Pezeshkian’s deputies urge restraint on criticism amid ‘wartime’ conditions
Two senior members of President Masoud Pezeshkian’s administration urged officials and citizens to refrain from public criticism of the government, describing Iran’s current economic and political situation as “wartime conditions.”
First Vice President Mohammad Reza Aref said on Sunday that criticism of the government’s performance was serving the enemy. Speaking at a meeting of the Market Regulation Headquarters, Aref accused outside actors of spreading “malicious and misleading analyses” following the recent 12-day conflict, which he said were being echoed domestically.
Iran’s Chamber of Commerce in September projected a worst-case scenario of a 60% currency plunge, inflation at 75%, and unemployment at 14% in the coming months.
Responding to growing discontent over the government’s handling of poverty and rising living costs, Aref said supervisory and economic institutions must “avoid giving excuses to the enemy” and “not dishearten the public.” He warned officials against airing internal disagreements in public, adding that “there is no need for officials to discuss disputes at podiums; such issues should be resolved in meetings.”
Officials defend government amid rising hardship
President Pezeshkian last week acknowledged that his administration’s economic policies were contributing to inflation, saying, “We are creating inflation. We are sleeping on gold, yet the people are hungry.” His remarks drew criticism from Javan, a newspaper affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, which urged the president to address inequality instead of “repeating the word hunger.”
Mounting inflation, shrinking household purchasing power, and soaring living costs have deepened public frustration, exacerbated by the reactivation of the UN’s snapback sanctions mechanism against Iran.
Mohammad Jafar Ghaempanah, Pezeshkian’s executive deputy, also described the current situation as wartime on Sunday. Rising sanctions, he said, meant “the country must be evaluated in exceptional, not normal, circumstances.”
“Parliament members have the right to criticize the government,” Ghaempanah said. “But this is not the time to question how the country is being managed.”
Their remarks came amid intensifying domestic criticism over economic hardship, while Iranian officials continue to stress the need for “internal cohesion” against what they call a “hybrid war.”
A shortage of qualified nurses has left some hospital units unopened, Iran’s nursing chief said on Monday, warning that high living costs in Tehran have discouraged recruits from taking vacant posts in the capital.
The country faces a shortfall of at least 100,000 nurses, a deficit that has increased workloads, extended shifts, and contributed to staff burnout and lower patient satisfaction, Ahmad Nejatian, head of the Iranian Nursing Organization told Tasnim. Many nurses work compulsory overtime to compensate for missing staff, he said.
“Some hospitals in Tehran have wards ready to open, but they remain closed because there are not enough nurses,” Nejatian said. “Even when recruitment exams are held, a number of positions remain vacant because housing costs in Tehran make living in the capital unaffordable for nurses.”
Iran’s nurse-to-patient ratio, according to the Ministry of Health, remains far below international standards. The gap, Nejatian said, stems not only from limited funding but also from outdated staffing frameworks that do not reflect the actual number of active hospital beds.
Housing costs and retention challenges
Around 70 percent of nurses in Iran are women, most aged between 30 and 35, balancing work with family responsibilities, Nejatian said. Current regulations prevent hospitals from hiring temporary replacements for staff on maternity leave, placing added pressure on remaining personnel.
Offering incentives, he added, could help retain nurses in major cities. “Building dormitories or hostels alone won’t solve the problem,” he said. “We need a comprehensive plan that includes housing support and financial incentives similar to those used to attract staff to remote regions.”
Iran’s nurse-to-population ratio remains critically low – about 1.3 to 1.6 per 1,000 people – well below international standards. The shortage is worsened by excessive workloads, delayed or insufficient pay, insecure employment, short-term contracts, and the growing exodus of skilled nurses seeking better opportunities abroad. The impact is already visible, with some hospitals forced to shut down intensive care and emergency units due to a lack of qualified staff.
Gaza ceasefire talks advanced largely because Tehran was excluded, Republican Senator Tommy Tuberville told Iran International, urging the Trump administration to focus on reviving Israel normalization deals instead of engaging in negotiations with Iran.
During Donald Trump’s presidency, Tuberville argued, Iran had little sway over events in Gaza, and that US diplomacy was more effective because the White House avoided direct engagement with Tehran on the issue.
