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Unmasking the shadows in Iran
Post
|January 21, 2026
RECENT events in Iran, marked by widespread protests and internal strife, have once again placed the Islamic Republic under the global spotlight.
IRANIAN Americans hold a rally and vigil in honour of the thousands of protesters killed in Iran and to call on policymakers to support the people of the country, outside the White House in Washington, DC. | SAUL LOEB AFP
(SAUL LOEB AFP)
While mainstream media often focuses on the narrative of civilian-led demonstrations, a provocative online exchange, highlighted by Dorothy Lennon, has pulled back the curtain on a far more realistic and potentially destabilising narrative.
This narrative is further complicated by emerging claims of direct technological warfare and a fiercely contested account of the protests’ nature, bringing into sharper focus the tension and the threat of a “pending war” that has long shadowed US-Iran relations, one which is, currently, typified by US sanctions which are weaponised to create favourable trade agreements for American interests. Years of sanctions have devastated the economy of Iran.
Lennon’s observation zeroes in on a critical moment as the protests began. Mike Pompeo's tweet, which seemed to imply Mossad involvement alongside Iranian protesters, wasn’t merely a political jab from a former CIA director.
It carried the weight of someone familiar with international espionage. Adding to this, a Farsi-language X account linked to Mossad openly urged Iranians to demonstrate, claiming its agents were “with the crowds”. The Israeli media was surprisingly honest about Israeli involvement in various articles, and clearly, they do not fear accountability.
These revelations suggest active, on-the-ground participation by external forces.
The Iranian government’s response to these protests and the alleged foreign intervention has been brutal and severe.
Officials, including Professor Seyed Mohammad Marandi, have presented a starkly different account from Western media reports.
This story is from the January 21, 2026 edition of Post.
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