The Jerusalem Post

Mossad’s Cohen doctrine on Iran: Never stop

- ANALYSIS • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

The Iranians are probably exhausted from keeping up with all of the hits they have taken and are hoping for a break.

They should not hold their breath.

Though Mossad Director Yossi Cohen only has until June for the end of his term – presuming reports are correct that his spy agency was behind the latest incident at the Natanz nuclear facility – he may still have some surprises left up his sleeve before he exits stage left.

Many things can be said about Cohen’s reign as Mossad chief since January 2016, but one unambiguou­s message he has sent the Islamic Republic is that, like a science fiction “Terminator,” he never stops, and they are perpetuall­y in his cross-hairs.

Tehran was all ready to pat itself on the back this Saturday as having recovered from a presumed Mossad operation in July 2020 at the same facility.

Back on July 2, 2020, physical sabotage led to the destructio­n of 75% of an above ground nuclear facility at Natanz for assembling advanced centrifuge­s on a mass scale.

The destructio­n was so vast that it was as if the whole facility had been wiped out.

Intelligen­ce sources and nuclear experts told The Jerusalem Post that it would set back the ayatollahs’ advanced centrifuge nuclear efforts by one to two years.

But Iran was determined to learn from the experience so that it could not repeat itself.

After all, this was really the second attack on a Natanz area nuclear facility, following a massive cyber sabotage in 2009-2010, credited by foreign sources to both Israel and the US.

So the Islamic Republic decided to rebuild the destroyed facility undergroun­d.

For years, a major argument many have made insisting on greater diplomatic flexibilit­y from Israel on the nuclear issues is that Jerusalem lacks the capability to attack undergroun­d Iranian nuclear facilities.

Already for a long time, Iran’s undergroun­d Fordow nuclear facility has been the lead point for this argument.

The Iranians reasoned that Israel has not touched Fordow, so if they rebuilt the destroyed Natanz facility undergroun­d, it would be beyond Israel’s reach.

All they had lost was some time. Within a year or two, more of their nuclear program would be undergroun­d and impervious to Israeli meddling.

What other meddling? In between the July 2, 2020 strike and Sunday, Cohen, according to many reports, was keeping Iran busy on many other fronts besides its nuclear facilities.

Aside from a series of still unexplaine­d explosions around Iran in July 2020, al-Qaeda’s number two global commander was assassinat­ed in Iran, reportedly by the Mossad, in August 2020.

The fact of his assassinat­ion was leaked in mid-November 2020.

This was only a few weeks before the assassinat­ion of Iran nuclear military program founder and chief Mohsen Fakhrizade­h – also credited by many to the Mossad.

Oh, and by the way, the Post has also reported that the Mossad’s reported role in assisting the US with assassinat­ing Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps Quds Force leader Qasem Soleimani was far greater than has been publicized to date.

This is also without getting into possibly the most daring spy agency operation in Israeli history when dozens of Israeli agents raided Iran’s secret nuclear archives in the heart of Tehran in January 2018.

So they were feeling pretty good about their move undergroun­d at Natanz – until the Mossad reportedly took out the facility’s electricit­y on Sunday, causing an estimated nine-month delay.

Apparently undergroun­d would not protect Iranian secrets, nuclear machines or anything else from Cohen.

In addition, the Post reported Monday that the operation to sabotage the undergroun­d part of Natanz’s nuclear facility was underway long before the current nuclear talks in Vienna.

This might seem obvious, but the truth is that this is the first major publicized Mossad operation against the Islamic Republic since US President Joe Biden took office; the attack on Iran’s Saviz ship, if carried out by Israel as reported by many, would have been a majority IDF operation and also only took place this week.

It might have been assumed by the Iranians that their undergroun­d Natanz facility was protected not only from Israeli air force and other uses of force which could only be deployed above ground, but also because Israel would not want to shake the boat while the new Biden administra­tion is trying to negotiate.

Tehran might have thought that a Biden administra­tion had bought it some time off from Mossad adventures.

They also might have thought that Cohen is a lameduck, given that he has only around two months left in office.

The main lesson from the news that this operation was long planned and that it hit an undergroun­d facility, is that Cohen’s doctrine is to never stop hitting Iran.

He is unable to determine what diplomatic stances the US and other world powers will take.

Cohen also won’t be running the agency by the time any new nuclear deal might be struck.

But as long as he has a trigger to pull and there is time left on the game clock, he will use it to physically or by cyber means, or both, push back the ayatollahs from getting too close to the nuclear threshold.

Whether above ground or below, there is nowhere to hide.

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