Enemy Watch — Official
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Exposing enemies and infiltrators — exposing and examining unvirtuous elites and their infiltrations.

West Asia | South Asia | West

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🥀 | The number of testimonies from the massacres in Syria—carried out by Erdogan’s terrorists—and from Gaza is so overwhelming that it’s impossible to post them all. And yet, skipping them or ignoring them feels like a betrayal. It’s not just hard—it’s heartbreaking. There’s a deep, suffocating pain that comes with reading each account. It brings emotional breakdown, grief, and rage. After 19 months, it’s truly heartbreaking. It feels like it should have been enough by now—enough pain, enough loss, enough horror to demand control, to end it. But it hasn’t stopped. And watching it continue, helplessly, tears you apart from the inside.


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🇾🇪 Breaking: 10 martyrs killed in U.S. airstrikes on Hodeidah, Yemen:

Ten Yemeni martyrs
were confirmed killed following U.S. airstrikes on Hodeidah, as Washington intensifies its terror aggression across western Yemen.

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🇮🇷 Breaking: Leader of the Revolution Imam Khamenei (H): The Oman talks are just one of many tasks of the Foreign Ministry:

A short while ago, Imam Khamenei (H), in a meeting with senior officials from the three branches of government, stated:

“The negotiations in Oman are just one among dozens of tasks handled by the Foreign Ministry. We should not tie the country’s issues to negotiations. We are neither overly optimistic nor overly pessimistic about these talks. In the end, it is a process that has been decided upon and has so far been implemented well in its early stages. Of course, we are very distrustful of the other side—but we are confident in our own capabilities.”

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| As expected, the Oman talks are merely one of many responsibilities carried out by the Foreign Ministry and, on their own, appear to lack real strategic weight. There is little indication that they will result in any concrete implementation. Trusting the United States—particularly in light of its continued hostility and threats, such as Trump’s recent rhetoric—remains both naïve and dangerous. These negotiations hold no inherent value when the opposing party has repeatedly acted in bad faith.

Imam’s remarks make the state position abundantly clear: “The Oman negotiations are just one among dozens of tasks handled by the Foreign Ministry. We should not tie the country’s issues to negotiations.” This line alone dismantles any illusion that these talks are central to Iran’s broader national agenda. Imam explicitly warns against both overconfidence and defeatism, recognizing that the process may have some tactical use, but emphasizing that the country’s trajectory should not be dependent on it.

Furthermore, his statement that “we are very distrustful of the other side—but confident in our own capabilities” reflects a key doctrinal stance: Iran’s strength lies in self-reliance, not in diplomatic engagement with historically untrustworthy counterparts. These talks, then, are not endorsed as a strategic breakthrough but acknowledged as a procedural move—useful perhaps in rhetoric, but ultimately peripheral.

It is critical to recognize that this is not a pivot, nor a reconciliation strategy—it is damage control at best, optics at most. The regime’s posture remains defensive, pragmatic, and rooted in skepticism. To portray these talks as a sign of shifting policy would be a fundamental misreading of both the tone and intent of Iran’s leadership.

So Enjoy!

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🇮🇷 Breaking: Imam Khamenei (H):

Do not tie the country’s affairs to these negotiations.

Let us not repeat the mistake we made with the JCPOA.

During the JCPOA era, we conditioned the country—linking everything to the progress of the negotiations.

When investors see that a country’s future is dependent on negotiations, they refrain from investing.

The Iran–US talks are proceeding in a good and professional manner, and our red lines are well defined. There will be no repeat of the JCPOA experience.

I advise officials to remain committed to this path. The negotiations may yield results—or they may not. But the country’s affairs must not be dependent on these talks. Trust in the capabilities of our nation. Don’t place all your eggs in one basket—pursue other national objectives in parallel.

If the talks succeed, good. If not, we move forward regardless. National progress must continue, and we must not become distracted or paralyzed by the negotiations.


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🇮🇷 Breaking: In his first meeting of the new Iranian year with the senior officials of the three branches of government, Imam Khamenei (H) identified the lack of consistent follow-up as the “missing link” in the path to achieving the country’s strategic goals, and emphasized that the slogan of the year should become a unified agenda for all institutions:

He warned against excessive reliance on diplomatic negotiations, particularly those being held in Oman, and stated that Iran’s national progress must not become hostage to any talks. “We must not tie the country’s affairs to these talks,” he said, referring to the Oman dialogue. “Let us not repeat the mistake of the JCPOA, where everything was conditioned on the outcome of the negotiations.”

