An
Al Jazeera investigation finds internal security facilities in populated areas have been heavily targeted. Experts say the aim is to try to make the Iranian state collapse.Rescue workers inspect the site of an Israeli and US strike on a police station in
Tehran on March 3, 2026 [Majid Khahi/ISNA/WANA via Reuters]Published On 30 Mar 2026In the densely populated neighbourhoods of southern
Tehran, the 11th Criminal Investigation Base once stood as a mundane symbol of local law enforcement. Its detectives investigated economic crimes, fraud and petty thefts.The building housed no ballistic missiles, no uranium centrifuges and no military command centres. Today, it is a crater. In the opening wave of the
United States-
Israel war on
Iran, warplanes wiped the local police station off the map.Satellite imagery provided by
Planet Labs shows the destruction of the 11th Criminal Investigation Base in southern
Tehran on February 26 and March 6, 2026. [
Al Jazeera/Planet]It was not an isolated incident. An investigation by
Al Jazeera’s Digital Investigations unit has verified that at least 75 internal security sites were destroyed or damaged in bombardments by
Israel and the US from February 28 to March 10. The targeted facilities included local police stations, criminal investigation headquarters, public security offices and checkpoints operated by the
Basij paramilitary force.
Al Jazeera mapped the strikes using open-source data, cross-referencing field reports with satellite imagery to confirm the destruction. However, conducting independent verification has grown increasingly difficult. On March 6, commercial satellite providers
Planet Labs and
Vantor restricted imagery over the Middle East, later expanding the blackout to impose a 14-day delay on all images of
Iran.While the companies said the blackout prevents hostile actors from endangering civilians, independent journalist
Ken Klippenstein recently revealed a leaked
US Space Force directive dictating how commercial satellite firms describe damage. The leak exposed a deliberate US effort to control the flow of information and obscure the reality of the battlefield.Targeting population centresThe spatial distribution of the 75 verified strikes revealed a clear and deliberate strategy. Warplanes bypassed isolated military installations to hit the infrastructure
Tehran uses to police its citizens.An
Al Jazeera map details the geographic distribution of the 75 internal security sites targeted by US-Israeli strikes, showing a heavy concentration in
Tehran and western provinces. [
Al Jazeera]The capital alone absorbed 31 strikes, more than 40 percent of the total targets. Sanandaj, the capital of Kurdistan province, suffered eight strikes. The remaining targets were clustered tightly in major western and central cities, including Isfahan, Kermanshah and Hamedan. Meanwhile,
Iran’s sprawling eastern and southeastern provinces remained largely untouched by this campaign.By overlaying the strike coordinates with demographic maps, the investigation shows a near-perfect alignment with urban density. More than 70 percent of
Iran’s population lives in these targeted western urban areas.A population density map of
Iran demonstrates how the strike locations closely align with the country’s most heavily populated urban centres. [
Al Jazeera]The strikes systematically targeted the Law Enforcement Command, known as FARAJA, and the
Basij network. FARAJA, elevated in 2021 by late Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to operate alongside the military, is currently led by Ahmad-Reza Radan. It manages daily urban law enforcement and riot control. The
Basij, an immense volunteer paramilitary force deeply embedded in Iranian neighbourhoods, acts as the state’s ultimate tool for social control.Engineering state collapseThe pattern of the US-Israeli air strikes points to an objective far removed from dismantling nuclear facilities or degrading military infrastructure. It reveals a calculated attempt to engineer the collapse of the Iranian state.On February 28, US President Donald Trump launched the war and in a video address urged Iranians to take over their government once the bombs stopped falling. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu echoed this sentiment in Farsi, calling on millions of Iranians to take to the streets and describing the military strategy as breaking the Iranian government’s bones.The military planning, however, preceded events on the ground that Trump and Netanyahu pointed to for justification for their war. Israeli Defence Minister
Israel Katz revealed in early March that
Israel had been planning to strike
Iran in mid-2026, long before January’s deadly government crackdown across
Iran against economic protests.Satellite imagery captures extensive damage to the Beheshti
Basij headquarters in
Tehran’s District 8 after the initial wave of strikes. [
Al Jazeera/Planet]This approach aligns with a broader Israeli doctrine. Daniel Levy, a former Israeli government adviser, previously told
Al Jazeera that
Israel has no interest in a smooth political transition in
Tehran. What
Israel wants is the collapse of the government and the state, Levy said, adding that if the repercussions spread to Iraq, the Gulf and the entire region, that is better from
Israel’s point of view.Still, a month into the war, the US-Israeli strategy to spark an internal revolution through the systematic destruction of
Iran’s internal security apparatus appears to be failing.Iranians are living under daily bombardments. As missiles destroy civilian infrastructure and oil refineries burn, daily survival has eclipsed any coordinated political uprising. The United Nations special rapporteur on human rights in
Iran has warned that civilians are facing a simultaneous military and human rights crisis.Rather than collapsing,
Iran’s internal security apparatus has adapted. During Ramadan, FARAJA deployed 24-hour patrols across
Tehran, and riot police shut down public gatherings before the Persian New Year holiday. After the March 17 assassination of
Basij commander Gholamreza Soleimani, Israeli forces released footage of strikes on mobile
Basij checkpoints, indicating that Iranian security forces are still controlling the streets.The US attempt to dismantle state security from the air mirrors its disastrous 2003 de-Baathification policy in neighbouring Iraq, which barred members of the former ruling Baath Party from holding government jobs, dismantled local policing and birthed a devastating sectarian war. Unlike in Iraq, Washington today has no troops on the ground in
Iran to fill a security void it is trying to create.Beneath the rubble of the 11th Criminal Investigation Base and dozens of stations like it, the US and
Israel are aiming to bury the Iranian state and spark a popular revolt. Instead, they have trapped millions of civilians in a burning country.