s intent to strengthen its coordination with Syria and reassert its influence in the face of mounting challenges.
The escalators do not work. What works here is hijab enforcement. Welcome to Sadeqieh subway station in western Tehran! A link between the rest of the Iranian capital and its nearest densely populated suburb Karaj.
The loudspeaker says the next train to downtown Tehran does not stop here as it is fully packed. In less than a minute, passengers are forced to step back from the edge of the platform and watch a train with its doors open dashing away in high speed as passengers inside cling onto whatever that can help keep them on board. A subway train with doors malfunctioning is another sign of breakdown in public services.
The Kayhan newspaper, a hardline daily associated with the office of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, recently suggested that US President-elect Donald Trump should be assassinated, claiming that this would please Allah. Such statements are profoundly unacceptable by any standard. Yet, the government, which maintains tight control over domestic media, allows this newspaper to make threats against a foreign elected official.
The "reformist" press adopts a slightly more moderate tone. Etemad newspaper reported that 12 economists have advised President Masoud Pezeshkian to address the shortage of electricity and fuel by raising prices, suggesting that higher costs will lead to reduced demand. The suggestion comes as 40% annual inflation has impoverished one third of the population in the past five years.
Outside the station, traffic police stop women riding motorcycles. A 16th-century cleric, Mohammad Bagher Majlesi, known as Allamah, or “the most learned man” in Isfahan, issued a ruling in his interpretation of Shariah law that women should not sit on saddles, claiming they might experience unchaste sensations from the contact with the saddle. Confiscated motorcycles line the sidewalk, awaiting a male family member to come and collect them.
For many men and women, motorcycles are the most practical way to navigate Tehran’s heavy traffic. Women are allowed to ride as passengers, and Shariah law generally overlooks it when they hold onto the male driver’s waist for support. There are different rules for the driver’s seat and the passenger seat, as if there were two different Gods governing each position.
The government attempts to strictly enforce hijab regulations, at times using force, though many women continue to resist. The latest enforcement initiative is the Hijab Clinic, also called the “Clinic to Give Up Hijablessness.” The wording gives it the tone of a center for drug rehabilitation. An Iranian journalist commented on X: “This political system clings to absurd measures while grappling with multiple crises. Such a system is bound for decline; power, water, and gas shortages, along with the opening of hijab clinics, are signs of its collapse.”
Despite the government's strict stance on hijab, two of the most widely shared stories on social media this year involve scandals surrounding state officials and celebrities. While authorities say they made a few arrests in Rasht, related to a sex scandal caught on video, they have remained silent about another incriminating video involving the granddaughter of a Friday prayers Imam in a different city.
The government has attributed widespread power outages to its decision to halt the use of polluting fuels in power plants, yet residents continue to complain about the smog that settles over the city like a thick blanket. It was only after mounting criticism that Government Spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani acknowledged that some power plants are still burning mazut, one of the most harmful fuels available. An energy expert reports that Iran burned approximately 8.2 billion liters of mazut in urban areas last year. The reason: shortage of natural gas, when Iran has the world’s second-largest reserves.
Amid widespread public frustration over government inefficiency, viral photos have surfaced of five “apple polishers,” including two movie stars, a footballer, a TV presenter, and a wrestling coach, who continue to praise the government’s “achievements” in trivial areas or even compliment the President’s mannerisms. This seems to be a public tactic for naming and shaming those who turn a blind eye to the struggles of ordinary people.
Speaking of naming and shaming, one of the biggest stories circulating involves a whistleblower revealing financial corruption among several former officials, including two former heads of the Iranian Judiciary. Social media users have criticized state-controlled media for selectively covering these cases while omitting others implicated in significant corruption scandals, such as former Tehran mayors Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Alireza Zakani, as well as the city's Friday prayer Imam, Kazem Sedighi.
