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Iran’s Army chief inspects construction of border wall in northeast

Iranian Border Guards

During the visit, General Hatami toured several military installations, including combat battalions, mobile assault brigades, engineering workshops, and operational headquarters of the Army.

He evaluated the preparedness and operational capabilities of the deployed units and reviewed the ongoing construction of reinforced concrete structures forming the new border wall.

General Hatami praised the continuous efforts of army personnel to safeguard Iran’s borders, emphasizing that the Army’s primary mission remains the defense of national sovereignty and territorial integrity.

He described the wall as a “significant measure” to enhance security along Iran’s eastern frontier, particularly with Afghanistan, addressing longstanding border management challenges.

The commander also commended the high morale and dedication of the soldiers deployed in these remote areas, noting their determination to ensure the safety and peace of Iranian citizens through constant vigilance and readiness.

Iran releases first Hebrew-language documentary highlighting 12-day conflict

The film presents a fresh perspective on the 12-day conflict between Iran and Israel in June, marking a notable step in Iranian media efforts directed at Israeli audiences.

The documentary explores the hidden confrontation between Iran and Israel in the oil and gas infrastructure sector, an episode that reportedly influenced the course of the conflict and shifted regional power dynamics.

Through analytical storytelling, expert interviews, intelligence data, and visual reconstructions, the film aims to provide a realistic portrayal of Iran’s strategic decision-making and military capabilities, countering narratives commonly presented by Western and Israeli media.

“Missiles Over Bazan” is intended to communicate directly with the Israeli public from a position of strength, revealing aspects of the conflict that have remained largely unknown to Hebrew-speaking audiences.

Iran’s Supreme Council of the Cultural Revolution has instructed the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) to establish an international Hebrew-language television channel.

The network will serve as a platform to respond to Israeli media campaigns and promote Iran’s perspective in the region, according to an official resolution under the country’s national cultural, social, media, scientific, and technological policies.

US plans ‘temporary housing’ in Gaza behind Israeli lines: The Atlantic

Israeli Army

The US and Israeli officials working on the plan termed them as “Alternate Safe Communities”. Palestinians would be screened for “anti-Hamas” sentiment before being granted entry into the compounds.

The proposal was discussed in an email by US Lieutenant General Patrick Frank, who is heading the civil-military coordination centre overseeing the Gaza ceasefire, which has been marred by regular Israeli violations.

In an email reported by The Atlantic, Frank said that each settlement should include a medical centre, a school, an administrative building, and temporary housing for about 25,000 people. But the Atlantic reported that the plan is constantly shifting, and the number of occupants slated to live in the developments changes “almost by the day”.

“A team of US, UK, and Israeli military officials working on the project has already revised the intended occupancy of each community down to about 6,000, from an original estimate of 25,000,” the Atlantic reported.

President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and advisor, Jared Kushner, publicly floated the idea of the US and its partners reconstructing parts of Gaza occupied by Israeli troops, while leaving the war-ravaged enclave’s core, which is governed by Hamas, destroyed.

The idea of dividing Gaza has plenty of pitfalls, but in recent weeks, two Arab diplomats familiar with the US peace plan said they were taking the US push seriously.

The Financial Times reported that the proposed plans have alarmed Arab states and European countries as potentially being the first step in a permanent occupation of a portion of Gaza.

According to the Atlantic, less than two percent of Gaza’s two million-strong population lives behind the so-called yellow line. This barrier is supposed to be temporary.

Trump’s 20-point peace plan envisions Israel eventually withdrawing all of its troops from Gaza with the exception of a small security perimeter. Israeli troops are supposed to move out as an Arab peacekeeping force enters. Eventually, that force is envisioned to hand security over to a “reformed” Palestinian Authority.

The US plan provides no timeline for Israel’s withdrawal.

At its core, the plan would require Palestinians in central Gaza to willingly accept living under territory controlled by Israeli troops.

The plan also needs money. The Trump administration has not pledged any US sovereign funds for Gaza’s reconstruction. Trump says he wants Persian Gulf states to invest.

The Atlantic reported that a senior administration official said at least one pilot city would be built in southern Gaza near Rafah, which is home to the enclave’s border with Egypt.

