Iran’s IRGC-linked Tasnim releases its first Hebrew-language documentary glorifying missile strikes on Israel, aiming to manipulate Israeli public opinion.
In a bold and provocative propaganda maneuver, Iran’s Tasnim News Agency, the media arm of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), has unveiled its first-ever Hebrew-language documentary, openly targeting the Israeli public with Tehran’s version of the recent June missile war.
The film — titled “Missiles Over Bazan” — dramatizes Iran’s missile strike on Haifa’s oil refineries, an attack that Iran falsely claims “changed the course of the war and shifted the regional balance of power.”
In an official statement, Tasnim described the production as a “strategic media initiative” designed to “speak directly to the Israeli public from a position of strength and reality.”
“The purpose of producing the documentary is to speak directly to Hebrew-speaking viewers and expose truths hidden for years by Israeli and Western media,” the agency declared.
The propaganda film, complete with mock intelligence briefings, fabricated battlefield visuals, and staged ‘expert’ interviews, represents a new psychological warfare tactic — one that seeks to penetrate Israeli society linguistically and psychologically, bypassing traditional Arabic or English channels.
Security analysts in Jerusalem dismissed the move as “a digital extension of Iran’s hybrid war,” aimed at sowing fear, division, and self-doubt among Israelis even as Iran’s military capabilities remain largely blunted by Israel’s superior defense systems.
“It’s Tehran’s attempt to play mind games after its battlefield failures,” said one Israeli defense commentator. “They can’t beat the IDF on the ground, so they’re trying to invade through screens — in Hebrew.”
The release of “Missiles Over Bazan” comes as Iran ramps up its multi-front information campaign, blending disinformation with psychological operations targeting not only Israel but also Western audiences sympathetic to Tehran’s narrative.
Experts note that the use of Hebrew-language content marks a major escalation in Iran’s propaganda strategy — transforming media into a weapon of psychological warfare intended to legitimize terror, glorify attacks, and erode Israel’s deterrence image.
For Israelis, the film serves as a stark reminder that Iran’s aggression is no longer limited to missiles and militias — it now fires propaganda directly into the living rooms of its intended victims.
