
Iran Supreme Leader's Old Feminist, Liberal Posts Resurface. Internet Is Amused
Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's old feminist and liberal posts have resurfaced as the Israel-Iran conflict rages on. In the posts, Mr Khamenei can be seen musing about women's rights, liking poetry, standing up for the Black Lives Matter movement, and even being 'naughty' and 'playful' as a kid.
Some of the posts date back at least a decade and paint a starkly different portrait of Mr Khamenei. Social media users were surprised by the posts, with some even calling Mr Khamenei a rather progressive leader for his liberal thoughts.
In a series of women-centric posts, Mr Khamenei stood up for the fairer sex whilst also dishing out love advice.
"Man has a responsibility to understand #woman's needs and feelings and must not be neglectful toward her #emotional state," he wrote.
Man has a responsibility to understand #woman 's needs and feelings and must not be neglectful toward her #emotional state
— Khamenei.ir (@khamenei_ir) September 15, 2013
Women are stronger than men. Women can completely control and influence men with their wisdom and delicacy. May 11, 2013
— Khamenei.ir (@khamenei_ir) March 7, 2018
In one post from 2013, Mr Khamenei recalled his awkward school days. 'I went 2school w/a cloak since1st days; it was uncomfortable 2wear it in front f other kids, but I tried 2make up 4it by being naughty&playful,' he wrote.
I went 2school w/a cloak since1st days;it was uncomfortable 2wear it in front f other kids,but I tried 2make up 4it by being naughty&playful
— Khamenei.ir (@khamenei_ir) September 24, 2013
I'm not into cinema and visual arts but when it comes to poetry and novels, I'm not just a typical audience. #Books #AvidReader
— Khamenei.ir (@khamenei_ir) February 25, 2015
Mr Khamenei even commented on reading a book by India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, to understand the country's past.
"Before studying "Glimpses of World History" by Mr. #Nehru I didn't know #India before colonization had undergone so many important #advances"
Before studying "Glimpses of World History" by Mr. #Nehru I didn't know #India before colonization had undergone so many important #advances
— Khamenei.ir (@khamenei_ir) August 6, 2013
Social media users were quick to react. with one X user replying: "I apologise, ayatollah khamenei, i was unfamiliar with your game."
i apologize, ayatollah khamenei, i was unfamiliar with your game https://t.co/yXH72eQg94
— Sam 👁️ (@SamtheNightOwl) June 20, 2025
Another wrote: "Born to be a lover, forced to be the supreme leader."
Born to be a lover, forced to be the supreme leader https://t.co/HMWmPtF1iN
— Ahad|| (@yeagerexcelency) June 19, 2025
A third commented: "Ayatollah Khamenei is the first guy to be uncancelled after old tweets resurfaced."
The posts have surfaced at a time when the Iranian leader has vowed not to surrender even as Israel and the US continue to pile pressure. Mr Khamenei recently threatened that if the US got involved in the ongoing conflict, it would bring "irreparable damage to them".

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Mint
36 minutes ago
- Mint
Israel-Iran Trade Fresh Blows as US Bombers Fly Over Pacific
Israel and Iran launched new strikes in a second week of hostilities, with the Isfahan nuclear facility targeted again, as Donald Trump deepened uncertainty about his readiness to join the conflict. The US military dispatched several B-2 bombers and refueling tankers over the Pacific Ocean from a base in Missouri, according to several media reports. The move is a possible sign that the planes are being positioned for a possible strike, although the Wall Street Journal cited officials saying that no order has been given to ready an operation. Israel warned the US it didn't want to wait the 'two weeks' the president laid down as his timetable for deciding whether to join the strikes, Reuters reported, citing two anonymous people. That warning was delivered in a 'tense' phone call with Trump officials on Thursday. On Saturday, Israeli jets attacked Iran's Isfahan site for the second time, targeting a centrifuge production section, the Israel Defense Forces said. There were no leaks of hazardous material, Iran's semi-official Fars News reported. Israeli jets later on Saturday targeted military infrastructure in southwest Iran. The IDF earlier said it had identified missiles launched from Iran and was working to intercept them. Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said Saeed Izadi, who led part of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' overseas arm linked to financing and arming Hamas in Gaza, was killed in the Iranian city of Qom. Behnam Shahriyari, another IRGC member linked to supplying Lebanon's Hezbollah and other militias, was also killed, along with a third commander, according to an Israeli military official. Separately, Yemen's Houthi militants said they will target US vessels and battleships in the Red Sea if the US gets involved to support the Israeli attack on Iran, according to a statement published on a Houthi spokesperson's official Telegram account. After stepping up threats against Iran earlier this week, Trump appeared to dial back tensions Thursday, saying that he would hold off for now to give diplomacy a chance. On Friday, he hinted at shortening the deadline, but also suggested he 'might' support a ceasefire while talks were underway. Iran has demanded the attacks stop before it enters negotiations, something Israel has refused to do. 'I'm giving them a period of time,' Trump told reporters in New Jersey, after meeting earlier Friday with his national security team. 'I would say two weeks would be the maximum.' Foreign ministers from the UK, France and Germany met their Iranian counterpart in Geneva on Friday. They made little apparent headway. 'Iran doesn't want to speak to Europe. They want to speak to us,' Trump said. 'Europe is not going to be able to help them.' French President Emmanuel Macron, in a post on X Saturday, said he spoke with his Iranian counterpart Masoud Pezeshkian and that he would accelerate the negotiations. Macron also reiterated his position on Iran's nuclear program, saying that Iran needed 'to provide full guarantees that its intentions are peaceful.' Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Iran is ready to hold another meeting with the Europeans in the near future, the state-run IRNA news agency reported. No follow-up meeting has yet been scheduled and there was no agreement on where or in what format such talks would take place, according to a European official. The proposals made by the Europeans were unrealistic, Reuters cited an unidentified Iranian official as saying. Oil prices fell on Friday following a Reuters report that Iran is ready to discuss limitations on uranium enrichment, though they're still up significantly from before the conflict. A jittery week ended with losses in stocks as investors weighed geopolitical and trade developments. The dollar had its best week since February. The Iranian judiciary's Mizan news agency reported on Saturday that 430 people were killed and more than 3,500 wounded since the war began June 13. In Israel, at least 24 people have been killed and hundreds injured, the Associated Press reported. Araghchi was in Istanbul on Saturday to attend a summit of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, according to state-run TV. He is also scheduled to meet Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on the sidelines. 'Israel is dragging our region into instability with the backing of western powers,' Erdoğan told the summit. Before a two-month-old negotiation process with the US was suspended in the wake of Israel's attack, Tehran had signaled its willingness to accept some restrictions on its enrichment activities. Israel and the US have said the Islamic Republic shouldn't be allowed to enrich uranium at all. 'We don't know how we can trust them anymore,' Araghchi said of possible talks with the US, in an interview with NBC on Friday. 'What they did was in fact a betrayal to diplomacy.' Most experts say a successful strike against the subterranean nuclear enrichment site at Fordow would require American participation, since Israel doesn't have the kind of munitions — like the most powerful bunker-buster bombs — with the ability to penetrate that deep underground. But there's a debate on the issue, with some claiming Israel has the necessary tools. Trump repeated his stated belief that Iran was a matter of weeks from getting a nuclear bomb when Israel attacked, and again dismissed US intelligence findings that Iran's leadership wasn't seeking to do so. He is due to attend a national security meeting again on Saturday. While some argue that US participation would shorten the war by eliminating Fordow quickly, others say it would escalate the conflict and risk spreading it to the wider region, including neighboring Gulf states. 'This war flies in the face of the regional order the Gulf countries want to build, which is focused on regional prosperity,' Anwar Gargash, a senior diplomatic adviser to the United Arab Emirates' president, told reporters in a briefing Friday. 'There are many issues in the region, if we choose to tackle everything with a hammer nothing will be left unbroken.' With assistance from Skylar Woodhouse, Valentine Baldassari, Samy Adghirni, Jordan Fabian, Chris Martlew, Akayla Gardner, Donato Paolo Mancini, Golnar Motevalli, Asli Kandemir, Ellen Milligan, Iain Rogers, Hadriana Lowenkron, Sara Gharaibeh and Fadwa Hodali. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.


