13 Basij members killed in Tabriz checkpoint attack
13 Basij members were killed and 18 others wounded in an attack on a checkpoint in Tabriz on Thursday evening, the Revolutionary Guards in East Azarbaijan province said.
Officials said the death toll could rise following the attack in the city’s Qaramalek area.
13 Basij members killed in Tabriz checkpoint attack | Iran International
New explosions and fighter jet activity were reported across several Iranian cities around midday Friday.
Witness reports showed jet activity over Nurabad Mamasani, while explosions and flashes were seen in Yazd and a blast was heard in Bushehr. Reports also pointed to strikes on an airbase in Bandar Abbas, with four large explosions heard.
In Semnan, locations including a Basij base and an IRGC site were reported hit, while an area near Shahmirzad was also targeted. Separate reports said the Chamran missile site in Bushehr province’s Jam county was bombed around noon.
The Israeli military said it killed Revolutionary Guards spokesperson Ali Mohammad Naini in an overnight airstrike, following intelligence gathered by its Military Intelligence Directorate.
“Naini disseminated the regime’s terrorist propaganda to its proxies across the Middle East,” the military said, describing him as a central figure in messaging tied to attacks against Israel. Iranian state media had earlier reported his death.
Israel’s President Isaac Herzog extended Nowruz greetings to the people of Iran, praising their “dignity and longing for freedom” and expressing hope for a better future.
“You, the people of Iran, deserve better. You deserve a different future,” Herzog said in a Friday video message, adding he hopes both nations will one day “celebrate Nowruz together again” in a spirit of cooperation and peace.
A message attributed to Iran's Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei called for stripping security from domestic and foreign enemies, following the killing of Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib.
The Telegram post urged officials to step up efforts and fill the gap left by Khatib.
The message was published as no verified image or video of Mojtaba Khamenei has been released since he was introduced as the Islamic Republic’s new leader, with speculation circulating that he may have been killed, wounded or severely disfigured in US and Israeli strikes.
A meeting of senior Iranian officials that was hit by an Israeli airstrike on February 28 may have been linked to the Islamic Republic’s final deliberations over building a nuclear weapon.
On the last day of February, as reports emerged that Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei had been killed in an Israeli bombardment, it was also announced that a meeting of the Defense Council had been struck.
Several senior figures were killed in the strike, the Israeli military confirmed on March 16.
Among those killed were Ali Shamkhani, a senior adviser to Khamenei and secretary of the Defense Council; Abdolrahim Mousavi, chief of staff of Iran’s armed forces; and Aziz Nasirzadeh, the defense minister.
Also killed were two figures associated with Iran’s Organization of Defensive Innovation and Research, known by its Persian acronym SPND, the direct successor organization to Iran’s pre-2004 nuclear weapons program.
The two figures were former SPND chief Brigadier General Reza Mozaffarinia and the organization’s new head Brigadier General Hossein Jabal Ameli.
Washington has sanctioned more than 30 SPND scientists and multiple affiliated entities, accusing the organization of overseeing “dual-use research and development activities applicable to nuclear weapons and nuclear weapons delivery systems.”
While Tehran denies pursuing a nuclear weapon, the UN nuclear watchdog and Western powers including the US and its European allies maintain that Iran's high-level uranium enrichment (up to 60%) has no credible civilian justification.
Iran currently possesses some 400 kg of near-bomb-grade enriched uranium. The US and Israel have in recent days discussed sending special forces into Iran to secure the stockpile at a later stage of the war, according to a report by Axios.
US War Secretary Pete Hegseth said Thursday that President Trump saw Iran advancing ever closer to nuclear capability and viewed it as unacceptable, prompting his decision to launch the war against Tehran.
Why A-bomb was focus of Defense Council meeting
There are four reasons suggesting the meeting of the Defense Council was likely related to the final stage of decision-making on constructing a nuclear weapon.
First, the composition of the gathering is a key indicator. The simultaneous presence of two former and current SPND chiefs alongside the defense minister — their superior — suggests the meeting concerned nuclear matters rather than battlefield operations. If the session had been focused on the war itself, senior operational or battlefield commanders would have been expected to attend instead of officials tied to the nuclear weapons industry.
Second, Ali Shamkhani had publicly spoken about nuclear weapons months earlier. Four months before his reported death, he said in an interview that if he could go back in time during his tenure as defense minister, he would build an atomic bomb.
Third, Shamkhani’s roles placed him at the center of coordination between multiple institutions. As Khamenei’s senior adviser and secretary of the Defense Council, as well as a former defense minister, he maintained extensive ties with officials within the ministry, including the department responsible for special weapons development, SPND.
He was also described as a senior commander overseeing Revolutionary Guard officers involved in nuclear weapons development and as the link between these networks and Khamenei himself.
Fourth, in one of his final public remarks, Shamkhani told Lebanon’s Al-Mayadeen television that a war with the United States and Israel was inevitable and that the Islamic Republic needed to prepare for it.
Taken together, these elements may indicate that the meeting struck in the bombardment may have been connected to the final stage of decision-making regarding nuclear weapons development.
It is unknown whether Israel was aware that the gathering concerned possible deliberations over building a nuclear weapon, or whether it targeted the meeting simply because senior Iranian officials were known to be present.