Friday, May 08, 2026

Parallels between the subversion of the khilafah and the opposition to Islamic Iran

Abu Dharr

Revolutions have many enemies. The enemies of an Islamic Revolution are one of two types: those that confront it from the outside and those that creep up on it from within...

Revolutions have many enemies. The enemies of an Islamic Revolution are one of two types: those that confront it from the outside and those that creep up on it from within. During the 23 dynamic years of the Prophetic era, the new faith-community encountered both kinds of enemy. The counter-Islamic forces inside Arabia initially put up massive opposition to Islam and Muhammad (saw), only to realize that Islam was the irresistible wave of the future. Thus, in the final years of this 23-year period many hitherto staunch and public enemies of Islam, having failed to beat the Muslims, joined them instead. Later, it was many of these who effectively hijacked the Islamic project and took Islamic governance down a completely false path. It took time; but they were willing to wait until the right moment presented itself: when it did they showed their true colours.

OVERVIEW

The Islamic Uprising in Iran a quarter of a century ago is too important and too special for Muslims to simply watch it wander from its original and true course. We remember all too clearly the impact this breakthrough had on Muslims everywhere. For the first time in modern history, Muslims had risen against a corrupt government and its imperialist and zionist sponsors, and were able to take control of their own country, and begin to show the rest of us how things should be done.

Of course, the road forward was not likely to be smooth. The sponsors of the Pahlavi regime could not be expected to sit and watch a people shape their own future on the basis of their Islamic faith and commitment. Throughout the last 25 years, America and Israel have been working to bring the Islamic government in Iran to its knees, with the support of their Western allies, Iran’s pro-Western neighbours and even supporters within Iran. Iran’s borders amount to some 8,000 kilometers; American troops are now based across six thousand kilometers of this border. This grim scenario has been gradually built over 25 years, and has passed almost unnoticed by most Muslims, and even most Iranians. There has never been any cessation of hostilities between the followers of the line of Imam Khomeini (r.a.), who refuse to compromise when it comes to the independence and sovereignty of the Islamic state, and the numerous other interests wanting to shape the state on their terms.

Part of our object in this new column is to look at some of the gaps that have developed since the passing of Imam Khomeini (r.a.), many of which are rooted in earlier events, and how these gaps have caused serious problems about which we can no longer remain silent. But before we walk into this sensitive area, one point needs to be made absolutely clear. This is that none of the points we make are intended to express any criticism of Imam Sayyid Ali Khamenei, the successor to Imam Khomeini (r.a.) as Rahbar of the Islamic State. Many of the points we make will be highlighting natural processes in the evolution of post-Revolutionary state and society. Others will indeed involve criticism of errors and failures in Iran, mainly on the part of those who have been responsible for aspects of Iranian government and policy at the executive level. It was inevitable that such errors and failures should emerge over a quarter of a century in an unprecedented and highly-pressured historical situation; unfortunately they have contributed greatly to what many now see as the Islamic experiment’s current stagnation.

Sometimes frank statements of truth can be bitter pills to swallow; we hope no-one will consider this column to be too bitter a pill. We say what we say only to express our honest understanding of the issues. If we are correct, we appeal earnestly to Allah to accept our humble words to our humble readers. If not, we request Allah’s forgiveness and correction from anyone able to do so; without, we hope, descending into personal issues or hidden agendas. Ameen.

This was a period in which the true and dedicated Muslims gave freely of their possessions and lives for the cause of Allah, against the military powers that stood as barriers between Islam and the larger world out the Arabian peninsula. The attention of the Muslim public was so fixed on the expansion of Islam into areas controlled by the dominant powers of the time, the Romans and Persians, that they little noticed that rottenness emerging in the heart of their own community. This, in essence, is the root of the degradation of the political legitimacy of the Ummah that began with Abu Sufyan, was brought into the open by Mu‘awiyah, who proclaimed himself "the first King of Muslims", and was consolidated by Yazid.

Abu Sufyan saw, towards the end of the Prophet's 23-year struggle, that Islam was there to stay, acknowledging that "hadha amrun qad tawajjaha": "this affair [of Islam] has become irreversible." He said this after lifelong opposition to Islam, having sensed that it was no longer realistic to stand against it. With him came his son Mu‘awiyah, who during the last Islamic return to Makkah, when the Makkan establishment finally conceded defeat to the power of Islam emerging from Madinah, was among those who became known as the tulaqa', those who were released (singular: taliq). These were the remnants of the Makkan nobility who were assembled at the request of Allah's Prophet (saw). He asked them: "madha tadhunnuna anni fa‘ilun bikum al-yawm?": "How do you think I will treat you today?" They, the hard-core enemies who had resisted him for more than two decades, replied: "akhun karim wa ibnu akhin karim": ‘You are a noble brother and the son of a noble brother.' And he told these lifelong enemies: "idh-habu fa-antum al-tulaqa" – ‘Go! You are all released.'

Waiting in the wings was Yazid, the man who would later take his forebears' deviation to its logical conclusion, confirming the end of the genuine khilafah-imamah, and poisoning the Islamic body politic, with the most devastating possible treachery: the tragedy of Karbala'.