It is these paradoxes and hypocrisies—scandals in a political system that prides itself on chastity, financial corruption in the world’s most prominent theocracy, and a ban on love and alcohol in a land whose literary heritage celebrates both—that led one of Iran’s most renowned contemporary poets, Ahmad Shamlou, to write: “These are strange days, my darling. They flag love at the crossroads, and they smell your mouth at checkpoints to make sure you have not said: I love you.”
A decorated military man, Mike Waltz has long been an advocate of taking on Tehran and as Trump’s incoming national security advisor looks set to become a formidable adversary of the Islamic Republic.
Waltz has pulled no punches in accusing the Joe Biden administration of emboldening Tehran.
Despite sanctions, the Islamic Republic in the last four years has made record revenues from oil, approached military grade uranium enrichment, supported Russia’s war in Ukraine and backed allied armed groups in a region-wide fight against Israel.
Most recently, Iran has attempted to assassinate President-elect Donald Trump according to US authorities, an alleged plot which Waltz has not been shy to blame on Biden.
“While the Iranians have been trying to assassinate not only dissidents like journalists, like Salman Rushdie who was stabbed in the neck on stage, but they’re trying to kill right now as we speak, president-elect Trump,” he said on Fox News last week.
“President Biden should be standing on the podium right now sending a very clear message to the Ayatollah: if any of this happens, here will be the consequences," he added. "We will rain holy hell down on Tehran if you interfere with our democracy and if you kill a President-elect of the United States. But yet they think they can get away with it because they don’t think there will be any consequences.”
Waltz, who hails from Florida, is a defense veteran who has also worked in the Pentagon as a policy adviser under former defense chiefs Donald Rumsfeld and Robert Gates.
After 24 years of service, he was the first Green Beret elected to the US House and has been chairman of the House Armed Services subcommittee on readiness and a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.
In 2020, Waltz was quick to praise the Trump-ordered assassination of Iranian Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani: “I'm glad President Trump finally stood up to Iran to show them we will not allow the death of more Americans.”
The killing of Soleimani, who had been responsible for the deaths of many US soldiers, made Trump and his aides the targets of alleged assassination plots from Tehran.
Waltz, in addition to supporting Ukraine against Iran-baked Russian aggression and Israel against Iran’s regional militias, will be likely be central to an effort by the incoming administration to further isolate Tehran.
In 2020, he said more must be done to strangle Tehran economically.
“We must continue to enforce sanctions and the economic pressure campaign because it's working — but we can't do it alone. Our European allies need to step up against terrorism to pressure the regime back to the negotiating table. For our country, our military and the world, it's important we don't back down,” he said.
In spite of countries such as Canada joining the US in designating Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) a terrorist organization, the European Union has so far demurred, though it has levied multiple rounds of sanctions against Tehran for its nuclear program, human rights record and arms shipments to Russia.
On X last week, Waltz continued his criticism of Biden: “Why has Iran been trying to kill President Trump? Because they think they can get away with it. The Biden administration’s weakness over the last 4 years has emboldened our adversaries THAT MUCH.”
He has long been a vocal supporter of Iran's archenemy, Israel, calling the Jewish state “the greatest ally we’ve ever known” at the Republican Jewish Coalition's annual conference in September.
In a recent Economist article, Waltz chastised the Biden administration for hindering Israel in its war in Gaza against Iran-backed Hamas. Biden had threatened to cut off arms if more aid was not given to the Palestinians in the enclave amid a humanitarian crisis as pressure mounted from Democrats.
"The next administration should, as Mr. Trump argued, 'let Israel finish the job' and 'get it over with fast' against Hamas," Waltz wrote. "They should put a credible military option on the table to make clear to the Iranians that America would stop them building nuclear weapons and reinstate a diplomatic and economic pressure campaign to stop them and to constrain their support for terror proxies."
A US appeals court has overturned a $1.68 billion judgment against Iran’s central bank, angering the families of US Marine Corps personnel killed in the 1983 Iran-backed truck bombing in Beirut.
