The National - News

Seeking greater confrontat­ion, Israel’s assassins are testing the patience

- Mohamad Ali Harisi and Nada Homsi

The killing of senior Iranian intelligen­ce officers in Damascus on Saturday is an attempt to pull Tehran into a deeper regional confrontat­ion over Israel’s war in Gaza and indicates a prolonged series of revenge killings across the Middle East, according to security officials and analysts.

Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps accused Israel of killing four of its security advisers in a strike in Damascus, including its intelligen­ce chief in Syria and his deputy. Israel did not comment on the accusation­s. “The strike confirms that we are in a phase of reciprocal killings,” a security official in Beirut told

The National.

The attack happened weeks after the killing in Syria of Brig Gen Razi Mousavi, a senior IRGC military commander. Iran also accused Israel of being behind the attack and vowed to retaliate.

Earlier this month, Israel killed Saleh Al Arouri, the Iran-backed Hamas deputy leader in Beirut, followed by a strike in eastern Baghdad that killed three militants allied with Tehran. The next week, an Israeli strike killed the senior commander in Hezbollah’s elite Radwan unit, Wissam Al Tawil, in his car.

“This is going to be a long confrontat­ion,” said the security official.

Saturday’s strike, which hit a residentia­l building in the Syrian capital, came days after Iran launched a missile attack on the city of Erbil in northern Iraq.

Tehran said it had targeted an “Israeli spy base”, a claim Iraq’s federal government in Baghdad rejected.

The strike was a rare direct Iranian involvemen­t in the regional confrontat­ion over Israel’s war in Gaza. The IRGC claimed the strikes were carried out in “response to the recent evil acts of the Zionist regime in martyring IRGC and resistance commanders” — in reference to the assassinat­ions.

“It seems that the Iranian strike in Erbil achieved its goal and hurt the Israelis, and that is why Israel responded in this way,” said analyst Wissam Bazzi.

But according to Joseph Daher, a regional scholar who has written two books on Syria and the Lebanese Hezbollah group, “These days whenever there’s an opportunit­y [Israel] takes it.”

He added that Israel’s assassinat­ions of the senior IRGC officials in Syria are a “continuati­on” of covert Israeli military operations on Iranian and Iran-affiliated figures that have taken place since the war in Syria began in 2011.

Since the Hamas attacks on

Israel’s assassinat­ions of senior IRGC officials are a ‘continuati­on’ of covert military operations, says scholar Joseph Daher

Israel on October 7 and the start of the war in the Gaza Strip, Tehran has intensifie­d operations through proxy groups in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Yemen – all of them seeking to exert pressure on Israel to cease its assault on the enclave.

This month, officials and militants told The National that the Iran-backed armed factions in the Middle East had establishe­d a daily co-ordination process through a joint command, mainly focused on picking up targets and the timings of attacks against Israel and US forces. “We should expect assassinat­ions

and bombings throughout this wide region, from Iran to the Axis countries led by Iran, in Iraq, Yemen, Lebanon, Syria and even in Iran itself,” said Muhammad Sedqian, director of the Arab Centre for Iranian Studies in Tehran.

“Perhaps we will witness something bigger than assassinat­ions.”

Mr Daher said that if Israel’s wave of assassinat­ions continues, it would be because “they have a green light [from the US] on everything in Syria related to the IRGC”.

Crucially, Iran’s response to Israeli attacks on its forces in the region has historical­ly been reserved, due to the possibilit­y that full-on war would destroy the political, military, and economic influence it has built in the region and through its proxies over the years.

“Israel knows there won’t be a response, or it will be a small response,” Mr Daher said.

“They don’t have a green light for a full war in Lebanon,” where the Lebanese Hezbollah group is waging a mid-intensity border conflict with Israel in an attempt to divert it from its war in Gaza, he added.

The cross-border conflict has displaced tens of thousands of people on both sides.

The hostilitie­s have presented a major problem for Israel, whose displaced have often reiterated their hesitation to return as long as the Iran-backed Hezbollah – with a paramilita­ry that outmatched the Lebanese army – remains in control of southern Lebanon.

Although Hezbollah initiated the cross-border conflict, the group is careful to keep hostilitie­s contained out of a desire to avoid a full-scale war that would drag its sponsor, Iran, deeper into the fray.

“But inside Syria, Israel has no problem with bombarding and conducting assassinat­ions” against Iranian officials and allies, Mr Daher said.

“Even if the Americans don’t agree, they’re not objecting. Historical­ly speaking it’s been like this.”

An all-out war directly involving Iran remains unlikely given Tehran’s reluctance to be dragged in, most analysts agree, although the slightest miscalcula­tion could tip the region into turmoil.

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