Trapped in silence: Iran’s internet shutdown leaves millions in the dark
Men view the cityscape in the aftermath of Israeli strikes, in Tehran, Iran, June 13, 2025.
A growing number of Iranians are reporting near-total internet outages across the country as the government appears to have imposed a widespread digital blackout amid the ongoing war.
Israel hopes the United States will knock out Iran's underground nuclear site Fordow with its superior firepower but may try alone within days while military gains and global opinion allow, two Israeli security sources told Iran International.
The two sources still viewed joint action alongside the United States as the most likely scenario, within 48-72 hours at most.
An attack could be underway as early Friday night, the sources added, but Israel is also weighing going it alone to avoid losing the military advantage it has gained this week.
“In order for us to force Iran into concessions it would otherwise not make, and to bring it back to the negotiating table, this is the only way; we need the US to take action," an Israeli intelligence source told Iran International on condition of anonymity.
"We need Trump to do this within the next two to three days," one source added. "Trump is extremely unpredictable right now though, so anything could happen.”
Buried deep underground, the Fordow nuclear enrichment facility has remained untouched so far in the ongoing Israeli military campaign which appeared to take Iran by surprise in the early hours of last Friday morning.
Window closing
The window of opportunity to knock out the site was closing, the second Israeli security source said, and Israel had been planning for an attack for months.
“Until now the IDF (Israeli military) has opened up the flight path to Iran and the skies are open but that will be for a limited time, it can’t go on indefinitely,” he told Iran International on condition of anonymity.
“Therefore, if America decides to get involved, it has to be a decision made as fast as possible otherwise the opportunity will be missed.”
As the war begins to impact the global economy, including the soaring price of oil, the source said world powers could quickly lose patience with the conflict.
“There are economic issues at stake, so for example if oil prices spike, then these countries could be involved due to their own economic interests. So in general, America has to take this opportunity within 48-72 hours.”
The reach and strength of Israel's bombers are more limited compared to their American peers, making an attack on Fordow by Israeli forces alone more complex.
“Israel doesn’t have the heavy B-52 capabilities to drop a 14-ton bomb to penetrate the heart of the Iranian atomic sites that have to be destroyed,” the security source said.
Israel’s F-15s travel nearly 2,000 kilometers with far smaller payloads of around 400 kilograms, the source added. "Do the math. America could do that mission within a few days, but for us, it would be a much longer, more complex operation."
The entrance to the Fordow nuclear facility in central Iran
Destroying the Fordow enrichment facility requires a US military asset never been used in war, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.
Known as the Massive Ordnance Penetrator, the GBU-57 is designed to tear through 200 feet of mountain rock before exploding. The United States has around 20, the newspaper reported, delivered via B-2 stealth bombers.
In the White House on Wednesday, Trump maintained studied ambiguity. “I may do it. I may not do it. I mean, nobody knows what I’m going to do,” he told reporters.
Iain Overton, the Executive Director of Action on Armed Violence, told Iran International that despite the heavy blows taken, Tehran could opt to fight on.
“Iran may lack parity in conventional military terms, but it possesses a distributed deterrent capability: armed proxies across the region, cyber warfare expertise, and a long-honed ideological machinery that frames death not as loss but as victory," he said.
"If the Ayatollah’s regime interprets US involvement as existential, it will not capitulate. It will escalate.”
As Israel continues striking Iran and Tehran fires missiles in retaliation, a new German intelligence report warns that Iranian efforts to acquire missile-related technology in Europe surged in 2024.
“In addition to its nuclear program, Iran pursues one of the most extensive missile programs in the Middle East,” Germany’s Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), equivalent to the FBI in the US, asserted last week.
“Procurement activities in Germany in the area of Iranian missile technology/missile programs remain high – and are on the rise.”
The report added that Iran continued to violate key commitments under the 2015 nuclear deal (JCPOA), prompting the EU to maintain a partial embargo banning the transfer of sensitive goods, weapons, and delivery systems.
Calls for snapback sanctions
In May, Austria’s intelligence service concluded that Iran’s nuclear weapons development is “well advanced” and that it now has a growing arsenal of ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear warheads.