Human nature is human nature, and changes little if at all. The same or very similar motivations, and social dynamics, are still fond in modern Muslim societies. What the Islamic movement in Iran, under the leadership of Imam Khomeini (ra), achieved is precisely what all Islamic movements all over the world are striving for: the emulation of the Islamic Revolution in Arabia 14 centuries ago. Like that revolution, the Islamic Revolution in Iran also has its die-hard enemies.

In the years before the Muslims of Iran welcomed Imam Khomeini back to Iran, and in the early period of consolidation of the Islamic state, some of his enemies recognized the irresistible momentum of the Islamic movement and, like many enemies of Islam before them, found it convenient to embed themselves inside the Revolution rather then stand against it. Like Mu‘awiyah and Yazid before them, they opted to ride the Islamic tide. Abu Sufyan and Mu‘awiyah in some Islamic circles gained the honorific title of sahabi, a companion of Allah's Messenger. We should hardly be surprised, therefore, to find embedded within the Islamic Revolution of Iran people of the same kind, hiding behind respected titles such as Hujjatul-Islam and even hizbullahi. The question we must consider is: who are the Abu Sufyans, the Mu‘awiyahs, and potentially the Yazids of the Islamic Revolution, waiting for the right moment to subvert the government with such deviations as ‘secular Islam' or ‘American Islam'?

Imam Khomeini's ijtihad on the wilayat-e-faqih was a massive break with the traditional, hidebound political culture of the Shi'i scholarly establishments. From the earliest days of the Revolution, however, there were in Iran numerous traditionalists and status-quo culturalists who considered this ijtihad a step too far from their set ways, and the Islamic Revolution that it inspired a deviation rather than the proper direction for the Ummah to take. For these people, the pressures of subsequent political events have only confirmed their yearning for a return to the comfort and security of an Islam without political strength. Looking back at the early years of Islam, we can see the Abu Sufyans, the Mu‘awiyahs, and the Yazids of the past, and the debates of that time may appear academic. The real issue now is to be able to identify today's Abu Sufyan, the present Mu‘wiyah, and tomorrow's Yazid. This is not an academic issue; it is an essential matter upon which the survival of the Islamic Revolution depends.

To some people all this may seem an old story, no longer relevant a quarter of a century after the Revolution. However, during Imam Khomeini's years we witnessed a keen understanding of history, personalities, and movement. We saw how the understanding and momentum of the Revolution was maintained by the vigilance of the Imam and those around him against the influence of such individuals as Shari‘atmadari, Yazdi, Bani Sadr and their like, who wanted to undermine the Revolution from within. There is no reason to suppose now that this danger has passed. Indeed, it is only to be expected that such threats to the integrity of the Revolution may have increased; we may today be faced with a swarm of Shari‘atmadaris, hosts of potential Bani Sadrs.

We should note that Abu Sufyan, after accepting Islam, is reported to have gone to war for Islam; he lost an eye fighting against his previous comrades-in-arms at al-Ta'if and the other at al-Yarmuk. He literally went blind for the cause of Allah. When the Prophet (saw) died, Abu Sufyan had risen to the position of governor of Najran. We should not, then, expect the danger to the Revolution to come only from those who have refused to stand for the cause, who have made no sacrifices, and performed no public service. It is not necessarily their commitment that is in doubt, but their understanding. Just as Abu Sufyan, a taliq, and Mu‘awiyah, the self-proclaimed first king in Islam, are remembered for positive contributions – Mu'awiyyah is listed in history books as a katib al-Wahy, a scribe of God's word – how many individuals may there be in Iran who are overtly committed, have made sacrifices for the Revolution, have made their way up the political ladder, but deep down inside are still not convinced of the "political correctness" of Islam?

Were these late converts to Allah’s cause merely feigning Islam? Did they remain, in their hearts and souls, opposed to the message and leadership of Muhammad (saw)? He was, after all, the man who had radically challenged the social and religious status quo of the society in which they had held high status. Or was their commitment to Islam, even if it was genuine, simply too weak to stand against their hunger for power and its trappings within the new order, if they could not maintain the old order? Was it simply that, not having been through the formative crucible of history that was the Madinan period, they did not have the vision and imagination to build a radically new kind of political order, rather than reverting to the norms of the order that Islam was supposed to replace? However we read what they did, the damage they did to the Islamic body politic is beyond question.

Imam Khomeini (ra) was also a radical who broke with the established socio-religious order of this time, even though this order was based on a reduced, emasculated and apolitical Islam, rather than on non-Islam. The risk of the custodians of that pre-Revolutionary religious order producing modern equivalents of Mu‘awiyah and Yazid to undermine the body-politic of Islamic Iran from within, and that these figures may even have risen to positions of prominence within the structures of state and society, cannot be ignored. There are those in Iran now willing to subvert the wilayat-e-faqih just as Mu‘awiyah subverted the khilafah, and possibly even to try to destroy it as Yazid tried to destroy the imamah. However these figures are understood, and however they may present their agendas, they must not be permitted to damage the essence and institutions of the Islamic Revolution and the only Islamic state in the world today.

Islamic RevolutionIslamic Republic of IranForeign InterferenceIslamic history

Iran war undercurrents: Trump as peacemaker, Trump as saboteur

A journalist asks President Donald Trump about Iran as he departs following a military mothers celebration in the East Room of the White House on Wednesday. AFP


Since the April 8 ceasefire agreement, US President Donald Trump has stirred hopes of an end to the Iran war, only to shatter them—often within hours—with warnings, deadlines, and military escalation. This pattern has led critics to wonder whether Trump’s announcements were part of insider dealings to help his Wall Street allies, as peace-promoting words drive stock prices up.

