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Channel Posts
| 2 | statement by General Qaani, successor to martyr Haj Qassem Soleimani, regarding today's israeli attack on Lebanon | 95 |
| 3 | An interesting fact:
Do you know what the similarity between pahlavists and jews is?
Both play the victim by multiplying the real number of their killed several times over — and this is while they betrayed the country that had sheltered them, like leeches.
The jews turn 271 thousand into 6 million, and the pahlavists turn 3,117 people into 40 thousand. | 135 |
| 4 | Media headline if this had happened in Iran: The Iranian government massacred 40,000 innocent protesters | 129 |
| 5 | Wild hours in New York: how the local team's victory in the NBA basketball league is celebrated
The city erupted in celebrations after the New York Knicks defeated the San Antonio Spurs in the finals of the country's main basketball league.
Some of the fans provoked riots, attacking police cars, burning buses and blocking traffic. Law enforcement forces intervened to disperse the rioters. | 129 |
| 6 | Labbayk ya Nasrallah | 142 |
| 7 | No text... | 136 |
| 8 | 🚨 BREAKING: HISTORIC BLOW TO THE ZIONIST REGIME!
For the very first time, Hezbollah has successfully downed the advanced Zionist "Heron 1" drone!
The myth of airspace superiority is shattered. The skies belong to the resistance | 548 |
| 9 | دوازده روز، دوازده روایت
روز دوم: سپهبد شهید حسین سلامی
• متولد ۱۳۳۹، وانشان گلپایگان؛ دانشجوی مهندسی مکانیک علموصنعت.
• ورود به سپاه: آبان ۱۳۵۹؛ حضور در کردستان و جبهه جنوب.
• دفاع مقدس: مسئولیت در لشکر ۲۵ کربلا، لشکر ۱۴ امام حسین و قرارگاه دریایی نوح.
• پس از جنگ: دافوس، ارشد مدیریت دفاعی، تدریس و نقشآفرینی در آموزش فرماندهان سپاه.
• ۱۳۷۱ تا ۱۳۷۶: مؤسس و فرمانده دافوس سپاه؛ تبدیل تجربه جنگ به دانش فرماندهی.
• ۱۳۷۶ تا ۱۳۸۴: معاون عملیات ستاد مشترک سپاه.
• ۱۳۸۴ تا ۱۳۸۸: فرمانده نیروی هوایی سپاه؛ دوره مهم در تقویت توان موشکی و هوایی.
• ۱۳۸۸ تا ۱۳۹۸: جانشین فرمانده کل سپاه در دوره تحریم، جنگ منطقهای، داعش و فشار حداکثری.
• از ۱۳۹۸: فرمانده کل سپاه؛ دوران ترور شهید سلیمانی، عینالاسد، وعده صادق و نبرد با آمریکا و رژیم صهیونیستی.
• ویژگی محوری: فرمانده ایدئولوژیک، سخنور، ضدجنگ شناختی، معتقد به بازدارندگی ترکیبی؛ موشک، پهپاد، اطلاعات، روایت، مردم و ایمان.
سلامی حلقه اتصال دفاع مقدس، آموزش فرماندهی، عملیات ستادی، قدرت موشکی و جنگ شناختی جمهوری اسلامی بود. | 184 |
| 10 | Twelve Days, Twelve Stories
Day 2: Martyr Lt. Gen. Hossein Salami
• Born in 1960, Vanshan, Golpayegan; mechanical engineering student at IUST.
• Joined the IRGC in Nov. 1980; served in Kurdistan and southern fronts of the Iran–Iraq War, known in Iran as Sacred Defense.
• War roles: 25th Karbala Division, 14th Imam Hossein Division, Noah Naval HQ.
• After war: Command and Staff College, M.A. in Defense Management; instructor of IRGC commanders.
• 1992–1997: founded and led IRGC Command and Staff College.
• 1997–2005: IRGC Deputy for Operations.
• 2005–2009: Commander of IRGC Air Force; missile and air-power growth.
• 2009–2019: Deputy Commander-in-Chief during sanctions, ISIS and regional wars.
• From 2019: IRGC Commander-in-Chief; era of Soleimani’s assassination, Ain al-Asad, True Promise, and confrontation with the US and Israel.
Profile: ideological commander, voice of deterrence and cognitive warfare; bridge between Sacred Defense, command education, missile power and strategic narrative. | 527 |
| 11 | israeli soldier flees after warning of incoming drone | 178 |
| 12 | Not just Gaza but also Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq and of course the HQ of resistance : Iran | 192 |
| 13 | دوازده روز، دوازده روایت
روز اول: سرلشکر شهید محمد باقری
محمد باقری هنگام شهادت در جنگ دوازدهروزه، رئیس ستاد کل نیروهای مسلح و عالیترین مقام نظامی ایران بود.
او با نام اصلی محمدحسین افشردی، سال ۱۳۳۹ در تهران متولد شد و برادر شهید حسن باقری بود؛ از پایهگذاران اطلاعات عملیات سپاه در جنگ ایران و عراق.
