PROPHECY UPDATE
PROPHECY RELATED NEWS AND COMMENTARY
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
Russian Troops Strike Energy Facilities Used by Ukraine's Military-Industrial Complex in Past Day
Iranian authorities tighten crackdown on fourth day of protests as unrest continues
Security has been increased throughout Iran as protests entered their fourth day on Wednesday, with authorities stepping up measures to contain demonstrations spreading across multiple cities.
Despite many provinces being on an official shutdown due to cold weather and energy constraints, protesters gathered in the cities of Tehran, Isfahan, Kermanshah, and Mashhad. Security forces were seen deploying covert units near protest sites in Mashhad, while videos from within Iran showed police and security officials positioning water cannons against demonstrators in Tehran.
Protests began after the bazaaris (merchant class) closed their shops on Sunday and took to the streets to protest the country’s dire financial situation. The market value of $1 reached 1.4 million rials, when its official value is 42,000 rials.
Iran’s First Vice President Mohammad Reza Aref tendered his resignation on Wednesday amid the unrest, but President Masoud Pezeshkian declined to accept it, a senior adviser at the presidency confirmed, according to Iran International.
Iran’s prosecutor-general also warned on Wednesday that authorities would respond firmly if economic protests were transformed into unrest or attacks on public property.
Mohammad Movahedi-Azad said the protests, driven by economic hardship, were understandable and should be dealt with through lawful means. However, he cautioned against what he described as organized attempts to hijack legitimate grievances.
He said the state would not tolerate what he called the “systematic manipulation” of protests, citing the role of coordinated media activity, misleading narratives, and the involvement of individuals who disrupt public order.
Protests regarding ongoing financial situation
Meanwhile, four students from the University of Tehran arrested on Tuesday were released late that night, the university announced on Wednesday afternoon. Mohammad-Reza Taghidokht, executive deputy of the university president’s office, told the Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA) that all four detained students had been freed by authorities.Amid the nationwide unrest, rumors also circulated that a protester had become the first fatality of the demonstrations. Reports initially claimed that 18-year-old Mehdi Samavati had been shot and killed by security officials in the southern city of Fasa. However, sources told The Jerusalem Post that such claims were false.
A video later emerged that reportedly showed Samavati alive. It is believed that the Iranian regime deliberately spread news of his death in an attempt to sow fear among the protesters.
The reports were also disputed by a senior judicial official in Fasa. According to Iranian media, Hamed Ostovar, head of Fasa’s justice department, denied that anyone had been killed during the unrest while confirming that arrests and injuries had occurred.
“The claim is not true and is only a rumor,” Ostovar said.
He did, however, acknowledge that images circulating online showed alleged damage to part of the governor’s office.
“During the incident and after police entered the area, four of the attackers were arrested,” he said, adding that three police officers were injured.
Residents of Fasa, which has a population of 11,000, gathered outside the governor’s office and other official buildings to protest Iran’s worsening financial situation, witnesses said. Some demonstrators were heard chanting slogans critical of the Islamic Republic during the gathering.
A video carried by state media showed a group of people trying to break open the gate of the building. Reuters verified the location of the footage but was not able to independently verify the timing.
The governor of Fasa told state media that "the protests were caused by inflation and economic conditions. Individuals influenced by hostile channels and media participated in them... the situation is back to normal."
Iranian authorities have responded to previous protests over issues ranging from prices, drought, women's rights and political freedoms with forceful security measures and extensive arrests.
Iranians set fire to building, chant against regime as protests ramp up across country
Iranian protesters set fire on Wednesday evening to a building in Asadabad, in the Hamadan province of western Iran, footage circulated on social media by Iranian independent journalists and media outlets showed as protests intensified across the country.
Unverified reports claimed the targeted building to be a base of the Basij paramilitary forces, though this claim could not be independently verified.
Iranian semi-state-owned media outlet, ISNA, reported that a Basij officer was killed during the protests.
Iran International reported local security forces opened fire and deployed tear gas in attempt to disperse the protests in Asadabad. It further reported that demonstrators "remained in the streets."
'This is the national slogan: Reza, Reza Pahlavi'
Protests intensified across Iran as protesters were filmed chanting in support of the exiled Reza Pahlavi and against the Islamic regime in various cities across Iran.
Protesters in Khorramabad in the western Lorestan province were seen marching in the streets while chanting "Iranian, shout out, scream for your right," in footage shared by Radio Farda, part of the US-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty media group.
