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Iranian MP Vows Response To Israel's Killing Of IRGC Commanders

Jan 25, 2024, 20:47 GMT+0
People inspect the damage at the site of an Israeli strike, according to sources, in the Mazzeh neighborhood of Damascus, Syria January 20, 2024
People inspect the damage at the site of an Israeli strike, according to sources, in the Mazzeh neighborhood of Damascus, Syria January 20, 2024

An Iranian MP says Tehran will retaliate against Israel's recent attack that claimed the lives of five Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) commanders in Syria.

Fadahossein Maleki, a member of the National Security Committee of the Parliament, emphasized on Thursday that “the fact that military commanders exercise prudence does not mean they don’t want to respond.”

The incident occurred on January 20, when a residential building in Damascus's Mazzeh neighborhood was targeted in what Syria's state-run SANA news agency described as an Israeli airstrike. The IRGC confirmed that four personnel initially lost their lives, identified as Hojatollah Omidvar, Ali Aqazadeh, Hossein Mohammadi, and Saeed Karimi. Later, a fifth officer, Mohammad-Amin Samadi, succumbed to injuries sustained in the attack.

The recent assault follows a pattern of Israeli strikes targeting Iranian interests in the region. In December, Razi Mousavi, responsible for logistical and military coordination for the IRGC in Syria, was killed in a similar attack near Damascus.

People inspect the damage at the site of an Israeli strike, according to sources, in the Mazzeh neighborhood of Damascus, Syria January 20, 2024.
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People inspect the damage at the site of an Israeli strike, according to sources, in the Mazzeh neighborhood of Damascus, Syria January 20, 2024.

The Iranian government has repeatedly issued threats against Israel, holding it responsible for the deaths of IRGC commanders and personnel in the region. Despite these threats, Tehran has refrained from directly attacking Israel, though continues to support its proxies surrounding Israel. Since October 7 when Iran-backed Hamas in Gaza declared war on Israel, support from the likes of the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen and Hezbollah in Lebanon swiftly followed. 

Israel, while refraining from commenting on specific strikes, has acknowledged conducting numerous sorties against Iran-backed forces and facilities in Syria over the past decade. The recent escalation coincides with heightened tensions stemming from the Israel-Hamas conflict that erupted in October.

Israel has been targeting Syria, particularly affecting international airports in Damascus and Aleppo, potentially disrupting the transfer of weapons from Iran to its proxies in Gaza and along Israel's borders. Iran's involvement in supporting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad throughout the 12-year civil war has led to a significant deployment of Iranian fighters, with many members of the Revolutionary Guard being killed in the conflict.


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Iran Ignored US Warnings Of Impending ISIS Attack

Jan 25, 2024, 17:34 GMT+0
•
Iran International Newsroom

US officials confirmed to Iran International that they warned Iran of the impending double bombing which killed 95 civilians in Kerman earlier this month.

Separately, Iran International has learned that the US passed the warning to Iran more than one week before the Kerman attack.

Speaking to Iran International, a US official said, "Prior to ISIS’ terrorist attack on January 3, 2024, in Kerman, Iran, the U.S. Government provided Iran with a private warning that there was a terrorist threat within Iranian borders. The U.S. Government followed a longstanding “duty to warn” policy that has been implemented across administrations to warn governments against potential lethal threats. We provide these warnings in part because we do not want to see innocent lives lost in terror attacks."

In spite of the warning that Islamic State’s affiliate in Afghanistan, ISIS-Khorasan, known as ISIS-K, planned to commit the attacks at the commemoration ceremony of slain Qods Force commander Qassem Soleimani, Iran failed to prevent the attacks, the Wall Street Journal first broke the news. 

According to the US newspaper, American officials said the information passed to Iran was specific enough about the location and sufficiently timely that it could have prevented the mass killings on January 3.

Coffins of casualties of the Islamic State attack in Kerman, lie during a funeral ceremony in Kerman, Iran, January 5, 2024.
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Coffins of casualties of the Islamic State attack in Kerman, lie during a funeral ceremony in Kerman, Iran, January 5, 2024.

The attack was the deadliest since the birth of the Islamic Republic in 1979. Many Iranians questioned why Soleimani's family members and top officials were absent from the memorial at his gravesite in Kerman on January 3. The US warning could explain their absence.

The duty to warn will raise questions for many, when Iran’s proxies have been directly targeting US facilities and troops in more than 150 attacks since October 7 alone, following the Hamas invasion of Israel.

Proxies in Syria, Iraq and Yemen have said the US support for Israel’s right to defend itself in the wake of the Iran-backed Hamas massacre has made it a target alongside the Jewish state.

While Iran continues to develop its nuclear program and contravenes international laws, as well as arming Russia in its war against Ukraine, many will question the motives of the Biden administration in forewarning a global enemy.

People stand near a man lying on the ground at the scene of explosions during a ceremony held to mark the death of late Iranian General Qassem Soleimani, in Kerman, Iran, January 3, 2024.
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People stand near a man lying on the ground at the scene of explosions in Kerman, January 3, 2024.