پس از فعالیت در کمیته انقلاب، در سال ۱۳۵۹ به سپاه پیوست و در دفاع مقدس در اطلاعات و عملیات نیروی زمینی سپاه، قرارگاه کربلا و قرارگاه خاتمالانبیا نقش داشت؛ حوزهای که بر شناخت دشمن، زمین، طراحی عملیات و کاهش خطای محاسباتی تکیه دارد.
پس از جنگ، در ستاد کل مسئولیتهایی در اطلاعات، عملیات، امور مشترک و هماهنگی قرارگاه مرکزی داشت. در ۸ تیر ۱۳۹۵ با حکم رهبر انقلاب، رئیس ستاد کل نیروهای مسلح شد.
او دکترای جغرافیای سیاسی و ژئوپلیتیک داشت، در دانشگاههای دفاعی تدریس میکرد و سه نشان فتح و یک نشان نصر دریافت کرد.
او حلقه اتصال دفاع مقدس با جنگ ترکیبی و اطلاعات عملیات با فرماندهی کلان بود. | 229 |
| 14 | On the first day of “Twelve Days, Twelve Stories,” we honor Martyr Major General Mohammad Bagheri — a commander whose life began in intelligence and operations during the Sacred Defense and reached the highest level of command in the Armed Forces.
He was not merely a name in a list of commanders.
He was part of the strategic memory of the Islamic Republic. | 1 |
| 15 | Twelve Days, Twelve Stories
Day One: Martyr Major General Mohammad Bagheri
We begin this series with a commander who, at the time of his martyrdom, held the highest military position in Iran: Martyr Major General Mohammad Bagheri, Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
His original name was Mohammad-Hossein Afshordi, though he became known as Mohammad Bagheri. His name was tied to the Sacred Defense, the command structure of Iran’s Armed Forces, and the strategic understanding of national security. He was the brother of Martyr Hassan Bagheri, one of the key founders of the IRGC’s intelligence and operations structure during the Iran–Iraq War. Mohammad Bagheri also entered the military field through intelligence, operations, and wartime planning.
Bagheri was born in 1960 in Tehran. After the victory of the Islamic Revolution, he served for a period in the Revolutionary Committees, and in 1980 joined the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. With the outbreak of the imposed war, he went to the frontlines and became part of the intelligence and operations structure — a field focused on understanding the enemy, the terrain, force deployments, infiltration routes, vulnerabilities, and operational possibilities.
During the Sacred Defense, he held responsibilities in the intelligence and operations division of the IRGC Ground Forces, as well as in Karbala Headquarters and Khatam al-Anbiya Headquarters. This experience shaped his military outlook. Intelligence and operations were not a secondary part of the war; they formed the basis of commanders’ decisions, operational planning, and the reduction of miscalculation on the battlefield.
After the war, Bagheri remained within the General Staff of the Armed Forces and took on several key responsibilities: head of the intelligence department, deputy for intelligence and operations, chief of staff and joint affairs of the Armed Forces, and coordinating deputy of Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters. This path shows that he was not only a field commander, but also a central figure in strategic planning, coordination, and high-level military management.
On June 28, 2016, by decree of the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Major General Mohammad Bagheri was appointed Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces. This position is the highest level of military command and coordination in the country, responsible for coherence among the Army, the IRGC, the Law Enforcement Command, defense organizations, major headquarters, and the broader policies of national security.
A less-discussed aspect of Bagheri’s life was his academic background. He held a PhD in political geography and geopolitics from Tarbiat Modares University and taught at the Supreme National Defense University and Tarbiat Modares University. This matters because his view of security was not limited to the battlefield. It was connected to geography, borders, regional dynamics, national power, and geopolitics.
Bagheri also received three Orders of Fath for his service during the Sacred Defense and one Order of Nasr for his postwar contributions. These honors reflect an effective role in operations, command, wartime management, and distinguished defense service.
In the Twelve-Day War, the martyrdom of Major General Mohammad Bagheri was not merely the loss of one commander. At the moment of his martyrdom, he was Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces and one of the key figures in Iran’s strategic military memory — a man whose experience stretched from the Sacred Defense to the era of hybrid warfare, from intelligence and operations to high-level command, and from the battlefield to the university.
His significance was that he connected several generations of Iran’s defense experience: the generation of the Sacred Defense, the generation that rebuilt defense structures after the war, the generation that confronted regional threats, and the generation responsible for command in the age of complex and hybrid warfare. | 2 |
| 16 | On the first day of “Twelve Days, Twelve Stories,” we honor Martyr Major General Mohammad Bagheri — a commander whose life began in intelligence and operations during the Sacred Defense and reached the highest level of command in the Armed Forces.
He was not merely a name in a list of commanders.
He was part of the strategic memory of the Islamic Republic. | 1 |
| 17 | Twelve Days, Twelve Stories
Day One: Martyr Major General Mohammad Bagheri
We begin this series with a commander who, at the time of his martyrdom, held the highest military position in Iran: Martyr Major General Mohammad Bagheri, Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
His original name was Mohammad-Hossein Afshordi, though he became known as Mohammad Bagheri. His name was tied to the Sacred Defense, the command structure of Iran’s Armed Forces, and the strategic understanding of national security. He was the brother of Martyr Hassan Bagheri, one of the key founders of the IRGC’s intelligence and operations structure during the Iran–Iraq War. Mohammad Bagheri also entered the military field through intelligence, operations, and wartime planning.
