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https://twitter.com/MOSSADil/status/1792378635212534102
1 posted on 05/19/2024 9:32:51 PM PDT by know.your.why
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To: know.your.why
Unconfirmed reports of the assassination of the commander-in-chief of the Iranian police. Was shot 7 times.

SEVEN is a lucky number, doncha know!
98 posted on 05/20/2024 8:02:40 AM PDT by BigEdLB
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To: know.your.why

Allahu Akbar


107 posted on 05/20/2024 9:20:24 AM PDT by coalminersson
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To: know.your.why

I’ll believe it when I see it

Overthrowing the Islamic republic of Iran is a very tall order

And extremely and I mean extremely risky


111 posted on 05/20/2024 10:10:29 AM PDT by wardaddy (. A disease in the public mind we’re enduring…Alina Habba is fine as grits I'd drink her bathwater)
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To: know.your.why

Biden sends his condolences.


123 posted on 05/20/2024 11:32:52 PM PDT by Alvin Diogenes
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To: know.your.why

Shot seven times? In D.C. and Little Rock they call that a “suicide.”


128 posted on 05/21/2024 3:04:51 AM PDT by noiseman (The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.)
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To: know.your.why

https://x.com/Salwan_Momika1/status/1792306231010300226


129 posted on 05/21/2024 4:22:55 AM PDT by Doctor Congo
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To: know.your.why

The chief of #Iranian Police Ahmad-Reza Radan has been assassinated with 7 bullets hit on his body.

He was behind the murder of hundreds of innocent civilians in #Iran in recent clashes.

https://x.com/dahrinoor2/status/1792412109734850852?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Etweet


130 posted on 05/21/2024 4:30:08 AM PDT by Doctor Congo
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To: know.your.why

EXCERPT:

These reports document several instances in which Iran has lent support to Al-Qaeda, enabling the group to conduct attacks more effectively and avoid US and coalition counter- terrorism efforts. Nevertheless, distrust between Tehran and the group’s members also appears to have prevented the two sides from developing a closer working relationship. Documents recovered during the raid on Osama bin Laden’s Abbottabad compound in Pakistan in May 2011 show the relationship was “fraught with difficulties,” as described by the Combating Terrorism Center (CTC) report Letters from Abbottabad: Bin Laden Sidelined published on 3 May 2012. According to the report, “references to Iran [in the documents] show that the relationship is not one of alliance, but of indirect and unpleasant negotiations over the release of detained jihadis and their families, including members of Bin Laden’s family. The detention of prominent Al-Qaeda members seems to have sparked a campaign of threats, taking hostages and indirect negotiations between Al- Qaeda and Iran that have been drawn out for years and may still be ongoing.”

Link: https://www.brookings.edu/articles/unlikely-alliance-irans-secretive-relationship-with-al-qaeda/


135 posted on 05/21/2024 6:29:03 AM PDT by Fitzy_888 ("ownership society")
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To: know.your.why

Explainer: Who is Ahmad Reza Radan, Iran’s new police chief with a brutal past?
16 January, 2023

After over 35 years of service, Brigadier General Ahmad Reza Radan could retire now, but his brutality in muffling dissidents and his unconditional allegiance to Iran’s supreme leader assisted him in becoming the country’s new police chief.

In the early 2000s, when the “Islamic Morality Police” was established, Brigadier General Ahmad Reza Radan was one of the leading defenders of this special division and openly supported the arrest of women who did not follow the obligatory hijab. In 2007, he ordered the police to arrest “boys” with what he called “perverted hairstyle”, and during the 2009 uprising, his forces demonstrated a new level of brutality by killing protestors. In 2011, he banned the physicians and specialists practising in private health centres from putting on ties.

Now, he is back again.

On 7 January, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei appointed Ahmad Reza Radan as Iran’s new police chief. Before his return to an operational post, he remained on the margins for eight years, directing Iran’s police research bureau. At a crucial time in Iran’s post-revolution history, he gained full power to lead the country’s infamous police.

Radan is the police commander to whom, in a 2008 live TV program, the presenter said, “There is no one who sees you and is not scared of you”.