Will his latest announcement of a peace deal—said to be a one-page document—end up in the dustbin of history like the previous ones, despite the optimism it is generating in US media and among Pakistani facilitators? Iran has said it is positively reviewing the 14-point US proposals sent through Pakistan, but maintains that the US is not acting in good faith, underscoring the deep trust gap between the two sides. Iran’s response to Trump’s latest peace proposal was expected yesterday.

For any peace deal to succeed, if Trump is serious about peace, it must be win-win. Yet Trump’s record suggests otherwise. He offers peace, only to sabotage the process and then blame Iran for it. Neither his peace strategy nor his military pressure reflects foresight. This was evident in his decision to attack Iran on February 28, even as talks on Iran’s nuclear programme were progressing with Oman’s facilitation.

Ignoring Pentagon and State Department veterans’ warnings, Trump embraced Israel’s hawkish Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s plan—essentially a trap—for attack. If Trump is eager to remove another world leader after Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro and Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, he should set his sights on Netanyahu, for it was he who pushed Trump into an abyss from which he struggles to emerge unscathed.

Though, for his presidential race, Trump campaigned on an anti-war platform, Netanyahu convinced him that the war could be over within days. The butcher of Gaza misled him into believing Iran was merely a paper tiger. Yet Iran proved its mettle by confronting two nuclear powers at once.

The roar of the Persian lion now echoes far beyond the region. Iran controls the Strait of Hormuz, through which more than 20 percent of the world’s oil flows. The one who controls the Strait of Hormuz controls the oil trade. And the one who controls the oil trade controls the world.

With the US military response and pressure tactics failing to challenge Iran’s dominance in the Hormuz Strait, Trump is now desperate for an off-ramp. As the oil prices rise, political pressure on him, especially from the Republicans, mount. He seems to be bargaining for one that he can present to his MAGA (Make America Great Again) base as a resounding victory. Iran is not going to grant him that if such a deal undermines its national security or its newfound role as the dominant power in the Hormuz Strait.

The US first imposed a blockade on April 13, two days after talks in Islamabad ended in a stalemate. Washington claimed its blockade was meant to prevent ships from entering or leaving Iranian ports, hoping the pressure would force Iran to lift its own blockade of the strait. Operating at a relatively safe distance in the Gulf of Oman, US forces managed to seize only two Iran-linked ships. Most vessels, especially those carrying Iranian oil to China, continued without incident, while ships from other Gulf ports remained stranded for fear of Iranian attack.

When pressure failed to work, the US announced Operation Project Freedom on Monday, describing it as a defensive measure aimed at ensuring the passage of more than 2,000 commercial vessels stranded in the Strait of Hormuz. Perhaps, Trump does not want to be accused of resuming a war that does not serve the US interests.

The Project Freedom initiative was preceded by—and also linked to—the United Arab Emirates’ decision to quit the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)—a move intended to allow the UAE to produce and release as much oil as possible to the market, thereby driving down prices and undermining Iran’s leverage over the Hormuz Strait.

Iran then drew two red lines across the strait, like the opposite sides of a trapezium, declaring that no ships could enter or leave without its permission. The zone included the UAE’s Fujairah port, from which much of Emirati oil was to flow to the market. The UAE’s OPEC departure was good news for Trump, but not for Saudi Arabia. Amid these circumstances, Saudi Arabia hosted the Gulf Cooperation Council summit on April 28. Confirming the growing rift between Saudi Arabia and the UAE, the UAE president did not attend the summit, sending the foreign minister instead.

Saudi Arabia has been alarmed by many of the UAE’s policies—whether in Yemen, Sudan, Somaliland, or now in its decision to undermine Saudi Arabia’s OPEC strategy of maintaining high prices through production cuts. 

The UAE’s strained relations with Pakistan are also making major ripples in regional politics. Suddenly, the UAE demanded that Pakistan immediately repay its US$3.5 billion loan. Moreover, UAE authorities rounded up tens of thousands of Shiite Pakistanis, froze their assets, and deported them—for being Shiites and a threat to UAE security. Yet the loan repayment demand and mass deportations are a serious blow to Pakistan’s struggling economy, which has vowed to defend the kingdom against external threats.

Trump’s Operation Project Freedom ended almost as soon as it began, but not without high drama in the Strait of Hormuz, where Iran fired shots at US naval vessels that tried to defy Iran’s no-go zone while the UAE—including the Fujairah port—came under attack on Monday and Tuesday. Interestingly, Iran has denied responsibility for the attacks on the UAE.

The emerging scenario underscores a new security architecture in the Gulf region, with Iran asserting dominance. These developments have sparked discussion of a possible security arrangement between Iran and Gulf nations, as indicated by the subtext of Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi’s meeting with his Chinese counterparts Wang Yi in Beijing on Wednesday.

China is expected to play a key peacemaking role in any security framework between Iran and Gulf nations, especially Saudi Arabia, though likely excluding the UAE, which has drawn criticism across the Muslim world for its close alliance with Israel. Israel has sent advanced air defence systems to the UAE—the first country to receive them—along with military personnel and technicians to operate them. This effectively places Israeli boots on the ground in the war zone.

