IRGC navy warns Iran's neighbors against serving as launchpad for attack


Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Navy warned neighbors against allowing their territory to be used against Iran, saying the force has full control over the Strait of Hormuz, a key waterway through which about one-fifth of global oil trade passes.
Arabian Peninsula neighbors have long hosted US military bases widely seen as a bulwark against Iran in the waterway through which much the world's oil exports flow.
“We are receiving real-time intelligence from the air, the surface, and beneath the waters of the Strait of Hormuz, and we have full control over it,” Mohammad Akbarzadeh, political deputy of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Navy said on Tuesday.
“Regional security depends on the decisions of Iran,” he added. “If the airspace, land, or territorial waters of neighboring countries are used against Iran, they will be considered hostile."

US billionaire investor and political donor Bill Ackman called on President Donald Trump on Tuesday to topple Iran's leadership, after sharing a documentary by Iran International on the January 2026 massacre that shows graphic footage of protesters’ bodies inside Tehran’s Kahrizak morgue.
"Leaving these monsters in control ... remains an extremely serious persistent and long-term existential threat to the United States and to the world at large," Ackman wrote in a long post on X.
"President Trump, you are a man of your word. You drew a red line about the regime killing protesters," he added. "President Trump, it is time to finish the job.
Ackman urged Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth to watch the Iran International documentary “Iran’s 2026 Massacre: Inside the Kahrizak Morgue.”
“The film bears witness to one of the greatest crimes against humanity in recent decades,” Ackman said.
Conservative TV host Mark Levin, who has repeatedly called for a US military attack to overthrow Iran's theocracy, reposted the message.
Republican Senator Ted Cruz also shared the documentary, saying it is worth watching.
According to a message shared with Iran International from an alleged eyewitness, security forces in Mashhad stopped an ambulance during the January 7–9 protests and entered the vehicle.
Iran International could not immediately corroborate the veracity of the account amid an internet shutdown authorities imposed on Jan. 8 lingers.
The source says they then fatally shot five wounded protesters inside, reportedly including a 15‑year‑old girl, and threatened the ambulance driver and doctor to stop treating injured demonstrators.
The same source also said several people who were previously arrested alive were returned to their families about a week later shot dead.

Iranian authorities are arresting medical professionals for treating injured anti-government protesters, according to London-based oncology professor Shahram Kurdasti from King's College.
Named detainees cited by the professor include urologist Alireza Rezaei in Tehran, healthcare employee Matin Moradian in Mashhad, neurosurgeon Saber Dehghan in Sirjan, general surgeon Farhad Naderi in Gorgan, and Ameneh Soleimani in Ardabil.
The crackdown aims to intimidate healthcare workers and conceal evidence of violence against demonstrators, Kurdasti told Iran International, adding that medical neutrality is a core ethical duty and treating the injured is not a crime.


Former Iranian footballer Mohammad-Hossein Hosseini, who was detained amid nationwide protests earlier this month, has been charged with moharebeh or enmity against God, a charge that carries the death penalty under Iranian law, people familiar with the matter told Iran International.
The sources, who asked not to be named for fear of retaliation, said Hosseini was informed of the charges after being transferred to Vakilabad Prison in Mashhad and told that a court hearing would be held in the coming days.
They said authorities have not allowed him access to a lawyer. According to the sources, prison officials on Tuesday showed Hosseini a written notice listing additional charges of assembly and collusion, cultural propaganda against the system, damage to public property, and leading unrest.
Hosseini, 26, a former youth player for Persepolis and Sepahan from the northeastern city of Mashhad, was detained at around 4 p.m. on January 13, after security forces raided his home.
Hosseini has been arrested six times since 2022, the sources said. His previous detention before this case was linked to his attendance at the seventh-day memorial ceremony on Dec. 12 for Khosrow Alikordi, a lawyer and human rights activist.
The gathering turned into a protest against authorities whom attendees blamed for the jurist's death, leading to attacks on the demonstrators and many arrests.

