Israeli intelligence services reached out directly to Iranian citizens on Thursday, establishing a dedicated medical consultation service in Farsi through social media platforms. The initiative appeared on an X account identifying itself as the "Mossad Farsi," accompanied by a video message from journalist Menashe Amir. The Mossad declined to comment on Israel Hayom's request regarding the publication.
The Mossad's Farsi-language spokesperson posted a message to the Iranian people offering telemedicine assistance following the ceasefire. The statement says the regime is focused on protecting senior officials, not civilians, and that Israeli-backed medical teams are available to… pic.twitter.com/mewnj8CGmM
— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 26, 2025
The social media post addressed Iranian citizens directly, stating that "the ceasefire has been implemented and the damage is now becoming clear." Intelligence officials claimed that "the regime focuses on its senior officials and not on treating its citizens" while announcing the establishment of a medical advisory center staffed with specialists in cardiology, diabetes treatment, pulmonary medicine, infectious diseases, and oncology, as well as support services for pregnant women and psychological counseling.

The medical consultation service offers comprehensive healthcare guidance, including treatment for wounds, injuries, emergency first aid, pain management, disease consultation, and other telemedicine services. All medical professionals speak Persian fluently, and Iranian citizens can communicate in either Persian or English.
Iranian citizens seeking medical advice are advised to use VPN services to access the consultation platform, which operates Sunday through Thursday from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Iran time. Citizens can connect through WhatsApp, Telegram, or Signal using Israeli, Czech, and Dutch telephone numbers provided in the social media post.
— Mossad Farsi (@MossadSpokesman) June 26, 2025
Journalist Menashe Amir, formerly responsible for Voice of Israel's Farsi-language broadcasts, addressed the broader economic context in a separate video message. "One of the basic conditions for state leaders who want to enter war and threaten that they will destroy us in a minute is that they have a strong economy," Amir observed. Amir described Iran's deteriorating economic conditions, noting years of shortages in electricity, water, and heating infrastructure. "People don't have sufficient income, inflation is raging, banks are not functioning," Amir explained, describing a situation where "we hear about people who buy prescription medicines at subsidized prices and then sell them on the black market to get money to buy bread."