PODCAST · news
Eye For Iran
by Iran International English
From Iran International comes the 'Eye for Iran' podcast, a weekly show that will take listeners beyond the headlines, deep into the Iran stories that matter most. With compelling interviews, expert analysis and high impact investigations, host Negar Mojtahedi examines the latest developments in and around Iran.
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Trump's Iran MoU explained: how Iran gets billions—and why | Eye for Iran 109
The new US-Iran Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) could unlock tens of billions of dollars for Tehran and fundamentally reshape Iran's economic and political future. Host Negar Mojtahedi speaks with former US Treasury sanctions official Max Meizlish, economist Mohamad Machine-Chian, former US military intelligence officer Michael Pregent, and Iran analyst Omid Memarian to explain what the agreement means for sanctions, the IRGC, Qatar, China and post-Khamenei Sr. Iran.In this episode:Max Meizlish, a former Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) official, explains why General License X could provide "unconditioned, unrestricted sanctions relief," potentially giving Tehran access to tens of billions of dollars. He argues the IRGC stands to receive a significant financial windfall and warns that China could emerge as one of the agreement's biggest beneficiaries.Mohamad Machine-Chian examines whether the agreement can stabilize Iran's economy. He explains why FATF restrictions, Iran's isolated banking system and entrenched corruption remain major obstacles, while arguing the new funds could help Iran's Central Bank avoid a deeper inflation crisis.Former US military intelligence officer Michael Pregent argues Qatar wielded extraordinary influence during the negotiations, warning that "Every Qatari negotiated outcome is a failure for US national security." He explains why he believes the agreement echoes the concessions made during the JCPOA and what it could mean for future US policy toward Iran.Omid Memarian, Director of Communications at DAWN, says the Islamic Republic is entering an "identity crisis" following the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. He predicts the next battle will unfold inside the regime itself, as competing factions fight to define Iran's future and the next phase of the Islamic Republic.Topics covered:Trump's Iran MOU explainedGeneral License XIran sanctions reliefIran oil exportsThe IRGC and Iran's economyFrozen Iranian assetsQatar's role in the negotiationsChina's influence in IranFATF and Iran's banking systemPost-Khamenei IranInternal power struggles inside the Islamic RepublicUS-Iran relationsMiddle East geopoliticsIf you enjoy in-depth reporting and expert analysis on Iran and the Middle East, subscribe to Eye for Iran and turn on notifications so you never miss a new episode.#iran #iranpodcast #mou #qatar #jdvance #witkoff #kushner #youtube #middleeast #shorts #trump #economy
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The Iran-US MoU explained: what it means for Iranian people | Eye for Iran 108
Did the new US-Iran Memorandum of Understanding hand Tehran a major victory?In this episode of Eye for Iran, host Negar Mojtahedi breaks down the controversial MOU with former US Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs David Schenker, who argues the agreement delivers significant benefits to the Islamic Republic while leaving major questions unanswered on Iran's nuclear program, ballistic missiles and regional proxies.Then, human rights activist Gazelle Sharmahd joins the program to discuss the reaction among many Iranians who had hoped recent events would lead to meaningful change. Sharmahd reflects on the kidnapping and killing of her father Jamshid Sharmahd, the ongoing executions inside Iran and why she believes many Iranians feel abandoned by the international community.Finally, Iran International correspondent Alireza Modiri and actress and activist Shiva Negar discuss the FIFA World Cup and the emotions surrounding Team Melli. For many Iranians, football has become about far more than sport. From Lion and Sun flags in the stands to debates over national identity, the World Cup has become a reflection of the deep divisions and complicated feelings shaping modern Iran.Topics:• US-Iran MOU explained• Did Iran win the deal?• David Schenker's analysis• Gazelle Sharmahd on her father's murder• Human rights in Iran• Team Melli and the FIFA World Cup• Lion and Sun flags• Why Iranians are divided• Iran, Hezbollah and Lebanon• The future of US-Iran relationsGuests:David Schenker – Former US Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs and Senior Fellow at The Washington InstituteGazelle Sharmahd – Human Rights Activist and daughter of Jamshid SharmahdAlireza Modiri – Correspondent, Iran InternationalShiva Negar – Actress and ActivistHost:Negar MojtahediSubscribe for more Eye for Iran interviews, analysis and reporting from inside and outside Iran.Chapters: 00:01: 39 Did Iran Win the MOU? | David Schenker Breaks Down the Deal00:22:42 "Iranians Feel Betrayed" | Gazelle Sharmahd on the Human Cost00:39:41 FIFA & Team Melli | Why Iranians Are Divided at the World Cup#iran #trump #lebanon #israel #MOU #irandeal #podcast #news #irannews #iranpodcast #youtube #sportify #shorts
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Arab world losing the Mideast, experts say | Eye for Iran 106
As Lebanon becomes central to Iran’s conditions for a broader US-Iran deal, this episode of Eye for Iran asks what the war has really changed — and what comes next.Aaron David Miller, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a veteran US Middle East negotiator, says Iran is using Lebanon to pressure both Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu, trying to establish a new equation around Hezbollah. He also argues the future balance of power in the Middle East may increasingly belong to three non-Arab powers: Israel, Turkey and Iran.Elliott Abrams, former US Special Representative for Iran and Venezuela, says Washington still fails to grasp the nature of the Islamic Republic and warns that no deal can solve the deeper problem posed by the regime itself.Mohamed Fahmy, Egyptian-Canadian veteran journalist and Middle East political analyst, recently returned from Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. He says the war has left “a scar” across the Arab world. Is the Iran war ending — or is Lebanon becoming the first battle over the Middle East that comes after it?#iran #lebanon #middleeast #podcast #youtube
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Can Trump crack Iran’s delay-and-negotiate playbook? Eye for Iran 106
For decades, Iran has frustrated presidents, diplomats, and negotiators. Has it finally met its match?In Episode 106 of Eye for Iran, we examine the strategy, pressure and power dynamics shaping the latest standoff between Washington and Tehran—and whether Donald Trump is succeeding where previous administrations fell short.Former US diplomat Alberto Fernandez, United Against Nuclear Iran Policy Director Jason Brodsky, and Daily Mail Special Correspondent David Patrikarakos break down Trump's negotiating style, Iran's long-standing playbook of delay and resistance, and the growing debate over whether Tehran has finally encountered an opponent willing to combine diplomacy, economic pressure and military force to change the calculus. Has Iran met its match—or is it once again playing the long game? And even if a deal is reached, could future military strikes still be on the table?We then turn to the Strait of Hormuz, where Homayoun Falakshahi, who leads Kpler's crude oil analysis team, explains why one of Iran's most important sources of leverage may be losing its value. As Persian Gulf states invest in alternative export routes and global energy markets adapt to disruption, we explore whether Tehran is overplaying its hand—and why the next five years could leave the Islamic Republic with fewer strategic cards to play than it has today.Finally, from Beirut, Iran International Lebanon Correspondent May Farhat discusses Hezbollah's weakened position, Lebanon's efforts to curb Iranian influence, and growing concerns that Tehran is tying Lebanon's future to its broader confrontation with the United States and Israel. In a striking rebuke this week, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun accused Iran of using Lebanon as a "bargaining chip" in its negotiations with Washington and told the IRGC: "It's not your country, it's our country." His comments reflect a growing frustration among Lebanese leaders who argue that their country has paid the price for conflicts driven by outside powers. Meanwhile, Trump claimed progress in efforts to end the fighting, telling reporters, "We actually spoke with Hezbollah for the first time ever. We didn't know they spoke."But with Hezbollah rejecting a new ceasefire proposal and Israel insisting it will not withdraw its forces, we ask whether Lebanon risks becoming a bargaining chip in a much larger regional struggle—or whether Beirut is finally beginning to push back against Tehran's influence in a way that could reshape the country's future.Featuring:• Alberto Fernandez – Former US Diplomat and Vice President of the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI)• Jason Brodsky – Policy Director, United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI)• David Patrikarakos – Daily Mail Special Correspondent and Author• Homayoun Falakshahi – Head of Crude Oil Analysis, Kpler• May Farhat – Iran International Lebanon CorrespondentTopics discussed:• Trump-Iran negotiations• Iran's negotiating strategy• Iran's nuclear program• The Strait of Hormuz• Global oil markets and energy security• China-Iran relations• Hezbollah and Lebanon• Iranian influence in the Middle East• US foreign policy and regional securityChapters: 0:00:00 Introduction to podcast 0:01:51 Segment 1: Has Iran finally met its match? We examine whether Donald Trump's mix of diplomacy, economic pressure and military threats is succeeding where previous administrations failed—and whether Tehran is genuinely on the defensive or simply buying time.0:33:27 Segment 2: The Strait of Hormuz has long been one of Iran's most powerful tools of leverage, but as global energy markets adapt and the Persian Gulf states diversify export routes, we ask whether that strategic advantage is beginning to erode.0:51:15 Segment 3: As Lebanon's president openly accuses Tehran of using his country as a bargaining chip, we explore Hezbollah's weakened position, growing resistance to Iranian influence, and whether Beirut is finally trying to break free from Tehran's shadow.#iran #trump #lebanon #hormuz #israel #podcast #iranpodcast #news #youtube #shorts
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Can Trump crack Iran’s delay-and-negotiate playbook? Eye for Iran 106
For decades, Iran has frustrated presidents, diplomats, and negotiators. Has it finally met its match?In Episode 106 of Eye for Iran, we examine the strategy, pressure and power dynamics shaping the latest standoff between Washington and Tehran—and whether Donald Trump is succeeding where previous administrations fell short.Former US diplomat Alberto Fernandez, United Against Nuclear Iran Policy Director Jason Brodsky, and Daily Mail Special Correspondent David Patrikarakos break down Trump's negotiating style, Iran's long-standing playbook of delay and resistance, and the growing debate over whether Tehran has finally encountered an opponent willing to combine diplomacy, economic pressure and military force to change the calculus. Has Iran met its match—or is it once again playing the long game? And even if a deal is reached, could future military strikes still be on the table?We then turn to the Strait of Hormuz, where Homayoun Falakshahi, who leads Kpler's crude oil analysis team, explains why one of Iran's most important sources of leverage may be losing its value. As Persian Gulf states invest in alternative export routes and global energy markets adapt to disruption, we explore whether Tehran is overplaying its hand—and why the next five years could leave the Islamic Republic with fewer strategic cards to play than it has today.Finally, from Beirut, Iran International Lebanon Correspondent May Farhat discusses Hezbollah's weakened position, Lebanon's efforts to curb Iranian influence, and growing concerns that Tehran is tying Lebanon's future to its broader confrontation with the United States and Israel. In a striking rebuke this week, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun accused Iran of using Lebanon as a "bargaining chip" in its negotiations with Washington and told the IRGC: "It's not your country, it's our country." His comments reflect a growing frustration among Lebanese leaders who argue that their country has paid the price for conflicts driven by outside powers. Meanwhile, Trump claimed progress in efforts to end the fighting, telling reporters, "We actually spoke with Hezbollah for the first time ever. We didn't know they spoke."But with Hezbollah rejecting a new ceasefire proposal and Israel insisting it will not withdraw its forces, we ask whether Lebanon risks becoming a bargaining chip in a much larger regional struggle—or whether Beirut is finally beginning to push back against Tehran's influence in a way that could reshape the country's future.Featuring:• Alberto Fernandez – Former US Diplomat and Vice President of the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI)• Jason Brodsky – Policy Director, United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI)• David Patrikarakos – Daily Mail Special Correspondent and Author• Homayoun Falakshahi – Head of Crude Oil Analysis, Kpler• May Farhat – Iran International Lebanon CorrespondentTopics discussed:• Trump-Iran negotiations• Iran's negotiating strategy• Iran's nuclear program• The Strait of Hormuz• Global oil markets and energy security• China-Iran relations• Hezbollah and Lebanon• Iranian influence in the Middle East• US foreign policy and regional securityChapters: 0:00:00 Introduction to podcast 0:01:51 Segment 1: Has Iran finally met its match? We examine whether Donald Trump's mix of diplomacy, economic pressure and military threats is succeeding where previous administrations failed—and whether Tehran is genuinely on the defensive or simply buying time.0:33:27 Segment 2: The Strait of Hormuz has long been one of Iran's most powerful tools of leverage, but as global energy markets adapt and the Persian Gulf states diversify export routes, we ask whether that strategic advantage is beginning to erode.0:51:15 Segment 3: As Lebanon's president openly accuses Tehran of using his country as a bargaining chip, we explore Hezbollah's weakened position, growing resistance to Iranian influence, and whether Beirut is finally trying to break free from Tehran's shadow.#iran #trump #lebanon #hormuz #israel #podcast #iranpodcast #news #youtube #shorts
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Is Trump giving Iran's regime a lifeline? Eye for Iran 105
Is a new US-Iran deal on the horizon—or is Tehran being thrown a lifeline at one of the most vulnerable moments in its history?As reports of renewed negotiations intensify, major questions remain. Is the Islamic Republic negotiating from a position of weakness or strength? Has Iran emerged damaged by war and economic pressure, or can its leadership still claim victory?Host Negar Mojtahedi is joined by former US Treasury official, FDD research fellow and former CENTCOM official Miad Maleki, alongside former Canadian government official, University of Ottawa professor and Chatham House associate fellow Thomas Juneau, to debate the state of the negotiations, Iran’s vulnerabilities, and what a deal could mean for the future of the Islamic Republic.Then, foreign policy commentator Mohamed Amersi joins Eye for Iran with a rare perspective from someone who regularly engages with Iranian officials, as well as Chinese, Russian, Arab and Western policymakers. He shares what he is hearing behind the scenes and why Tehran’s leadership may view the current moment very differently from many analysts in Washington.Finally, investigative reporter Jay Solomon of The Free Press and security expert Roger Macmillan examine allegations that Iran-linked proxy networks are expanding beyond the Middle East. From Europe to North America, they discuss growing security concerns, recruitment tactics, and what Western governments are doing to respond.In this episode:• Is a US-Iran deal getting closer?• Has the Islamic Republic been weakened by war and sanctions?• What is Tehran’s leadership really thinking behind closed doors?• Could a deal help the regime survive?• What role are China, Russia and Gulf states playing?• Are Iran-linked proxy networks expanding into Europe and North America?• What are the implications for Western security and Jewish communities?Chapters:00:02:04:18 - 00:40:31:14 Is Trump Giving Iran's Regime a Lifeline?00:40:34:14 - 01:17:46:17 Inside Tehran: What are Islamic Republic Really Thinking01:17:49:10 - 01:42:56:23 Iran's Proxy Network Goes Global#iran #trump #israel #irannucleardeal #middleeast #shorts #youtube #podcast #news Miyad Maleki and Thomas Juneau debate the potential US-Iran deal, whether Tehran is negotiating from weakness, and what any agreement could mean for the future of the Islamic Republic.
