Iran threatens to attack parks, recreational areas and tourist destinations around the world
Iran warned it could attack tourist destinations around the world in response to the bombings carried out by the US and Israel on its territory
Nearly three weeks after the United States, in collaboration with Israel, began bombing several locations in Iran, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) threatened to attack parks, recreational areas and tourist destinations around the world.
According to the Agency of According to Iran-based human rights activists, since February 28, at least 1,262 Iranian civilians, including 200 children, have been killed as a result of US airstrikes. However, the most serious aspect of the matter is that Ali Khamenei, Iran's Supreme Leader, also lost his life as part of the US military offensive. From that moment on, the conflict escalated, with implications for Iran's neighboring countries, which were also caught off guard by attacks. Meanwhile, the Strait of Hormuz was closed to navigation, preventing the passage of ships carrying oil and goods, primarily destined for Europe. The damage caused by these incidents has strained relations in the Middle East and the rest of the world, as several of the Iranian attacks were carried out using sophisticated drones on US military bases located in Arab countries. Although President Donald Trump has tried to downplay the conflict and even claims to have Iran under his thumb, With his neck on the line and on the verge of surrendering, in a new chapter of this war, General Ali Mohammad Naini, spokesman for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), issued a chilling statement to the state-run newspaper Iran. “We are producing missiles even in times of war, which is astonishing, and there is no particular problem with storage. Iran will attack the parks, recreational areas, and tourist destinations of its enemies,” he said. Hours later, Iranian state television reported that Naini was killed in an airstrike shortly after his comments were published. Subsequently, in a statement, Ayatollah Mokhtaba KhameneiIran's new supreme leader, who has not yet appeared publicly, warned that Iran's enemies must be stripped of their "security." In this regard, the US government claims to have destroyed the headquarters of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which—in theory—would deal a severe blow to its military intelligence department.