The presence of Israelis in the Emirates poses a security threat not only to Iran but also to Saudi Arabia, which maintains that its consent for the Abraham Accords with Israel is conditional upon the establishment of a free and independent Palestinian state.

Israel’s strategy is, meanwhile, aimed at weakening Arab and Islamic states. Its war against Iran is largely part of that effort. Once Iran is subdued, Israel could target Turkey or even Saudi Arabia—states it views as major impediments to its Greater Israel expansion project. This is all the more reason why Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Iran need to reach a common security arrangement to keep Israel where it should be—confined within the 1967 borders.

Thursday, May 07, 2026

Western media narrative on Iran is “deeply misleading”: British independent correspondent

TEHRAN- In this exclusive interview with Tehran Times, Bushra Shaikh, a British media personality, broadcaster, and activist known for her political and social commentary, reflects on her recent visit to Iran as part of a delegation of international journalists who traveled to the country to report on the effects of the Israeli–U.S. attack on Iran.

During her tour of war-damaged areas, she offers firsthand observations of the scale of destruction, the humanitarian impact on civilians, and the broader information gap in Western media coverage. She also addresses key questions surrounding civilian infrastructure, casualty reporting, and the narratives shaping international perceptions of the conflict, emphasizing the importance of direct field reporting in understanding the realities on the ground.

The following is the full text of the interview:

When you entered the war-damaged areas, what were the first physical signs of destruction that stood out to you—things that cannot be fully conveyed through photographs or secondary reports?

For me, it was the sheer gravitas—the scale of the destruction. It was the rubble, the fact that nothing remains. Entire structures have been reduced to their most basic materials. It was beyond comprehension. Even now, I am still processing some of the scenes I witnessed.
Images present a distorted version of reality. They do not do justice to what is actually on the ground or to the magnitude of the crime that has been committed. It is deeply heart-wrenching to see what were once homes or institutions reduced entirely to rubble. There is nothing left.

 After witnessing these areas firsthand, what is the most important detail that international audiences are not being told accurately?

This is a very important question, particularly in relation to international audiences—and even international law. If I must identify a single point, I would say there are, in fact, multiple critical aspects being overlooked.

First, we are not being accurately informed about the types of missiles and munitions used, nor about the scale of their destructive power in civilian areas. There is also a lack of transparency regarding casualty figures—particularly how many of the victims are women and how many are children.

As a result, there is a highly distorted image of what these airstrikes actually entail and the extent of their impact. Targeting infrastructure is one issue, but when weapons have an impact radius of up to 20 kilometers, it means that surrounding buildings—and the people inside them—are inevitably affected.

Another key issue is the repeated justification for bombing civilians. We are presented with narratives suggesting that an apartment building was targeted because a military figure was believed to be present. This raises serious legal and moral questions. Yet, the international community has remained largely silent.

We are witnessing the bombing of cultural and historical heritage sites protected under UNESCO. Civilian infrastructure—homes and family dwellings—is being destroyed. Even media institutions, such as the IRIB building, are being targeted. These are facilities meant to inform the public—so how can they be considered legitimate targets?

This issue is complex and far-reaching. It is not limited to a single factor. What I have witnessed, combined with the silence of the international community, is nothing short of a travesty.

 You visited the Shajareh Tayyebeh Elementary School in Minab, which was hit on February 28 during the opening wave of U.S.-Israeli strikes, killing nearly 170 civilians—including around 120 schoolchildren and more than 20 teachers. Given that it was a functioning school filled with students at the time, did you see any evidence suggesting it was a military target?

The first thing I would say is that the scale of destruction was so vast that it was almost inconceivable that the site had once been a school. That was my initial reaction.

As for any evidence of military operations or the presence of an army base at that location, I saw nothing to suggest that. What I did see was that at least 70 percent of the entire school had been destroyed. And throughout, all I could think about were the young schoolchildren who had been killed under the rubble.

Walking through the site, it was clear that it was a school. It was heartbreaking. There were children’s drawings on the walls, half-broken desks, and classrooms that still bore traces of where students once sat. I remember seeing a dolphin painted on one of the doors. Everyone in the area confirmed that the building had functioned as a school for the past six to seven years.

If the United States and Israel claim to possess some of the most advanced high-tech intelligence capabilities in the world, then surely their intelligence systems would have identified this building as a school.

I understand that there was a justification offered—although no apology was issued. The statement was that the incident was “under investigation,” and that there may have been an army base in the vicinity. I looked into this claim. Even in that case, there was no evidence of an army base at the site itself. A separate building had been targeted, which also showed no indication of being a military facility; rather, it appeared to be a warehouse storing essential goods, including pharmaceutical supplies.

Even if there had been an army base nearby—which I did not see—my point is this: if there is a primary school in close proximity, that area should not be considered a target zone. Are we to justify the bombing of children and the killing of teachers because of something that might exist nearby? These are grave war crimes, and there is no other way to describe them.

It was deeply emotional. We cried for hours. To me, that is part of journalism—you cannot stand in a place where children once learned and played, and where they were killed, without being profoundly affected. I could not even bring myself to describe what may have happened to the bodies of these children. The impact of the strikes—multiple, simultaneous “double” and “triple” hits—was beyond anything that can be adequately expressed in words. It was truly awful.