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Will a US deal with Tehran save the regime? | Eye for Iran | EP 104 |
Is Iran heading toward a nuclear deal — or another war?As negotiations intensify, Tehran is threatening to expand the conflict beyond the Middle East while Israel remains on high alert. But behind the headlines lies a much bigger story: Iran’s growing attempt to turn the Strait of Hormuz into a geopolitical toll booth.In this episode of Eye for Iran, Negar Mojtahedi is joined by former U.S. State Department Senior Advisor Hazem Alghabra, former U.S. Treasury sanctions official Max Meizlish, Middle East analyst Hayvi Bouzo and national security expert Shayan Samii to break down:• Is Trump bluffing — or preparing for more war with Iran?• Could a new nuclear deal actually help the Islamic Republic survive?• Is China enabling Iran’s sanctions evasion and regional influence?• Why Tehran’s “Hormuz toll booth” strategy could trigger a global economic confrontation• Reports alleging Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was once considered in a post-Khamenei scenario• Internal fractures inside the Iranian regime• Whether economic pressure — not military strikes — is now the real battlefield“The Iranian people do not need rockets, they do not need drones, the Iranian people need to live.”WATCH UNTIL THE END for the explosive discussion on Ahmadinejad, Mossad, the New York Times report and the growing debate over what comes after the Islamic Republic.00:00 Segment 1 — Deal or No Deal? War or No War?Guest: Hazem Alghabra00:00 Intro — Is Iran Heading Toward Diplomacy or More War?02:19 Trump, Tehran & Israel’s High Alert Status03:27 Iran’s Internal Power Struggle Explained07:20 Could Economic Pressure Bring Down the Regime?08:28 Trump’s Negotiation Strategy & Iran Fatigue09:02 Russia, China & Europe’s Role in the Crisis11:08 “The Iranian People Need to Live”13:25 Segment 2 — China, Hormuz & Iran’s Toll Booth StrategyGuest: Max Meizlish13:25 Iran’s New “Hormuz Toll Booth” Explained14:01 China’s Role in Iran’s Sanctions Evasion16:04 Can the U.S. Punish China for Supporting Tehran?19:35 Why Washington Isn’t Using Maximum Economic Pressure21:50 Could Economic Warfare Weaken Both Iran & China?25:06 Is Iran Formalizing Control Over the Strait of Hormuz?27:56 Why China Needs Hormuz Open29:28 China’s Quiet Negotiations With Tehran30:53 Iran’s Alleged $2 Million Transit Fees32:59 Segment 3 — Ahmadinejad, Mossad & The NYT ReportGuests: Hayvi Bouzo & Shayan Samii33:08 The New York Times Report Explained34:08 Who Is Mahmoud Ahmadinejad?37:39 Ahmadinejad’s Record: Holocaust Denial & the Green Movement39:17 Was the NYT Report Deliberately Leaked?43:05 Is the Regime Turning on Ahmadinejad?45:15 Internal IRGC Infighting & Succession Chaos49:14 Could Ahmadinejad Ever Return?51:54 Was the Leak Meant to Distract Iran’s Leadership?53:20 Final Thoughts & Outro#iran #trump #israel #china #hormuz #iranwar #nucleardeal #middleeast #irgc #MahmoudAhmadinejad #geopolitics #EyeForIran
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Can Iran’s Economy Survive the Internet Blackout and Economic Fury? | Eye for Iran 103
In episode 103 of Eye for Iran, Mohamad Machine-Chian is filling in for Negar Mojtahedi. In this episode, Holly Dagres, senior fellow at Washington Institute discusses the continued internet blackout in Iran. Operation Epic Fury may be over but Operation Economic Fury is just getting started. Siamak Javadi, from Texas University explains what's next for Iran’s economy.#iraninternational #Iraninternational #ایران_اینترنشنال
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The price of oil and the future of Hormuz
The Strait of Hormuz remains closed and the U.S. blockade of Iranian ports continues. Can Tehran weaponize Hormuz for years to come? Are Iranian oil fields nearing the point of no return? In episode 102 of Eye for Iran, two energy experts assess the potential scenarios ahead.#Iraninternational #ایران_اینترنشنال
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Canada let Iran football chief linked to IRGC in — then got caught | Eye for Iran | EP 101|
An Iran International exclusive has triggered a political firestorm in Ottawa — after Mehdi Taj, Iran’s football chief and a former Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) intelligence commander, was granted entry into Canada despite being legally inadmissible under the country’s own terrorist designation.Taj was issued a Temporary Resident Permit (TRP) — a rare override used to bypass national security inadmissibility — allowing him to travel to Vancouver for a FIFA Congress. But after the story broke and public pressure mounted, he was stopped at the airport and sent back.Now, Prime Minister Mark Carney is facing mounting questions:Who approved the permit? Why was an IRGC-linked figure allowed in? And did the government only act after being exposed?Melissa Lantsman, Deputy Leader of Canada’s Conservative Party, joins Eye for Iran to demand accountability, warning that this case exposes deeper failures in Canada’s immigration system, national security screening and enforcement of its own IRGC terror listing.But this story doesn’t stop at Canada.At the same time, the UK is facing a surge in violent attacks targeting Jewish communities — including a stabbing in Golders Green, attempted synagogue firebombings and arson attacks on Jewish ambulances. British authorities are now investigating whether these attacks are linked to Iran and a shadow network known as HAYI (Harakat al-Shabab al-Yamin al-Islamiyah).Alex Winston of The Jerusalem Post explains why intelligence officials fear this reflects a broader Iranian strategy: proxy networks, online radicalizationand sleeper cells recruited across EuropeLen Khodorkovsky, former U.S. State Department official, breaks down the war of narratives, Trump’s warning to Iran and how the regime is using internet blackouts and information control to hide unrest and shape global perception.This episode connects the dots between immigration policy, terrorism and the Islamic Republic’s global reach — and asks critical questions.Guests: Melissa Lantsman, Len Khodorkovsky, Alex WinstonHost: Negar MojtahediProgram: Eye for IranEye for Iran is a podcast series brought you by Iran International that takes you beyond the headlines and brings you the Iran stories that matter most. Chapters: 00:00 Opening Highlights | Taj turned away, Trump warning, UK Jewish attacks02:15 Melissa Lantsman | How did Mehdi Taj get a permit?03:25 Melissa Lantsman | “Somebody issued him a permit”05:16 Melissa Lantsman | IRGC concerns in Canada07:42 Melissa Lantsman | “They circumvented the rules”08:51 Melissa Lantsman | Who approved Taj’s entry?10:09 Melissa Lantsman | Canada’s privacy excuse11:27 Melissa Lantsman | Parliament demands answers12:09 Melissa Lantsman | Did Canada act only after being exposed?13:41 Melissa Lantsman | Canada’s wider IRGC problem15:44 Melissa Lantsman | Ottawa’s confusing response16:47 Melissa Lantsman | What happens next?18:47 Alex Winston | UK Jewish attacks and possible Iran links19:41 Alex Winston | Golders Green, synagogue firebombings and HAYI20:07 Alex Winston | Iran’s external operations playbook22:30 Alex Winston | Telegram, IRGC-linked media and proxy networks24:03 Alex Winston | Why proving Iran links is difficult26:39 Alex Winston | Was HAYI born out of the war?27:38 Alex Winston | How Iran takes the war to the West29:45 Alex Winston | Is the West waking up?30:51 Alex Winston | Is regime change the only solution?32:38 Alex Winston | Where the war could go next36:01 Alex Winston | Fears of more sleeper-cell attacks38:02 Len Khodorkovsky | Iran, messaging and information warfare38:27 Len Khodorkovsky | America’s message to Iran’s regime and people42:00 Len Khodorkovsky | Iran’s internet blackout and the battle for truth46:10 Len Khodorkovsky | Western media narratives and the Iran war52:06 Len Khodorkovsky | Trump’s warning and negotiation strategy56:00 Len Khodorkovsky | Iran’s people, blackout and Western silence59:42 Len Khodorkovsky | Prince Reza Pahlavi, the press and agenda-driven narratives01:01:51 Len Khodorkovsky | How journalism standards have changed01:05:15 Len Khodorkovsky | How audiences should consume news today01:08:05 Closing Remarks | Final thoughts and newsletter details#iran #irgc #fifa #iranwar #operationepicfury #canada #usa #trump #carney #immigration #uk #jewish #israel #youtube #shorts #podcast #news #middleeast
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Tehran turns on itself as Iran’s regime fractures | Eye for Iran | EP 100 |
Veteran journalist Eli Lake of The Free Press and host of the Breaking History podcast joins Eye for Iran to discuss real fractures inside Iran’s regime, why Tehran’s leadership may be turning on itself and how internal power struggles could eventually bring down the Islamic Republic from within. Lake says Iran’s rulers now need a deal more than Washington does, and argues any negotiations should begin with restoring internet access, freeing political prisoners and ending executions.Lake also offers hope for Iran’s future, saying the Iranian people remain the country’s greatest strength: “You cannot keep these people down.”Hudson Institute research fellow Zineb Riboua then breaks down China’s growing anxiety over the Strait of Hormuz, Beijing’s weakening leverage over Tehran, Iran-China ties and whether Operation Epic Fury is really about weakening China’s position in the Middle East.Finally, Iran International journalist Shervin Shahrestani reveals his major investigation into Iran’s expanding influence network in Kashmir and India, including ideological outreach, funding networks and why some call the region a “Mini Iran.”A special 100th episode covering Iran regime fractures, the Strait of Hormuz crisis, China, the IRGC and the fight for Iran’s future.Contents for this video:00:00 Intro: Tehran Turns on Itself? Fractures in Iran’s Regime02:16 Eli Lake Joins Eye for Iran02:38 What Is Really Happening Between US and Iran?05:25 Why Give Tehran More Time?06:03 Eli Lake: Put Iranian People First07:56 Any Deal Must Include Internet & Prisoners11:51 Xi Jinping Pressures Tehran Over Hormuz12:57 Are Iran’s Internal Fractures Real?17:35 Can the Islamic Republic Fall From Within?24:38 Why Even Ahmadinejad Is Criticizing the Regime27:56 How Change Could Happen Inside Iran32:54 Biggest Bet: Collapse From Within34:43 Are Negotiations Psychological Warfare?36:03 Iran’s Nuclear Program & What Comes Next40:25 Eli Lake: “You Cannot Keep These People Down”46:01 Eli Lake on His Iran Podcast Series52:31 Zineb Riboua Joins Eye for Iran52:32 Why China Suddenly Spoke on Strait of Hormuz56:30 Beijing’s Weakness Exposed?58:32 Is China Panicking?01:02:16 What China Stands to Lose01:05:28 Is Operation Epic Fury Really About Weakening China?01:07:45 Are US and Israel Fully Aligned?01:09:22 What to Watch Next: Gulf States & China01:12:27 Shervin Shahrestani Joins Eye for Iran01:13:00 Iran’s Influence Network in Kashmir01:15:02 Why Kashmir Is Called “Mini Iran”01:19:54 How Tehran Builds Influence in India01:22:30 Security Risks: Sleeper Cells & Lone Wolves?01:26:21 Why This Story Matters Now01:28:19 Is Iran More Dangerous After the War?01:30:16 Final Thoughts / Subscribe#iran #iranwar #israel #trump #nuclear #podcast #news #usa #youtube #shorts #middleeast
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Iran war: ceasefire holds, Strait of Hormuz reopens — what now? | Eye for Iran | EP 99 |