Imam Khamenei (H) emphasized the importance of implementation over mere planning: “In this country, we have good laws and well-crafted plans. But the lack of follow-up prevents our goals from being achieved in a satisfactory way.”

He pointed to critical national issues—such as high gasoline consumption, unequal access to education, and hardships faced by vulnerable populations—as challenges that can be solved through rigorous follow-through. “The motivation and enthusiasm of the heads of the three branches and other officials is appreciated—but it is not enough,” he said. “Without proper follow-up, the decisions and directives from senior leadership lose strength as they pass through layers of bureaucracy and often go unimplemented.”

Calling energy conservation a national necessity, he demanded that government institutions—**“the largest consumers of energy”—**take the lead in developing efficient habits. “This, too, requires persistent oversight,” he added.

On the economic front, Imam Khamenei (H) underscored that supporting this year’s slogan—centered on “investment for production”—is the shared duty of all branches. “With investment in production, many of the country’s problems will be solved,” he said. “The Ministry of Economy, the Central Bank, and other relevant agencies must direct capital and liquidity into productive sectors.”

He praised investment in production as a noble act and added: “We must provide security for investors and remove barriers in the path of economic actors.”

“If domestic investment thrives,” he noted, “it will attract foreign investors as well.”

Imam Khamenei (H) once again emphasized that resistance is the best response to sanctions: “Lifting sanctions is not in our hands. But neutralizing them is. We have numerous means and domestic capacities for this. If we achieve this, the country will become invulnerable to sanctions.”

He reiterated the importance of strengthening ties with regional neighbors and Asian and African economic powers. “Changing the routines and inefficiencies at middle levels of management also requires serious follow-up,” he said.

Imam Khamenei (H) praised the President’s diplomatic outreach and the Foreign Ministry’s engagement: “These efforts are good and effective.” Yet, he reiterated a warning: “The Oman negotiations are just one of dozens of Foreign Ministry activities. We must not tie the fate of the country to them.”

He warned of repeating past errors, particularly in relation to the nuclear deal: “The mistake we made with the JCPOA—where everything became conditional on negotiations—must not be repeated. It paralyzed the country and stalled investment while everyone waited for results.”

He underlined that national projects and initiatives—whether in industry, infrastructure, economy, or culture—“have nothing to do with the Oman talks.”

Addressing the nature of the current negotiations, Imam Khamenei (H) said: “We are neither excessively optimistic nor excessively pessimistic. The decision to talk was made, and the first steps have been executed well. From here on, it must be pursued with precision.”

He reaffirmed: “Our red lines are clear—to us and to the other side. The talks may succeed or fail. We are very distrustful of the other party—but confident in our own capabilities.”
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He also called for the proper, unwavering implementation of the Seventh National Development Plan: “This is a good plan rooted in national macro-policies. It must be implemented firmly from the start without deviation.”

At the end of his remarks, Imam Khamenei (H) offered New Year congratulations to officials and their families. He praised the role of spouses in supporting those in public service and expressed hope that the Vice President’s report would be fulfilled within a reasonable timeframe.

He concluded by condemning the atrocities committed by the Zionist regime in Gaza: “The deliberate targeting of patients, journalists, ambulances, hospitals, women, and children—these crimes require extraordinary savagery, which the criminal occupying gang possesses.”

Finally, he called for decisive action by the Muslim world: “A coordinated response—economically, politically, and if necessary operationally—is a serious need. Divine justice will surely strike these oppressors, but that does not diminish the weight of responsibility upon Muslim governments and nations.”

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| Imam Khamenei (H)’s remarks place the ongoing indirect Iran-U.S. negotiations in Oman in their proper context: as one of many diplomatic activities—not as a national priority, nor a defining factor in the country’s trajectory. Firstly, the Leader’s choice of words is telling. By referring to the Oman negotiations as “one of dozens” of tasks handled by the Foreign Ministry, Imam Khamenei (H) directly pushes back against the inflated significance being attributed to these talks in some domestic and foreign circles. This framing is a deliberate effort to de-escalate the public and political overreliance on diplomacy as the main lever of progress. Iran should not wait breathlessly for outcomes that may or may not materialize. Secondly, the venue—Oman—is also symbolic. It is a neutral location chosen by Iran, not imposed or preferred by the United States. This indicates Iran’s upper hand in setting the framework of the talks, reaffirming that Tehran is not approaching this dialogue from a position of desperation or strategic retreat. The fact that the U.S. was the one seeking re-engagement, as earlier confirmed by Iranian officials, further exposes the leverage Iran believes it holds.