The United States claims that the school was struck by a Tomahawk missile by mistake. What do you think was the objective? Do you believe it was intended to create fear among civilians in Iran—not only physically but also psychologically?

I believe that labeling such a grave war crime—an act against humanity and the educational system where parents and teachers were killed—as a "mistake" reveals a profound dehumanization. It suggests that these lives are neither equal nor valued. Nothing of this magnitude happens by accident. If it truly were a mistake, it would expose a catastrophic failure in the "strike intelligence" they claim is the best in the world; clearly, it is not.

In reality, we know this was not accidental. It was deliberate. It was a targeted operation carried out intentionally, evidenced by multiple successive strikes. This constitutes psychological warfare, aimed at instilling fear among the Iranian people and making them feel threatened. Essentially, as we understand from statements attributed to Donald Trump, the objective was to push the Iranian population toward rising up against their own government.

There were even allegations that these strikes were carried out by Iran itself. The level of distortion, fabrication, and outright falsehoods, combined with a lack of empathy and humanity, points to one conclusion: there was willingness to commit this act. They were prepared to do it. Why? Because there is a persistent absence of accountability that allows such actions to continue.

The international community has repeatedly failed to take a firm and principled stance when the United States and Israel commit such acts. We have witnessed, in the case of Israel, actions widely described as genocide, with estimates of at least 100,000 women, children, and babies killed, entire families and bloodlines erased. Yet the international community—including the EU and the UK—has been complicit through inaction, effectively allowing it to continue.

In that context, what the United States has done, when compared to the scale of crimes attributed to Israel, may be considered “minor” by their own standards—yet it remains an act of profound brutality.

Many Western media outlets portray Iran as a country on the verge of collapse. Based on your observations, how accurate is this portrayal?

It is quite striking that some in the West appear largely unaware of how Iran’s infrastructure, ecosystem, and broader cultural system actually function. This is a country that has been under sanctions for 47 years, yet what I witnessed inside Iran tells a very different story.

The Iranian people are remarkable. They have learned to operate under constraints in ways that few other countries could. I would challenge anyone to point to another nation that has endured nearly five decades of sanctions and still achieved what Iran has.

When you look at the infrastructure—the metro system, the organization of daily life, the housing, the food, the culture—it becomes clear that the country continues to function in a highly adaptive and resilient manner. What is particularly impressive is the level of self-sufficiency: indigenous organizations, locally produced pharmaceuticals, and domestic industries that have developed precisely because of restrictions on imports and exports.

The narrative of a “broken” Iran is, in my view, largely rhetorical. It is a constructed storyline designed to persuade external audiences that the country is failing and therefore in need of outside intervention or “liberation.” In reality, the situation is quite the opposite. Iran is performing remarkably well, especially when considered within the context of the pressures it faces.

 You will soon return to London. What is the single most important message you want to convey to your audience there—particularly to those whose understanding of Iran is shaped only by media portrayals?

The most important message I want to take back with me and amplify in the UK is the need to humanize Iranians. There has been a clear process of dehumanization, and that needs to be challenged.

Iranians are among the most intelligent, inspiring, and skilled people I have encountered. This is a civilization with a history spanning thousands of years—one that has preserved and passed down its knowledge, culture, and identity across generations.

Equally important is this: the people of Iran have not asked for war. They have not asked for foreign intervention. There is a persistent narrative suggesting that Iranians want the United States or Israel to act on their behalf—this is categorically false. It is a fabrication.

The reality is simple: the people of Iran have never asked to be bombed.

The death of Washington’s Dimona omertà and the return of JFK’s ghost

 By Garsha Vazirian

TEHRAN — For more than half a century, Washington played its part in a carefully staged omission: Israel's nuclear weapons were never to be officially named. On May 4, it became obvious that the script has been torn up.

A cohort of 30 House Democrats, led by Representative Joaquin Castro, sent Secretary of State Marco Rubio a letter that does what no congressional faction has ever dared.

It demands the Trump administration publicly acknowledge Israel's undeclared nuclear arsenal and deliver a detailed accounting of its warheads, its plutonium production at Dimona, its delivery systems, and the red lines that could trigger their use. The lawmakers gave Rubio until May 18.

The end of a political taboo

Avner Cohen, who has spent decades documenting Israel's nuclear history, saw the shift clearly. "This is something that people did not dare do before," he told the Washington Post, a quiet acknowledgment that the old rules of omission no longer hold.

He was describing a silence that has lasted longer than most Americans have been alive, a silence formalized in September 1969 when Richard Nixon and Golda Meir struck their infamous pact: Israel would not test, declare, or threaten its arsenal, and in return, the U.S. would shield it from all international scrutiny.

Every president since, Democrat and Republican alike, has honored that abominable arrangement with private letters, secret pledges, and public lies.

What brought the political landscape to this boiling point has been the world's witness to Israel's genocidal devastation of Gaza and its central role in the two illegal campaigns of aggression against Iran alongside the U.S.

The letter arrives in a political landscape that would have been unimaginable even five years ago.

