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OPINION

Loose lips sink ships, security supremo at center of wedding furor warns

Kambiz Hosseini
Kambiz Hosseini

Host of nightly show The Program

Oct 24, 2025, 01:30 GMT+1Updated: 00:07 GMT+0
Iranian ex-security chief Ali Shamkhani is pictured between curtains in this file photo.
Iranian ex-security chief Ali Shamkhani is pictured between curtains in this file photo.

Ali Shamkhani, Iran’s former national security chief, responded to the viral outrage over his daughter’s extravagant wedding with a cryptic but telling line.

“We're all in the same boat shaped by the sacrifices of the martyrs of the Islamic Revolution, and it would be a shame if our differences created weaknesses", he said in an interview with state media

It sounded, at first, like an appeal for unity. But in the opaque language of the Islamic Republic, moral parables are rarely innocent.

Beneath the call for calm was a political warning: a message to rival factions inside the regime to stop leaking, stop exposing, stop fighting, before their infighting sinks the whole ship.

When Shamkhani urged everyone not to “puncture the boat,” he invited an obvious question: whose boat? Was he speaking of the Iranian nation or of the VIP mariners like himself who have captained it for nearly five decades?

In one reading, the “boat” is the state itself, a vessel battered by sanctions, protests and crises. From that vantage point, Shamkhani’s warning was a familiar one: security men urging unity to preserve the ship of state.

But there’s another interpretation, and it’s the one most Iranians heard. This wasn’t a plea for national survival.

It was a coded SOS from the elite, a reminder to fellow insiders that the leaks threatening to sink them were coming from within their own cabin. Their “boat” isn’t the Islamic Republic; it's the luxury vessel of privilege, patronage and power that keeps them afloat while the rest of the country treads water.

History has shown that when Iran’s political ship hits rough waters, it’s not the captains who drown, it’s the crew.

Economic collapse, inflation, repression, all of it falls hardest on those already half-submerged: workers, teachers, pensioners and the youth. Meanwhile, those steering the ship have lifeboats waiting: foreign bank accounts, Dominica passports, villas on Private Islands or even in London.

So when Shamkhani warns that “we’ll all sink together,” he isn’t speaking to the street vendors or nurses who can’t afford rent. He’s speaking to his peers, the sanctioned oligarchs and security bosses who know that too much sunlight might burn their privilege.

The crumbling myth of piety

The scandal’s power lies not in the wedding itself, but in what it reveals: the erosion of the ruling system's last claim to legitimacy and moral authority.

For decades, the Islamic Republic justified its rule through an ethic of sacrifice and piety. The message was simple: we may be strict, but we are righteous. Now, its ruling class lives like exiled royalty and curses its critics.

Every leaked image of over-indulgence, every glimpse behind the velvet curtain, peels away another layer of the revolution’s moral armor.

Corruption is not a crack in the hull; it is the hull. And the public knows it. Outrage has given way to a colder recognition: the ship has been taking on water for years.

The Iranian people no longer expect reform from within. They have learned that the system cannot self-correct because it was never built to share accountability, only to protect those who built it.

And so, Shamkhani’s metaphor holds, but not in the way he intended.

Iran is a boat, yes. But it’s one where a few dine under chandeliers while others take on water in the dark. The waves are rising. And this time, the passengers in steerage are no longer willing to go down quietly.

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The US ambassador to the United Nations on Thursday urged Iran to abandon its revolutionary ambitions and end what he called destructive interference in neighboring Mideast states.

“The international community must urge the Iranian regime to give up its false hope of revolution, forego its ambitions toward its neighbors, and stop meddling in the politics of other countries in the region,” Michael Waltz said in a speech at the UN.

“Instead, Iran should engage in direct and good-faith dialogue with the United States for the benefit of the Iranian people and the security of the region,” Waltz added.

Iran's relations with Washington appear to be deteriorating as an impasse over Iran's disputed nuclear program festers and European countries triggered the so-called snapback of international sanctions on Tehran last month.

Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said in a speech on Monday that Washington sought to bully Iran by making it concede defense capabilities, appearing to reject a peace overture the previous week by US President Donald Trump.

Speaking on the Gaza peace plan, Waltz praised the Trump administration for its achievement and called for greater pressure on Iran to ensure full implementation.

“Because of tough action against Iranian proxies, we are seeing historic opportunities in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and across the region. In this spirit, the United States supports the reimposition of UN snapback sanctions on the Iranian regime,” he said.

The sanctions have further strained Iran's economy after a punishing 12-day war with Israel and the United States in June.

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Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations, Amir Saeid Iravani, rejected the remarks, saying Iran’s foreign policy is based on “respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity, non-interference and good neighborliness,” and that it “has always been ready for fair and genuine dialogue.”

Tehran maintains that its nuclear program is peaceful and that repeated US accusations were aimed at justifying what it calls its aggression.

Western countries have called for Tehran to engage in renewed diplomacy with Washington and restored access to international nuclear inspectors.

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A US court will hold a sentencing hearing next week for two men convicted over an alleged Tehran-backed plot to kill Iranian dissident and journalist Masih Alinejad, she said on X on Thursday.

Alinejad said the hearing would take place in Manhattan on Wednesday and that she planned to appear in person.