A fragile ceasefire may be holding between the United States and Iran — but is the war really over, or just paused?As the Strait of Strait of Hormuz reopens after weeks of disruption, new questions are emerging about the true impact of the conflict: who’s actually winning, how much pressure the Islamic Republic is under, and whether this moment leads to a deal — or another round of escalation.On this episode of Eye for Iran, Charlie Brown, Senior Advisor at United Against Nuclear Iran, and Dr. Iman Nasseri, Managing Director for the Middle East at FGE, break down the maritime and economic battlefield — from Iran’s shadow fleet and sanctions evasion networks to the real timeline for when a blockade actually hits Tehran’s economy.We also examine the nuclear file with Dr. David Albright, Founder of the Institute for Science and International Security, who warns that while Iran’s ability to build a bomb may have been set back, its incentive to pursue one could be growing.And in a stunning regional development, Lebanon and Israel hold direct talks for the first time in decades. Hussain Abdul-Hussain, Research Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, explains what this could mean for Hezbollah, Lebanon’s sovereignty, and whether Iran’s grip on the region is beginning to weaken.Is this the beginning of the end — or just the calm before the next phase of conflict?Watch Eye for Iran.Recorded just before the Strait of Hormuz reopened, offering a real-time snapshot of a rapidly shifting situation.Chapters:00:00 Is the Iran war really over?00:39 Hormuz reopens: what it means now02:07 Conflicting narratives: is Iran winning or losing?03:22 Can Iran survive the blockade?05:15 How long until sanctions actually hit?07:54 What’s really happening at sea right now11:44 Will the next 10 days change everything?15:11 Is Iran still making money from oil?17:32 Shadow fleet & sanctions evasion explained19:01 Shadow banking crackdown: does it work?22:10 U.S. strategy: pressure or regime change?26:19 What’s the endgame here?Nuclear file segment32:16 Can Iran still build a nuclear weapon?36:54 Could Iran be hiding enriched uranium?43:23 Is Iran now a greater long-term threat?49:09 Where do global powers stand?53:52 Why regime change isn’t so simple57:59 What has this war actually achieved?01:03:32 Missiles, drones & future threats01:06:12 Are we heading toward another war?Lebanon / regional shift segment01:06:35 Historic Lebanon-Israel talks explained01:08:39 Is Lebanon breaking away from Iran?01:10:42 Does Hezbollah still have power?01:11:52 What do Lebanese people really think?01:15:26 How Lebanese view Iran’s role01:17:54 Iran’s internal divisions revealed01:19:02 Decoupling Lebanon from Iran01:23:32 Is Iran weakening across the region?01:27:02 Could Lebanon normalize with Israel?01:29:57 Final thoughts & what comes next#Iran #IranWar #MiddleEast #StraitOfHormuz #Hormuz #OilMarkets #Geopolitics #USIran #Israel #Lebanon #Hezbollah #NuclearDeal #EnergyCrisis #BreakingNews #EyeForIran
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Iran-US ceasefire: pause before escalation or deal? | Eye for Iran | EP 98 |
A fragile ceasefire appears to be in place between Iran and the United States, but is it really a ceasefire, or simply a brief pause before a new phase of conflict?In this episode of Eye for Iran, former CIA analyst and former National Security Council director Ken Pollack explains why he believes both sides may not have agreed to the same terms, and why the current moment could still lead to renewed escalation. He also warns that if this war ends with the regime intact, the Iranian people may once again be left to pay the price.Then, writer, activist, and Middle East expert Dalia Ziada breaks down the regional fallout. She explains why many Arab states, especially in the Gulf, feel sidelined despite being directly affected by the conflict, and why frustration is also growing over Pakistan’s role.Finally, investigative reporter Jay Solomon joins us to discuss his months-long investigation into Calla Walsh, the 21-year-old American activist who has become a prominent voice amplifying the Iranian regime’s narrative. How did her radicalization happen, and why does it matter?Watch the full episode of Eye for Iran, and subscribe for more in-depth interviews and analysis.Contents for this video:00:00 Fragile ceasefire or pause before escalation?01:42 Ken Pollack joins: what this “ceasefire” really means03:24 Why Washington and Tehran are talking past each other07:05 Will the Iranian people be abandoned again?13:27 What a new phase of war could look like17:24 Trump’s messaging to the people of Iran23:02 Is regime change still possible?30:51 Why Gulf states may move closer to Israel36:51 Dalia Ziada: regional fallout and Arab frustration39:11 Could this accelerate Arab-Israeli alignment?44:02 Pakistan’s role and Saudi disappointment47:08 Lebanon, Hezbollah, and Iran’s regional reach49:37 Qatar rethinking ties to Tehran?52:10 Jay Solomon: who is Calla Walsh?54:29 Cuba, radicalization, and Tehran’s influence01:00:36 How Walsh became part of Iran’s narrative machine01:05:14 Why Gen Z radicalization should worry the West01:07:37 Is this Iran exporting its revolution?01:09:46 Subscribe for more Eye for Iran#iran #usa #israel #war #ceasefire #pakistan #youtube #shorts #youtubeshorts #news #podcast #middleeast
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UAE hits Iran’s economic lifeline | Decoding Trump’s speech | Special report| Eye for Iran | EP 97 |
The UAE’s arrest of dozens linked to the IRGC’s sanctions-evasion network could mark one of the biggest blows yet to Tehran’s economic lifeline. Former U.S. Treasury sanctions strategist Miad Maleki, United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) Research Director Daniel Roth, and Iran International senior economic journalist Mohammad Machine-chian break down what this could cost the regime — and whether it could cripple Tehran’s ability to fund repression, proxies and sanctions evasion. Then Republican strategist, former Bal Harbour, Florida Mayor and Standpoint podcast host Gabe Groisman unpacks what President Trump’s Iran speech really signaled, who the message was intended for and whether “strategic ambiguity” is part of the plan. Plus, Iran International journalist Azadeh Akbari reveals new findings from a special report showing the regime moved weapons and personnel into at least 70 civilian sites, including schools.You can watch this week's episode of Eye for Iran or listen on any podcast platform. Chapters: 00:00 Trump’s Iran Speech and What It Really Means00:35 UAE Arrests IRGC-Linked Money Changers01:31 Special Report: Regime Used 70 Civilian Sites02:06 How Important Is Dubai to Tehran’s Survival?05:35 Why the UAE Is Cracking Down Now07:26 How Much Money Is the Regime Set to Lose?12:56 Can This Disrupt Iran’s Global Money Laundering?17:48 Iran’s Other Financial Lifelines: Turkey, Erbil, Herat19:34 Impact on Proxies, Repression, and the Rial22:02 Political Fallout for Iran-UAE Relations24:11 Tehran’s Strategic Miscalculation28:57 Gabe Groisman on Trump’s Iran Speech32:10 Trump’s Tone: Planned, Measured, Strategic34:11 Is Trump Using Strategic Ambiguity?37:52 Was Trump Also Sending a Message to Tehran?39:08 Regime Change: Goal or Byproduct?42:26 Strait of Hormuz and Regional Allies46:30 October 7 and Iran’s Biggest Miscalculation49:13 Why Trump Didn’t Mention Oman50:24 Was Trump’s Speech Escalatory?52:59 Could Ground Troops Still Be on the Table?55:05 Trump vs Netanyahu on Messaging58:55 Special Report: Weapons Moved Into Schools and Civilian Sites59:13 How Iran International Verified the Investigation01:03:46 Are Civilians Being Used as Human Shields?01:07:05 Children Put in Harm’s Way01:08:15 What This Says About the Regime’s Wartime Doctrine#iran #uae #money #sanctions #trump #usa #iranian #HumanShields #israel #war #iranwar #news #podcast #shorts #youtube
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Iran just proved its reach — how much further will this war go? | Eye for Iran | EP 96 |
A war already underway — now entering a more dangerous phase.We begin with Iran’s reported strike toward Diego Garcia — a moment that signals something critical: this threat is no longer abstract. It is real.Defense experts Farzin Nadimi of The Washington Institute and Janatan Sayeh of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) break down what this reveals about Iran’s capabilities — from vast underground missile networks, some “the size of small cities,” to a growing global threat. As Sayeh warns, “Iranian missiles and drones were already being used on European soil through Russia — now the regime itself can launch them directly from Iranian territory.”Then — what comes next.Former US State Department official Joel Rubin and foreign policy expert Dr. Walid Phares analyze the global response and the role of diplomacy as well as signs the conflict may be moving toward a broader escalation.Reacting to a striking op-ed by the UAE ambassador to Washington calling for a “conclusive outcome,” Rubin underscores the stakes, saying “this is how Iran behaves — willing to disrupt the global economy to protect itself.”Phares, meanwhile, argues current talks are part of a strategic calculation — “less about peace and more about buying time” — as momentum builds toward a more decisive phase that could include limited ground operations.They also point to developments in Lebanon — long seen as firmly within Iran’s sphere of influence — as evidence that Tehran’s regional grip may be weakening in real time.And finally — the human reality behind it all.Ali Rezaei Majd, the Iranian protester whose video from inside Iran was seen by millions, speaks out after escaping the country:“We cannot make a deal with them. Dealing with them means letting this cancer continue.” Watch this week's episode of Eye for Iran or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing.YouTube Chapters00:00 Opening: “They were shooting people like a video game”00:06 The viral witness: Ali Rezaei Majd00:43 Iran fires toward Diego Garcia01:20 UAE warns ceasefire is not enough01:58 Iran’s missile capabilities and what comes next02:42 Farzin Nadimi on Iran’s true missile range04:55 Could Iran’s missiles reach the UK?06:16 Why this is a global wake-up call07:30 How much of Iran’s missile arsenal remains?11:08 Inside Iran’s underground missile cities12:44 Missile sites hidden near civilians15:04 Factories, launchers, and urban danger zones17:32 Kharg Island and the regime’s economic lifeline20:27 What Iran is still capable of militarily24:01 Threats to the US homeland?25:17 UAE sounds alarm on Iran as a global threat27:52 Is the region shifting against Tehran?30:35 Are talks stalling?33:27 Could boots on the ground be next?37:21 Lebanon and Iran’s loosening grip42:33 Ali Rezaei Majd on the January massacre43:12 The viral video from inside Iran45:16 Why he recorded it 46:43 What he witnessed on the streets50:55 How he escaped Iran54:33 His message to the world: no negotiations58:14 First Nowruz after the massacre01:02:04 “It was like a video game”01:03:03 Final message from Ali Rezaei Majd#iran #diegogarcia #trump #ballisticmissiles #irgc #iranmissiles #uae #lebanon #hezbollah #israel #usa #middleeast #podcast #news #youtube #shorts
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The call for another uprising in Iran is near, Israeli security insider says| Eye for Iran | EP 95 |
“It’s a matter of weeks.”That is Brigadier General (res.) Amir Avivi’s message on what may come next in Iran. The Israeli security insider and chairman of the Israel Defense and Security Forum says conditions could soon be in place for Iranians to rise up safely against the Islamic Republic. But, he says, Israel and the US would first assess whether those conditions had truly been met — and would remain overhead in the skies, with drones and advanced capabilities, to protect the people of Iran.“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,” Avivi told Eye for Iran.Then, what could Washington do next?Investigative journalists Jay Solomon of The Free Press and David Patrikarakos, special correspondent for the Daily Mail, join us to discuss the next phase. Solomon says his sources in Washington indicate the Trump administration wants to secure the more than 400 kilograms of unaccounted-for highly enriched uranium. But with Pickaxe Mountain believed to be so deeply buried, an aerial mission alone may not be enough — raising the possibility of US ground forces entering tunnels.“The Marine Expeditionary Unit, MEU, that’s kind of been moving closer to Iran … could potentially be a unit that would be utilized to go in and try to safeguard the materials,” Solomon says.Patrikarakos shares what his sources are seeing inside Iran, including reports of growing disorder and signs that some IRGC elements may be turning against one another. Is the Revolutionary Guards Corps nearing a breaking point?“They paint a picture of a regime in disarray, its security apparatus is in disarray,” Patrikarakos says.And finally, we speak with Daniel Levinson, the son of retired FBI agent Robert Levinson, who disappeared in Iran while on an unsanctioned CIA-linked mission and is presumed dead. He tells us why the latest US and Israeli strikes may bring his family closer to the truth.“Khamenei had the power to free my dad at any point and chose not to. He knew what was happening and did nothing, so for our family, it’s been an emotional moment — but not one of grief.”You can watch this week's episode of Eye for Iran on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing. Contents for this video:00:00 Avivi: “The goal is clear”00:24 Avivi says a turning point could be weeks away00:54 Larijani dead, regime vows revenge01:22 New reporting on IRGC infighting and next US moves02:17 Robert Levinson case: Daniel Levinson joins later03:45 Avivi on the three stages of the war07:07 When can Iranians safely rise up?09:20 Why Larijani’s killing matters10:51 Is regime change the end game?12:31 What conditions need to be met inside Iran13:21 Avivi claims major defections in some units16:01 Jay Solomon and David Patrikarakos join16:35 David Patrikarakos on regime disarray19:08 Are IRGC members turning on each other?21:05 Jay Solomon on Pickaxe Mountain and US options25:29 Could US boots go into the tunnels?28:55 Kharg Island and pressure on the regime34:07 Is this war also about China?41:20 What is the actual US objective?44:20 Could more regime officials be targeted?45:27 Executions continue inside Iran47:13 Iran’s information war in the West52:44 Daniel Levinson joins the program54:12 Robert Levinson’s disappearance explained55:30 The family’s 19-year search for answers56:58 Official linked to Levinson case killed in strikes58:06 “No one was more responsible than Khamenei”59:55 Could this bring justice?01:01:00 Message to officials who know what happened01:01:25 What accountability looks like now01:01:53 Levinson family trips to Iran01:03:26 Did the US do enough?01:04:19 What Americans should understand about Iran01:07:40 How Daniel wants his father remembered#iran #israel #trump #war #youtube #shorts #podcst #news #iranian
