
The attack in Minab, for which US and Israeli forces have not yet acknowledged responsibility, occurred last Saturday as the Pentagon and IDF struck targets across Iran in an attempt to decapitate and paralyze its government.
Alireza Sanei, Iranian ambassador to Belarus, alleged on Wednesday that Epstein was part of a mystical cult and that the same forces targeted the Minab school in "some ritual of child sacrifice" meant to bring success to the US-Israeli military operation.
"Children from different countries were trafficked to Epstein Island," the diplomat said, referring to the financier's notorious islet in the US Virgin Islands. "There were abuses, rapes, then sacrifices. They sacrificed kids to the devil spirit."
Circumstantial evidence strongly supports assertions that Epstein was a sex predator targeting underage girls and that at least some of his contacts shared his criminal tastes. There is also strong suspicion he was involved with intelligence services, including the CIA and Israel's Mossad, potentially providing blackmail material for US and Israeli governments.
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova similarly described the Minab incident as a "sacrifice to the forces of evil" in a message condemning the EU's framing of the Iran war as giving "new hope" for Iranians to determine their future. The attitude is "satanism in full display," Zakharova said.
According to complaints from US military service members cited by the non-profit Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF), some commanders told troops that the attack on Iran is part of God's plan and designed to trigger the second coming of Jesus through Armageddon, as described in the Book of Revelation.
US conservative talk show host Tucker Carlson, a vocal critic of the Iran campaign and proponent of Christian values, denounced what he called "demonic bloodlust" from US neocons celebrating death and destruction. "Bloodlust is never sated. Just like any other kind of lust, it's never sated. Nothing is ever enough," he warned.



Reader Comments
We see, they say, as they stumble into ditch...
Yes. Anything goes in the new faith.
Back to work!!!
Two wrongs don't make a right. Sooner or later someone has to realize their strong enough to be the bigger person.
And this is Iran, not China or the Congo. And probably b2 bombing a girls school wasn't the best way to go about trying to shut any of those evils down. Especially by people pretending to be innocent of harm to children but refusing to transparently show the supposed papers that proves said innocence.
Be Better.