Iran’s top diplomat Abbas Araghchi laid bare alleged U.S.-Israeli fingerprints on the nation’s spiraling protests during a closed-door session with envoys. Amid reports of dozens dead in fiery skirmishes, he presented ‘undeniable’ proofs—from audio tapes to infiltration records—painting a scene of foreign-fueled anarchy.
Protesters clashing with security have razed mosques and clinics nationwide, but Araghchi insists armed outsiders, not locals, drive the bloodshed. Intercepted messages reportedly command attacks on peaceful folk and forces alike, with back-shot killings signaling assassinations.
Mossad’s role looms large in his account: Persian-fluent spies allegedly coordinating saboteurs to manufacture crisis, handing Trump a casus belli for strikes after U.S. vows to punish protester harms. ‘We have the documents,’ he affirmed, vowing transparency to counter narratives of internal repression.
This bold exposé reframes protests as geopolitical chess, with Iran casting itself as besieged by superpowers. As destruction mounts and threats volley, stakeholders eye de-escalation amid fears of wider war. Araghchi’s words rally domestic support while challenging global powers to confront the ‘truth’ of engineered unrest.