Iran turns to internal crackdown in wake of 12-day war
Iranian authorities are pivoting from a ceasefire with Israel to intensify an internal security crackdown across the country with mass arrests, executions and military deployments, particularly in the restive Kurdish region, officials and activists said.
Within days of Israel's airstrikes beginning on June 13, Iranian security forces started a campaign of widespread arrests accompanied by an intensified street presence based around checkpoints, the officials and activists said.
Some in Israel and exiled opposition groups had hoped the military campaign, which targeted Revolutionary Guards and internal security forces, as well as nuclear sites, would spark a mass uprising and the overthrow of the Islamic Republic.
While Reuters has spoken to numerous Iranians angry at the government for policies they believed had led to the Israeli attack, there has been no sign yet of any significant protests against the authorities.
However, one senior Iranian security official and two other senior officials briefed on internal security issues said the authorities were focused on the threat of possible internal unrest, particularly in Kurdish areas.
Revolutionary Guard and Basij paramilitary units were put on alert and internal security was now the primary focus, said the senior security official.
The official said authorities were worried about Israeli agents, ethnic separatists and the People's Mujahideen Organization, an exiled opposition group that has previously staged attacks inside Iran.
Activists within the country are lying low.
"We are being extremely cautious right now because there's a real concern the regime might use this situation as a pretext," said a rights activist in Tehran who was jailed during mass protests in 2022.
The activist said he knew dozens of people who had been summoned by authorities and either arrested or warned against any expressions of dissent.
Iranian rights group HRNA said on Monday it had recorded the arrests of 705 people on political or security charges since the start of the war.
Many of those arrested have been accused of spying for Israel, HRNA said. Iranian state media reported three were executed on Tuesday in Urmia, near the Turkish border, and the Iranian-Kurdish rights group Hengaw said they were all Kurdish.
Iran's Foreign and Interior Ministries did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Checkpoints and searches
One of the officials briefed on security said troops had been deployed to the borders of Pakistan, Iraq and Azerbaijan to stop infiltration by what the official called terrorists. The other official briefed on security acknowledged that hundreds had been arrested.
Iran's mostly Sunni Muslim Kurdish and Baluch minorities have long been a source of opposition to the Islamic Republic, chafing against rule from the Persian-speaking, Shi'ite government in Tehran.
The three main Iranian Kurdish separatist factions based in Iraqi Kurdistan said some of their activists and fighters had been arrested and described widespread military and security movements by Iranian authorities.
Ribaz Khalili from the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (KDPI) said Revolutionary Guards units had deployed in schools in Iran's Kurdish provinces within three days of Israel's strikes beginning and gone house-to-house for suspects and arms.
The Guards had taken protective measures too, evacuating an industrial zone near their barracks and closing major roads for their own use in bringing reinforcements to Kermanshah and Sanandaj, two major cities in the Kurdish region.
A cadre from the Free Life Party of Kurdistan (PJAK), who gave her nom de guerre of Fatma Ahmed, said the party had counted more than 500 opposition members being detained in Kurdish provinces since the airstrikes began.
Ahmed and an official from the Kurdish Komala party, who spoke on condition of anonymity, both described checkpoints being set up across Kurdish areas with physical searches of people, as well as checks of their phones and documents.
Hashtags

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


Yomiuri Shimbun
3 hours ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Iran Shows Interior of State-Run Broadcaster after Bombing by Israel
The Iranian government on Wednesday invited foreign media inside a Tehran-based office for the state-run broadcaster that was bombed by Israel on June 16, in what is believed to be an attempt at propaganda. Inside, the five-story building was littered with charred computers, and bare wiring hung from the ceiling and walls, demonstrating the severity of the attack.


Kyodo News
5 hours ago
- Kyodo News
Trump likens U.S. strikes on Iran to bombings of Hiroshima, Nagasaki
KYODO NEWS - 10 hours ago - 02:40 | All, World U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday equated the American military's weekend airstrikes on Iran's key nuclear facilities with the World War II atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, saying the result in both cases was a swift end to conflict. "I don't want to use an example of Hiroshima, I don't want to use an example of Nagasaki, but that was essentially the same thing. That ended that war," Trump told reporters while meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte in The Hague. Trump made the comments as he dismissed a leaked U.S. intelligence report suggesting in an early assessment that the impact of the strikes on Iran's nuclear program was limited. He stressed that the attacks ended the Israel-Iran conflict, saying the two countries would still be fighting if the United States had not bombed the nuclear facilities. His comments, justifying the world's first use of nuclear weapons on a civilian population, provoked an angry outcry from survivors of the bombings of the Japanese cities by U.S. forces in 1945. "I'm really disappointed. All I have is anger," said Teruko Yokoyama, 83, a senior member of Nihon Hidankyo, Japan's leading atomic bomb survivors' group that was named the 2024 Nobel Peace Prize laureate. Trump has said the Iranian nuclear sites were "obliterated," but the intel assessment reported by U.S. media says the strikes only set back Iran's nuclear capabilities by a few months. Asserting that the intelligence is "very inconclusive," the U.S. leader said he believes Iran's nuclear program has been put back "basically decades" and he does not think it will ever carry out its uranium enrichment efforts. "The intelligence says, 'We don't know. It could have been very severe.' That's what the intelligence says," Trump said. He also claimed the United States is "actually getting along with (Iran) very well right now." Later, at a press conference following the NATO summit, he said the United States plans to hold talks with Iran next week, adding, "We may sign an agreement." But he also said an agreement is not a must. "The only thing we'd be asking for is what we were asking for before, about we want no nuclear," he said. Related coverage: Japan foreign minister stresses importance of Israel-Iran cease-fire


NHK
5 hours ago
- NHK
CIA chief: Iran nuclear sites 'severely damaged' by US strikes
The head of the CIA says "credible intelligence" suggests Iran's nuclear program has been "severely damaged" by the recent US strikes and could take "years" to rebuild. In a statement on Wednesday, CIA Director John Ratcliffe cited "new intelligence from a historically reliable and accurate source/method that several key Iranian nuclear facilities were destroyed and would have to be rebuilt over the course of years." CNN and other US media outlets have reported that an early intelligence assessment indicated that US airstrikes did not destroy the core components of Iran's nuclear program, and likely only set it back by months. US President Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed that Iran's nuclear program has been "totally obliterated."