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CENTCOM posts before-after images of drone-linked plant hit in Iran

Mar 23, 2026, 03:53 GMT+0

US Central Command posted two images on X showing what it said was the destruction of a facility in Iran used to support drone production for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

CENTCOM said the Qom Turbine Engine Production Plan made gas turbine engines for attack drones and other aircraft components used by the IRGC.

According to the post, the first image dated March 6, 2026 shows the facility before US airstrikes. A second image taken three days later shows the site heavily damaged following what CENTCOM described as a devastating strike by US forces.

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Israeli security insider says Iranians ‘weeks away’ from rising up

Mar 23, 2026, 03:37 GMT+0

An Israeli security insider says Iran could be weeks away from reaching conditions for an uprising, as the US and Israel may soon judge the Islamic Republic weak enough to call on Iranians to take to the streets.

“It’s a matter of weeks until the US and Israel will assess that this regime is weak enough,” Brigadier General (res.) Amir Avivi, CEO of the Israel Defense and Security Forum, told Eye for Iran podcast.

“And then there will be a call to the Iranian people to go to the streets and take over the country,” he added. "And when they will do that ... above their heads, there will be Israeli drones and American capabilities defending them from the air."

Read the full article here.

Iranians ‘weeks away’ from another uprising, Israeli security insider says

Mar 23, 2026, 03:20 GMT+0
•
Negar Mojtahedi

An Israeli security insider says Iran could be weeks away from reaching conditions for an uprising, as the US and Israel may soon judge the Islamic Republic weak enough to call on Iranians to take to the streets.

The current trajectory of the US-Israeli war against the Islamic Republic is rapidly weakening the regime, said Brigadier General (res.) Amir Avivi, CEO of the Israel Defense and Security Forum, an influential body that advises the Israeli government on security matters.

“It’s a matter of weeks until the US and Israel will assess that this regime is weak enough,” Avivi told Eye for Iran podcast.

“And then there will be a call to the Iranian people to go to the streets and take over the country.”

“And when they will do that,” he added, “above their heads, there will be Israeli drones and American capabilities defending them from the air — and any attempt to hit the Iranian people will be met by an attack.”

From containment to collapse

Avivi described the war as unfolding in stages — from Hamas, to Hezbollah, to the fall of Assad's Syria and the Houthis — and now entering what he called its decisive phase: Iran itself.

Earlier stages focused on weakening those forces. Now, he said, the objective has shifted.

“This is about bringing down the Iranian regime.”

He pointed to the scale of the ongoing campaign, saying tens of thousands of targets have been struck, including air defenses, missile systems and naval assets — alongside sustained pressure on the regime’s internal enforcement arms.

“We are now attacking in Tehran Basij forces who are standing in junctions, monitoring society,” he said. “We’re dismantling all the Basij bases and the Revolutionary Guards.”

Breaking the regime’s grip

According to Avivi, the key to creating conditions for an uprising lies in dismantling the regime’s ability to control and repress its population.

“It’s about destroying the command and control of the Revolutionary Guards and the Basij forces,” he said. “Eliminating their motivation to fight.”

He said there are already signs of strain within the system.

“We see defection in many units. Some units you have 90 percent defection,” Avivi said.

At the same time, he pointed to deepening economic pressure.

“There is a siege on Iran. They are not trading. How long can a country continue with no import, no export?” he said. “The currency is broken… it’s obvious where this is going.”

Larijani’s killing sends a signal

Avivi said the killing of Ali Larijani sends a clear message about the endgame — rejecting any scenario in which figures from within the Islamic Republic remain in power under a rebranded system.

He said the issue had come up directly in a recent high-level conversation.

“I met this week with a very, very prominent diplomat who asked me at length whether maybe Larijani will be the solution,” Avivi said — referring to the idea that a figure seen by some as more “moderate” could emerge as a compromise.

Avivi dismissed that notion outright.

“The guy is not moderate at all — not at all,” he said.

He argued that targeting Larijani underscores a broader objective.

“None of these leaders in this vicious regime can be rulers the day after,” he said. “Iran needs completely different leadership… a more open, more liberal country.”

He framed the strategy as one in which Israel and the United States set the conditions — but the decisive moment must come from within.

“Changing the regime is up to the Iranian people,” he said.

Signs of strain — but not collapse yet

That assessment is partially echoed by investigative journalist David Patrikarakos, who told Eye for Iran that sources describe a regime under pressure, with its security apparatus showing signs of disarray.

“They paint a picture of a regime in disarray,” he said, citing what he described as the “surgical decapitation” of layers of the security structure.

But he cautioned that internal fractures remain limited for now.

“We’re hearing reports… in the dozens… of people being killed for disobeying orders, people trying to defect,” he said. “I’ve not been told that it’s on a big scale.”

Patrikarakos said the real test will come later.

“To judge the success of this campaign, we’ve got to see what happens when the shooting stops — and what happens inside Iran.”

Washington’s next phase: the nuclear question

Investigative journalist Jay Solomon said sources in Washington suggest the next phase may focus on ensuring Iran cannot rebuild its nuclear program.

That includes concern over highly enriched uranium believed to be hidden in deeply buried sites such as Pickaxe Mountain.

“If they really decide they want to go in and secure that material, I don’t think there’s any other way,” Solomon said — referring to the possibility of US special forces entering underground facilities, an operation he described as “extremely dangerous.”