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Inside Iran: Basij strikes, purported message & voices from Tehran | Eye for Iran | EP 94 |
The war against the Islamic Republic may be entering a new phase after Israeli drone strikes targeted Basij checkpoints in Tehran. The Basij — a paramilitary force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) — has long been responsible for carrying out repression and violently suppressing protests across Iran. In this episode of Eye for Iran, John Hannah, who served in senior foreign policy positions for both Democratic and Republican administrations, including as former Vice President Dick Cheney’s National Security Advisor from 2005–2009 and Deputy National Security Advisor for the Middle East from 2001–2005, explains why these strikes could mark a turning point that may weaken the regime’s ability to control the streets and potentially shift the balance in favor of the Iranian people.Meanwhile, Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has yet to appear publicly. Instead, his first communication reportedly came in the form of a written message rather than a video statement — raising new questions about who is truly in charge. A panel of experts, including historian Shahram Kholdi, former U.S. government appointee Shayan Samii, and former Israeli intelligence official Avi Melamed, analyzes what the message said and what it may reveal about the power struggle inside the regime.Finally, actress and producer Tara Grammy shares messages from inside Tehran, describing how many Iranians are experiencing the war — and why some say decades of repression have reshaped how they view danger, and hope for change.Contents for this video: 00:00 Introduction02:19 John Hannah: Basij checkpoints hit in Tehran03:10 John Hannah: Could this fracture the regime?05:08 John Hannah: Is this phase two of the war?07:42 John Hannah: Can the opposition seize the moment?09:32 John Hannah: When is it safe for Iranians to rise up?11:00 John Hannah: What does regime change mean?12:54 John Hannah: FBI warning and retaliation fears14:34 John Hannah: Was wider escalation inevitable?16:10 John Hannah: Military success vs political success17:49 John Hannah: Is this also about China?20:51 John Hannah: Message to the axis of aggressors23:11 John Hannah: How long can the regime survive?25:00 John Hannah: Advice to Trump30:01 Shahram Kholdi, Shayan Samii and Avi Melamed join30:15 Shahram Kholdi: Where is Mojtaba Khamenei?33:57 Avi Melamed: Who is really in charge?35:14 Shayan Samii: Who is Mojtaba Khamenei?39:24 Shahram Kholdi: What did the alleged message say?47:23 Avi Melamed: What is Israel’s endgame?53:44 Shayan Samii: Mojtaba’s message and what it means58:12 Shahram Kholdi: Is the IRGC running the show?01:03:58 Avi Melamed: What Mojtaba’s silence suggests01:06:45 Tara Grammy joins Eye for Iran01:07:30 Tara Grammy: Why some Iranians cheer the bombs01:08:56 Tara Grammy: Threat normalization and trauma01:13:02 Tara Grammy: Why outsiders do not understand01:17:19 Tara Grammy: A 1% chance at freedom01:18:34 Tara Grammy: The bombs and the regime01:20:14 Tara Grammy: Voices from inside Iran01:21:52 Tara Grammy: January 8 and 9 changed everything01:24:44 Tara Grammy: The role of the diaspora01:26:55 Tara Grammy: The message from inside Iran — regime change01:28:33 Tara Grammy: Shoot-to-kill orders and hospital killings01:30:35 Tara Grammy: Why the world ignores the massacre01:32:18 Tara Grammy: What the West should be talking about01:33:06 Outro#Iran #IranWar #IranProtests #IranRegime #IslamicRepublic #IRGC#Basij #news #podcast #youtube #shorts
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Iran's regime needs to be "removed from power", says Ted Cruz | Eye for Iran | EP 93 |
Senator Ted Cruz joins Eye for Iran as the United States and Israel intensify their campaign against the Islamic Republic. In this episode, Cruz lays out what he sees as the objective of the war, whether regime change is now on the horizon, what victory would look like, and whether limited U.S. ground engagement is possible.Host Negar Mojtahedi also speaks with Mark Dubowitz, CEO of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, about possible endgame scenarios, and also taking a deeper look at Mojtaba Khamenei, the man now in charge of the Islamic Republic.From Israel, journalist and defense analyst Yaakov Katz joins the program to discuss daily life under missile fire, Israel’s military coordination with the United States, how this war is reshaping the Middle East, and why many Israelis see the freedom of the Iranian people as central to the region’s future.Chapters: 00:00 Ted Cruz: “The objective is to remove the regime from power”00:34 War with Iran: what victory could look like01:38 Senator Ted Cruz: What are the next steps in the war04:18 Does victory mean regime change in Iran05:58 Who could lead Iran after the regime07:35 How the Iranian regime could collapse from within11:21 Could the U.S. deploy limited ground forces14:45 Ted Cruz on Kurds and arming protesters19:35 Mark Dubowitz: Endgame scenarios for Iran33:00 Yaakov Katz: Life inside Israel during the war42:43 Did Iran make a catastrophic strategic miscalculation#iran #war #trump #israel #usa #middleeast #news #podcast #youtube #shorts #usisraeliran #tedcruz
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EU lawmaker to Iran's regime: “Your time is up” | Eye for Iran | EP 92 |
"Your time is up.”A senior European lawmaker from Malta delivers a direct message to Tehran on this episode of Eye for Iran. Daniel Attard — Member of the European Parliament and Vice-Chair of the European Parliament’s Delegation for Relations with Iran — calls for tougher action against the Islamic Republic following its deadly crackdown on protesters, urging Europe to expel Iranian diplomats, halt trade, and increase pressure on the regime while standing firmly with the Iranian people.“The time for negotiation is over. We must match the courage of the people of Iran,” Attard tells Eye for Iran, arguing that the European Union must support Iran’s opposition — not its oppressors — and act when a regime turns its violence against its own citizens.We then break down President Donald Trump’s State of the Union warning about Iran’s expanding ballistic missile program and the implications of ongoing Geneva talks. Joining the panel are Janatan Sayeh, Research Analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD); Shayan Sami’i, national security analyst and former U.S. government appointee; and Shahram Kholdi, international security and law analyst and Middle East historian. The panel examines whether Washington’s shifting rhetoric signals a turning point in U.S. policy toward Iran.Finally, we present our joint Iran International–Free Press investigation with Jay Solomon, investigative reporter at The Free Press, uncovering how the Islamic Republic built and spread a coordinated disinformation campaign blaming a CIA-Mossad conspiracy for what was in fact a homegrown uprising. Using digital forensic analysis and investigative reporting, the investigation traces how Tehran’s narrative spread globally and helped obscure accountability for the January massacre.Contents of this video: 00:00 “Your time is up” — EU message to Tehran00:10 What’s coming up on Eye for Iran (EU action, Trump, Geneva, investigation)00:02:29 Interview begins: Daniel Attard (EU Parliament)00:03:04 R2P: “Sovereignty can’t be a shield”00:04:26 “No more business as usual” — halt trade, shut embassies00:05:37 Geneva talks: why Attard says negotiations must end00:06:28 What the EU should do now: sanctions, IRGC, accountability00:07:41 Why IRGC designation took so long + closing embassies00:09:06 Will Europe actually expel diplomats and cut ties?00:10:22 Attard’s message to Iranians: “Your courage is seen”00:11:11 Attard to the regime: “Your time is up” (again)00:11:25 Trump’s missile warning: what it means for Europe00:13:34 The human toll: Attard reacts emotionally to images of the killings00:16:01 Panel begins: Trump’s tone + Geneva talks (Sayeh, Sami’i, Kholdi)00:17:30 Is this a prelude to war? 3 pillars: nukes, missiles, human rights00:19:21 Tehran’s reaction + rebuild after the “12-day war”00:23:39 What is Washington waiting for? legitimacy vs. delay00:26:09 How long can this go on? signs of escalation00:28:11 Next steps: deterrence, force posture, and consequences00:32:14 Is there bipartisan consent? avoiding Iraq/Afghanistan mistakes00:35:27 Investigation segment begins: the CIA/Mossad disinfo lie (Jay Solomon)00:36:04 When it became a coordinated information operation00:38:19 The “TikTok” version: how Tehran seeded the narrative before the massacre00:40:01 Western influencers + the far-left/far-right convergence00:41:22 Bots and amplification: Russia-linked networks + inauthentic traffic00:43:31 Why accountability vanished: how disinfo buried the massacre00:44:46 Mossad/Pompeo posts: how the regime weaponized them00:47:00 What Tehran might do next if strikes happen: incitement + hybrid warfare00:49:48 Why the world didn’t respond: blackout + parallel narrative toolkit00:51:34 Jay’s biggest worry: collapse of verified media, rise of paid narratives00:53:04 Outro + newsletter plug#iran #irannews #iranpodcast #iranrevolution #israel #usa #trump #eu #youtube #youtubeshorts #news #eyeforiran #politics #shorts
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Iran Massacre: “a final bullet in hospital,” says father of slain teen | Eye for Iran | EP 91
Seventeen-year-old Sam Afshari was wounded during Iran’s January protests and taken to a hospital in Karaj, where doctors were trying to save his life. According to his father, Parviz Afshari, security forces entered the room while a breathing tube was still in his mouth — and fired a final, fatal shot.On this episode of Eye for Iran, we speak with Sam’s father, who is now calling for justice — and for the end of the Islamic Republic — after his son was killed following detention during the nationwide crackdown that left tens of thousands dead.Then, as Iranian officials prepare to appear before United Nations human rights bodies in Geneva, UN Watch Executive Director Hillel Neuer calls for a diplomatic walkout and accountability for the regime’s actions.And as a reported end-of-February nuclear deadline approaches, threats escalate from Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and military deployments intensify — including the arrival of the USS Ford carrier strike group. Is diplomacy running out of time? Is war now imminent?Featuring analysis from Dr. Casey Babb, Director at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute; Peter Roff, Contributing Editor at Newsweek; and Adelle Nazarian, Senior Fellow at the Gold Institute for International Strategy.#iran #iranprotests #unitednations #war #usa
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'A plea for help': why are Iranian people watching the skies?| Eye for Iran | EP 90