The 11-year-old case was won by families of the bombing which killed 241 US personnel at a barracks in Beirut but the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan threw it out in a 3-0 decision citing issues around state law.
The panel also rejected a claim that a 2019 federal law designed to make it easier to seize Iranian assets held outside the United States waived the central bank's (Bank Markazi) sovereign immunity.
That law "neither abrogates Bank Markazi's jurisdictional immunity nor provides an independent grant of subject matter jurisdiction," Circuit Judge Robert Sack wrote.
It has now been referred back to US District Judge Loretta Preska in Manhattan to address state law questions, including whether the case can proceed at all in Bank Markazi's absence.
The case, Peterson et al v. Bank Markazi et al, accused Iran of giving material support for the Hezbollah attack by seizing bond proceeds held by Luxembourg-based Clearstream Banking in a blocked account on Bank Markazi's behalf.
However, Bank Markazi claimed immunity under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, which generally shields foreign governments from liability in US courts.
The case has been a years-long battle for families seeking justice. Plaintiffs successfully sued Bank Markazi in 2013 to partially satisfy a $2.65 billion default judgment they had won against Iran in 2007. Another judge dismissed the case in 2015, but the 2nd Circuit revived it in 2017.
Then in 2020, the US Supreme Court ordered a fresh review in light of the 2019 law, which then-President Donald Trump signed as part of the National Defense Authorization Act.
The plaintiffs have said they hold more than $4 billion of judgments against Iran and have been unable to collect for decades.
(Reporting by Reuters)
The mixed messages show the contending goals of beleaguered civilian leaders eager to ease heavy international sanctions and an ascendant armed establishment dedicated to confronting Israel and the United States.
Iran would “choose the timing and nature of our response to the Zionist regime, and when the moment arrives, we will act without hesitation," Army Commander-in-Chief Abdolrahim Mousavi said. "Our response will be decisive and uncompromising.”
Other senior officials intensified their warnings. Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Chief Hossein Salami said Iran was determined to respond.
“Our eyes are fixed upon you, and we will fight to the very end. Retribution will come; we will respond with painful blows—just wait and see,” Salami warned.
His deputy, Ali Fadavi, said the showdown would pit justice against falsehood, vowing the world would soon “witness the complete downfall of the Zionist regime.”
The warnings underscore the sky-high tension between regional arch-foes Iran and Israel, even as Iran's civilian leaders told the visiting head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that it sought to negotiate over its disputed nuclear program.
In an escalating cycle of tit-for-tat attacks that began in April, Iran and Israel have increasingly targeted each other, with tensions reaching new heights.
Iran is now expected to retaliate following Israel’s latest move: a four-hour operation on October 26 that Israel reports significantly damaged Iran’s air defense systems.
Israel’s strike was itself a response to Iran’s October 1 missile barrage, which followed a series of high-profile assassinations attributed to Israel.
These killings included the leader of Hezbollah in Lebanon and a senior Hamas political figure within an IRGC compound in Tehran, an incident widely seen as a stark breach of Iranian security.
Meanwhile, has signaled its readiness for diplomatic engagement on its nuclear program.
On Wednesday, Rafael Grossi, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), arrived in Tehran to address international concerns over Iran’s nuclear activities.
“Iran is prepared to cooperate with the IAEA to clarify any supposed ambiguities,” President Masoud Pezeshkian assured Grossi, insisting on the “the peaceful nature of our nation’s nuclear activities.”
Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi also highlighted Iran’s willingness to negotiate, saying, “We are ready to engage in talks based on our national interest and our inalienable rights, but we will not negotiate under pressure or intimidation.”
Following his meeting with Grossi, Araghchi reaffirmed Iran’s commitment to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), adding, “Differences can be resolved through cooperation and dialogue.”
According to Reuters, Iran plans to send a message to European powers through Grossi, underscoring its determination to resolve the nuclear standoff with Western nations.