Pew Research now records that 80 percent of Democrats hold an unfavorable view of Israel, nearly double the figure from 2022. Last month, 40 Senate Democrats voted to block weapons transfers to Tel Aviv, an act of defiance that previous Congresses would have deemed career suicide.

Castro summed up the absurdity that finally broke the dam: "We are, in the fullest sense, fighting this war side by side with a country whose potential nuclear weapons program the United States government officially refuses to acknowledge."

When he asked the State Department's top arms control official in March to describe Israel's nuclear capability, Thomas DiNanno replied with the zombie mantra of half a century: "I can't comment on that specific question."

The lawmakers demand answers because the fiction is no longer sustainable, and the cost of maintaining it has been measured in mass graves.

The ghost of JFK

Now, maybe for the first time since John F. Kennedy asked it and may have paid with his life, some people in Washington are finally voicing the question again: what exactly is the U.S. protecting, and for whose benefit?

Kennedy insisted on inspections at Dimona and warned David Ben-Gurion that American support depended on nuclear transparency.

Many scholars and investigators believe that refusal to acquiesce to Israel's clandestine program, documented in his urgent letters to Ben-Gurion, was a key reason that made him a target.

That suspicion is powerfully reinforced by Lyndon Johnson's immediate reversal of Kennedy's policy and his reported order to the CIA to bury the matter, a deliberate erasure that imposed the silence Washington has kept ever since.

CIA counterintelligence chief James Jesus Angleton, who served as the agency's secret liaison to Mossad and Shin Bet, played a key role in concealing the Dimona nuclear program, later committing perjury and obstructing the JFK assassination investigation.

And it was Jack Ruby, born Jacob Rubinstein, a gangster with ties to the Zionist paramilitary Irgun who reportedly told his rabbi he "did it for the Jewish people," who silenced the patsy Lee Harvey Oswald before he could testify.

Built and hidden by the West

Israel did not acquire the bomb through genius or desperation. It was gifted the bomb.

In 1957, France secretly agreed to supply a nuclear reactor, uranium, and an underground plutonium reprocessing plant at Dimona in the Negev Desert, all under the ludicrous cover of "peaceful purposes."

When the so-called inspectors arrived from the U.S., they were met with false walls, hidden elevators, and elaborate camouflage.

A major 2026 Haaretz investigation revealed that West Germany covertly financed the bulk of the nefarious Dimona project, channeling nearly two billion marks through secret loans later converted into outright grants.

Norway shipped 20 metric tons of heavy water. Britain contributed lithium-6 for thermonuclear warheads. Washington provided bomber guidance systems, in addition to other assistance.

Years later, Berlin delivered Dolphin-class submarines capable of launching nuclear-armed cruise missiles from any ocean. Together, this consortium built the Middle East's only nuclear weapons state while lecturing others about nonproliferation.

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute currently estimates Israel's arsenal at 90 warheads, with fissile material stockpiled for up to 200 more. The Nuclear Threat Initiative calculates that Israel's plutonium reserves, between 750 and 1110 kilograms, could yield as many as 277 weapons.

Israel now commands a full nuclear triad: land-based Jericho III intercontinental missiles with a range covering the region and beyond, nuclear-capable aircraft, and those German-supplied submarines, which give Tel Aviv a second-strike capability from any body of water on the planet. Additionally, the Dimona reactor is reportedly undergoing active modernization.

The Samson Option

This is where the arrangement reveals its true psychopathy. Investigative journalist Seymour Hersh, in his 1991 book The Samson Option, documented Israel's nuclear doctrine.

The name comes from the biblical figure who pulled down a Philistine temple, crushing himself along with his enemies.

Applied to Israeli military strategy, the supposed Samson Doctrine means that if Israel faces what it deems existential destruction, it will launch every nuclear weapon in its possession in a retaliatory spasm, regardless of the global consequences. This is a threat to incinerate the region and hold the world hostage to a single genocidal regime's survival.

Hersh traced how successive American administrations, beginning with Eisenhower, practiced a policy of "willful ignorance," actively suppressing intelligence about Israel's nuclear progress. He documented how pro-Israel lobbying groups created a political climate in which silence was richly rewarded and candor ruthlessly punished.

He revealed the case of Jonathan Pollard, the ex-U.S. Navy analyst convicted of spying for Israel in the 1980s, who now lives in Israel, supports the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, and has recently announced his candidacy for the Knesset.

Hersh also reported that Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir then traded some of that stolen American intelligence to the Soviet Union.

The price of honesty was illustrated by Mordechai Vanunu, the Dimona technician who in 1986 gave the London Sunday Times photographs and testimony proving what the world already knew. The Mossad lured him to Rome with a female agent, drugged him, kidnapped him, and smuggled him back to Israel, where a secret court sentenced him to 18 years in prison, 11 of them in solitary confinement. The West's so-called human rights champions said little.

The mask slips

The pretense of ambiguity collapsed from within on November 5, 2023, less than a month after Operation Al-Aqsa Flood, when Israeli Heritage Minister Amichay Eliyahu told Kol Barama radio that dropping a nuclear bomb on Gaza was "one option." Pressed on whether he meant an atomic strike "to kill everyone," he claimed that this, too, remained on the table.