A high stakes week in Washington raises one question: are we watching “good cop bad cop” diplomacy that is really a prelude to military strikes on the Islamic Republic? After President Donald Trump meets Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US military deployments intensify, Dr. Eric Mandel, founder and director of MEPIN (Middle East Political and Information Network), and Ambassador John Craig, a former American diplomat, unpack the pressure campaign on Tehran, the tight circle around Trump and why one guest calls this moment a prequel to military action.Then the human reality behind the geopolitics. Mina, speaking from Germany with her identity protected, shares what she is hearing from inside Iran after the January 8 and 9 killings, including the story of slain protester Hamid Reza Najari and two imprisoned brothers. She describes a level of desperation many outside Iran struggle to grasp: people monitor air traffic every night hoping intervention is coming because they feel they have no way left to fight a brutal state with empty hands.Finally, former UK ambassador to Saudi Arabia Sir John Jenkins explains the Persian Gulf states’ private calculations. Many would like Iran to change but fear the consequences of sudden collapse, regional spillover and unpredictable escalation. What are Iran’s neighbors quietly preparing for and how might their interests shape Washington’s next move?Contents for this video:00:00:00 Opening montage: Iran’s uprising, deaths, desperate pleas00:00:59 The geopolitics shaping what comes next, Iran’s Arab neighbors, Sir John Jenkins00:02:19 Interview begins, how Gulf states are reading Tehran after the massacre00:05:49 The Gulf’s priority: avoiding open-ended conflict, Vision 2030 anxiety00:09:22 Transitional government talk, referendum idea, Iran as a potential economic giant00:13:18 Regional map: Israel, UAE, Jordan, Turkey, post-Oct 7 alignments00:18:44 A new order or a new disorder, keeping Iran weak vs fearing collapse00:19:36 Who sways Trump, personalized White House, Netanyahu factor, military options00:23:36 Soleimani and “performative” retaliation, why escalation fears may be overblown00:25:55 Turkey, Syria, Kurds, and why Ankara fears a powerful Iran00:36:18 Europe’s role, IRGC networks, snapback, money flows, hostile state activity00:39:57 Strait of Hormuz, can Iran really close it, China’s interests, mining scenario00:42:41 Jenkins final thoughts, hope for peaceful regime change00:43:05 Voices from inside Iran: Mina’s testimony, slain protester and imprisoned brothers00:43:54 Hamid Reza Najari killed, family misled, body returned after 20 days00:47:09 Why they protested: a future without the Islamic Republic, chants and hope00:48:28 Damun and Yashar arrested, fear of silence, families under pressure00:52:17 The mood inside Iran: “last battle,” nationwide despair, duty to amplify00:54:11 Munich protests and hope, people inside Iran tracking turnout and weather00:57:24 Why some plead for intervention, “watching air traffic,” the desperation point00:59:50 The victims’ lives, “normal life” stolen, why none will be the same00:01:01:33 Mina’s final message: use freedom outside Iran, stay loud, stay united00:01:02:47 Trump-Netanyahu meeting: what was decided and what it means for Iran00:01:03:27 Dr Eric Mandel, inner debates in Trump world, nuclear vs missiles vs proxies00:01:08:08 Neglecting Iran’s people, why “nuclear-only” deals keep failing00:01:11:17 Ambassador John Craig: carrier moves, “prequel” to military action00:01:16:09 What targets could look like, Israel’s role, “accept terms or else”00:01:17:27 Talks about talks, stalling, and why diplomacy may be a setup for force00:01:24:05 Who’s in the tight circle, Witkoff, Kushner, Vance, Barrack, Rubio question00:01:27:07 Regional pressure on Washington, Gulf states, stability argument vs regime fall00:01:30:14 Final messages to Trump, legacy, midterms, “be unconventional”00:01:32:20 End of episode#iran #freeiran #netanyahu #trump #iranprotests #iranrevolution #rezapahlavi #nucleardeal #usa #israel
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“Day of infamy” and why the regime can’t kill its way out | Eye for Iran | EP 89
“You cannot kill your way out of this.”That is how Iranian-American historian Abbas Milani describes the Islamic Republic’s response to Iran’s latest uprising, a crackdown he calls unprecedented in modern Iranian history.In this episode of Eye for Iran, Milani explains why mass killing and mass arrests have exposed the regime’s political death rather than restoring control. Drawing on new research documenting thousands of protests across Iran, he argues that fear no longer works, resistance is cumulative and the Islamic Republic cannot survive by violence alone. He also examines the chain of command behind the crackdown, the role of the IRGC and why negotiations with Tehran after mass killings risk throwing a lifeline to a sinking regime.The conversation then turns to the international response with Major Andrew Fox and Jake Wallis Simons, co-hosts of The Brink podcast. Fox, a conflict researcher and senior associate fellow at the Henry Jackson Society, served 16 years in the British Army from 2005 to 2021. Together, they assess whether diplomacy is buying time for Tehran, break down US options and warn that attempts to tame the regime risk normalizing mass killing.The episode concludes with frontline testimony from physicians documenting the human cost of the crackdown. Dr. Homa Fathi and Dr. Panteha Rezaeian of the AIDA Health Alliance describe hospital raids, doctors arrested for treating protesters and a growing epidemic of untreated wounds and preventable deaths as fear keeps the injured away from care.Contents for this video:00:00 Cold open: “You can’t kill your way out of this”00:00 Iran’s darkest chapter and the information war00:02 Doctors targeted for treating protesters00:02 Abbas Milani: how unprecedented is this crackdown00:06 Why the regime can’t murder its way to survival00:08 Friday talks: what is even left to negotiate00:13 A crackdown planned for decades00:16 Chain of command: how mass repression is executed00:19 Tehran’s soft power and influence networks00:23 Why negotiations fail and what comes next00:29 Andrew Fox and Jake Wallace-Simons join00:33 Trump’s options: deal, strikes, or “taming” the regime00:40 Can a “Maduro model” work in Iran00:51 Why Trump told protesters “help is coming”01:00 The information war in Western streets01:08 Doctors and AIDA Health Alliance: arrests, raids, snipers01:17 Virtual clinic and the epidemic of infected wounds01:29 Patients taken mid-treatment and what the world must do01:34 Closing#iran #iranprotests #freeiran #youtube #news #podcast #trump #negotiations #eyeforiran
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Are US strikes now imminent? | Eye for Iran | EP 88
As President Donald Trump issues a final warning to Tehran and US military assets appear to be moving into place, a defining question emerges: are targeted strikes against the Islamic Republic now around the corner?In this special edition of Eye for Iran, Negar Mojtahedi is joined by four crucial voices as Iran faces an unprecedented moment of crisis and possibility.Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus analyzes what potential US and Israeli military action could look like, which targets could weaken the regime’s command structure and what must follow to prevent chaos in a post-Islamic Republic Iran.Human rights activist and former political prisoner Shiva Mahboubi shares disturbing reports of detainees being forcibly injected and killed in custody, a hidden campaign of repression unfolding inside Iran’s prisons.Retired US federal judge Mark Wolf, chair of Integrity Initiatives International, explains how Iranian regime kleptocrats and their enablers could one day be held accountable and how stolen billions abroad may be frozen, seized and repatriated.Finally, analyst Khosrow Esfahani breaks down the regime’s escalating war of narratives and disinformation as Tehran seeks division while Iranians press forward with pain and resolve.Four conversations. One historic turning point.Contents for this video:00:00 “We Will Win” — Iran’s Uprising Reaches a Breaking Point00:40 Trump’s Final Warning — Are US Strikes on Tehran Now Imminent?02:16 Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus — What Targeted Strikes Could Look Like07:08 Conricus — The World’s Silence as Iran Faces Massacre10:12 Conricus — “It’s Only a Matter of Time” Before Military Action17:55 Conricus — Key Targets That Could Collapse the Regime24:15 Conricus — After the Fall: Preventing Chaos & Securing Transition28:55 Shiva Mahbobi — Forced Injections & Killings in Iranian Custody36:26 Mahbobi — What the International Community Must Do Now41:05 Judge Mark Wolf — Holding Regime Kleptocrats Accountable44:16 Wolf — Freeze, Seize, Repatriate: Recovering Iran’s Stolen Wealth54:33 Khosro Isfahani — Tehran’s Disinformation War & Narrative Battle01:20:07 Isfahani — “Pain, But Resolve” in Iran’s Fight for Freedom#eyeforiran #iran #iranprotests #trump #israel #NUFDI #IslamicRepublic #IRGC #HumanRights #PoliticalPrisoners #IranPrisoners #IranRevolution #Disinformation #accountability
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Iran is bleeding: Will the world act now? | Eye for Iran | EP 87
As Iran’s streets turn into killing fields, the debate in Washington is no longer theoretical. Eye for Iran examines the Islamic Republic’s escalating violence against civilians under a near total digital blackout and asks the most urgent question yet: what will the world do now?Michael Makovsky, President and CEO of the Jewish Institute for National Security of America (JINSA), and Blaise Misztal, the Institute’s Vice President for Policy, argue the United States should pursue one clear objective: regime collapse. They explain why this moment may be a rare strategic window, what collapse could unlock for US policy and regional security and what concrete steps could weaken the regime while supporting Iranians risking their lives.Democracy and internet freedom activist Mehdi Yahyanejad then shares what his sources inside Iran are reporting despite the blackout, including how censorship, propaganda and fear are shaping what the world can and cannot see. He describes the role of Starlink access, the dangers faced by those sending information out and the stories emerging from the crackdown.Finally, Dr. Nazak Tavakoli of the Iranian Association of Human Rights and Allies, political activist Iman Vaez and Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs contributor Sogand Fakheri come together for a deeply personal conversation about grief, resilience and the human cost of this uprising, as families inside Iran vanish into silence and the diaspora struggles to respond.Subscribe for ongoing coverage of Iran’s uprising, the regime’s bloody crackdown and the global decisions that may shape what happens next.Contents of this video: 00:00:00 Cold open: eyewitness accounts under blackout00:00:25 Opening montage: “war on civilians” framing00:01:14 Segment 1 teaser: regime collapse argument (Makovsky + Misztal)00:02:55 Show open + guest introductions (Makovsky, Misztal)00:03:32 What does “regime collapse” actually mean00:05:07 Regime change vs. regime collapse: key distinction00:05:59 What collapse would unlock for US + region00:09:12 Does this moment have a “window”00:11:31 Trump red line: credibility, consequences, deterrence00:15:04 Most effective next step for Washington00:16:15 Building a long-term “collapse strategy” (comms, defections, pressure)00:20:41 Mixed signals: Witkoff, negotiation talk, military moves00:23:55 Where is this headed + closing thoughts (Segment 1 wrap)00:26:34 Segment 2 intro: Mehdi Yahyanejad (internet freedom + sources inside Iran)00:27:09 What he’s hearing now: fear, shock, missing loved ones00:28:51 Starlink pipeline + protecting identities00:35:29 Paint the picture: escalation, tactics, scale of violence00:41:32 Disinformation + confusion as a regime tactic00:49:09 Stories weighing on him most + what Iranians want from the world00:58:38 Victims + the human toll (Segment 2 wrap)01:01:03 Segment 3 intro: Nazak Tavakoli, Iman Vaez, Sogand Fakheri01:01:55 How they’re holding up: trauma, grief, resolve01:07:03 Family and friends back home: silence, fear, loss01:11:13 “This is war on unarmed people”01:11:36 Nazak’s story: legacy, missing contact, waiting for news01:16:14 Nazak on her father and the long shadow of repression01:22:03 Iman: messages from inside Iran + the diaspora’s role01:30:19 Message to Iranians: don’t lose hope01:32:19 Imagining Iran after: dignity, remembrance, rebuilding01:34:40 Closing thanks + sign-off + where to follow / newsletter#iran #iranprotests #usa #trump #iranrevolution #freeiran #podcast #iranpodcast #news #youtube #youtubeshorts
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Inside Iran's killing spree: eyewitness speaks out | Eye for Iran | EP 86
