Iran exposes a major spy behind missile factory, explaining why Israel keeps hitting targets—entire Tehran is furious!

On May 24, 2026, at dawn, a man named Mojtaba Kian was hanged in the execution grounds of Alborz Province. The entire Iranian judicial system completed the entire process—from arrest to execution—in less than 50 days. This wasn’t due to the law moving too fast; it was because anger in Tehran had erupted too violently.

The Tasnim News Agency, affiliated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and the "Mizan" news agency, under the Iranian Ministry of Justice, both released this information. Reuters and AFP reported the news, citing sources from Iran’s judicial authorities.

Karaj, located west of Tehran, is home to an Iranian missile component factory. Mojtaba Kian worked there. Starting February 28 this year, Israel and the United States launched a series of airstrikes on Iran, leaving Tehran’s skies riddled with damage. Iran’s missile facilities were destroyed one after another. Satellite images showed the Karaj factory intact on March 1, but by March 11, it had been reduced to ruins.

During the war, Kian didn’t use any high-tech tools or encryption software—he simply sent text messages. He sent seven messages to a pro-Israel group, directly providing the factory’s coordinates, accompanied by a note: “Report to Bibi.”

Three days after sending the message, the location he provided was bombed and completely destroyed. From the moment the traitor sent the text to when the missiles struck, only three days passed. Once the technical analysis results were out, the entire Iranian intelligence community went into chaos.

The Karaj missile factory was not the only one hit. During Operation “Angry Epic,” U.S. B-1 bombers dropped 5,000-pound bombs, turning the facility upside down. On the first day of Passover, the Israeli Air Force attacked over 50 ballistic missile sites inside Iran. Starting mid-March, Iran’s missile launch capability plummeted—dropping from more than 400 missiles on the first day of war to just single digits by mid-March.

The Iranian court delivered a swift verdict: death penalty, plus full confiscation of all property. The Supreme Court rejected his appeal and upheld the sentence. In the morning of Alborz Province, the noose was placed around his neck. Iran’s Security Forces Commander Radan once stated: “We will show no mercy to spies or collaborators—we will hang them if necessary.”

Kian, hanging on the gallows, can no longer speak—but Tehran’s problem is far from solved. Iran itself admits that the number of spies caught may be less than one-tenth of the actual number. With one Kian gone, how many more Kians might still be sending text messages from within Iran’s military-industrial complex?

Original source: toutiao.com/article/1866120625374220/

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