September 19, 2025

TheAfroReport

Exposing, Informing, Empowering

IRAN Accuses ISRAEL of Using JINN in WARFARE

IRAN Accuses ISRAEL of Using JINN in WARFARE
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In a world already drowning in propaganda, strange claims are nothing new. But every so often, something surfaces that sounds like it came straight from the pages of a supernatural thriller.

Recently, Iranian officials have accused Israel of using jinn, magic, and sorcery as part of its military operations. The statement, made during ongoing tensions between the two nations, was framed as evidence that Israel’s successes on the battlefield are not purely technological or tactical, but supernatural.

For those unfamiliar, jinn in Islamic tradition are spiritual beings—neither human nor angel—capable of influencing the physical world in ways that defy logic. In folklore, they can be invisible, shapeshift, or manipulate elements like fire and wind. To accuse a military force of employing them is to claim they are using otherworldly allies in battle.

Iran’s assertion was not supported with physical proof, and Western observers quickly dismissed it as political theater—an attempt to frame Israel’s military dominance as unnatural or even unholy. But the claim plays into a deeper cultural vein. Across the Middle East, stories of jinn involvement in human affairs—especially in times of war—have existed for centuries.

This isn’t the first time jinn have been tied to conflict. Folklore from ancient battles often includes tales of unseen forces aiding one side or sabotaging the other. Whether these accounts are religious metaphor, myth, or propaganda has always been up for debate.

But in the age of drones, cyberwarfare, and advanced espionage, accusations like this serve a dual purpose: they attack the enemy’s reputation and feed the public’s imagination with the idea that the war is not just political, but spiritual.

What’s interesting here is that while most Western audiences will laugh this off, in parts of the world where belief in the supernatural is ingrained, such claims can have a real psychological impact. Wars are not just fought with weapons—they’re fought with stories, fears, and symbols.

Whether you believe in jinn or not, Iran’s accusation against Israel is a reminder that in modern conflict, the battlefield is as much in the mind as it is on the ground.

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