The Daily Telegraph

Iran slips arms to West Bank to stir unrest

Intelligen­ce agents, gangs and militants help to take weapons to occupied area in shadow war with Israel

- By Nataliya Vasilyeva Middle east correspond­ent in Jerusalem

‘If missiles start hitting Tel Aviv from Lebanon, Israel will send aircraft and troops’

IRAN is smuggling weapons to the occupied West Bank in an apparent attempt to foment unrest as part of its ongoing shadow war with Israel, according to US intelligen­ce officials.

Iran has been operating smuggling routes across the Middle East with the help of intelligen­ce operatives, militants and criminal gangs to bring weapons to the West Bank, several security officials from the United States, Israel and Iran told The New York Times yesterday.

The Iranian officials who request anonymity said Tehran wants to flood the Israel-occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s with weapons to stir up potential unrest against Israel.

Reports about Iran’s ongoing smuggling efforts were highlighte­d by an academic study last year that noted a noticeable uptick in weapons and drugs smuggling into the West Bank via Jordan and Egypt.

The long-simmering conflict between Israel and Iran broke to the surface earlier this year as Israel started targeting not only Iranian proxies but also Iranian personnel and assets across the Middle East, mostly recently, assassinat­ing a top Iranian general in Damascus, Syria.

Security officials told The New York

Times the smuggling began about two years ago as weapons flooded the routes previously used to smuggle drugs and other contraband.

Officials believe Iran is using two main routes to the West Bank, via Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Israel. The complex clandestin­e network is believed to use a complex web of militants, organised crime gangs and Bedouin smugglers who reportedly smuggle weapons from Jordan into Israel.

Meanwhile, Israeli forces are reportedly preparing to strike Iranian nuclear facilities if Tehran launches an attack in retaliatio­n for the assassinat­ion of a top general last week.

Israel has held air force drills in recent days and is eyeing vital Iranian infrastruc­ture, including nuclear sites, the London-based media outlet Elaph News reported, citing an unnamed Western security official.

Israelis have been on tenterhook­s since late last week, when a high-precision Israeli air strike killed a top general with the Iranian Revolution­ary Guards Corps and other senior officers at the Iranian consulate in Damascus.

Mohammad Reza Zahedi has been described as Iran’s most important general to have been assassinat­ed since the 2020 US airstrike that killed Qassim Soleimani.

Iran has vowed to retaliate for the killing, sparking fears of a major escalation and even an all-out war between Israel and Iran.

Last Friday, an IDF spokesman pleaded with the Israeli public not to panic-buy supplies and power generators as Western intelligen­ce sources suggested that a major airstrike on the country was imminent within the next 48 hours.

Debunking previous reports of an imminent attack, unnamed US officials quoted by CNN yesterday said that their intelligen­ce indicates that Iran is unlikely to strike Israel directly, fearing broad repercussi­ons of a global conflict.

Iran is now believed to be mulling over a response that would involve one of its proxies such as Lebanon’s Hezbollah or Yemen’s Houthis.

Early yesterday, Israeli forces launched a series of strikes on Syrian army posts in Syria’s south, the IDF said.

That came in response to Syrian rocket fire on Israel-occupied Golan Heights in the north.

There were no immediate reports of casualties.

Separately, in an interview with the Italian newspaper La Repubblica yesterday, Israel Katz, who is Israel’s foreign minister, pledged to strike Iran if Israel comes under attack.

He said: “If Iran attacks us directly, we will attack Iran.

“And if it’s the militias allied with Iran that do it, as a reprisal for the destructio­n of the (Iranian) consulate in Damascus, we will attack them as well.”

Israel has indicated that it is not interested in a major confrontat­ion with Hezbollah, despite the Iran-backed terrorist group hitting northern Israel with rockets almost daily since the start of the war in Gaza.

Asked about a possible response to a major Hezbollah attack, Mr Katz indicated that Israel would consider sending troops to Lebanon.

He said: “If missiles start hitting Tel Aviv from Lebanon as a reprisal for Damascus, Israel will send military aircraft and troops.”

In Iran, a senior commander of the Iranian Revolution­ary Guard Corps issued a veiled threat against the United Arab Emirates for accommodat­ing Israeli interests.

Alireza Tangsiri, an IRGC navy commander, told Iran’s semi-official Student News Agency yesterday that Israelis come to the UAE “not for economic purposes but rather for security and military work”, which, he said, presents a threat to Iran.

The UAE in 2020 became the first Gulf country to normalise relations with Israel in a landmark deal brokered by the United States.

 ?? ?? Palestinia­ns at a hospital where casualties were transporte­d after Israeli bombing on the al-bureij camp in the Gaza Strip
Palestinia­ns at a hospital where casualties were transporte­d after Israeli bombing on the al-bureij camp in the Gaza Strip

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