• العربية
  • فارسی
Brand
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Theme
  • Language
    • العربية
    • فارسی
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
All rights reserved for Volant Media UK Limited
volant media logo

Major petrochemical zone in Iran evacuates amid US strikes threat

Apr 6, 2026, 22:30 GMT+1

All personnel have been evacuated from every active industrial unit in the Mahshahr Petrochemical Special Economic Zone in southwest Iran, authorities said.

The zone’s public relations office said the evacuation was ordered by the region’s emergency command committee.

The move comes as US President Donald Trump has threatened to bomb Iranian energy infrastructure, including power plants and bridges, on Tuesday night if no agreement is reached over reopening the Strait of Hormuz.

Most Viewed

The Hormuz get out of jail card turned to a grave
1
OPINION

The Hormuz get out of jail card turned to a grave

2

State media slam Araghchi's Hormuz tweet, say it let Trump claim victory

3
INSIGHT

How Tehran bends its own red lines to boost state rallies

4
PODCAST

Too early to tell who is winning Iran war, experts say

5

IRGC fires at Indian vessel in Hormuz

Banner
Banner

Spotlight

  • A nation in limbo: 100 days after the massacre, has the world moved on?
    INSIGHT

    A nation in limbo: 100 days after the massacre, has the world moved on?

  • 100 days after carnage: Iran economy reels from war, inflation, unemployment
    INSIGHT

    100 days after carnage: Iran economy reels from war, inflation, unemployment

  • The Hormuz get out of jail card turned to a grave
    OPINION

    The Hormuz get out of jail card turned to a grave

  • Too early to tell who is winning Iran war, experts say
    PODCAST

    Too early to tell who is winning Iran war, experts say

  • How Tehran bends its own red lines to boost state rallies
    INSIGHT

    How Tehran bends its own red lines to boost state rallies

  • Iran blackout cripples freelancer, small business incomes
    VOICES FROM IRAN

    Iran blackout cripples freelancer, small business incomes

•
•
•

More Stories

Israel prepares new Iran energy targets as Trump deadline looms - CNN

Apr 6, 2026, 22:24 GMT+1

Israel has approved an updated list of energy and infrastructure targets in Iran in case negotiations fail, according to two Israeli sources cited by CNN.

The updated target list reflects Israeli expectations that the conflict could escalate further if diplomatic efforts do not produce an agreement.

Israeli officials are said to be highly skeptical that a deal is achievable under current conditions, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu personally conveying his concerns to US President Donald Trump.

US rescue inside Iran opens debate over war's next phase

Apr 6, 2026, 22:12 GMT+1
•
Negar Mojtahedi

The mission to rescue an American pilot downed in Iran showed how a tactical success can open wider strategic possibilities, sharpening debate over how far the United States may expand its footprint inside Iran.

The operation may have cost the United States several military assets, but it also forced Iran to reveal what it considers key terrain, according to former intelligence officer Michael Pregent.

A veteran with more than 28 years of experience in security and terrorism in the Middle East, Pregent believes that in scrambling to protect what it thought would be the next landing zone, Iranian forces exposed troop movements and defensive priorities that US planners may now be able to exploit.

“You can see movement of assets to protect key terrain that we may not have thought was key terrain but the regime does, and that gives an opportunity to exploit the situation," Pregent told Iran International.

"The establishment of this base now changes that focus. It's not just about fixed airstrips. Air bases that the US can take over—now it's just flat terrain, because that's what this was.”

For Pregent, the deeper implication is what the mission revealed about the regime’s internal weakness.

“It indicates a lack of command and control of regime forces due to the degradation, due to key leaders being taken out… the regime wasn't able to do anything about it. And that says something.”

That reading is echoed, though more cautiously, by Farzin Nadimi, a defense and military expert on Iran at the Washington Institute, who says the rescue proved American reach but also exposed how fragile that success was.

The mission itself was among the most daring US operations of the war so far. Special operations forces moved deep into Iran under cover of darkness, crossed mountainous terrain to reach the stranded weapons systems officer, and rushed him toward extraction before dawn.

But the operation nearly unraveled when two transport aircraft were unable to take off, forcing commanders to improvise a new extraction plan in real time to avoid leaving roughly 100 troops stranded inside Iran.

US troops destroyed the disabled MC-130s and four additional helicopters inside Iran rather than risk leaving sensitive equipment behind.

