Iranian President Pezeshkian would have been injured in Israeli strikes

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian would have been slightly injured during one of Israel’s attacks on Iran last month.
The Fars Iranian state news agency, close to the revolution goalkeeper, said that on June 16, six bombs targeted both the access points and the entry points of a secret underground center in Tehran where Pezeshkian attended an emergency meeting of the Supreme National Security Council.
The president would have been injured in the legs while he and others escaped an emergency well. Iran would now be followed by infiltration tracks by Israeli agents.
The Fars report was not checked independently. Israel did not publicly comment on the report.
Videos published on social networks during the 12-day war showed repeated strikes against a mountain in the northwest of Tehran.
Now it appeared that the strikes of the fourth day of war have targeted a secret underground installation in Tehran where the main Iranian leaders were.
The FARS news agency report indicates that Israeli strikes have blocked the six entry and exit points, as well as the ventilation system.
The electricity of the installation was also cut – but Pezeshkian managed to achieve security.
The Supreme National Security Council is Iran’s first decision -making body after the supreme chief of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Last week, Pezeshkian accused Israel of having tried to kill him – a complaint rejected by the Israeli Minister of Defense Israel Katz, who declared that the “change of regime” had not been an objective of the war.
Israel has erased many best IRGC and army commanders at the very beginning of the war.
Iranian leaders admit that they were completely caught by surprise, and there was a decision -making paralysis for at least the first 24 hours after the attack.
Israeli officials admitted that Ayatollah Khamenei was also the target – but that they had lost track of him when he was transferred to a secure secret place, cut to a large extent of the outside world.
There are still many questions about how Israel had gathered critical information on the place where Iranian officials and commanders are located – not to mention the locations of sensitive secret installations.
On June 13, Israel launched a surprise attack on nuclear and military sites in Iran, saying that it had acted to prevent Tehran from making nuclear weapons.
Iran – which retaliated with air attacks against Israel – denies seeking to develop nuclear weapons and says that its enrichment of uranium is for peaceful purposes.
On June 22, the Air Force and the US Navy made air and missile strikes against three Iranian nuclear installations.
President Donald Trump later said that the attack had “erased” the facilities, even if some American intelligence agencies had a more cautious opinion.




