Deep beneath the streets of central Tehran, Iran had built what it believed was an impenetrable refuge- a fortified underground command centre designed to keep the country’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei alive and in control during the worst conceivable attack. On Thursday, approximately 50 Israeli fighter jets destroyed it.
The strike, confirmed by the Israel Defense Forces in a statement, targeted a large underground bunker beneath Iran’s leadership compound in central Tehran. The IDF described it as one of the most significant blows yet to Iran’s ability to direct its military and political response to the ongoing war.
Read more:‘Our Response Is Clear’: Iran Tells Mediators To Focus On US And Israel, Not Tehran
What Exactly Was Khamenei’s Bunker?
According to the Israeli military, the underground complex extended beneath several streets in central Tehran and featured multiple concealed access points. Inside, the facility contained fortified meeting rooms, dedicated communications areas and internal corridors designed to allow senior regime figures to operate continuously during wartime or large-scale air attacks.
The IDF said the bunker had been specifically designed as an emergency command facility for Khamenei- a protected nerve centre from which he could continue directing Iran’s military and state institutions even under sustained bombardment.
Read more:Russia Is Actively Feeding Iran Intelligence On US Military Targets In West Asia: Report
Khamenei, however, never used it. He was killed before he was able to reach the facility. In the weeks following his death, the bunker continued to function as a meeting and coordination site for senior officials within Iran’s ruling establishment- making it, in Israeli military terms, a legitimate and high-value target.
“The bunker was intended to serve as a secure emergency command center for the Supreme Leader," the IDF statement said, adding, “Targeting it further degrades the regime’s command and control capabilities."
The concept of an underground command centre for a head of state is neither new nor unique to Iran. The fundamental logic is continuity of government- the ability of a state’s leadership to keep functioning even when its cities are under attack, its communications are disrupted and its conventional infrastructure has been destroyed.
Source: World News in news18.com, World Latest News, World News