Bagheri was born in 1960 in Tehran. After the victory of the Islamic Revolution, he served for a period in the Revolutionary Committees, and in 1980 joined the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. With the outbreak of the imposed war, he went to the frontlines and became part of the intelligence and operations structure — a field focused on understanding the enemy, the terrain, force deployments, infiltration routes, vulnerabilities, and operational possibilities.
During the Sacred Defense, he held responsibilities in the intelligence and operations division of the IRGC Ground Forces, as well as in Karbala Headquarters and Khatam al-Anbiya Headquarters. This experience shaped his military outlook. Intelligence and operations were not a secondary part of the war; they formed the basis of commanders’ decisions, operational planning, and the reduction of miscalculation on the battlefield.
After the war, Bagheri remained within the General Staff of the Armed Forces and took on several key responsibilities: head of the intelligence department, deputy for intelligence and operations, chief of staff and joint affairs of the Armed Forces, and coordinating deputy of Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters. This path shows that he was not only a field commander, but also a central figure in strategic planning, coordination, and high-level military management.
On June 28, 2016, by decree of the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Major General Mohammad Bagheri was appointed Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces. This position is the highest level of military command and coordination in the country, responsible for coherence among the Army, the IRGC, the Law Enforcement Command, defense organizations, major headquarters, and the broader policies of national security.
A less-discussed aspect of Bagheri’s life was his academic background. He held a PhD in political geography and geopolitics from Tarbiat Modares University and taught at the Supreme National Defense University and Tarbiat Modares University. This matters because his view of security was not limited to the battlefield. It was connected to geography, borders, regional dynamics, national power, and geopolitics.
Bagheri also received three Orders of Fath for his service during the Sacred Defense and one Order of Nasr for his postwar contributions. These honors reflect an effective role in operations, command, wartime management, and distinguished defense service.
In the Twelve-Day War, the martyrdom of Major General Mohammad Bagheri was not merely the loss of one commander. At the moment of his martyrdom, he was Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces and one of the key figures in Iran’s strategic military memory — a man whose experience stretched from the Sacred Defense to the era of hybrid warfare, from intelligence and operations to high-level command, and from the battlefield to the university.
His significance was that he connected several generations of Iran’s defense experience: the generation of the Sacred Defense, the generation that rebuilt defense structures after the war, the generation that confronted regional threats, and the generation responsible for command in the age of complex and hybrid warfare. | 1 |
| 18 | Twelve Days, Twelve Stories
Day One: Martyr Major General Mohammad Bagheri
At his martyrdom in the Twelve-Day War, Mohammad Bagheri was Iran’s Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces, the country’s highest military post.
Born Mohammad-Hossein Afshordi in 1960 in Tehran, he was the brother of Martyr Hassan Bagheri, a founder of IRGC intelligence/operations in the Iran–Iraq War.
He served in the Revolutionary Committees, joined the IRGC in 1980, and during the Sacred Defense worked in intelligence and operations in the IRGC Ground Forces, Karbala HQ, and Khatam al-Anbiya HQ: enemy analysis, terrain, planning, and reducing miscalculation.
After the war, he held General Staff roles in intelligence, operations, joint affairs, and coordination. On June 28, 2016, by Leader’s decree, he became Chief of Staff.
He held a PhD in political geography/geopolitics, taught at defense universities, and received three Fath Orders and one Nasr Order.
He linked Sacred Defense to hybrid warfare, and intelligence to high command | 638 |
| 19 | Twelve Days, Twelve Stories
Day One: Martyr Major General Mohammad Bagheri
At his martyrdom in the Twelve-Day War, Mohammad Bagheri was Iran’s Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces, the country’s highest military post.
Born Mohammad-Hossein Afshordi in 1960 in Tehran, he was the brother of Martyr Hassan Bagheri, a founder of IRGC intelligence/operations in the Iran–Iraq War.
He served in the Revolutionary Committees, joined the IRGC in 1980, and during the Sacred Defense worked in intelligence and operations in the IRGC Ground Forces, Karbala HQ, and Khatam al-Anbiya HQ: enemy analysis, terrain, planning, and reducing miscalculation.
After the war, he held General Staff roles in intelligence, operations, joint affairs, and coordination. On June 28, 2016, by Leader’s decree, he became Chief of Staff.
He held a PhD in political geography/geopolitics, taught at defense universities, and received three Fath Orders and one Nasr Order.
He linked Sacred Defense to hybrid warfare, and intelligence to high command | 1 |
| 20 | One year ago, the Twelve-Day War changed many lives and left behind stories that deserve to be remembered. To mark its anniversary, we will spend the next twelve days honoring twelve individuals whose courage and sacrifice became part of that history. Beyond the headlines and the battles, this series is about the people, their stories, and the legacy they left behind. | 166 |
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