On June 12, the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency(IAEA) censured Tehran for failing to meet its safeguard obligations under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
“The E3 (Britain, France and Germany) should invoke the snapback sanctions mechanism,” Jason Brodsky, policy director at United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI), told Iran International.
“Invoking snapback would restore previous UN Security Council resolutions requiring Iran to suspend all uranium enrichment and reinforce the US position of zero enrichment in Iran,” he added, pointing out that snapback would also reinstate the arms embargo and missile restrictions.
Espionage, repression, regional threats
The report also named Iran, along with Russia, China, and Turkey, as among the top four states conducting espionage, cyberattacks, influence operations, and proliferation inside Germany.
Each country, it noted, pursues different priorities.
Proliferation was defined as acquiring products and knowledge for weapons of mass destruction, delivery systems, and other advanced military technologies. Iran was mentioned 84 times in the 412-page report, which outlines threats to German democracy.
It also condemned Tehran’s domestic crackdown and support for Russia’s war in Ukraine.
“Due to the violent actions of Iranian security forces within the country and the support of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, the EU imposed further sanctions against the country in 2023 and 2024,” the report said.
German-Iranian political scientist Dr. Wahied Wahdat-Hagh told Iran International that Berlin is increasingly alarmed by Tehran’s continued defiance. He said snapback under UNSCR 2231 is likely unless Iran yields to US demands.
He also warned that Iran’s missile program poses a threat to Europe, citing its threats to close the Persian Gulf, disrupt global markets, and target countries allied with Israel.
Iran International contacted Israeli officials for comments on the German findings. No response was received at the time of publication.
The Taliban’s General Directorate of Intelligence (GDI) held a high-level internal session on the possible escape of Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and al-Qaeda members into Afghanistan, alongside a potential wave of Iranian refugees, Afghanistan International has learned.
Amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Islamic Republic, the session outlined several key concerns and scenarios.
IRGC members seeking asylum
Facing potential instability, senior members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) could flee Iran and seek refuge in Afghanistan. GDI discussed the possibility during the session that such individuals might request protection from the Taliban, according to Afghanistan International’s sources.
Risk of al-Qaeda member relocation
Senior al-Qaeda figures such as Saif al-Adel and Abu Abdulrahman, who are believed to currently reside in Iran, may attempt to escape the country amid instability. GDI has asked the Taliban leadership for guidance on how to respond if they attempt to enter Afghanistan—whether to accept them, place them under surveillance, or reject their entry altogether. This discussion was part of the internal analysis obtained by Afghanistan International.
In 2021, then–US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo accused Iran of harboring al-Qaeda leaders. US and UN intelligence agencies later confirmed that Saif al-Adel was residing in Iran and is now considered al-Qaeda’s de facto leader. In 2024, the US State Department reaffirmed that Iran continues to provide safe haven to senior al-Qaeda operatives.
Preparedness for influx of Iranian refugees
GDI has posed a critical question: Can Afghanistan absorb a possible wave of Iranian refugees? The session called for urgent contingency planning to evaluate national capacity, political risks, and humanitarian consequences.
Top Senate Democrats on Wednesday accused US President Donald Trump of risking war with Iran without legal authority, hours after Trump said the Islamic Republic’s downfall was possible and suggested he might bomb key nuclear sites.
“I want total and complete victory,” Trump said in Washington, dismissing any notion of a ceasefire and suggesting Iran had asked for talks. “They should have negotiated sooner.”
The president said Iranian officials had even proposed a visit to the White House, a remark later denied by Iran’s UN mission in New York.
The statements came as ABC News reported that Trump was increasingly open to a military strike on Iran’s underground Fordow nuclear site, citing a source familiar with current intelligence.
Democratic senators call for legal authority
Five senior Senate Democrats issued a joint statement criticizing what they called the administration’s “lack of preparation, strategy, and clearly defined objectives” on Iran.
“The United States cannot sleepwalk into a third war in as many decades,” the senators wrote, warning Trump against bypassing congressional approval.
“By law, the president must consult Congress and seek authorization if he is considering taking the country to war," they said.
