Rotorua Daily Post

Iran arrests top guards amid fears of spying

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Iran’s leadership is purging its powerful Revolution­ary Guards after a month of chaos for the regime amid fears it has been infiltrate­d by Israeli spies.

A senior general in the guards has been arrested on suspicion of spying for the Jewish state, it emerged this week, while last week Tehran sacked its intelligen­ce chief Hossein Taeb.

Taeb, 59, was dismissed in the wake of three major embarrassm­ents for the Iranian intelligen­ce services, which Israeli security officials claim has left the regime “shocked and rattled”.

The first was a botched alleged attempt by Iran to carry out revenge attacks on Israeli citizens in Turkey. Israel had publicly raised the alarm about the plot and ordered its citizens to flee the country after warning of an imminent attack.

During the same period, Turkey arrested several people who allegedly worked for Iranian spy cells.

The second case, at the end of May, saw Israel publish intercepte­d Iranian documents online, including details about its nuclear programme.

Thirdly, Iran suspects that Israel assassinat­ed two of its nuclear scientists by sending agents to poison their food at dinner parties before vanishing.

The plot was reminiscen­t of the Israeli TV show Tehran, in which undercover Mossad agents carry out attacks on Iranian targets. Israeli officials say the string of events were part of a new tactic to undermine Iranian intelligen­ce known as the “Octopus doctrine”.

The doctrine compares Iran’s leadership to the head of an octopus while its tentacles are the various Iranian proxy groups spread across the Middle East, notably in Syria and Lebanon.

In recent weeks, the Sunday Telegraph understand­s, Israel has shifted from striking the tentacles and is now going straight for the head.

“The Iranians saw all of that informatio­n released by Israel as a huge slap in the face. They were rattled by it,” an Israeli security official told the Telegraph.

Iran analysts say Taeb had a close relationsh­ip with the supreme leader, Ali Khamenei. More reshufflin­g of senior commanders in Iran is now expected as the regime launches a molehunt for more Mossad spies, analysts say.

Iranian spies referred to Taeb as “the judge” because he oversaw the interrogat­ion and torture of prisoners, according to Dr Kylie Moore-gilbert, an Iran affairs analyst and former hostage of the regime.

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