Imam Khamenei (H) made it unequivocally clear: there is no trust in the United States—and there will be none. This is not a diplomatic posture but a hard-learned strategic stance rooted in decades of broken promises, from the JCPOA withdrawal to recent threats and provocations. The talks are tolerated—not endorsed—as a tactical engagement, not a strategic partnership.

More critically, the Leader warned against what he called the “JCPOA mistake”: tying the country’s fate—especially its economy and development—to the outcome of foreign negotiations. Investment, production, and national mobilization must not be made conditional on talks. He pointed out that in the JCPOA era, even domestic investors hesitated, fearing the fallout of failed negotiations. That error must not be repeated.

The underlying directive from Imam Khamenei (H) is clear: diplomacy should be active and firm but not naive. Iran should define its own red lines, preserve its strategic depth, and never approach negotiations from a place of weakness or dependency. “We are distrustful of the other side—but confident in our own capabilities".

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🇮🇷 Breaking: A wave of donations, including gold, money, and other contributions, has begun in the holy city of Qom, Iran:

Iranians have started a massive donation drive in support of Gaza, with hundreds of thousands gathering at Masjid al-Jamkaran in Qom.
• The donations, including gold, money, and various other contributions, are intended to support Palestinian people amid the ongoing Israeli aggression.

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🟢 Breaking | Statement by Abu Ubaydah (H) Coming Soon:

The Al-Qassam Brigades have issued a statement announcing that an important tweet by their military spokesman, Abu Ubaydah, will be released soon via his Telegram channel.

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(In fact, We hurl the truth against falsehood, leaving it crushed, and it quickly vanishes. And woe be to you for what you claim!) - Al-Anbyaa 18

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• Fast and accurate news
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• Refuting the enemy's lies and propaganda

🇮🇷 Join TRN | The Revolutionary Network: https://t.iss.one/addlist/IifhhPlPADVmODE0

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Therefore, we recommend deleting the old TRN folder before adding this new one.
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Enemy Watch — Official
🟢 Breaking: Martyr Izz El-Din Al-Qassam Brigades: نحن حقاً نعتقد أننا سنعود للديار أموات، لا يوجد ما نقوله، لا يوجد أمل אנחהו באמת מאמינים שנחזור הביתה מתים, אין מה להגיד, אין תקווה We really think we'll come home dead. There's nothing to say, no hope الوقت…
🟩 Breaking: Al-Qassam spokesman Abu Ubaydah (H) says Israeli airstrike targeted the location of Israeli-American prisoner Edan Alexander:

Hamas’ Al-Qassam Brigades announced that an Israeli bombardment directly hit the site where prisoner Edan Alexander, a U.S.-Israeli dual national, was being held. According to spokesman Abu Ubaydah, contact has been lost with the Qassam unit guarding him.

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🟨 Breaking: Statement from Hezbollah:

"In the name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful."

Hezbollah strongly condemns the crime of hundreds of Zionist settlers desecrating the sanctity of Al-Aqsa Mosque over three consecutive days—storming its courtyards, performing Talmudic rituals, and committing provocative acts under the protection of occupation forces, led by extremist Knesset figures.

This brazen aggression aims to impose a dangerous new reality in line with the Zionist settlement and Judaization project, seeking to erase the Arab and Islamic identity of Quds and its holy sites. The enemy mistakenly believes its crimes in Gaza and the West Bank will divert the Ummah’s attention from its repeated violations of the first Qibla, the heart of the Palestinian cause.

These aggressive practices, exploiting religious occasions to defile Masjid Al-Aqsa, provoke the anger of Muslims worldwide and demand urgent action from Arab and Islamic nations. Our peoples’ heightened awareness must translate into loud condemnation through all available means, as silence only emboldens the Israeli enemy to escalate its aggression across Jerusalem, Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen—crossing every red line.

Hezbollah calls on the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, the Arab League, religious scholars, and free people worldwide to act immediately, uphold their historical responsibilities, and raise their voices against the ongoing violations of Masjid Al-Aqsa. Effective and forceful measures are needed to halt the U.S.-backed Zionist crimes in Palestine and the region.

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