Ahead of the mission, the CIA reportedly ran a deception campaign inside Iran, planting false information that US forces had already found and moved the missing officer. As the rescue unfolded, US forces also jammed communications and struck key roads near the location to keep Iranian forces away.

"Over the past several hours, the United States military pulled off one of the most daring search and rescue operations in US history," Trump said in a statement. The airman was injured, but Trump said "he will be just fine."

For Nadimi, that near miss is the real takeaway.

“It was a very successful operation… It showed real reach, real flexibility, and real results. But at the same time, it also showed… that the mission could very well have failed. And that would leave almost 100 troops in the middle of Iran," he told Iran International.

That warning now carries added weight as the fate of Iran’s uranium stockpile remains unresolved.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) had estimated Iran held roughly 440.9 kilograms of uranium enriched to near weapons-grade levels before the latest round of strikes, much of it still unaccounted for.

But when asked whether the rescue mission could make a future operation to secure that stockpile more likely, Nadimi is blunt.

“I think the simple answer is no.”

His assessment is that a mission to secure more than 400 kilograms of highly enriched uranium would require a fundamentally different scale of operation: heavy engineering equipment, excavation teams, perimeter defense, airlift support and the ability to seize and hold key terrain for days or even weeks.

Yet the political lesson may be moving in the opposite direction.

Shahram Kholdi, a Middle East historian whose own Iranian conscript service to the regular army (Artesh) gives him firsthand insight into how the Islamic Republic prioritizes the IRGC and Basij in any domestic theater, says the operation may strengthen the hand of those in Washington arguing that half measures are no longer enough.

“Those so-called hawks now have a stronger view… to convince the president not to go in half-baked anymore… we are going to see blows that would be interdisciplinary actions.”

The Islamic Republic's rush to capture the downed airman may reinforce arguments among hawks that future operations should combine overwhelming air power with more deliberate ground-enabled missions, according to Kholdi.

The rescue not only brought both men home but also demonstrated that Washington can execute complex operations deep inside Iran—leaving the far bigger question of how, and how far, it may use that lesson next.

Iran says four officers killed by US aircraft during aviator rescue mission

Apr 6, 2026, 20:33 GMT+1

Iran’s army said on Monday four of its officers were killed after engaging US aircraft involved in a mission to rescue an American aviator in Isfahan.

"In the early hours of Sunday, these army officers engaged in direct combat with enemy fighter jets, helicopters, armed drones, and support aircraft in the Mahyar area of Isfahan, opening fire at the aerial targets. After a shoulder-fired missile struck one of the attacking aircraft, they were targeted by other enemy aircraft and killed," the statement said.

The officers were identified as Brigadier General Masoud Zare, Colonel Moein Heidari, Colonel Seyyed Saeid Mousavi, and Lieutenant Milad Salarvand.

100%

Trump says every single Iran bridge will be 'decimated' if no deal reached

Apr 6, 2026, 19:28 GMT+1

"We have a plan where every bridge in Iran will be decimated by 12 o'clock tomorrow night, where every power plant in Iran will be out of business, burning, exploding and never to be used again," US President Donald Trump told reporters.

"I mean, complete demolition by 12, o'clock, and it will happen over a period of four hours if we wanted to. We don't want that to happen, we may even get involved with helping them rebuild their nation."

"Do I want to destroy their infrastructure? No, it will take them 100 years to rebuild right now. If we left today, it would take them 20 years to rebuild their country," he added.

Iranians 'willing' to suffer for freedom, Trump says on infrastructure attacks

Apr 6, 2026, 19:00 GMT+1

US President Donald Trump said on Monday that the Iranian people are “willing” to suffer in order to gain freedom, when asked whether attacking Iran’s infrastructure would punish civilians for the regime’s actions.

"The Iranians have, we've had numerous intercepts, saying please keep bombing bombs that are dropping near their homes. Please keep bombing. Do it. And these are people that are living where the bombs are exploding and when we leave and we're not hitting those areas, they're saying, Please come back. Come back. Come back."

"I don't know what they do. All I can tell you is they want freedom. They have lived in a world that you know nothing about. It's a violent, horrible world where if you protest, you are shot," Trump added.

"We're giving them (Iran leaders) till tomorrow, eight o'clock Eastern time, and after that, they're gonna have no bridges, they're gonna have no power plants. Stone ages," Donald Trump told reporters, doubling down on his earlier threats to attack Iran's infrastructure.