By SCM REPORTER
IRAN’S military hardmen have issued a blood-curdling warning to the West last night, claiming they have successfully sabotaged a string of industrial giants in a wave of “painful” revenge attacks.
In a statement dripping with malice, the Commander of the Revolutionary Guard’s (IRGC) Aerospace Force bragged that Tehran’s shadow war has moved from the battlefield to the boardroom.
The regime claims it is now systematically “destroying” strategic industries linked to what it calls the “American-Zionist enemy.”
”These painful attacks will continue until we see the pain in your eyes,” the Commander sneered.
The IRGC chief claimed his forces have already struck high-value targets across the region, focusing on the backbone of the Israeli economy. According to the Tehran mouthpiece, the “hits” include:
Chemical Industries: The massive Neot Hovav eco-industrial park in the Negev desert.
Energy: At least one major oil refinery.
Metals: Two massive steel complexes and two leading aluminum plants.
Headlines Suggested by The Sun:
AXIS OF EVIL: Iran Brags of ‘Painful’ Blitz on Western Factories
EYE FOR AN EYE: Guard Chief’s Sick Vow to Cripple Industry
DESERT SABOTAGE: Tehran Claims Hits on ‘Zionist’ Steel & Chemical Plants
This latest escalation follows months of “tit-for-tat” strikes between Israel and Iran. Tehran has been reeling from precision strikes on its own infrastructure—including mysterious “glitches” at nuclear facilities and explosions at military warehouses—which it blames on Mossad and the CIA.
The IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) is no stranger to cyber-warfare and proxy strikes. By targeting “strategic industries” like aluminum and steel, the Ayatollahs are attempting to choke the region’s economy without triggering a full-scale conventional war.
Expert Analysis: Security sources say that while Iran often exaggerates its “victories” for propaganda, the specific naming of the Neot Hovav site suggests a sophisticated level of targeting.
Whether these “destructions” were caused by cyber-hacks, suicide drones, or boots-on-the-ground sabotage remains the billion-dollar question for Western intelligence.
For more on the Middle East crisis, see Page 4.