Moreover, Iranian officials blamed the United States and Israel for the ISIS attacks, reiterating their long-standing position that the US has created ISIS.

Last year, the US cut a deal with Tehran to release five US-Iranian citizens unlawfully detained in Iran in return for the unfreezing of $6bn in Iranian money held in South Korea.

Former CIA officer Douglas London told the Wall Street Journal that the decision to tip off Iran was likely made by senior officials at the White House and CIA. Such intelligence sharing may well be part of the Biden administration’s policy to bring its adversary closer rather than imposing heavy penalties such as designating Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps.

It is unknown if the tip-off was through direct or indirect channels, but is likely to have involved a third party, like the negotiations for last year’s hostage release.

The revelations of the tip-off will be hard to hear for the regime’s hard-liners who see the US as an adversary alongside Israel, its archenemy.

Speaking to WSJ, Alex Vatanka, director of the Iran program at the Middle East Institute, said that the ISIS-K attack was a humiliating setback for Tehran, whose mighty proxies reign terror across the Middle East and take billions of dollars of funding from Tehran annually, at the cost of its own people.

“ISIS operatives were able to come in and attack in the birthplace of Soleimani,” Vatanka said, a symbolic location commemorating the death of the man who oversaw all Iran's proxy operations abroad.

Since the US withdrawal of 2021, Afghanistan-based ISIS-K has grown in strength. US officials say it is one of the most dangerous groups in the region, eclipsing al Qaeda, with ambitions to strike targets in the West.

Vatanka added: “The headlines wrote themselves: the Islamic Republic cannot protect the Iranian homeland.”

Fire Breaks Out At Hospital In Tehran, No Casualties Announced

Jan 25, 2024, 16:43 GMT+0

A huge fire broke out at a hospital in Iran's capital Tehran on Thursday, with Iran's Health Ministry spokesman claiming that no one is injured.

There were no immediate reports of casualties or the cause of incident, with an official saying the blaze had engulfed the building's exterior facade.

State TV said the area around the Gandhi Hospital in northern Tehran has been cordoned off and the hospital was being evacuated.

Pedram Pak-Ayin, the spokesperson for the Health Ministry, said that "none" of the workers and patients at Gandhi Hospital have been harmed.

He added that the cause of the fire is not clear and added, "The patients of Gandhi Hospital are being transferred to other medical centers."

According to Deputy Health Minister Saeed Karimi, 80 patients have been transferred from Gandhi Hospital to surrounding medical centers.

Firefighters, Tehran, Gandhi hospital, Fire  (January 25, 2024)
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Tehran Fire Department spokesperson Jalal Malaki said the fire started at 1900 local time (1530 GMT) and firefighters had been dispatched to the area.

"Initial reports indicate that the fire primarily affected the exterior of the hospital building," Maleki told state TV.

According to information from the Gandhi Hospital website, the complex has 100 beds, 17 operating rooms, and 100 residential suites.

No exact information has been released about the number of patients and other people inside the hospital at the time of the fire.

Clerics Taking Over Iranian Schools With Hardliner Support

Jan 25, 2024, 15:22 GMT+0
•
Maryam Sinaiee

Recruitment of clerics as teachers and new legislation allowing mosques to run private schools has fueled concerns about the future of Iran's educational system.

In a statement published on its Telegram channel on January 18, the Coordination Council of Iranian Teachers’ Unions strongly criticized the employment of clerics as teachers by the education ministry.

The statement alleged that this meant “purging schools” from expert teaching staff and replacing them with clerics and seminary students who have no expertise in child education, or a standard education. The teachers’ union called the decision a “reactionary move” that resurrects the concept of schools run by the clergy (maktab), which were abolished nearly a hundred years ago. The ministry has denied a nationwide purge is underway. 

However, hardliners controlling the parliament and the executive branch have been also purging university faculties and openly speak about “purification.”

The powerful Shiite clergy in Iran lost its monopoly on education and the justice system with the establishment of modern courts and schools by the founder of the Pahlavi Dynasty, Reza Shah, in the 1920s who fundamentally curbed their powers. 

The council also warned Iranian families about the consequences of “the systematic presence of clergy in schools and its dangers to children.”

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi among a group of schoolgirls in Tehran (September 2022)
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Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi among a group of schoolgirls in Tehran (September 2022)

The ministry has expelled scores of teachers and forced many others to retire early for supporting last year’s protests, instead hiring 3,500 clerics and seminarians as teachers to fill some of the tens of thousands of new positions it has created to overcome the shortage of teaching staff.

Ali Farhadi, the ministry’s spokesman, has claimed that the ministry only became aware of the recruitment after the fact. “We, too, found out that these individuals had been accepted [for the positions] after the examinations [of candidates for teaching positions] were held,” he claimed. However, regime-controlled media have been talking about the subject for months, saying that clerics should become schoolteachers.

The clergy have been running unofficial schools for over a decade but last week the establishment of “mosque-centered schools” was given official status when lawmakers hastily approved a proposal to oblige the ministry of education to issue licenses to persons and legal entities to establish private schools attached to mosques if building requirements were met.