“Iran is non-relevant right now,” he said. “As President Trump said – they weren’t. There was no negotiation.”
Speaking on Capitol Hill, the Republican senator praised Qatar and Turkey for their roles in clinching the Gaza peace agreement but said efforts to end the Israel-Palestine conflict should not rely on temporary truces.
“In the Middle East, between Hamas and Israel -- obviously we’ve fought for 2,000 years,” Tuberville said. “We’re not going to solve it in a week with just one ceasefire and a peace deal.”
Under a US-brokered truce, Hamas was required to release the final 20 living Israeli hostages within 72 hours of Israel’s withdrawal on October 10, a condition it met, and to provide the remains or details of all those killed within the same timeframe.
Hamas failed to meet that latter condition, later handing over 15 of 28 deceased hostages. Israel has accused the group of deliberately withholding the remains of others believed to be in its custody.
Iran has long supported Hamas with funding, weapons, and training, positioning the group as part of what Tehran calls its “axis of resistance” against Israel and Western influence.
Tuberville said restoring the Abraham Accords - Trump-brokered normalization deals between Israel and Arab countries - should be a key regional priority.
“Maybe we can get the Abraham Accords back intact,” he said. “I think that’s going to be a big deal — but it’s a mess.”
Last month, Trump expressed hope that even Iran would join the Abraham Accords.
"Who knows maybe even Iran can get in there, we expect, we hope we are going to be able to get along with Iran. I think they're going to be open to it, I really believe that" Trump told reporters in late September.
"I long ago said at one point Iran would be a member of the accords. And little did I realize it was going to take this turn. It was some turn we did with the B-2s."
"I think they might very well be there, it would be a great thing for them economically."
Land subsidence driven by decades of groundwater over-extraction is emerging as a direct threat to some of Iran’s most treasured heritage sites, including Persepolis, Naqsh-e Jahan Square and the Tomb of Cyrus, Iranian scientists and officials say.
Geologists cited by Tasnim news agency said subsidence has accelerated across provinces such as Isfahan, Fars and Tehran, with field observations of cracks, surface fissures and foundation instability near historic structures.
“Nearly half of Iran’s valuable historic fabric lies in subsidence-prone zones,” geologist Ali Shahbaz was quoted as saying, adding that “63 nationally registered monuments and 27 world-class sites” are in affected areas.
In Isfahan, the long-dry Zayandehrud river has been linked to ground settlement of roughly 16-25 cm a year in the city’s north, raising stability concerns for Naqsh-e Jahan Square, the Shah and Sheikh Lotfollah mosques, and the Safavid-era Si-o-se-Pol and Khajou bridges, Tasnim reported.
In Fars province, subsidence in the Marvdasht plain -- estimated around 14 cm a year -- has prompted warnings about drainage systems and stone platforms at Persepolis and potential long-term risks to the Tomb of Cyrus at Pasargadae and the rock-cut tombs of Naqsh-e Rostam.
The concerns come amid broader alarms over nationwide land-subsidence.
Tasnim, citing official tallies, said 380 cities and about 9,000 villages have reported some level of subsidence, with roughly 42 million people living on sinking ground.
Iran’s Geological Survey says two decades of drought and sustained over-pumping, compounded by fragmented water governance, have pushed 106 plains into non-recoverable subsidence.
Cultural-heritage specialists stress there is no immediate risk of collapse at marquee sites, but warn that cumulative deformation, coupled with drying soils and sporadic heavy rains, could inflict irreversible damage over years to decades.
“No site is on the brink today,” Shahbaz said. “But without curbing withdrawals and restoring groundwater, we are setting the stage for losses that cannot be repaired.”
Israel’s Mossad identified a senior Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) commander it says directed a series of thwarted attacks on Israeli and Jewish targets across multiple countries, exposing what it called a years-long Iranian campaign of global terrorism.
The Mossad named Sardar Ammar, a senior Quds Force officer operating under commander Esmail Ghaani, as the leader of a network responsible for planned operations in Australia, Greece, and Germany during 2024-2025, a statement released via the prime minister’s office on behalf of the Mossad said on Sunday.
The Mossad described the network’s methods as “terror without Iranian fingerprints,” using foreign recruits, criminal intermediaries, and covert communications to conceal Tehran’s role.