Netanyahu's office suspended him but refused to fire him. The Arab League declared that Eliyahu had confirmed Israel's nuclear possession and exposed "the Israelis' abhorrent racist view towards the Palestinian people." Saudi Arabia, which was deeply involved in talks to join the "Abraham Accords" before the October 7 operation, condemned the failure to dismiss him outright as reflecting "the height of disdain for all human, moral, religious and legal standards."

The mask had fallen away, and behind it was a genocidal calculus that the West had spent decades helping to hide.

Gargantuan hypocrisy

The glaring double standard is a monument to Western corruption. For over 20 years, Iran's civilian nuclear program has been subjected to relentless sanctions, covert sabotage, suspicious IAEA inspections, and illegal strikes.

Iran has remained a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The martyred leader of the Islamic Revolution issued a religious decree forbidding nuclear weapons. American intelligence agencies have consistently assessed that Tehran is not building a bomb. Yet Iran's program remains the Western world's pretext for crisis and warmongering.

Israel, by contrast, is one of only five nations refusing to sign the NPT. When asked about Israel's arsenal, the IAEA shrugs.

In June 2025, IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi presented a resolution raising ambiguous concerns about Iran. Within 24 hours, Israeli warplanes bombed Iranian nuclear facilities at Natanz, Isfahan, and Fordow, explicitly citing the IAEA resolution as justification.

In April 2026, the UN General Assembly voted 149 to 6 to demand Israel renounce its nuclear weapons and join the NPT. Only the United States, Israel, and four small Pacific island states voted no. UN Security Council Resolution 487, adopted in 1981 after Israel bombed Iraq's Osirak reactor, has called on Israel for over four decades to place its nuclear facilities under IAEA safeguards. Israel has ignored it with total impunity.

What I witnessed in Iran challenges dominant Western narratives: American journalist

Christopher Helali details destruction sites, civilian response, and military presence in sensitive regions

TEHRAN- In this exclusive interview with Tehran Times, Christopher Helali, an American journalist, political analyst, and activist known for his coverage of international conflicts and U.S. foreign policy, shares his observations following his recent visit to Iran as part of a delegation of international journalists.

During his field reporting tour across areas affected by the Israeli–U.S. attacks, including major scientific, medical, and civilian infrastructure sites, he offers firsthand accounts of the scale of destruction and the humanitarian impact on affected communities. Helali also reflects on visits to military sites and the Strait of Hormuz, providing his perspective on Iran’s security posture and daily life under heightened regional tensions. The interview further explores his views on Western media narratives, Iranian societal resilience, and the historical and cultural factors shaping Iran’s response to external pressure.

The following is the full text of the interview:

You have visited areas affected by the US attacks. What was the first thing you saw on the ground that made you realize the reality was very different from what audiences are told?

Well, first and foremost, the scale of destruction was unbelievable. I mean, we’re talking about very heavy munitions being used against civilian infrastructure. When we went to Shahid Baheshti University and the plasma center, it was completely annihilated. When we went to the information center at Sharif University, it was completely destroyed. We went to the Pasteur Institute—the Pasteur Institute, which deals with vaccines—and it was annihilated. Many buildings were absolutely destroyed.

We also went to Gandhi Hospital. All of the fertility treatment areas and all of the facilities for this kind of work—helping people with infertility—were completely destroyed. So when you see the reality on the ground, what stands out is the brutality and barbarism of this aggression against the Iranian people.

On the other hand, what we also witnessed was the resilience and solidarity of the Iranian people with one another. People rushed to help each other; they took care of so many situations collectively. There was no mass looting, no violence, and no social instability. Instead, there was strong social cohesion and a clear effort to support neighbors and those affected.

This was something you would not understand from outside, because the way it is often portrayed is almost the opposite—that such attacks would lead to social instability or the destruction of the fabric of Iranian society. But in fact, the fabric of Iranian society that we observed was one of solidarity, care for neighbors, and mutual support.

Everywhere we went, people were deeply concerned about one another—concerned about workers, about those affected, about families who had lost loved ones, or whose relatives were injured or had passed away. There was a great deal of aid and mutual support during this time, which was very reassuring. It showed that Iranian society is highly resilient and deeply committed to defending its communities and its nation against such aggression.


Did you have the opportunity to speak with survivors of the attacks or with the families of the victims, particularly those affected by the Minab school strike?

Yes, we did. We had the opportunity to speak with a grandfather who came to the school right as the attacks were happening, in an attempt to rescue his daughter and granddaughter. He also spoke about friends of the family who were present at the time. In the end, he lost these family members, and he was very emotional.

We also spoke with people who were nearby the scene of this act of aggression. It was very clear that they were overwhelmed with emotion. And I think when you see that—when you understand that these people have lived through a tremendous trauma—we are talking about a massacre. It is not a simple attack. This was a massacre of human beings: children, teachers, staff members, parents, and passersby. It deeply affected them, and it also shaped the way they now view the war being waged against them.

We also spoke with survivors of other bombings here in Tehran, and especially in Isfahan, including around cultural areas where cultural workers were present near some of the strikes. When you speak to them, they are simply shocked by the level of brutality and the intensity of the bombings.

It is one thing to target military sites—that is, in the context of war, something that unfortunately happens. But to bomb civilian infrastructure, to bomb cultural sites, to bomb residential apartment buildings and similar areas—this is something that left the survivors overwhelmed with emotion. They experienced this level of violence while they were non-combatants, while they were civilians, and they should be protected under international law.