The return of the man of terror

On 16 September, following the 22-year-old Mahsa Amini’s death while in “Islamic morality police” custody, most Iranian cities were rocked by anti-establishment demonstrations. The protests began with opposition to the obligatory hijab and rapidly developed into nationwide demonstrations in which ordinary citizens chanted “down with Khamenei”.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the intelligence organizations, paramilitary Basij troops and the official police forces came together to contain the demonstrations. As a result, ordinary people paid a considerable price: at least 481 were killed, four demonstrators were hung, about 20,000 were arrested, and thousands were injured.

After four months, the authority suppressed the demonstrations in most major cities, however, the hijab law has been widely contested as many Iranian women appeared in public without covering their hair.

In response, the officials vowed to fully implement the hijab law again. On 10 January, Abdol Samad Khorram Abadia, a Deputy Prosecutor General, in an official order, urged the police and judiciary officials to “severely fight against those removing their hijab”.

This new development in Iran explains why the 60-year-old Brigadier General Radan is back in power in the police force; a man with ultra-right political ideas and a long-lasting desire to implement Islamic Sharia law as strictly as possible.

Like most high-ranking officials in Iran, Radan is an IRGC member. However, before joining the elite forces, he first became a member of the paramilitary Basij troops. Basij is Iran’s plain-cloth force being deployed for operations that the IRGC or other official troops prefer to refrain from visibly engaging with.

From paramilitary to police force

Radan joined the Basij forces in the conservative city of Isfahan in central Iran in 1981 when he was only 17. For 18 months, he was assigned to the southeastern province of Sistan-o Baluchistan and then was sent to the Kurdish city of Saqqez. In Kurdistan, he began his service as an assistant operator launching rocket-propelled grenades (RPG). The young Radan shone among the volunteer forces in the Basij and was permitted to join the rank of IRGC cadres.

Until the end of the Iran-Iraq war, he served in the Kurdistan province, where the IRGC was accused of killing civilian Iranian Kurds. There he shone again, and by the end of the war, he was one of the middle-ranking trusted commanders in the elite force, and when the reformist came to power in 1997, many IRGC forces like Radan were assigned to the police force.

At that time, the police played a vital role in the power struggle between the reformists, seeking more socio-political freedom, and the Supreme Leader, attempting to secure his iron grip on power. On paper, Iran’s police force is under the interior minister’s command. However, the police chief is directly appointed by the Supreme Leader.

During those critical years (1998-2005), Radan served as provincial police chief in Kurdistan and Sistan-o Baluchistan, two provinces where the police and security forces have harshly suppressed religious and ethnic minority groups since the 1979 revolution.

In 2006, Radan finally won the centre of attention by being appointed as the police chief in the capital Tehran. He equipped the morality police with new vans and gave the division full power to arrest women with what they considered “not a proper hijab”. At this post, he stood out again and was awarded a higher position: Iran’s deputy police chief.

One year after his appointment to the new post, the 2009 Green Movement erupted, and Iranians organised protests in most major cities urging the then-president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to be ousted.

That was when Radan demonstrated his ability to brutally crackdown on social movements. The death in custody of three male protestors in Kahrizak detention centre happened during this time. On the streets, special police forces, along with the IRGC cadres and Basij paramilitaries, were shooting at and arresting protestors. Because of his role in suppressing protests in 2009 and 2010, the US and EU added him to the list of Iranians under international sanctions.

That reputation was not good for the nuclear talks Iran began under moderate then-president Hassan Ruhani’s leadership. So Radan was moved to the shadows for eight years. But now it is his turn again.

When he was the head of the police research centre, in an interview, Radan revealed his desire to implement strict Sharia law: “If some [officials] had not disrupted the hijab law implementation, I believe we could have changed people’s taste; we had to push a bit more ... and those [officials] who did not let us do that will be held to account on the day of the hereafter.”

Link: https://www.newarab.com/news/explainer-who-ahmad-reza-radan-irans-new-police-chief?amp


136 posted on 05/21/2024 7:07:55 AM PDT by Fitzy_888 ("ownership society")
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To: know.your.why

LMAO....

I guess at this point...latterly everybody and everything has a twitter account.

Did anyone check to see if Elvis is tweeting? (he’s probably voting too)


148 posted on 05/22/2024 12:15:33 PM PDT by suasponte137
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To: know.your.why

Seven times? Takes a lot to kill a demon!


151 posted on 05/23/2024 11:02:20 AM PDT by BigEdLB
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