Of course, one of many elephants in the room is Palestinian ownership of the land on which the sites will be built. The Gaza Strip has a formal land registry. The registry was run by Hamas but followed the basic institutional framework of the Palestinian Authority’s system.

Israel has reduced most of Gaza to rubble. The United Nations estimates that the enclave’s reconstruction will cost roughly $70bn. In the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967, the government and settlers have seized swaths of Palestinian land and evicted thousands of Palestinian families from their homes.

The Atlantic said that Israel’s Shin Bet would scan applicants to live in the housing complexes. One criterion would not only be whether an individual had ties to Hamas, but their wider family’s ties to the group.

Hamas has governed Gaza since 2007. After winning Palestinian legislative elections, it clashed with secular rival Fatah, which exercises limited control of the occupied West Bank through the Palestinian Authority.

According to The Atlantic, a US-based engineering and consulting firm that works with the US military, Tetra Tech Solutions, has already been awarded a State Department contract to clear unexploded ordinance and rubble from the site of the first Alternate Safe Community.

 

IRGC intelligence organization dismantles U.S.-Israeli spy network

IRGC

According to the statement, the network was neutralized following several stages of surveillance, intelligence monitoring, and operational measures.

The IRGC said the dismantled group had been directed by the United States and the Zionist regime to disrupt public security during the latter half of autumn 2025.

“The Zionist regime, acting as America’s proxy in the region, has turned to destabilizing Iran’s internal security after its humiliating failure in the 12-day war,” the statement read.

“To compensate for its military defeat, it had organized a network of deceived and treacherous elements to conduct subversive activities in the country.”

The IRGC confirmed that the operation was carried out simultaneously in several provinces, during which multiple affiliated cells connected to the Zionist regime were identified and arrested.

Convicted killer of cardiologist executed in Iran

Iran Prison

The sentence was implemented in a public square in the provincial capital before sunrise, following approval from the Chief of the Judiciary and at the request of the victim’s family.

According to the provincial judiciary, the killer had shot Dr. Davoudi dead on the night of November 11, 2024, while the physician was returning home.

The case was reviewed by Branch One of the Criminal Court of Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province, where experts confirmed the perpetrator’s mental competence at the time of the crime.

The death sentence was later upheld by Branch 20 of the Supreme Court.

Prosecutor Seyyed Vahid Mousavian stated that the execution served as a message to those who threaten public security, warning that “the safety of the people is the Judiciary’s red line.”

He added that the convict had shared a video of his crime on social media and had threatened others, but was swiftly apprehended and brought to justice.

The murder of this popular specialist doctor had deeply shaken the medical community and public opinion in Iran.

Iranian president orders investigation after Ahvaz youth dies following self-immolation

Masoud Pezeshkian

Baledi, who suffered burns over 70% of his body, was admitted to hospital in Ahvaz last week. Despite intensive medical treatment, he succumbed to his injuries on Tuesday, local authorities confirmed.

Following the incident, President Pezeshkian instructed the interior minister to convey his condolences to Baledi’s family and to take immediate steps to provide support and comfort to them.

The president also demanded a rapid and thorough investigation into the circumstances of the case and the prompt accountability of those responsible, with measures to prevent similar incidents in the future.

The public prosecutor of Khuzestan Province announced that the judicial system has opened a formal inquiry into the matter.

The mayor and the municipal enforcement officer in Ahvaz have been detained as part of the investigation.

The incident has drawn widespread attention in Iran.

Iranian commander highlights enhanced combat readiness in naval islands

Naaz Islands in Persian Gulf

During an inspection of the Nazeat Islands, part of the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) Navy, General Abdollahi emphasized that Iranian forces are fully prepared to confront any threats to protect the country’s maritime and territorial borders.

Visiting all operational units, General Abdollahi noted that substantial upgrades have been made across the islands, with new equipment and capabilities enhancing the operational readiness and symmetrical combat strength of the IRGC Navy.

Months after a conflict between Iran and the US-Israeli alliance ended in a ceasefire, he praised the personnel for their high motivation and skills, describing them as a key factor in the forces’ effectiveness.

