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Israel accuses Iran of directing Hezbollah attacks

Mar 11, 2026, 17:36 GMT

Israel told the UN Security Council it is conducting strikes in Lebanon to stop attacks by Hezbollah, which it said has fired hundreds of rockets, missiles and drones at Israeli communities since early March.

Israeli Ambassador Danny Danon accused Iran of funding and directing Hezbollah, describing the group as a proxy operating in violation of UN Security Council Resolution 1701.

He warned Israel would continue military operations if Lebanese authorities do not curb Hezbollah’s activities.

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A leader no one has seen: The unusual debut of Mojtaba Khamenei
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US backs Israel’s right to defend itself against Hezbollah and Iran

Mar 11, 2026, 17:34 GMT

The United States told the UN Security Council it strongly condemns attacks by Hezbollah against Israel and supports Israel’s right to defend itself.

US Ambassador Michael Waltz described Hezbollah as a proxy of Iran that does not represent the interests of the Lebanese people and referred to Iran as the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism.

He welcomed the Lebanese government’s March 2 decision to ban Hezbollah’s military activities and urged Lebanese authorities to fully implement the decision and reassert state authority across the country.

Russia blames US-Israeli strikes on Iran for regional escalation

Mar 11, 2026, 17:32 GMT

Russia told the UN Security Council that the violence in Lebanon is tied to broader regional escalation following US and Israeli strikes on Iran.

Deputy Permanent Representative Anna Evstigneeva said the military actions by the United States and Israel were pushing the Middle East deeper into instability.

She also condemned attacks on civilian and diplomatic sites and warned they risk further destabilizing the region.

Iran strike on US base in Kuwait worse than known - CBS

Mar 11, 2026, 17:23 GMT

An Iranian drone strike in Kuwait that killed six US service members in the early hours of the war caused far greater casualties than initially disclosed, with dozens suffering injuries including traumatic brain injuries, shrapnel wounds and burns, multiple sources told CBS News.

At least one service member may require an amputation.

Sources described a chaotic scene after the March 1 strike on a tactical operations center at Shuaiba port outside Kuwait City, where smoke quickly filled the building and complicated rescue efforts.

More than 30 service members remained hospitalized Tuesday night with battle injuries from the attack, sources said.

Israeli drones targeted checkpoints in Tehran - IRGC-affiliated Fars News

Mar 11, 2026, 17:00 GMT

Drones launched by Israel targeted checkpoints in Tehran on Wednesday and were tracked by Iran’s air defenses, IRGC-affiliated Fars News reported.

Fars said unconfirmed reports indicated one of the drones failed during an operation in northeast Tehran.

The drones were aimed at disrupting security measures in the city, including neighborhood checkpoints, the report added.

System over leader: Tehran broadcasts stability in wartime

Mar 11, 2026, 16:59 GMT
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Behrouz Turani

Iran’s state media has moved quickly to frame the leadership transition not as a rupture but as proof of institutional resilience, shifting its messaging from wartime urgency to carefully managed continuity.

Following the death of Ali Khamenei and the elevation of Mojtaba Khamenei, the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) emphasized that the state—not any individual—is the true source of stability.

IRIB’s rolling news channel, IRINN, repeatedly declared: “The Islamic Republic of Iran is not dependent on a single individual. It is a system based on the rule of law and divine values.”

After the Assembly of Experts named Mojtaba leader on March 9, state television pivoted to stressing the decisiveness of the vote.

Despite reports of clerical unease about the process, IRIB described the outcome as reflecting an 85 percent consensus and presented it as both legally sound and religiously sanctioned.

Broadcasts featured pledges of allegiance from the Revolutionary Guards, the military, the diplomatic corps and even the national football team as evidence of unified support.

Because the transition unfolded during an active conflict with Israel and the United States, state television fused the succession narrative with imagery of military strength.

Shortly after Mojtaba’s appointment, IRIB aired footage of missile launches toward Israel under the caption: “At your command, Sayyid Mojtaba,” invoking both his lineage and his role as wartime commander-in-chief.

The messaging aligned with broader official rhetoric, with security chief Ali Larijani and parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf both rejecting calls for a ceasefire and signaling that Iran would continue strikes.

These narratives circulated even as Mojtaba himself remained absent from public view. His silence fueled speculation about his condition, with some commentators drawing religious analogies to the occultation of the 12th Imam, while others circulated unverified claims about his whereabouts.

At home, the messaging has been accompanied by tighter control. Iran’s police chief warned that anyone taking to the streets after encouragement from US and Israeli leaders would be treated as an “enemy” rather than a civilian protester—a signal that the space for dissent is narrowing further under wartime conditions.

References to dissent or worsening economic conditions have meanwhile largely disappeared from state coverage.

Skepticism about the hereditary nature of the succession has been framed as foreign psychological warfare, while relatively small pro-government gatherings are presented as signs of broad public enthusiasm.

For now, the message is clear: continuity over disruption, system over individual. But the carefully managed narrative also reflects the pressures facing the leadership at a moment of unusual uncertainty.