As Iran’s authorities continue sealing off global internet access, thousands of Iranian volunteers abroad are helping users inside the country slip through what few narrow digital cracks remain.
Thousands of diaspora users have downloaded and run an application called Psiphon Conduit that allows them to securely share part of their bandwidth with the widely popular censorship circumvention tool Psiphon, helping users inside Iran maintain access to it.
By leaving unused phones or computers connected to home Wi-Fi networks and power, they have created small, fragile bridges that help keep Psiphon reachable from inside Iran.
In recent days, many Iranians who had been offline since the shutdown began January 8 have managed to contact relatives and friends via WhatsApp and Telegram or publish posts on social media after nearly two weeks of silence.
The closure coincided with two days of mass killings of protestors by security forces.
Psiphon
Much of the recent connectivity has been enabled by Psiphon Conduit, an application designed to function during severe censorship and shutdowns.
In recent days, many diaspora users with unlimited internet access have installed Psiphon Conduit and kept spare devices continuously connected. Inside Iran, users searching for a connection are automatically matched with these external helpers, allowing limited access to the global internet.
Each external user can enable access for roughly 25 people, albeit at low speeds.
The connection is considered relatively secure because traffic ultimately exits through Psiphon servers, meaning neither the Iranian user’s IP address nor the intermediary’s IP address is directly exposed.
According to Psiphon’s official website, Iran currently has more Psiphon users than any other country.
On January 22, more than half of the 2.8 million recorded Psiphon Conduit connection attempts originated from Iran. At the time of writing, more than 40,000 Iranian users were connected simultaneously, according to the site’s live data.
Other means, brief openings
Some users inside Iran report occasional success using the Tor Project’s Snowflake feature, Lantern’s unbounded mode, or WireGuard-based tools, though speeds are often extremely slow and unreliable.
Others say that, at times, unfiltered international internet access briefly becomes available on certain mobile operators in specific provinces. These short windows may be the result of technical glitches or testing of filtering methods, allowing users momentary passage through the state-imposed digital barrier.
The government has effectively sealed Iran’s internet by blocking international gateways and many VPN protocols. Under these conditions, traffic cannot normally leave the country, while limited domestic connectivity—such as banks, government services, and some content delivery networks—remains active.
Tools like Psiphon Conduit exploit narrow pathways that cannot be fully closed without disrupting the state’s own systems. They disguise encrypted traffic as ordinary web activity and route it through these small openings.
When shutdowns occur, users who already have the application installed do not need to download anything new; traffic begins flowing through whatever cracks remain.
This access, however, is far from comprehensive. Telegram or X may load sporadically, images and videos upload slowly, and connections frequently drop and reconnect.
Life online remains unstable
On Friday, Fars News Agency, which is affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said global internet access would be restored within 24 hours. Still, the closure continues.
Currently, the only access provided to users inside the country is to a highly unstable, filtered intranet, largely cut off from the global network.
Users say even domestic websites and government-linked platforms frequently disconnect, making basic tasks such as banking or administrative work difficult and at times impossible.
One user wrote on X: “Living without internet access, confined to a handful of domestic media outlets and news agencies and a few foreign satellite channels, is one of the darkest human experiences."
Others say that while they are relieved to have escaped two weeks of digital darkness, gaining access to information and videos withheld during that period has also caused profound distress.
Dark days, costly workarounds
Following the internet and phone shutdowns on January 8—and the violence of that day and the next—some Iranians traveled to border regions, used SIM cards from neighboring countries or left Iran entirely to regain connectivity and share footage with the outside world.
The first video showing large numbers of bodies at the Kahrizak forensic medicine center reportedly reached media outlets days later, filmed by someone who said they had traveled more than 1,000 kilometers to access the internet. Others shared limited information using Starlink, despite significant personal risks.
According to the monitoring site Filterban (Filter Watch), more than 300 hours of internet disruption pushed international connectivity into a black market. Proxies and configurations were reportedly sold at inflated prices—up to $15 for 10 GB of access which is a huge sum in Iran—amid widespread fraud.
Economic damage
For many, internet access is not optional. Hundreds of thousands of small and home-based businesses—from handicrafts and agricultural products to online language and music lessons —have been severely disrupted or effectively shut down.
Officials have yet to present a clear plan for restoring connectivity.
Mohammad-Jafar Ghaempanah, the president’s executive deputy, has said the government itself suffers losses from internet shutdowns, acknowledged that filtering fuels public dissatisfaction, and apologized for the disruption.
At the same time, hardline figures such as Hossein Shariatmadari, editor of the Kayhan newspaper, continue to advocate for permanent use of the National Information Network— an intranet system designed to sever direct, universal access to the global internet.