“He owes Congress and the American people a strategy for US engagement in the region.”
The signatories included Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, Chris Coons, Mark Warner, Jack Reed, and Patty Murray.
Iran vows response if provoked
Iran’s UN ambassador in Geneva warned that any trace of US involvement in Israeli attacks would trigger retaliation.
Mojtaba Ranjbar, a Iranian cleric, said, “If the United States targets the Supreme Leader, Iran will strike Washington and New York.”
Trump described Iran as “totally defenseless,” intensifying speculation over imminent military action.
With threats traded and authorizations absent, the risk of open conflict is rising as Washington and Tehran continue to exchange warnings without resolution.
US President Donald Trump looked closer to attacking Iran on Wednesday, saying he gave Iran "the ultimate ultimatum" while Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei vowed "irreparable damage" if confronted, as Israel and the Islamic Republic warred on.
Here's a brief summary of major developments as the conflict entered its sixth day.
President Trump gives "ultimate ultimatum"
US President Donald Trump said Wednesday the Islamic Republic's downfall was possible. Trump added he seeks “total and complete victory,” not a ceasefire.
The US President said he had given Iran the "ultimate ultimatum".
Iran has expressed interest in negotiating, Trump said on Wednesday.
Trump said Tehran had even proposed a visit to the White House. “They should have negotiated sooner,” Trump said.
The US President was growing more comfortable with bombing Iran's Fordow nuclear site, ABC News reported citing a source familiar with the intelligence.
Khamenei warns US of pain
Iran’s Supreme Leader appeared in a defiant video address.
Ali Khamenei said a US military intervention would result in “irreparable damage".
Khamenei rejected Trump's call for Iran to surrender the previous day.
Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi lashed out at Israel but said diplomacy was still possible, in an apparent reference to the United States.
Mutual blows continue
Israel's military said it continued to target Iran’s military capabilities.
Israeli strikes over the past day hit 60 locations, a spokesman said, including centrifuge and anti-tank missile production sites in and around Tehran.
Iran continued to launch missile salvos at Israel, albeit at less intensity.
Residents reported huge explosions in Isfahan, Shiraz and Kermanshah.
Iran has launched around 400 ballistic missiles and 1,000 drones at Israel since the conflict began on Friday, CNN cited a senior Israeli military official as saying.
The IAEA confirmed Israeli air strikes hit two Iranian centrifuge production sites, the TESA Karaj workshop and the Tehran Research Center.
US military readied, Congress to be briefed
US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the military was ready for any scenario, including the fallout from a potential attack on Iran.
Hegseth said the US military is prepared to execute any decision President Donald Trump makes regarding war or peace.
An aide to Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said senators would be briefed on Iran in a classified session early next week.
US moves assets to Mideast
The USS Ford Carrier Strike Group is set to deploy into the eastern Mediterranean near Israel, CNN reported citing US officials.
The United States has deployed more than 30 aerial refueling tankers to the Middle East.
Israel touts wins
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel controlled Iran's skies.
The country's pilots, Netanyahu added, were striking at nuclear and missile sites.
Israel's Defense Minister Israel Katz said the air force had destroyed the headquarters of Iran’s internal security agency.
Iran warns of retaliation to US
Iran’s UN envoy in Geneva warned that Tehran would retaliate against the United States if it detects American involvement in Israeli attacks.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards warned Israelis to flee or risk being trapped in bomb shelters under missile fire.
A senior Iranian official Mojtaba Ranjbar said the United States targets the Supreme Leader, Iran would strike Washington and New York.
Iran’s UN mission in New York rejected President Donald Trump’s statement that Iranian officials proposed a visit to the White House.
Diplomacy quickens
Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi would accept a meeting to discuss a ceasefire with Israel, the New York Times cited a senior Iranian official as saying.
Russia’s President Vladimir Putin said Moscow had presented ideas for a settlement to Iran, Israel and the United States.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov cautioned on Wednesday that direct US military assistance to Israel could sharply destabilize the Middle East.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer warned his cabinet to prepare for a potential US military strike on Iran, the Financial Times cited British officials as saying.