An eyewitness who recently fled Iran and whose identity is being withheld for his safety recounts indiscriminate gunfire that turned city streets into a battlefield. He says he saw thousands of bodies stored at a cemetery as families searched for missing loved ones during a nationwide digital blackout.He is risking his life to speak out and send a message to the world that the killings are still ongoing and Iranians urgently need help. He describes witnessing indiscriminate gunfire directed at unarmed civilians, narrowly escaping being shot himself.Eye for Iran host Negar Mojtahedi speaks with Republican Congressman Marlin Stutzman about what the United States may do next as Iranian lives hang in the balance. She also speaks with writer and human rights advocate Roya Hakakian on why this moment could mark a historic rupture for Iran and what pressure might reduce further civilian deaths.The program also features Gunther Fehlinger-Jahn Chairman of the Austrian Committee for NATO Enlargement on why he supports the Iranian people and what he believes Europe should do in response.This episode contains disturbing testimony.Contents of this video: 00:00 Eyewitness: “They Started Shooting with Heavy Guns”01:48 Iran’s Digital Blackout Begins02:13 Eyewitness Account from Tehran Streets03:58 Burying the Dead at Behesht Zahra06:48 “Thousands of Bodies” in Cemetery Warehouses11:18 Indiscriminate Gunfire Turns Streets Into a Battlefield14:59 “They Shot into the Crowd”16:38 Is This a Genocide?23:28 US Response to Iran’s Violence23:54 Congressman Marlin Stutzman on Trump and Iran29:46 Are Regime Officials Preparing an Exit?34:55 Roya Hakakian: A Historic Rupture50:36 Gunther Fehlinger-Jahn on Europe and Iran01:03:37 Final Thoughts and What Comes Next#iran #iranprotests #trump #tehran #iranrevolution #news #podcoast #iranpodcast
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Iran on the brink of a revolution: is this the moment? | Eye for Iran | EP 85
A wounded protester in Iran puts it starkly: “I’m not scared. For 47 years, I’ve been dead.”As protests spread across the country and chants turn openly existential, this special episode of Eye for Iran asks the question many are now asking: is Iran approaching a revolution? Is this the moment?Negar Mojtahedi is joined by former UK Security Minister and Member of Parliament Tom Tugendhat, former senior CIA official Norman Roule, Jason Brodsky, policy director at United Against Nuclear Iran, and David Patrikarakos, journalist, author and special correspondent for The Daily Mail.Tugendhat argues the Islamic Republic has entered its endgame, warning that Iran’s security forces will be judged by what they do next. Roule explains how Washington is assessing fast-moving unrest and what President Donald Trump’s warnings could mean in practice. Brodsky and Patrikarakos break down why this protest wave feels fundamentally different from 2009 and 2022, what real regime-change momentum looks like, and the decisive question ahead: can street protests translate into a coherent political alternative and meaningful defections inside the system?You can watch this episode on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing. You can also switch to Persian captions or any language of your choice on YouTube. Contents for this video: 00:00 “I’m not scared. For 47 years, I’ve been dead.”01:08 Iran on the brink of revolution: is this it02:57 “This is the endgame” – Tom Tugendhat06:15 Why this protest wave is different09:33 Signs of regime panic and elite exits13:23 Why the West should care now18:36 Iran, Venezuela and collapsing proxy power22:31 Is the West preparing for a post-regime Iran23:37 Trump’s warning and the red line on repression25:59 Has the regime’s myth of invincibility shattered29:50 Former CIA official Norman Roule joins31:53 Will Trump act if killings escalate35:26 How relevant is Khamenei today39:47 Succession battles and IRGC power44:08 How intelligence reads a system in collapse51:56 The cost of Western silence55:47 Why this moment feels different from past protests01:02:40 Can protests become real regime change01:09:52 What happened to “Woman, Life, Freedom”01:21:50 Final reflections: courage, risk and Iran’s future#iran #iranprotests #iranrevolution #eyeforiran #iran #regimechange #middleeast #Geopolitics #WorldPolitics #ForeignPolicy #USIran #news #podcast #youtube #FreeIran
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"Mullahs must get lost": Iran protests threaten to topple the theocracy | Eye for Iran | EP 84
Chants of “Mullahs must get lost” are spreading across Iran six days after a collapsing currency and shuttered bazaars triggered the largest nationwide protests since the 2022 Woman, Life, Freedom movement. What began as demonstrations over economic hardship has evolved into a nationwide uprising directly targeting the Supreme Leader, posing one of the most serious challenges to Iran’s theocracy in years.On Eye for Iran, host Negar Mojtahedi asks: Can the Islamic Republic still control the situation — or is something deeper breaking?Joining us:* Shayan Samii — former US government appointee in intelligence and foreign policy* Arash Azizi — journalist and author of What Iranians Want: Women, Life, Freedom* Danny Citrinowicz — former head of the Iran branch in Israeli military intelligence* Alan Eyre — former US State Department Persian-language spokesperson and Iran specialist* Alex Vatanka — Director of the Iran Program, Middle East Institute* Joseph Epstein — Director, Turan Research Center at the Yorktown Institute* Bozorgmehr Sharafedin — Iran International Digital lead and former Reuters journalistWe break down:– Who these protesters are — and why bazaaris matter– How economic collapse is fueling anger nationwide– How the Islamic Republic may respond, and what signals to watch nextPlus: a deep dive into growing talk of regime change after the Trump–Netanyahu meeting — what Israel actually wants, what Washington is prepared to do and how any external pressure could shape the protests inside Iran.Bozorgmehr also explains why this protest wave may be harder to contain: broader networks, deeper grievances and a regime weakened after the 12-day war and ongoing economic freefall.Will these protests lead to the end of the Islamic Republic? Tell us in the comments.Contents for this video:00:00 – Cold open: anger over economic collapse00:23 – Intro: is Iran’s regime nearing the end?03:45 – Who are the protesters and what do they want? (Shayan)06:24 – Protests spread nationwide and the leadership vacuum (Arash)13:19 – No “silver bullet” for Iran’s economic crisis (Danny)19:00 – Protester courage, opposition factions and Western support27:29 – Who is on the streets? Gen Z, bazaaris, workers (Arash)32:55 – Opposition disunity and scenarios for change after Khamenei44:39 – Regime change versus change from within, and the exiled opposition54:40 – Does fixing the economy save the regime? (panel wrap)57:44 – Trump and Netanyahu meeting: is regime change a fantasy?01:03:04 – How could regime change or system collapse actually unfold?01:09:41 – Hopelessness inside the regime and IRGC’s next moves01:13:23 – War scenarios: Iran, Israel, Trump and the next clash01:18:53 – Ten features that make this protest wave different (Bozorgmehr)01:25:58 – Bazaaris break with the regime and Iran’s failing state economy01:34:41 – Comparing this to Women, Life, Freedom and what comes next01:41:06 – Final thoughts and Eye for Iran newsletter promo#iran #iranprotests #iranuprising #iraneconomy #iranpolitics #trump #netanyahu #israeliran #womenlifefreedom #middleeast #podcast #irgc #usforeignpolicy #iraninternational #eyeforiran #youtube #shorts #middleeast
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Iran 2025: crisis without collapse —Israel, accountability & YouTube creators | Eye for Iran | EP 83
Iran exits 2025 under visible strain. Direct confrontation with Israel, setbacks to Tehran’s proxy network, and rising domestic pressure have shaken the regime — but not toppled it.In this Eye for Iran special, Avi Melamed, Jay Solomon, and Dr. Shahram Kholdi explain what really changed inside Iran, what didn’t, and the biggest risks heading into 2026 — including potential renewed conflict between Iran, Israel and Hezbollah.We also speak with Shahin Milani, Executive Director of the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, about a landmark criminal complaint naming 40 Iranian officials for alleged crimes against humanity during the Women, Life, Freedom protests — and what universal jurisdiction could mean for accountability.And Siavash Rokni, an Iranian pop culture expert joins us to unpack YouTube’s new ad policy, how it has slashed income for Iranian creators, and why it may strengthen the regime’s cultural control despite fewer ads for viewers.Contents for this video:00:00 — Intro: Iran exits 2025 in crisis — but not collapse00:46 — Panel begins: What really changed this year?03:05 — Iranians losing fear — and what that means for the regime05:54 — Did the 12-Day War with Israel change the balance?10:22 — Deterrence shattered: Israel vs Iran’s proxy strategy14:49 — Looking ahead to 2026: escalation risks and miscalculation27:43 — Predictions: confrontation, diplomacy… or both?37:18 — Accountability segment: Argentina files landmark case39:15 — Universal jurisdiction — how Iran’s officials could face charges44:39 — Victims’ stories and why documenting evidence matters50:20 — YouTube policy change: Iranian creators lose revenue54:23 — Culture vs control: how the regime benefits1:06:57 — Final thoughts & outro — what to watch next#Iran #EyeForIran #WomenLifeFreedom #IranIsrael #MiddleEast #HumanRights #geopolitics #youtube #iran #digitalfreedom #shorts
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Drought to Flooding, Travel Ban on Iranians and Mass Arrests in Iran | Eye for Iran | EP 82
Iran's convergence of crises is upending people's lives both inside and outside the country.On this episode of Eye for Iran, we examine three developments you need to understand right now. Environmental researcher and hydraulic structures expert Roozbeh Eskandari explains how Iran can go from severe drought to destructive flooding, why these extremes are driven by mismanagement rather than nature alone and why flooding does little to resolve Iran’s deepening water crisis.We then turn to the United States, where expanded travel bans and immigration restrictions are leaving many Iranians in limbo. Iranian-American immigration attorney Ali Rahnama breaks down what the new policies actually mean in practice, who is most at risk and what families should be prepared for in the weeks and months ahead.Finally, we look inside Iran, where arrests continue following a memorial ceremony for a human rights lawyer who died under disputed circumstances. Psychotherapist and activist Azadeh Afsahi, who works closely with political prisoners and their families, shares what is known about the detainees, the conditions they face and what these arrests reveal about the reality behind claims of social opening in Iran.You can catch episode 82 of Eye for Iran on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing.#iran #water #flooding #nargesmohammadi #khosrowalikordi #toomajsalehi #trump #usa #immigration #drought Contents of this video: Segment 1 – From drought to flooding: Iran’s water crisisGuest: Roozbeh Eskandari, environmental researcher and hydraulic structures expert00:00 Intro – Iran at a breaking point00:13 Why Iran’s drought turned into flooding02:07 How bad governance drives both extremes03:10 Climate change as an intensifier, not the cause05:27 Soil erosion, urban planning and destructive floods07:19 Environmental injustice and who pays the price09:18 Why poorer neighborhoods flood first11:26 Can flooding recharge Iran’s aquifers13:43 “Territorial collapse” and water bankruptcy18:51 Water scarcity, social tension and what comes nextSegment 2 – US travel ban and immigration crackdownGuest: Ali Rahnama, Executive Director of the Iranian American Legal Defense Fund25:36 What the new US travel ban actually changes27:03 Deportations, paused visas and green card uncertainty31:42 Asylum seekers, detention and due process concerns34:59 Allegations of coordination with the Iranian regime42:29 Notices of intent to deny and legal limbo46:41 Dual nationals and long-term immigration risksSegment 3 – Arrests, repression and resistance inside IranGuest: Azadeh Afsahi, psychotherapist working with political prisoners50:17 Arrests after memorial for human rights lawyer51:30 Families left without information or legal access54:10 Visible defiance under the same laws and repression56:10 Toomaj Salehi, trauma and breaking the silenceSegment 4 – Closing01:03:02 Final thoughts and where to watch or listen
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Why the Islamic Republic endures despite discontent | Eye for Iran | EP 81
