New York Post

Drones, bombs & spies to stop Tehran

Inside amazing Israeli triple play to derail nuclear plans

- JAKE WALLIS SIMONS

ISRAEL has carried out three major operations over the last 18 months against Iran’s nuclear sites. These attacks involved as many as a thousand Mossad personnel and were executed with ruthless precision using high-tech weaponry, including drones and a quadcopter — and spies within Tehran’s holy of holies, its nuclear program.

While President Biden’s nuclear negotiator­s try to snatch catastroph­e from the jaws of defeat in Vienna, Israel is taking things more seriously.

Last week, Naftali Bennett, the Israeli prime minister, pivoted to a new policy on Tehran: retaliatin­g against aggression from militias backed by Tehran with covert strikes on Iranian soil.

This builds on the extensive capabiliti­es that the Mossad has built up in the Islamic Republic in recent years. In February — seven months before The New York Times “broke” the same story — I exposed in the Jewish Chronicle of London how Israeli spies killed nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizade­h using a remote-controlled machine gun. I can now reveal the secrets behind Israel’s latest triple attack on Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

The tripartite sabotage effort began on July 2, 2020, with a mysterious explosion in the Iran Center for Advanced Centrifuge­s (ICAC) facility at Natanz, one of the ultrasecur­e nuclear sites that are dotted around Iran.

At first, the Iranians were mystified. The building had apparently blown itself up. But how? The answer, as they say, shocked them. When the ayatollah’s apparatchi­ks were renovating the facility in 2019, Israeli agents had posed as constructi­on merchants and sold them building supplies. Those building supplies were packed with explosives. A year later, they were detonated by Tel Aviv.

Although this created substantia­l damage, the Natanz plant was far from out of the game. Beneath a protective layer of 40 feet of concrete and iron lay the inner sanctum of the A1000 subterrane­an hall. Inside were up to 5,000 centrifuge­s that whirred away day and night, minute by minute taking the Iranian regime closer toward a nuclear weapon.

The second phase of the plan swung into action. Mossad spies approached up to 10 Iranian scientists who had access to this hall and managed to persuade them to switch sides — although they led the scientists to believe that they were working for internatio­nal dissidents, not Israel.

Incredibly, the scientists agreed to blow up the high-security facility.

“Their motivation­s were all different,” a well-placed Israeli source tells me. “Mossad found out what they deeply wanted in their lives and offered it to them. There was an inner circle of scientists who knew more about the operation, and an outer circle who helped out but had less informatio­n.”

There remained the puzzle of getting the explosives into the fortified complex.

This was achieved in two ways. First, a drone flew into its airspace and delivered the bombs to an agreed-upon location to be collected by the scientists. Then came the smuggling.

“Let’s say you wanted to get explosives into Natanz,” a source told me, coyly. “How could you do it? You could, for example, think about how people working there need to eat. They need food.

“So you could put the explosives in the lorry that delivers the food to the canteen, and the scientists could pick it up once it’s inside. Yes, you could do that.”

The plan worked. The scientists collected the bombs and installed them. In April, after Iran announced that it had started to use advanced IR-5 and IR-6 centrifuge­s in the undergroun­d hall — in brazen defiance of its nu

clear commitment­s — the explosives were triggered.

The blast destroyed the secure power system, causing a blackout. Ninety percent of the centrifuge­s were destroyed, putting the facility out of action for up to nine months. The scientists instantly vanished. All are alive and well today.

Mossad’s attention then turned to the production of the centrifuge­s themselves, to disrupt the regime’s attempt to restore the Natanz facility. The crosshairs moved to Karaj, 30 miles northwest of Tehran, where the Iran Centrifuge Technology Company (TESA) is located.

Over the preceding months, a team of Israeli spies and their Iranian agents had jointly smuggled an armed quadcopter — weighing the same as a motorcycle, a source confirmed — into the country, piece by piece. Now it was time to deploy it.

On June 23, the team assembled the kit and took it to a location 10 miles from the TESA factory. The operatives launched it, piloted it to the factory and released the payload, causing a large explosion. Then the drone returned to the launch site, where it was spirited away to be used again.

It is significan­t that these operations took place while the negotiatio­ns were continuing in Vienna. The Mossad operations were carried out without internatio­nal collaborat­ion. To use Israeli intelligen­ce slang, the attacks were “blueand-white” rather than “bluewhite-and-red,” which refers to American involvemen­t. This is significan­t, too.

In recent weeks, Axios reported, Israel has shared intelligen­ce proving that Iran has been laying the technical groundwork for enriching uranium to 90 percent purity, the level required for a bomb.

While Biden’s team, saturated with naivete and a Back to the Future focus on the Obama years, fruitlessl­y pursues jaw-jaw in Vienna, the cynical Iranians are preparing for war — and the Mossad, whose instincts are sharpened by the desire to protect their families from annihilati­on, is trying to stop them. The contrast between cloudcucko­o Washington and postHoloca­ust Jerusalem is stark. And in seven months’ time, you might read even this in The New York Times.

 ?? ?? THREE STRIKES: Not only did Israel’s Mossad assassinat­e top Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizade­h (right) in an ambush last year (top), but it infiltrate­d Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility (above) in two separate strikes and took out a centrifuge factory using a quadcopter (left).
THREE STRIKES: Not only did Israel’s Mossad assassinat­e top Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizade­h (right) in an ambush last year (top), but it infiltrate­d Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility (above) in two separate strikes and took out a centrifuge factory using a quadcopter (left).

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