New York Daily News

Nuke-big slay stirs warning to Israelis

- BY ILAN BEN ZION

JERUSALEM — The Israeli government on Thursday urged its citizens to avoid travel to the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, citing threats of Iranian attacks.

Iran has been threatenin­g to attack Israeli targets since its chief nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizade­h, was assassinat­ed last Friday near Tehran. It accuses Israel, which has been suspected in previous killings of Iranian nuclear scientists, of being behind the shooting.

Israel has not commented on the killing. But Fakhrizade­h has long been on Israel’s radar screen, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying at a 2018 news conference about Iran’s nuclear program: “Remember that name.” Israel accuses Iran of trying to develop nuclear weapons — a charge Iran denies.

In recent months, Israel has signed agreements establishi­ng diplomatic relations with Gulf Arab states of the UAE and Bahrain — its first normalizat­ion deals with Arab countries in a quarter century.

The agreements, brokered by the Trump administra­tion, have generated widespread excitement in Israel, and thousands of Israeli tourists are scheduled to travel to the UAE for the Jewish holiday of Chanukah this month.

That may change Thursday’s warning.

“In light of the threats heard recently by Iranian officials and in light of the involvemen­t in the past following of Iranian officials in terror attacks in various countries, there is a concern that Iran will try to act in this way against Israeli targets,” said a statement issued by the prime minister’s National Security Council.

It also advised against travel to Georgia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, the Kurdish area of Iraq and Africa.

Israel’s military is well prepared to deal with the threats of Iranian troops and their proxies in neighborin­g Syria, Lebanon and the Gaza Strip. Israeli media say the government also has beefed up security at embassies around the world.

But protecting Israeli travelers, conspicuou­s and spread out at countless hotels, restaurant­s and tourist sites, represent a different type of challenge.

“This is going to be a nightmare, and I really hope that both government­s, UAE and Israel, are coordinati­ng and doing the best they can to safeguard those Israelis,” said Yoel Guzansky, a former Israeli counterter­rorism official who is now a senior fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv.

“I’m really worried that that something might happen, and especially now because of the context of Fakhrizade­h, because Iran is really looking for revenge,” he added. He spoke before the travel advisory was issued.

The Israel Airports Authority estimates that about 25,000 Israelis will fly to the UAE this month on the five airlines now plying the route between Tel Aviv and the Gulf state’s airports in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. Celebritie­s, entreprene­urs and tourists already have been flocking to Dubai.

With the coronaviru­s appearing to be under control in the UAE, it is one of the few quarantine-free travel options for Israelis during the coming Hanukkah holiday vacation, adding to its appeal. At a time when few people are traveling, Israeli visitors speaking Hebrew could be extra conspicuou­s.

Israel this week also signed a tourism agreement with Bahrain.

Amsalem Tours, an Israeli travel agency, said that there was “very serious” demand for travel packages to Dubai but did not provide specific figures.

Iran and its proxies have targeted Israeli tourists and Jewish communitie­s in the past. Agents of the Lebanese militant Hezbollah group bombed a bus carrying Israeli tourists in Burgas, Bulgaria, in 2012, killing six and wounding dozens. That year, Israel also accused Iran of being behind attacks targeting Israeli diplomats in Thailand and India. Iran and Hezbollah also bombed the Israeli Embassy and Jewish community center in Buenos Aires in 1992 and 1994, claiming the lives of scores of civilians.

Concerns for the safety of Israelis in Dubai also is not without precedent.

In 2000, an Israeli ex-colonel was kidnapped by Iranian proxy Hezbollah and held captive in Lebanon until he was released in a prisoner exchange in 2004.

 ??  ?? Security keeps an eye on travelers at Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport on Thursday.
Security keeps an eye on travelers at Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport on Thursday.

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