Former CIA analyst and National Security Council director Kenneth Pollack joins Eye for Iran to explain why he believes Iran has been in a “pre-revolutionary state” for years, why revolutions succeed only when regimes lose the will or capacity to use force and how Khamenei’s eventual succession could reshape everything.Then, Behnam Ben Taleblu of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) breaks down President Donald Trump’s new National Security Strategy and why Iran is dramatically downplayed compared to 2017 — plus the risks of an “indifference” moment when the Islamic Republic, according to Taleblu, is “down but not out.”Finally, we speak with Tatyana Eatwell of Doughty Street Chambers in the UK about the death of Iranian defense lawyer Khosrow Alikordi. Authorities cite cardiac arrest, while colleagues raise serious concerns about state involvement. What does this case mean for lawyers, detainees and due process in Iran and what role can international mechanisms play?You can watch episode 81 of Eye for Iran on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing.Contents of this video: 00:00 Intro — Is Iran in a Pre-Revolutionary State?Ken Pollack: Iran, Revolution, and Regime Change01:22 Why Iran Has Been “Pre-Revolutionary” for Years06:55 Why the Nuclear Issue Isn’t the Core Iran Problem11:30 Iran’s Regional Ambitions and the Axis of Resistance16:20 After October 7: Is Tehran Winning or Losing?20:43 Why Iran’s Uprisings Keep Failing28:49 What Happens After Khamenei?Behnam Ben Taleblu: Trump’s Iran Strategy37:18 Trump’s New National Security Strategy and Iran41:56 Why the Iran Threat Is Being Downplayed44:37 “Down but Not Out”: Risks of Strategic IndifferenceTatyana Eatwell: The Alikordi Case47:36 The Death of Lawyer Khosrow Alikordi48:32 Tatyana Eatwell (Doughty Street Chambers) on What This Means52:32 Why Lawyers and Dissidents Face Growing Danger58:08 Closing — Why Iran’s Future Remains Uncertain#iran #usa #trump #cia #youtube #shorts #khamenei #regimechange
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Iran’s cultural explosion: is it real or state controlled? | Eye for Iran | EP 80
This week on Eye for Iran, we look at Iran through three connected lenses: history, culture, and a society that some say is transforming in real time.First, Ambassador John Limbert – one of the American diplomats taken hostage in 1979 – reflects on what he witnessed in the early days of the revolution, how the Islamic Republic has (and hasn’t) changed over five decades, and why the hostility between Washington and Tehran has outlasted the Cold War. He reacts to Donald Trump’s assertion that “Iran is a bully no more,” and explains why he’s wary of predictions about the Islamic Republic's collapse.Then, researcher and postdoctoral fellow Siavash Rokni breaks down the controversy over Shervin Hajipour’s licensed album and the sudden “normalization” of rap in Iran. He explains how shows like BaZia and state-linked streaming platforms are being used to hijack youth culture, control the rap aesthetic and turn 25 years of underground music into a profitable, controllable industry and why he sees it as a sophisticated PR performance.Finally, journalist and senior Iran analyst at DAWN Omid Memarian joins to examine Iran’s apparent social renaissance: street concerts, jazz festivals, desert raves, and a Gen Z that openly pushes back on hijab rules and refuses to live a double life. He argues that the loosening of social restrictions is driven from below, not granted from above, and that this movement has deep political implications, even if the clerical establishment tries to present it as a controlled opening.You can watch this week's episode of Eye for Iran on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing. Contents of this video:00:00:00 – Intro: Is Iran really changing?00:01:49 – Ambassador John Limbert joins the program00:02:03 – Trump says “Iran is a bully no more” – Limbert reacts00:06:30 – How the hostage crisis reshaped Iran and crushed democratic hopes00:11:28 – Same rulers, new society: what has (and hasn’t) changed in 45 years00:16:35 – Brain drain, diaspora, and a creative generation stuck between two Irans00:22:18 – Segment 2: Siavash Rokni on youth culture and rap00:23:27 – What is BaZia and why it matters for Iran’s rap scene00:30:02 – Why the state is “normalizing” rap: money, control, and PR performance00:39:12 – Shervin Hajipour backlash: betrayal, survival, and public anger00:41:06 – DIY and parallel economies: how independent artists resist the system00:45:36 – Segment 3: Omid Memarian on Iran’s social opening and crackdown00:46:24 – Mahsa Amini, the 12-day war, and a “worn out” repression machine00:51:55 – Not just Tehran: how far the social shift reaches beyond big cities00:53:20 – Explosion of expectations: Gen Z vs the system00:55:27 – Raves, festivals, and imagining a future without the Islamic Republic01:02:11 – Outro and Eye for Iran newsletter/info#iran #shervinhajipour #music #rap #news #culture #podcast #youtube #shorts #usa #trump #eyeforIran #genz
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Iran wary of US push in Venezuela | IRGC cyber leak & child marriage probe | Eye for Iran | EP 79
The United States has launched one of its most visible military deployments in years off the coast of Venezuela — a major operation aimed at narco-terror networks and the Maduro government. Retired four-star General Joseph Votel joins Eye for Iran to explain how decisions like this are made, what Washington’s posture actually signals, and why moves in the Caribbean inevitably carry an indirect message for countries like Iran, even if they aren’t the main focus.Next, we examine an Iran International investigation revealing new details about “Department 40,” an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) intelligence and cyber unit known as Charming Kitten. Cybersecurity expert Amin Sabeti explains how leaked files show the unit tracking dissidents, diplomats, journalists, think tank experts -- and even hacking institutions in countries friendly to Tehran.Finally, we look at a separate investigation by an Iranian reformist newspaper uncovering that a licensed matchmaking platform in Iran is allowing parents to register children as young as 13 for marriage. Child rights advocate Nazanin Afshin-Jam explains why this platform will likely increase the number of child marriages in Iran especially with the fraught economic conditions. A look at US policy, Iran’s external activities, and the human rights issues unfolding inside the country — all in one episode.You can watch Eye for Iran on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing.Contents of this video:00:00:00 US sends 12,000 troops near Venezuela – cold open and episode intro00:02:47 Venezuela, Iran and US planning – first question to Gen. Votel00:05:15 How Washington makes military decisions on Venezuela00:07:05 Indirect impact on Iran and messaging to Tehran00:09:24 Covert options and information warfare against Maduro00:13:46 Deterrence, 12,000 troops and message to other adversaries00:17:05 Votel’s time as CENTCOM commander and Iran’s influence in the region00:21:05 How to confront and engage Iran going forward00:24:15 Can the US sustain major deployments in the Caribbean and Middle East?00:26:37 Leak exposes IRGC Department 40 cyber unit00:30:36 Why Iran’s hackers target even friendly states00:35:50 How deep the hacks go and how to protect yourself00:39:04 Investigation: matchmaking platform and child marriage00:43:22 Nazanin’s past campaign saving a child bride from execution00:47:43 What the world can do to pressure Tehran on child marriage00:49:28 Outro – how to follow Eye for Iran#iran #venezuela #usa #trump #hacker #hack #children #centcom #narconews #podcast #shorts #youtube
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Would Iran race toward the bomb? | Eye for Iran | EP 78
Iran says it is ready to talk to the United States on its own terms and has paused uranium enrichment after US and Israeli strikes. At the same time Tehran is allegedly building a secret enrichment site at Pickaxe Mountain and blocking inspectors. This while a leaked UN watchdog report shows there is no clear oversight of its 60 percent enriched uranium - enough for around ten nuclear weapons.In this episode of Eye for Iran Negar Mojtahedi sits down with nonproliferation expert Mark Fitzpatrick, author of “The Iranian Nuclear Crisis,” former US Deputy Assistant Secretary for Non Proliferation and associate fellow with the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). They break down Iran’s long-term strategy of nuclear hedging, why the Twelve Day War may have strengthened Tehran’s desire for a nuclear option and how Israel’s strikes have “temporized” but not ended the threat.They also explore what happens if Saudi Arabia secures a civilian nuclear deal with President Donald Trump, whether this could spark a regional nuclear arms race involving Egypt, Turkey and the UAE and if Iran might ever turn to North Korea for help. What is Washington’s real end game and how far will Israel go to block any US–Iran deal? Watch the full conversation to find out or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing.Contents of this video:0:00 Intro 01:23 – Introducing Mark Fitzpatrick01:59 – Iran’s long term nuclear hedging strategy04:26 – Growing calls inside Iran to pursue the bomb06:02 – Risks of a nuclear armed Iran and regional dominoes07:33 – Saudi nuclear ambitions and Trump meeting in DC09:03 – Could Saudi enrichment trigger a regional arms race10:55 – Iran–US negotiations and the zero enrichment deadlock13:21 – Israel’s strikes and the era of “temporizing”17:55 – Missing 60 percent uranium and IAEA blind spots20:12 – Did the Twelve Day War help or hurt long term stability31:37 – Could Iran turn to North Korea for nuclear help#iran #israel #saudiarabia #usa #trump #nuclear #podcast #news #youtube #shorts #middleeast
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Iran’s water crisis, Israel–Iran tensions and Syria’s new direction | Eye for Iran | EP 77
Iran is confronting one of the most serious environmental and geopolitical turning points in its modern history. In this edition of Eye for Iran, three critical conversations reveal how quickly conditions are shifting and what may come next for the region.The episode opens with Dr. Kaveh Madani, former senior Iranian environmental official and now head of the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health. He warns that Tehran is rapidly approaching what he calls Day Zero, with major reservoirs hitting dead storage, groundwater collapsing, and millions of residents at risk of losing reliable access to water. He explains why drought, climate pressure, and years of mismanagement have pushed Iran into national water bankruptcy.Professor Aram Hessami, a political science professor based in Maryland, then breaks down new reports suggesting that senior Israeli officials believe the window is closing to force major change in Iran before 2029. He explains what these claims actually signal about Israel’s strategy, why regime change rhetoric rarely matches reality, and how misreading the Iranian public could lead to deeper instability.Jasmine Naamou, who was in the room with Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa during his historic visit to Washington, describes Syria’s emerging shift away from decades of Iranian influence and toward a closer alignment with the West. You can watch the full episode on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing.#iran #water #israel #syria #trump #usa #podcast #news #middleeast #youtube #shorts
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From guns to votes? Iran's plan in Iraq and why it matters | Eye for Iran | EP 76
Tehran is allegedly urging its Shia militias in Iraq to swap guns for ballots in a shift that could reshape Baghdad’s power balance and test Washington’s resolve. “Iraq may become, in a very odd way, the Achilles heel of the Trump administration,” said historian Dr Shahram Kholdi on Eye for Iran. Jay Solomon, author of the Iran Wars, said that while Tehran is “on its back foot,” it remains “committed to rebuilding its proxy network." Alex Vatanka, Director of the Iran Program at the Middle East Institute, added that “the regime is trying to rebuild” rather than reform.This week, host Negar Mojtahedi and her three guests also examine Iran’s nuclear standoff, Khamenei’s praise for the 1979 embassy takeover and the suspicious death of dissident Omid Sarlak.#iran #iraq #usa #trump #news #podcast #middleeast #youtube #shorts You can watch Eye for Iran on Youtube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing.