In Dehloran, protesters reportedly chanted "This is the national slogan: Reza, Reza Pahlavi."
In the city of Arak, protesters were filmed shouting anti-regime chants, including "Basiji, IRGC, you are ISIS," in footage shared by IranWire.
Earlier on Wednesday, Iranian protesters tried to break into a local government building in the southern Fars province. Protests over high inflation and a slump in the value of the local rial currency began among shopkeepers in Tehran on Sunday and by Tuesday had spread to several universities in Tehran, with the reported break-in attempt on Wednesday.
This is a developing story.
NATO member 'apprehends Russian ship' after critical undersea cable damaged
Finnish officials located the ship using data provided by Elisa, which had detected the fault in one of its submarine cables early on Wednesday morning.
Finland’s president confirmed the incident on X, stating that Finnish authorities had inspected a vessel suspected of damaging cables in the Gulf of Finland.
Alexander Stubb wrote: "We are monitoring the situation in close cooperation with the government.
"Finland is prepared for security challenges of various kinds, and we respond to them as necessary."
The police have consulted the National Prosecutor's Office, which has issued a prosecution order.
Following consultations with the National Prosecutor’s Office, police have been granted a prosecution order.
The investigation is focusing on suspected aggravated criminal damage, attempted aggravated criminal damage, and aggravated interference with telecommunications.
Estonian authorities have also been notified, and cross-border coordination is ongoing.
Russia flaunts 'unstoppable' nuclear missile for first time in Belarus as WW3 fears escalate
Russia appears to have deployed its so-called ‘unstoppable’ nuclear-capable missiles, potentially bringing the threat of devastating strikes closer than ever.
On Tuesday, the Defense Ministry released a video claiming to show combat vehicles in an undisclosed location in Belarus carrying the Oreshnik missile system.
State news agency TASS said it was the first time the ministry had publicly shown the Oreshnik, which President Vladimir Putin has declared impossible to intercept, with speeds reportedly exceeding Mach 10.
The Belarusian Defense Ministry said that the Oreshnik has a range of up to 3,100 miles. Reports have suggested it could hit London in 'eight minutes.'
TASS boasted that it would take the missile only 11 minutes to reach an air base in Poland and 17 minutes to reach NATO headquarters in Brussels.
While the Oreshnik is not an intercontinental missile capable of reaching the US mainland, its reported range puts American allies within striking distance, meaning any attack on them could draw the US directly into the conflict.
The announcement comes at a critical time for Russia-Ukraine peace talks. Trump hosted Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at his Florida resort on Sunday and insisted that Kyiv and Moscow were 'closer than ever before' to a peace settlement.
However, days before, Trump warned that the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war could spiral into a world war.
'Things like this end up in a third world war,' he told reporters on December 11. 'Everybody keeps playing games like this, you'll end up in a third world war, and we don't want to see that happen.'
Andrey Bogodel, the deputy chief of the General Staff department of the Military Academy of Belarus, told TASS that the deployment of Oreshnik was an anti-aggression warning to Western countries.
'Today, any good deed must, of course, be done with fists. Unfortunately, the world can no longer be organized any other way,' he said.
'Here, the "Oreshnik" isn't a weapon with which we want to attack, for example, Britain or Germany, but it's a message that we, above all, will protect our peace in this way. A way that will allow us to say that it's definitely better not to interfere with us.'
Bogodel added that Western nations had repeatedly crossed red lines during Russia’s so-called special military operation in Ukraine.
'Literally, there are red lines associated specifically with the use of missile systems, even nuclear weapons. After all, remember the appearance of the missiles they launched on us – SCALP, Storm Shadow, then ATACMS,' the expert continued.
'They also used drones against our radiation early warning stations. As well as attacks against our bombers, and so on. This is all an attempt to see how high Russia’s nuclear threshold is.'
The missile system was first used on November 21, 2024, in a test that saw it strike a defense plant in Ukraine.
Once launched, the Oreshnik uses its rocket engines to accelerate rapidly until it reaches the upper atmosphere, where its first-stage boosters are discarded after fuel depletion, Matthew Powell, Teaching Fellow in Strategic and Air Power Studies, University of Portsmouth, wrote in The Conversation.
The missile’s multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) are then released, traveling through space toward their designated targets.
Putin has claimed that conventional Oreshnik missiles could incinerate targets with temperatures reaching 7,200°F, nearly as hot as the surface of the sun, though the weapon is also capable of carrying a nuclear warhead.
Putin said earlier this month that the Oreshnik would enter combat duty before the year's end.