איראן לייגט ארויף א פארבאט אויף סמארטפאנס
Signs of panic are spreading through Iran’s leadership as the regime imposes strict internal controls amid fears of a potential U.S. military strike, according to reporting by Channel 14. Measures reportedly include sweeping bans on smartphones, sharply restricted in-person meetings, and heightened security protocols at senior levels of government and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
IRGC-linked sources describe an atmosphere of acute paranoia within Tehran’s power structure, driven by the belief that foreign intelligence services could exploit electronic communications or routine gatherings to facilitate precision strikes. Officials are said to be limiting exposure, isolating key personnel, and reverting to older, less traceable methods of coordination in an effort to avoid detection.
The anxiety is directly tied to lessons learned from Israel’s 2025 Operation Rising Lion, a 12-day campaign that inflicted severe damage on Iran’s nuclear and military infrastructure. That operation successfully targeted enrichment facilities, missile sites, and senior personnel, using advanced deception and intelligence tactics that caught the regime off guard and exposed vulnerabilities deep within its security apparatus.
According to sources, Iranian leaders frequently reference Rising Lion as a turning point, acknowledging that traditional counterintelligence measures failed to prevent infiltration and precision targeting. The lingering impact of that campaign continues to shape Tehran’s defensive posture, particularly as tensions with the United States rise and warnings of potential action circulate.
The reported lockdown reflects a regime operating defensively and under pressure, more focused on internal survival than outward projection of strength. As Iran tightens controls on its own officials and security forces, the measures underscore the lasting psychological and strategic impact of Operation Rising Lion and the extent to which Tehran fears a repeat of that level of military and intelligence penetration.
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