Mint
36 minutes ago
- Mint
Israel Hits Isfahan Nuclear Site as US Sends Mixed Signals
Israel and Iran launched new strikes in a second week of hostilities, with the Isfahan nuclear facility targeted again, as Donald Trump deepened uncertainty about his readiness to join the conflict. Israeli jets attacked Iran's Isfahan site for the second time, targeting a centrifuge production section, the Israel Defense Forces said. There were no leaks of hazardous material, Iran's semi-official Fars News reported. The IDF earlier said it had identified missiles launched from Iran and was working to intercept them. Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said Saeed Izadi, who led part of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' overseas arm linked to financing and arming Hamas in Gaza, was killed in the Iranian city of Qom. Behnam Shahriyari, another IRGC member linked to supplying Lebanon's Hezbollah and other militias, was also killed, along with a third commander, according to an Israeli military official. Iranian state TV said five members of the IRGC were killed in the western province of Lorestan on Saturday. After stepping up threats against Iran earlier this week, Trump appeared to dial back tensions Thursday, saying that he would hold off for two weeks to give diplomacy a chance. On Friday, he hinted at shortening the deadline, but also suggested he 'might' support a ceasefire while talks were underway. Iran has demanded the attacks stop before it enters negotiations, something Israel has refused to do. 'I'm giving them a period of time,' Trump told reporters in New Jersey, after meeting earlier Friday with his national security team. 'I would say two weeks would be the maximum.' Foreign ministers from the UK, France and Germany met their Iranian counterpart in Geneva on Friday. They made little apparent headway. 'Iran doesn't want to speak to Europe. They want to speak to us,' Trump said. 'Europe is not going to be able to help them.' Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Iran is ready to hold another meeting with the Europeans in the near future, the state-run IRNA news agency reported. No follow-up meeting has yet been scheduled and there was no agreement on where or in what format such talks would take place, according to a European official. Oil prices fell on Friday following a Reuters report that Iran is ready to discuss limitations on uranium enrichment, though they're still up significantly from before the conflict. A jittery week ended with losses in stocks as investors weighed geopolitical and trade developments. The dollar had its best week since February. Araghchi was in Istanbul on Saturday to attend a summit of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, according to state-run TV. He is also scheduled to meet Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on the sidelines. 'Israel is dragging our region into instability with the backing of western powers,' Erdoğan told the summit. Before a two-month-old negotiation process with the US was suspended in the wake of Israel's attack, Tehran had signaled its willingness to accept some restrictions on its enrichment activities. Israel and the US have said the Islamic Republic shouldn't be allowed to enrich uranium at all. 'We don't know how we can trust them anymore,' Araghchi said of possible talks with the US, in an interview with NBC on Friday. 'What they did was in fact a betrayal to diplomacy.' Most experts say a successful strike against the subterranean nuclear enrichment site at Fordow would require American participation, since Israel doesn't have the kind of munitions — like the most powerful bunker-buster bombs — with the ability to penetrate that deep underground. But there's a debate on the issue, with some claiming Israel has the necessary tools. Trump repeated his stated belief that Iran was a matter of weeks from getting a nuclear bomb when Israel attacked, and again dismissed US intelligence findings that Iran's leadership wasn't seeking to do so. He is due to attend a national security meeting again on Saturday. While some argue that US participation would shorten the war by eliminating Fordow quickly, others say it would in fact escalate the conflict and risk spreading it to the wider region, including neighboring Gulf states. 'This war flies in the face of the regional order the Gulf countries want to build, which is focused on regional prosperity,' Anwar Gargash, a senior diplomatic adviser to the United Arab Emirates' president, told reporters in a briefing Friday. 'There are many issues in the region, if we choose to tackle everything with a hammer nothing will be left unbroken.' With assistance from Samy Adghirni, Jordan Fabian, Chris Martlew, Akayla Gardner, Donato Paolo Mancini, Golnar Motevalli, Asli Kandemir, Ellen Milligan, Iain Rogers, Hadriana Lowenkron, Fadwa Hodali and Skylar Woodhouse. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.


Economic Times
38 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Bombing Iran might do the opposite of what the west wants, Medvedev warns against forcing Tehran into a corner
Reuters Medvedev predicted that any attempt to destroy Iran's nuclear infrastructure, whether by Israel or the United States, could provoke a severe response, and it would prompt Iran to cement its nuclear aspirations. (File Photo) Dmitry Medvedev, the outspoken former President of Russia, has shared a post with a warning over the possibility of military strikes targeting Iran's nuclear program by Israel. In a strongly worded post on X, Medvedev questioned the global double standards on nuclear weapons and cautioned against the consequences of trying to eliminate Iran's nuclear capabilities by force.'Why is it OK for Tel Aviv but not OK for Tehran?' Medvedev asked, suggesting that Israel's undeclared nuclear arsenal remains untouched and never questioned, while Iran is routinely targeted, but it is not known if they have any nuclear weapons. He proposed what was once called the 'zero option', a mutual disarmament of nuclear capabilities under the supervision of the UN Security Council and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).'Let them both abandon such programs,' Medvedev wrote. 'They will refuse, of course. And no strikes will help, 100%,' he added, arguing that Iran sees its nuclear program as essential to its survival, which the west thinks is a threat. The former Russian leader, who is also the current Deputy Chair of the Russian Security Council, also suggested that any attempt to destroy Iran's nuclear infrastructure, whether by Israel or the United States, could provoke a severe response. 'If it does have nuclear weapons, [Iran] will definitely use them. And if not, it will rebuild this program at any cost,' he warned. Medvedev's current stance stands in contrast to actions taken during his own presidency (2008–2012), when Russia aligned itself with international efforts to pressure and sanction Iran over its nuclear ambitions. In June 2010, following the adoption of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1929, Medvedev signed a decree that banned Iranian investments in Russia's uranium production and nuclear sectors. The measure was part of a package of sanctions intended to push Iran toward compliance with international nuclear also suspended selling S-300 surface-to-air missile systems to Iran as part of that decree. This advanced defense platform had been part of a previous agreement between the two nations. The move was seen as a significant gesture of Russia's support for the UN-led sanctions regime at the time.