In a report entitled “Autonomous Schools” Monday, the reformist Ham-Mihan newspaper said there are around 150 so-called “mosque-centered” schools with around 7,000 students now that operate unofficially.

An administrator of a “mosque-centered” school for girls told Ham-Mihan that their curriculum included homemaking, sewing, cooking and traditional medicine as well as computers and mobile photography to their students. They also selected and screened their own teachers, he said, but could not issue any kind of certificates under the current circumstances.

Former Minister of Education Mohsen Haji Mirzaei told Ham-Mihan that mosque-centered schools are "a rebellion against the official educational system" and warned that they could “delegitimize” the formal education system and foster extremist beliefs.

Speaking to the conservative Farhikhtegan newspaper, Rezvan Hakimzadeh, former Deputy Minister of Education, also expressed concern about the curriculum of these schools. “Who will supervise how the curriculum is replaced if the official one is to be disregarded? Who will approve of its suitability?” he asked.

Other critics such as another former education minister, Ali-Asghar Fani, have warned that the education ministry may fail to supervise these schools due to the political influence of the imams of the mosques to which they are attached.

Lawmakers supporting the legislation such as Ahmad-Hossein Fallahi, spokesman of the Education, Research and Technology committee, argue that schools attached to mosques can answer the dire need for more educational facilities, but claim the education ministry will have control over the curriculum of these schools.

An organization calling itself ‘Mosque-Centered Schools Headquarters’, says on its website that those behind the drive aim to “fulfil the heavy task of training and preparing an efficient revolutionary workforce” to meet the need for “human resources worthy of the Islamic Revolution.”

The organization’s secretary, Hossein-Ali Deylam, told Ham-Mihan that establishment of schools attached to mosques started in the religious city of Mashhad twelve years ago. He claimed that the number of these schools has grown since then due to the great demand from families who want their children to study in these schools, most of which are at the primary level.

“From the start, these schools have not been under the supervision of education ministry … Each school determines its tuition fees based on its activities and specifications,” he said without elaboration on their curriculum.

Americans Say Biden's Iran Policy Failed

Jan 25, 2024, 15:13 GMT+0

A recent online poll in the United States reveals that 61 percent of Americans believe the Biden administration's Iran policy has failed.

Moreover, a significant majority, 76 percent, believe that the Gazan militant group, Hamas, is receiving support from Iran in its war waged on October 7 against Israel.

Two thirds (67 percent) of voters expressed support for the US actively striking against terrorist groups with 74 percent of voters endorsing retaliatory attacks on the Houthis in Yemen for the blockade of global shipping in the Red Sea and the group's targeting of US ships. A further 84 percent advocate for increased military responses if the Houthis persist in the blockade on the route which accounts for 12 percent of global trade.

The survey also highlights public sentiment towards Iran and its proxies in the Middle East, with 74 percent of respondents affirming the belief that the Houthis receive guidance and assistance from Iran. Additionally, 63 percent agree that sanctions against Iran should be intensified in light of the more than 100 attacks on US targets in the region since October 7 and the US backing of Israel's retaliatory bombardment of Gaza following the Hamas atrocities of what was the single most deadly day for Jews since the Holocaust.

The monthly poll, a collaboration between the Center for American Political Studies at Harvard (CAPS) and the Harris Poll and HarrisX, surveyed 2,346 registered voters.

The Iranian government has refrained from direct military engagement in the Gaza conflict, opting to avoid escalation with Israel and the US. Nonetheless, its proxy militias in the Middle East have increasingly targeted US and Israeli interests, along with international shipping routes in the Red Sea.

The United States maintains a presence of 900 troops in Syria and 2,500 in Iraq, supporting and advising local forces to counter the resurgence of the Islamic State which had previously seized significant territories in both countries in 2014 before facing defeat.


Israeli Minister Says Iran A ‘Legitimate Target’ For Missile Strikes

Jan 25, 2024, 13:59 GMT+0

Israeli's minister of economy and industry has claimed that after Iran's proxy activities across the region, Tehran has become a 'legitimate target' for military action.

In an exclusive interview with The Telegraph, Nir Barkat said, "Iran is a legitimate target for Israel. They will not get away with it. The head of the snake is Tehran."

Since the Hamas invasion of Israel on October 7, Iran's proxies in Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Lebanon have joined a regional coalition against both Israel and the US, including a blockade on global shipping in the Red Sea.

"We should very very clearly make sure the Iranians understand that they will not get away with using proxies against Israel," Barakat, who has no input to the war cabinet, told the newspaper.

Barkat, tipped as the favorite to succeed PM Benjamin Netanyahu to take over the ruling Likud party, said, "we should very very clearly make sure the Iranians understand that they will not get away with using proxies against Israel".

The terror attack by Hamas on October 7, resulting in the deaths of at least 1,200 mostly civilians, has triggered a wide scale regional conflict. Described as the most deadly single day for Jews since the Holocaust, Iran has distanced itself from the day known as the Black Sabbath, but has commended Hamas for the atrocities, lauding it a victory against Israel.