Funeral processions for the slain commanders and scientists will begin at 8 a.m. Saturday, starting at Tehran’s central Enghelab Square and ending at Azadi Square, the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps said.
Commander Mohammad Bagheri will be buried in Behesht-e Zahra cemetery in southern Tehran, the IRGC said.
The remains of former IRGC chief Hossein Salami and several nuclear scientists will be interred at the shrine of Imamzadeh Saleh in northern Tehran near Tajrish Square.
Former Guards’ Aerospace commander Amir-Ali Hajizadeh will be buried in Behesht-e Zahra among the graves of slain Quds Force personnel.
Mohammad-Mehdi Tehranchi, a nuclear physicist, will be buried at the shrine of Shah Abdol-Azim in Rey, south of Tehran.
Allowing IAEA inspectors into Iran now amounts to espionage, Iranian former lawmaker Ali Motahari said Thursday, following the official enactment of a law mandating suspension of cooperation with the nuclear watchdog.
“The entry of inspectors into Iran under current conditions is nothing but an act of spying,” said Motahari, a supporter of the law.
His remarks came as Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov urged continued Iranian cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency.

Iran’s exiled prince Reza Pahlavi on Thursday urged Iranians to engage in civil disobedience to bring down the Islamic Republic, saying the state had sharply weakened in recent weeks.
“The regime is trying to intimidate and demoralize you. The truth is that the Islamic Republic has grown dozens of times weaker over the past two weeks, while we are stronger and more prepared than ever,” Pahlavi said in a video message.
In this message, Pahlavi framed the moment as ripe for mass, coordinated disobedience.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on Thursday called on Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev to investigate reports that Israeli drones may have entered Iranian airspace via Azerbaijani territory during the recent conflict with Israel.
In a phone call, Pezeshkian stressed the need for verification of claims that drones and micro-UAVs linked to Israel crossed into Iran from Azerbaijan.
According to Iran’s readout of the call, Aliyev denied reports that Azerbaijan allowed its airspace to be used in attacks against Iran.
The Pentagon disclosed new details about the US operation that struck Iran’s deeply buried nuclear facility at Fordow, describing it as the culmination of 15 years of classified planning and weapons development to overcome one of the most fortified sites in the world.
General Dan Caine, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Operation Midnight Hammer was enabled by breakthrough munitions technology that allowed six precision weapons to penetrate Iran’s underground nuclear mission center, exploiting vulnerabilities in its ventilation shafts.
According to Caine, US intelligence had tracked Iran’s recent efforts to conceal the shafts by pouring concrete caps over them—an attempt thwarted when the first US weapon shattered the barrier. The subsequent strikes, traveling at speeds of 1,000 feet per second, delivered a combination of explosive force and overpressure that “neutralized” the target.

The mission was initiated over a decade ago by an officer from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) who, upon identifying Fordow as a hard target, recognized that the US lacked the weaponry to effectively reach it.
“I spoke to the two DTRA officers who lived this single target for over a decade,” Caine said. “Their hearts were filled with pride to be part of this.”
Following the Fordow strike, Iran retaliated with a barrage of missiles aimed at US and allied targets in the Persian Gulf. At Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, 44 American service members fended off the attack in what Caine called “the single largest Patriot missile engagement in US history.”
“They had two minutes to succeed or fail,” Caine said. “They absolutely crushed it.”

All foreign internet access should be tightly restricted for several months as the war with Israel continues, Hardline Iranian official Mohammad-Javad Larijani said Thursday.
“We must abandon open-internet posturing,” said the head of the Institute for Research in Fundamental Sciences.
While domestic connectivity and business access should be facilitated, Iran’s national intranet must impose “complete control, limitations, and oversight” over international links, he added.






