Hebrew media in Israel is buzzing with information that the Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi and his Foreign Minister are dead, however government offices and legacy media channels have yet to confirm this.
The Iranian regime is on high alert following a helicopter crash involving President Ebrahim Raisi and Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian on Sunday afternoon. The helicopter took an emergency landing which turned into a crash in northwestern Iran, prompting immediate rescue efforts amid challenging conditions. Foggy weather and massive 70-meter tall boulders complicated the search and rescue operations, according to reports from the IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News Agency.
The crash occurred in a forested area between the villages of PirDavood and Uzi, adding to the difficulty of the rescue mission. More than 40 teams have been deployed to the site, struggling against worsening weather conditions as night fell. Iranian state media indicated that while some communication with officials on the ground was possible shortly after the incident, contact was later lost, heightening concerns for the safety of the president, the Foreign Minister who was with him, and the rest of his entourage.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called for national prayers, reassuring the public that there would be no disruption to state affairs. International reactions included offers of assistance from neighboring Azerbaijan and emergency support from the European Union. The U.S. State Department is closely monitoring the situation. President Raisi, often a controversial figure referred to as the “butcher of Tehran” due to his past actions, had been visiting the Azerbaijani border earlier in the day.
The incident is significant for Israel and the Jewish world, as Raisi has time and again denied the Holocaust, called the State of Israel a “false regime” and has repeatedly made direct threats to attack Israel’s biggest metropolis including Tel Aviv and Haifa, which has a large Arab Israeli community.
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