“The Nazeat Islands belong to Iran, and security is firmly established across all islands and coastal areas,” he said.

General Abdollahi specifically highlighted readiness along the strategic Strait of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf.

He added that the continuous modernization of equipment, combined with highly motivated personnel, has made the naval forces stronger than ever before.

Official says Iran to launch 3 remote-sensing satellites soon

Iran satellite

Hassan Salarieh said that according to schedule, the three Iranian satellites — Zafar, Paya, and the second model of Kosar — will all be launched simultaneously in  winter, less than a month and a half from now.

All three satellites are designed for remote sensing and will undertake key missions in land resource management, environmental monitoring, and the development of Iran’s space economy.

The Kosar satellite, developed by a private knowledge-based company in Iran, symbolizes the speed and high readiness of the private sector within Iran’s space ecosystem.

Remarkably, the upgraded version has been prepared for launch in less than a year after the first model’s deployment.The most significant feature of Kosar is its ability to capture images with a resolution of about four meters, making it a valuable tool for high-precision applications such as smart agriculture, environmental observation, and urban mapping. The 50-kilogram satellite will be placed in a sun-synchronous orbit at an altitude of approximately 500 kilometers.

Paya is another Iranian remote-sensing satellite designed for environmental monitoring, natural resource management, and the collection of practical data for land management. It can capture color images with a resolution of about 10 meters and black-and-white images with a resolution of up to 5 meters.

The third satellite to be launched in winter, Zafar, developed by Iran University of Science and Technology, is a remote-sensing and imaging project designed to capture images of the Earth’s surface with a resolution between 16 and 26 meters. This level of precision enables accurate monitoring of surface changes, making it an effective tool for resource management, environmental protection, and land-use planning.

Officials say the simultaneous launch of these three satellites in early winter, using a foreign launch vehicle, marks an acceleration in the country’s space activities and highlights the growing collaboration between Iran’s public and private sectors in the space domain.

Famous Iranian actor Homayoun Ershadi passes away at 78

Ershadi rose to international fame with his breakout role in the late Abbas Kiarostami’s Palme d’Or-winning Taste of Cherry (1997), which tells the story of a hopeless man looking for someone to bury him after his planned suicide.

The film brought him global recognition and marked the start of a late but highly respected acting career.

Born in the central city of Isfahan in 1947, Ershadi studied architecture before entering the film industry.

His work also reached international audiences with roles in Hollywood productions, such as The Kite Runner (2007).

He also featured in A Most Wanted Man (2014) and had a brief appearance in Zero Dark Thirty (2012).

Iran’s House of Cinema confirmed his death and offered condolences to the artistic community, praising Ershadi as a prominent figure of cinema, theatre and television.

Syrian president claims he ‘had nothing to do’ with 9/11 attacks

11 September

Al-Sharaa, who was removed from the US State Department’s “global terrorist” list last week, met with President Donald Trump in the White House on Monday. He had led the militant group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), a regional offshoot of Al-Qaeda, which spearheaded a coalition of anti-government forces that seized Damascus in December 2024, toppling Syria’s longtime president, Bashar Assad

Speaking to Fox News shortly after meeting with Trump, al-Sharaa described his former affiliation with militants as “a matter of the past.” When asked if he had any “regrets” over Al-Qaeda’s 9/11 attacks, he denied any involvement.

“I was only 19 years old. I was a very young person. I didn’t have any decision-making power at the time. I don’t have anything to do with it. Al-Qaeda was not present right then in my area,” al-Sharaa said. He added that he was “the wrong person” to be linked to the plane hijackings that killed nearly 3,000 Americans on September 11, 2001, which also paved the way for US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.

“We mourn for every civilian that got killed,” he added.

Although al-Sharaa has pledged to rebuild war-torn Syria as an inclusive state, his rule has been marred by sporadic sectarian violence against Druze, Alawite, and Christian communities.

In his Fox News interview, al-Sharaa stated that Syria and the US need to coordinate efforts against the terrorist group Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS).

He also expressed hope that Trump can help negotiate a deal with Israel, which expanded its occupation of southwestern Syria in 2024.