Kayhan, the Tehran newspaper that functions as the editorial mouthpiece of Iran's Supreme Leader's office, published a piece framing US President Donald Trump as a marked man whose assassination is both inevitable and religiously sanctioned — the latest and most explicit escalation in a weeks-long campaign of Iranian and Iran-aligned media calling openly for his killing. The piece, bylined to a "Kayhan Int'l Staff Writer" and posted to the paper's English-language site, does not merely report on recent bounty announcements targeting Trump. It celebrates them, casts the president's death as a foregone religious certainty, and extends the pool of prospective killers to nationals of multiple countries and ethnic groups, describing the "promise of paradise" for anyone who carries out the act. The Levant Files is not reproducing the language, which functions less as commentary than as an incitement to violence against a head of state. An outlet that ...
Iranian media placed reported American military losses in Jordan at the centre of their coverage of the confrontation with the United States over the past 24 hours, presenting them as evidence that Tehran can still impose significant costs on Washington despite continuing US air strikes. The prevailing message across state-aligned and conservative outlets was that Iran had restored a measure of deterrence by demonstrating its ability to hit US forces outside the immediate Gulf theatre. Centrist and opposition-oriented publications, however, gave greater attention to the risks of escalation, disruption in the Strait of Hormuz and the growing effects of the fighting on civilians in southern Iran. Mahr News prominently reported a US Central Command statement saying that two American service members had been killed in Jordan, while one remained missing and four others were wounded. The agency framed CENTCOM’s announcement as an acknowledgment that Iranian missile and drone attacks had inf...