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A free Palestine would undermine Tehran’s power, Gaza activists say | Eye for Iran | EP 75
Two Gaza-born activists tell Eye for Iran that Tehran’s support for Hamas has not only prolonged Palestinian suffering but also strengthened hardliners in Israel. Khalil Sayegh, now based in Washington DC, and Hamza Howidy, who fled Gaza in 2023, argue that Iran has used Palestinians as pawns to justify its regional ambitions. They say a free and independent Palestine would strip the Islamic Republic of its main ideological weapon — the plight of the Palestinian people — and further weaken Tehran’s regional sway after two years of war.You can watch the full episode on YouTube or any podcast platform of your choosing. #gaza #israel #hamas #usa #iran #shorts #youtube #podcast #news
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War fears and viral scandal: Iran faces upheaval inside and out | Eye for Iran | EP 74
Former Israeli ambassador to the United States Michael Oren tells Eye for Iran that Tehran’s growing isolation and lessons it drew from the recent 12-day war could make it a more formidable opponent. “Iran feels cornered,” Oren warns, “and that’s when nations become most dangerous.”Oren discusses Iran’s evolving military tactics, Israel’s decision to agree to a ceasefire and why he believes the post-war Middle East may be undergoing its most significant changes since the Six-Day War.Later, host Negar Mojtahedi speaks with Iran International’s Maryam Sinaiee about the leaked video of the lavish wedding for ex-security chief Ali Shamkhani’s daughter - a scandal that has unsettled Tehran’s ruling elite. Sinaiee examines the public backlash and potential infighting surrounding the video.You can watch this episode on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing.#iran #iranian #israel #usa #trump #nuclear #wedding #shamkhani
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Ex-Israeli intel officer: Iran–Israel war ‘almost imminent’ | Eye for Iran | EP 73
Former Israeli intelligence officer Danny Citrinowicz tells Eye for Iran a new and far deadlier conflict between Israel and Iran is “almost imminent.”Citrinowicz says both sides wrongly believe they “won” the last war — a miscalculation that makes another, even more violent escalation inevitable. He warns the United States is still chasing a deal while Israel aims to weaken or topple the clerical establishment, a dangerous imbalance that could ignite a wider regional war.We also examine satellite evidence appearing to show Iran’s rebuilding its nuclear capabilities south of Natanz, President Trump’s Knesset speech claiming victory, and growing signs that Washington and Tel Aviv are no longer aligned on Iran policy.Watch the full Eye for Iran interview on YouTube for insight into what the next Iran–Israel war could look like — and whether diplomacy can still stop it. You can also listen to this episode of Eye for Iran on any podcast platform of your choosing.#iran #israel #iranian #israeli #intelligence #war #podcast #news #middleeast #shorts #youtube #iraninternational
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Why some hardliners in Iran want to keep sanctions in place | Eye for Iran | EP 72
Oil sanctions were meant to throttle Iran’s revenue but have instead enriched its elite.Eurasia Group Iran and oil analyst Greg Brew joins Negar Mojtahedi to explain how Iran keeps selling over a million barrels of barrels a day through shadow networks which profit wildly from the murky trade.We also explore China’s role in sustaining Iran’s oil industry and shadowy tycoons like Babak Zanjani, who embody the paradox of Iran’s undercover economy. You can watch the full episode on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing.#iraninternational #ایران_اینترنشنال #iran #china #sanctions #oil #usa #trump #youtube #shorts #podcast #news
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Iran sanctions snapback heralds suffering, possible war | Eye for Iran | EP 71
International sanctions renewed on Tehran over the weekend are already making life harder for ordinary Iranians and may signal an impasse that could lead to renewed war, experts told Iran International’s podcast Eye for Iran.In this Eye for Iran episode, host Negar Mojtahedi speaks with economist Mahdi Ghodsi and analyst Holly Dagres to break down what may lie ahead.Subscribe to Eye for Iran for expert insights, real voices, and in-depth analysis you won’t hear anywhere else.You can watch the full episode on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing.
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UNGA Special: After snapback, will the US declare victory too soon? | Eye for Iran | EP 70
From the United Nations General Assembly in New York, Eye for Iran asks: Are we moving closer to war with Iran? At the center of this year’s agenda is Tehran’s nuclear program and the enforcement of snapback sanctions.Behnam Ben Taleblu of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies explains what snapback really means for Iran. Israel’s Ambassador Danny Danon weighs in on whether diplomacy is enough — or if military action is inevitable. And author Jonathan Harounoff joins to discuss his new book "Unveiled", diving deep into the Women, Life, Freedom movement and the disconnect between Iran’s rulers and its people.
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Arash Sobhani on Mahsa Amini & Iran’s viral concerts: propaganda or progress? | Eye for Iran | EP 69
Musician Arash Sobhani (Kiosk) joins journalist Negar Mojtahedi on Eye for Iran to unpack the third anniversary of Mahsa Amini, the paradox of joy under repression, and why “hope misled us.”From women discarding compulsory hijab at Tehran concerts, to trust, honesty, and unity in the Iranian opposition, Sobhani asks whether joy itself can be resistance — or if it risks being used as propaganda.Watch the full episode on YouTube or listen to the full podcast on Spotify, Apple, and all platforms.Subscribe to our channel.For Farsi captions, please press CC button on YouTube.#iran #sirvankhosravi #iranconcerts #youtube #shorts #news #podcast #iranian #iraninternational #kiosk #music #persian #culture #iranian
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US attack on Iran was sound but talks must win peace, ex-US diplomat says | Eye for Iran | EP 68
US attacks on Iranian nuclear sites forestalled their potential push toward a bomb but a deal must be reached to guarantee Tehran will not go nuclear, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Joel Rubin told Iran International. #Iraninternational #ایران_اینترنشنال
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Nuclear crisis looms: expert warns Iran sanctions snapback could spark war | Eye for Iran | EP 67
Nicole Grajewski of the Carnegie Endowment joins Eye for Iran this week to warn that Europe’s move to reinstate UN sanctions on Iran through the so-called "snapback" mechanism could push Tehran to quit the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) — and give Israel justification for new strikes. With uranium stockpiles near weapons-grade and US diplomacy on the sidelines, is a nuclear crisis inevitable? Watch this week's episode of Eye for Iran on YouTube or any podcast platform of your choosing. #Iran #Iraninternational #ایران_اینترنشنال #NuclearCrisis #SnapbackSanctions #IranSanctions #IAEA#NonProliferation #USIran #IsraelIran #EyeForIran #MiddleEast
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Shirin Ebadi: “We are moving closer to end of Islamic Republic” | Eye for Iran | EP 65
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi says Iran is heading toward collapse — with daily executions, economic freefall, and widespread shortages of water and electricity. In this Eye for Iran interview, she explains why reform is impossible, why Western governments have failed Iranians, and how the people themselves can bring about peaceful regime change through unity, nationwide strikes, and a UN-supervised referendum.Her message to Iranians: the cost of living under this regime is greater than the cost of change. Unity is the key to victory.
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Awakening from nightmare: Iran’s future beyond the Islamic Republic | Eye for Iran | EP 65 |
Stanford professor and historian Abbas Milani says the Islamic Republic's real opposition is not abroad but inside the country — women walking unveiled, teachers refusing propaganda, and artists reimagining history. Calling the Islamic Republic a “cancer” and a “totalitarian nightmare,” Milani insists Iran’s resilience points to a brighter future as people have woken from that nightmare. “Iranian society is more represented by intellectuals who used to be religious and now go and kiss the feet of a Baha’i and say, I’m sorry for everything we have done to you,” Milani said. “That’s the future of Iran. Those women are the future of Iran. They are the opposition to this regime.”Watch the full conversation now on YouTube, or listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and wherever you get your podcasts.#iran #iranian #womanlifefreedom #podcast #youtube #shorts #news #irannews #1953coup #islamicrepublic #iranprotests
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Israel now calls the shots on Iran as US steps back, ex-negotiator says | Eye for Iran | EP 64 |
Alan Eyre, who served as an Iran nuclear negotiator under Barack Obama, says the Trump administration has effectively ceded control of the Iran portfolio to Israel following joint strikes on Tehran’s nuclear facilities — a shift he warns could fuel a more dangerous phase, with 400 kilograms of enriched uranium still unaccounted for and Iran’s weakened leadership more resolved to go nuclear.Watch this week’s episode on YouTube or listen on any major podcast platform.#iran #israel #NuclearDeal #IranNuclearProgram #JCPOA #12DayWar#IsraelIran #MiddleEastPolitics #USForeignPolicy #TrumpIranPolicy #EyeForIran #AlanEyre #Diplomacy #Geopolitics #InternationalRelations #news #podcast #shorts #youttube
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61
Iran regime change 'a matter of when not if', ex-US official says | Eye for Iran | EP 63 |
Former US State Department official Len Khodorkovsky tells Eye for Iran that Tehran’s newly activated National Defense Council is “pure theater” — a desperate bid to project strength as the Islamic Republic faces collapse. Comparing the move to “rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic,” he says Iran’s downfall is inevitable and only a matter of time. Watch the full interview on YouTube or listen on your favorite podcast platform for in-depth Middle East analysis.#iran #war #podcast #trump #us #usa #trump #israel #news #middleeast #politics ##LenKhodorkovsky #usiranrelations
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60
Iran’s water crisis is real and deliberately engineered, says climatologist | Eye for Iran | EP 62 |
Taps are dry. Water barely reaches the second floor. Families endure days without water in brutal summer heat—while the Iranian government holds the solution.In this week's episode of Eye for Iran, climatologist Dr. Nasser Karami exposes how Iran’s water crisis is not just environmental—it’s political. While officials warn that Tehran could run out of water within weeks, Karami explains this is a crisis deliberately engineered by the state to shift the burden of rising costs onto the public.Iran has water. But in summer—when delivering it is more expensive—the government deliberately limits access while keeping the consumer price unchanged, according to Karami. He calls it an “engineered drought”: a policy of fear and austerity designed to reduce demand without investing in long-term solutions.Instead of fixing broken infrastructure or reallocating just a fraction of the 90% of national water diverted to military-run agriculture, officials exaggerate shortages to justify inaction. Meanwhile, elite institutions like the Revolutionary Guards enjoy uninterrupted supply, while ordinary Iranians—especially in poorer regions—suffer inequality, forced migration, and ecological collapse.This is not simply about drought or climate. It's about manipulation, mismanagement, and monetizing scarcity at the public’s expense.You can watch the full episode on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing.#water #iran #climatechange #iranian #podcast #news #shorts #youtube #iraninternational
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59
Israel’s strikes may be helping Iran regain power in Syria, expert warns | Eye for Iran | EP 61 |
Israel says its strikes in Syria are meant to protect the country’s Druze minority—but they may be creating an opening for Iran. University of Ottawa professor and former Canadian defense analyst Thomas Juneau warns that by weakening Syria’s fragile central government, Israel risks reviving Tehran’s old influence networks tied to the fallen Assad regime. “They are not all dead,” he told Eye for Iran. “Iran is already thinking about concrete plans to rebuild.” With over 1,100 dead in sectarian clashes and a shaky US- and Turkey-brokered ceasefire in place, Tehran appears poised to exploit the unrest.Watch this week’s episode of Eye for Iran on YouTube or listen on any major podcast platform.#iran #syria #israel #druze #arabs #trump #turkey #ceasefire #youtube #shorts #news #podcastclips #iranian
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
From Iran International comes the 'Eye for Iran' podcast, a weekly show that will take listeners beyond the headlines, deep into the Iran stories that matter most. With compelling interviews, expert analysis and high impact investigations, host Negar Mojtahedi examines the latest developments in and around Iran.
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