Foreign ministers from Germany, France, and Britain will meet their Iranian counterpart in Geneva on Friday for nuclear talks, Reuters cited a German diplomatic source as saying
IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi told Bloomberg the UN nuclear watchdog can no longer verify the location or security of Iran’s highly enriched uranium.
State TV hacked, internet down
Iran’s state broadcaster was hacked Wednesday night and videos calling for street protests briefly aired.
Iran's Cybersecurity Command said it had thwarted a major cyberattack targeting the country’s banking system
Armed Revolutionary Guard forces took control of Iran’s state broadcaster compound in Tehran following an Israeli airstrike, tightening security.
Iran’s exiled prince Reza Pahlavi said The Islamic Republic is in its final phase, urging support for a peaceful transition led by Iranians.
Several buildings near the headquarters of the Law Enforcement Command (FARAJA) were attacked wounding several offices, Iranian authorities said.
In messages sent to Iran International, Iranians from across the country described severe connectivity outages affecting both mobile networks and home internet services which left them in the dark about the historic attack on the country.
The shutdown, which some residents say has lasted more than 24 hours, is the most severe connectivity crisis since the November 2019 protests, according to monitoring group NetBlocks.
The disruption has left millions struggling with basic daily tasks, from financial transactions to communicating with loved ones abroad.
“I am a driver for Snapp (a popular ride-hailing app), and with GPS and navigation systems down, I can’t work anymore,” said one message.
“This is how I made a living. Now, in these conditions of war and economic hardship, how am I supposed to support my family?”
Users across the country described scenes of isolation and desperation, with one resident characterizing the situation as “being held hostage.”
“We feel like hostages," the contributor wrote. "The only reason I could even send you this message was through VPNs."
Multiple Iranians confirmed that the internet is entirely down in their areas, preventing the sending of videos or voice messages.
“Even basic messaging barely works," One user from Tehran said. "I managed to connect to the global internet by accident using Psiphon on Windows. Please inform others that this method might still work.”
As international lines remain disrupted, many Iranians living abroad are unable to reach their families.
“I am a student living outside Iran and haven’t been able to contact my family,” another person said.
'Please, Elon'
Others appealed directly to global figures. “Please, we are asking the Iranian people and international media to call on Elon Musk to provide satellite internet to the people of Iran, like he did for Ukraine during the war,” wrote a user in central Tehran.
Home internet services appear to be limited to internal Iranian websites and apps, such as Rubika, and even then operate at extremely low speeds.
In Arak, central Iran, residents reported complete disconnection and uneasiness.
“Even text messages sometimes don’t send. There are still long queues at bakeries and gas stations, even though the city is quiet and most shops are closed.”
Messages also highlighted emotional distress caused by the isolation.
“We are psychologically exhausted. Only Netanyahu finishing this [conflict] can save us,” one person wrote.
Losing touch
Another said, “It’s been over 48 hours since I last heard from my family in Qom. Every call just rings endlessly.”
One message by read, "Since yesterday afternoon, I have not only been unable to contact my loved ones living in Tehran and nearby cities, but I’ve also lost all means of communication with my mother and immediate family, who live in a northern city. I can’t reach them by landline or mobile."
"Today, I tried calling more than a hundred times at different hours. At one point, my call unexpectedly connected to other numbers in Iran — though they couldn’t hear me."
Others warned of the broader economic impact. “All banks are closed. Nationalized internet systems are down. No one can even update their debit cards,” said one message.
Those operating online businesses have reported losses. “I am a trader, and for the past week, my group of nearly 800,000 members has made no income.”
Meanwhile, some Iranians abroad shared partial workarounds. “My mother just managed to call me directly from Iran. Please let families know that direct calling might still work occasionally. It will help relieve some of the anxiety,” a user in Sweden reported.
The nationwide blackout has stoked fears of increased censorship and state control of digital communication.
“The ongoing blackout incident is the most severe tracked since the November 2019 protests and impacts the public's ability to stay connected at a time when communications are vital,” NetBlocks said.
Tasnim news agency, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guards, published an article on Thursday calling for a total internet blackout for people. The outlet described the blackout as a necessity “to disrupt enemy cyberattacks and drone operations.”