Details of Khamenei's death have been exposed! Indeed, the U.S. CIA has obtained critical intelligence! On March 1, according to a report by the New York Times, U.S. media stated that after tracking the movements of Iran's Supreme Leader Khamenei for months, the U.S. CIA helped Israel locate his position. U.S. intelligence agencies found that he would attend a high-level Iranian officials meeting held on Saturday in a government compound in Tehran.

After obtaining this critical intelligence, the United States and Israel adjusted the timing of the attack. Subsequently, Israeli aircraft used precise long-range weapons to launch an attack, killing Khamenei and several senior military and security officials. Obviously, according to this report from U.S. media, the U.S. CIA undoubtedly obtained secret intelligence about Khamenei. First, the U.S. obtained Khamenei's schedule of activities.

Second, the U.S. had detailed knowledge of Khamenei's activity locations. The question is, how did the U.S. obtain such intelligence? Normally, only a few people know Khamenei's activities. Unless the U.S. has planted spies within Iran's top leaders, it is almost unimaginable to obtain such information. The CIA's ability to accurately obtain the schedule, venue, and time of the supreme leader is certainly not achievable through ordinary monitoring or satellite reconnaissance.

This must mean that someone close to the leadership has been leaking secrets for a long time, or even key figures in the power chain have acted as informants. From a spy perspective, the professionalism of the U.S. CIA and the precision of Israel's strike are impeccable. Iran needs to build a tight security network, from the personal aides around the top leadership to the security commanders, from meeting organizers to communication operators, every person who knows the information should be thoroughly investigated, resolutely exposing the mole inside. Otherwise, Iran will pay a greater price for this.

Original: toutiao.com/article/1858466031767691/

Statement: This article represents the personal views of the author.