“Thanks to intensive activity with partners in Israel and abroad, dozens of attack tracks were thwarted, saving many lives,” the statement said.
Commander Ammar (upper left), and other prominent commanders from the IRGC’s Quds Force in a diagram published by Mossad
In August, Australia expelled Iranian Ambassador Ahmad Sadeghi and announced plans to designate the IRGC as a terrorist organization, after intelligence linked Tehran to antisemitic arson attacks in Melbourne and Sydney. Sadeghi denied the allegations upon his departure.
In Germany, authorities summoned Iran’s ambassador, Majid Nili Ahmadabadi, in July after the arrest of a Danish suspect accused of spying on Jewish and Israeli-linked sites in Berlin for Iranian intelligence. German officials said the surveillance could have been preparatory to terrorist attacks.
Iran’s covert campaign and regional reach
The Mossad accused Iran of pursuing a long-term strategy “to harm innocents around the globe while maintaining deniability,” but said the recent revelations “strip Iran of its space for denial and impose heavy diplomatic costs.”
The statement cited earlier cases in Greece as part of the same pattern. In 2024, Greek police arrested suspects, including Iranian and Afghan nationals, over arson attacks on an Israeli-owned hotel and a synagogue in Athens.
A year earlier, two Pakistani men were charged with plotting attacks on Israeli and Jewish sites in the city under Iranian direction.
The dismantling of Ammar’s network and the resulting diplomatic pressure, the Mossad said, marked a significant blow to Iran’s covert operations abroad, demonstrating what it called the Islamic Republic’s “repeated operational failures and growing international isolation.”
Three Turkish nationals have been charged in Israel with attempting to smuggle firearms into the country from Iran through Jordan, in what prosecutors describe as part of a wider Iranian effort to arm militants inside Israel.
The State Attorney’s Office filed the indictment on Sunday at the Nazareth District Court against Rahman Gokayer, Younes Ozel, and Oktay Asci, accusing them of illegal entry, weapons trafficking, and ties to foreign arms dealers. Asci also faces a charge of aiding terrorist activities.
Gokayer and Asci traveled from Turkey to Saudi Arabia and then to Jordan in September 2025, where they agreed to infiltrate Israel and smuggle three handguns supplied by Iranian intermediaries, according to the indictment.
The plan was later abandoned after internal disagreements, but the two crossed illegally near Kibbutz Shaar HaGolan.
Asci had previously lived in Israel without a permit for more than two years before being deported in July 2025. During that period, prosecutors say, he obtained a firearm in Bat Yam, buried it near his apartment, and later handed it to an unidentified individual.
After his deportation, Asci maintained contact with Gokayer and Iranian brokers through Turkish intermediaries, planning to route guns from Iran to Jordan and into Israel via Palestinian laborers. Gokayer’s role was to collect the weapons, transfer them to others, and manage the proceeds, for a promised payment of one million dollars.
“The plan was to transport the guns to Jordan and smuggle them into Israel using workers crossing the border. Gokair was supposed to receive the guns and transfer them to other parties and collect the money from the transactions. For his role in the smuggling network, Gokair was promised a payment of $1 million,” reads the indictment.
Ozel, already in Israel, was told to complete a weapons deal in Tel Aviv but twice left empty-handed. Prosecutors say he kept 5,000 shekels from the funds meant for the transaction. All three men remain in custody.
Iranian smuggling networks foiled
Earlier this month, Israel’s Shin Bet security agency said it had thwarted a major Iranian attempt to move a cache of advanced weapons into the West Bank for planned attacks. The haul included explosive devices, drones, anti-tank weapons, grenades, rifles, and ammunition.
An image of Iranian weapons seized in the West Bank, released by Shin Bet on October 8, 2025.
Shin Bet traced the operation to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, involving Unit 400 under Javad Ghafari and Unit 18840 in Syria, which reports to Asghar Bakri, head of the covert Unit 840. Two IRGC operatives killed in Israeli strikes in Lebanon in July -- Salah al-Husseini and Muhammad Shuayb -- were also involved.
Iran is pursuing a broader strategy to arm groups in the West Bank to attack Israeli civilians and forces, the agency said.
In March 2024, Shin Bet and the Israel Defense Forces intercepted another Iranian arms shipment that included grenade launchers, explosives, mines, and assault rifles.