 You filmed yourself standing among the wreckage of a U.S. military aircraft in Isfahan. How did witnessing the scene change your own understanding of the operation and its outcome?

I mean, for me, first of all, it showed that this was “Tabas 2.0.” This was another major failure of the United States in Iran. In 1980, during Operation Eagle Claw—the attempt by President Jimmy Carter and the U.S. military to rescue the hostages—the operation ended in complete disaster. This was another moment when the United States attempted to carry out a special operation in Iran, and once again it ended in absolute failure.

To see people come out to this remote airstrip in Esfahan and celebrate what they viewed as a victory—something I also understand as, in their view, a form of divine providence—was striking. From their perspective, the operation failed on every level. They achieved nothing. In fact, they lost everything.

We saw C-130 aircraft modified for special operations, “Little Bird” helicopters, and various pieces of equipment scattered across the site. All of this was there in front of us. Seeing the propellers, engine parts, and the markings—Lockheed Martin, manufacturing tags, and serial numbers—you are reminded that this is ultimately financed by taxpayers. These were American resources.

You could sense a level of frustration and failure in the American side, because operating in Iran’s home territory is extremely difficult. The terrain is challenging, and the operational environment is not easy for them. From that perspective, this was viewed locally as a major success for Iran, even though the United States may frame it differently in its own narrative.

The atmosphere among the people present was one of jubilation. It felt like a celebration, almost like a festival—a festival of what they considered victory. It was a moment of celebrating the success of the Iranian nation and its armed forces over what they see as aggression.

Wyatt (Wyatt Reed; The Grayzone correspondent) and I, along with many other journalists, documented the scene. We took videos and gathered information on site. I also did a live broadcast on RT, and it was important to show the world what was actually happening there. It was, to my knowledge, one of the first live broadcasts by a foreign journalist from that location.

For me, it was significant because there was a lot of propaganda, misinformation, and disinformation surrounding the event. Being there allowed us to see the reality directly. We saw equipment, bullet markings, barcodes, manufacturing dates, parachutes—everything on the ground.

I also had the opportunity to address the crowd. It was a very emotional experience, something I will not forget.

 You also visited the Strait of Hormuz. After seeing the area, how would you describe both the military atmosphere there and the daily life of people living there?

Daily life is normal. People are continuing their lives as usual. Life goes on. We saw many people going out and carrying out their normal activities.

The military presence, of course, is evident. This is now a sensitive military area under the control of the IRGC Navy. It is firmly secured. This is Iran’s territorial waters, and it has full rights under international law to exercise sovereignty over its territorial waters.

When we went out by boat toward the islands and close to the Strait of Hormuz, you could see that everything was in order. There were no issues. Everything appeared organized and structured. You could see ships still with engines running, with personnel present, and operations continuing. People were waiting for clearance to move.

But life continues. Iran continues to exercise its rights. We also saw speedboats—whether naval or otherwise, it was not entirely clear—but what was evident was that there is control, there is order, and there is discipline. There is no chaos at sea. Everything appeared structured and managed.

I was genuinely surprised by the level of organization, especially in the context of heightened tensions in the region. Even with what is described as a blockade further south in the Arabian Sea and in the Strait of Hormuz, and the presence of systems controlling maritime movement, things are still functioning. Ships are moving. Activity continues. Iran is exercising its full rights.

It was remarkable to be there as one of the first foreign journalists, after the previous media teams, to witness the situation firsthand—on the ground and at sea. The level of discipline and control was striking, as was Iran’s assertion of its sovereign rights.

From this perspective, it is clear that any attempt by external actors to impose control or pressure in this area would face significant difficulty. This entire region is firmly under Iran’s control, and Iran maintains a strategic advantage both on the islands and in the Strait.

What is the single most important truth about Iran during this war that you believe Western audiences still do not understand?

I think Western audiences do not understand that, for Iranians, the stories of their heroic ancestors—both pre-Islamic and Islamic—whether it is the defeat of Roman emperors or the martyrdom in Karbala, are deeply embedded in their national consciousness.

Iranians are willing to sacrifice themselves for their nation, without money and without payment. This is not transactional for them. They have done it before, during the eight-year war imposed by Saddam Hussein’s Ba’athist regime, which was supported by the West against Iran. And they would do it again—they are doing it now.

Iranians are highly patriotic. Many are deeply devout in their religious beliefs, some more, some less. But these narratives are often misunderstood.

The key point is that Iranians are willing to sacrifice themselves. Iran will persevere against all odds. Iranians do not need to be paid to fight. They will fight with nothing. Even if they are reduced to swords and spears, they will resist any aggressor who comes against them.

This is what I believe is so important for international audiences to understand. This is where the West has repeatedly miscalculated. There was an assumption that by targeting senior leadership—whether political, military, or symbolic figures—by destroying infrastructure and bases, Iran would collapse or submit.

But what is not understood is that the heart and soul, the enduring flame of Iran, lies in the dignity of its people and their historical resistance to oppression and foreign aggression. Until this is understood, such strategies will continue to fail.

Every attempt to dominate or control this land throughout history has ultimately failed. And I think that is the lesson—of this war, of previous wars, and of Iranian history as a whole, going back thousands of years.