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Iran takes over failing bank as sector struggles with economic headwinds

Oct 23, 2025, 20:09 GMT+1

Iran’s Central Bank revoked Ayandeh Bank’s operating license on Thursday, dissolving one of the country’s largest lenders due to massive losses and chronic inefficiency in another sign of gathering economic storm clouds as sanctions bite.

“Despite all the efforts made, this bank could not be placed on the path of reforms as desired by the central bank,” official media cited Central Bank Governor Mohammadreza Farzin as saying.

Farzin said that the bank had 5.5 quadrillion rials ($5.1 billion) in accumulated losses, 3.13 quadrillion rials ($2.9 billion) in overdrafts, and a negative 600 percent capital adequacy ratio.

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Ayandeh Bank was established in 2013 following the merger of several smaller financial institutions, most notably Tat Bank, Saman Bank’s credit institutions, and Ansar Financial and Credit Institute.

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Iran’s defense minister on Thursday told a senior visiting military-industrial official from Belarus that Tehran seeks to deepen military cooperation with Minsk as both countries grapple with deep Western sanctions.

“Iran welcomes the expansion of defense and industrial cooperation with friendly and independent countries, and Belarus holds a special place in this partnership,” Defense Minister Aziz Nasirzadeh told Belarus’s chairman of the State Authority for Military-Industrial Cooperation in a visit to Tehran, according to state media.

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Dmitry Pantus, head of the Belarus State Authority for Military-Industrial Cooperation meets with Iranian Minister of Defense Brigadier General Aziz Nasirzadeh in Tehran on Oct. 23, 2025.
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Tehran has supplied Moscow with drones and ammunition for its invasion of Ukraine, while Minsk has hosted Russian troops and allowed its territory to be used as a launchpad for attacks.

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Minsk and Moscow have been joined in a supranational Union State since 1999.

US sanctions on Belarus include prohibitions on transactions with key government entities such as the Ministry of Finance of the Republic of Belarus and the Development Bank of the Republic of Belarus, as well as restrictions on exports and re-exports.

Facing sanctions

Iran remains under broad US sanctions targeting its energy, financial and military sectors over its nuclear activities and arms transfers to Russia.

Following a 12-day war with Israel in June and the return of UN sanctions last month, Iran is seeking to rebuild its economy and strengthen its military readiness.

Western countries have called for Tehran to engage in renewed diplomacy with Washington and restored access to international nuclear inspectors.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said last week that Russia would help Iran meet its military needs even after European-triggered international sanctions further restricted trade with Tehran.

Iran denies seeking nuclear weapons, decried the attacks in June as illegal and say US demands that Tehran rein in its defense capabilities are unacceptable.

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US President Donald Trump said US attacks in June on three nuclear sites had left Tehran weakened to the point that it is no longer respected, adding in an interview with TIME magazine that his actions knocked out a "big bully" in the region.

“(Iran) was a very big, strong bully. And they used that power very strongly across the Middle East, and they really controlled it. But they don't control it anymore. They're not respected anymore at all,” Trump said in the interview conducted on October 15 and published on Thursday.

Trump said US airstrikes in June “bombed the hell out of” Iran’s nuclear facilities and “knocked out their nuclear potential,” leaving Tehran “fighting for survival."

The return last month of UN sanctions triggered by European powers has further strained Iran's economy after a punishing 12-day war with Israel and the United States.

Trump added that sanctions had left Iran “very weak,” citing the killing of senior Iranian military commanders, including Qassem Soleimani in a US drone strike in 2019, as key to curbing Tehran’s power.

Talks with Tehran over its disputed nuclear program began earlier this year with a 60-day ultimatum. On the 61st day, June 13, Israel launched a surprise military campaign which was capped with US strikes on June 22 targeting key nuclear sites in Esfahan, Natanz and Fordow.

“By doing it, we were able to—you see, if Iran was sitting there, powerful and a bully, it would have been impossible to make a deal like this, because you would have had this looming threat over the region. Now it’s not a looming threat,” Trump said, referring to a Gaza ceasefire he clinched this month.

Iran denies seeking nuclear weapons and has called the attacks illegal.

The US President told the Israeli Knesset last week that it would be ideal if Tehran could be folded into a broader Middle East peace deal. Still, he has often mooted bombing Iran again if it seeks to rebuild its nuclear program.

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Bush invasion, Obama deal

Trump criticized previous administrations for their Middle East policies, saying the so-called War on Terror disrupted the balance between Iran and Iraq.

“The problem was when Bush went in and blew up Iraq, he destabilized the region, because when we blew up one of the two powers, all of a sudden you had one bully," Trump said, referring to Iraq and Iran. "See, they weren’t bullies when they were fighting each other. But when one fell, Iran became a serious bully.”

Trump called the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran under the Obama administration another grave mistake, arguing it failed to stop nuclear proliferation.

“Under the Iran nuclear deal, they would have had a massive nuclear weapon by now. You know, it expired a long time ago. I canceled it, but I said it was ready to expire anyway. They had a clear road to a nuclear weapon—unchallenged,” Trump said.

Iran said its nuclear program was peaceful and that repeated US accusations were aimed at justifying aggression.