He also pointed to potential operations targeting Kharg Island, a key oil export hub tied to IRGC revenues.

But Solomon raised a critical concern: what comes after military success.

“The military side has been planned,” he said. “The post-conflict side is still very much up in the air… and that’s a concern.”

Despite those uncertainties, Avivi was unequivocal about where he believes events are heading.

“I foresee a change of regime,” he said. “This regime is not going to stay.”

And for Avivi, the broader objective goes far beyond Iran itself.

“The goal is clear,” he said. “To dismantle our enemies and change completely the Middle East for generations to come.”

IEA warns energy crisis triggered by Iran war ‘very severe’

Mar 23, 2026, 02:23 GMT+0

The head of the International Energy Agency warned Monday that the crisis triggered by US-Israeli strikes on Iran and Iranian retaliation is “very severe,” even worse than the oil shocks of the 1970s.

Fatih Birol said the agency is assessing market conditions and discussing options with member countries if disruptions to energy flows worsen.

“If it is necessary, of course, we will do it. We look at the conditions, we will analyse, assess the markets and discuss with our member countries,” Birol told the National Press Club in Canberra.

IEA members agreed on March 11 to release a record 400 million barrels of oil from strategic reserves to counter a surge in global crude prices following the outbreak of the war.

Top Senate Democrat urges end to Iran war

Mar 23, 2026, 01:45 GMT+0

US Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer called for an end to the war in Iran, saying even some Republican lawmakers do not understand the administration’s strategy in the Middle East.

“Even some Republican Senators are openly admitting they have no clue what the Administration is trying to accomplish in the Middle East,” Schumer wrote on X Sunday.

“Enough is enough. End this war,” he added.

US CENTCOM chief says Iran targeting civilians out of ‘desperation’

Mar 23, 2026, 00:51 GMT+0
•
Samira Gharaei

The commander of US Central Command said Iran has increasingly targeted civilian sites across the Middle East out of "desperation" as its military capabilities deteriorate in the third week of the war.

"They're operating in a sign of desperation... In the last couple of weeks, they've attacked civilian targets very deliberately, more than 300 times," Adm. Brad Cooper said in an interview with Iran International.

Cooper also said Iran’s strain has reduced the volume of its attacks.

“At the beginning of the conflict, you saw large volumes in the dozens of drones and missiles. You no longer see that. It’s all one or two at a time,” Cooper said this in his first interview since the start of the war between Iran and the United States on Feb. 28.

Iranian officials have vowed to sustain a prolonged conflict and deny that their military capabilities are fading.

In one of its most severe attack on Israel to date, Iran targeted the Israeli towns of Arad and Dimona on Saturday, leaving dozens of people injured, according to Israeli authorities.

'Hormuz is physically open'

US and allied forces are working to secure shipping lanes in the Strait of Hormuz—through which about a fifth of the world’s oil passes—by weakening Iran’s naval capabilities, Cooper said.

He added that coalition operations have sunk or severely damaged about 140 vessels since the start of the campaign.

“The Strait of Hormuz is physically open to transit,” he said. “The reason ships are not transiting right now is because the Islamic Republic is shooting at them with drones and missiles.”

President Donald Trump warned on Saturday that the United States could strike Iran’s power plants within 48 hours if Tehran does not fully open the waterway.

Iranian officials have warned such a move would trigger retaliation against energy and water systems across the region.

'Ahead or on plan'

Cooper blamed Tehran for the continued conflict, saying it was putting the lives of civilians at risk.

“They could stop this war right now, absolutely, if they chose to do so,” he said, "They need to stop putting the wonderful Iranian people at risk by firing missiles and drones from inside populated areas... They need to stop immediately attacking civilians throughout the Middle East region."

US and Israeli forces launched strikes on Iran as the two sides failed to reach an agreement over the Tehran’s nuclear program.

Cooper said the military campaign was progressing faster than expected. US forces were “ahead or on plan” in efforts to dismantle Iran’s military assets used to project power beyond its borders.

"We're also going after the manufacturing," he said. "So it's not just about the threat today. We're eliminating the threat of the future, both in terms of the drones, the missiles, as well as the navy."

He added that it would be up to Trump to decide how and when the war ends.

The United States and its allies in the region have established “the largest umbrella of air defense in the Middle East history,” Cooper said, adding that there is now “a very thick defensive umbrella” over countries across the region.

He also pointed out that Israel has played an important role in countering Iranian threats against neighboring countries: "Israel is attacking drones and ballistic missiles that are aimed at Arab countries, attacking and defeating them."

Commanders in safe bunkers

Cooper said there was a sharp contrast between Islamic Republic officials, who remained in safe bunkers, and the soldiers who bore the brunt of the war.

"I'd like everyone to note is I've watched this over the last week, this extraordinary contrast between the comfort and protection that you're seeing with the senior generals in the Islamic Republic, at least those that are still alive, who are up in deep bunkers and facilities in and around Tehran. And contrast that with the soldiers who are down on the ground who are unprotected. The generals are protected. The soldiers are not protected."

Cooper warned Iranian civilians to exercise caution, saying the government did not care about their safety.

"They're launching missiles and drones from populated areas and you need to stay inside for right now," he said. "There will be a clear signal at some point, as the President has indicated, for you to be able to come out."