Las Vegas Review-Journal

Iran rattled as Israel repeatedly strikes key targets

- By Ben Hubbard, Farnaz Fassihi and Ronen Bergman

In less than nine months, an assassin on a motorbike fatally shot an al-qaida commander given refuge in Tehran, Iran’s chief nuclear scientist was machine-gunned on a country road, and two separate, mysterious explosions rocked a key Iranian nuclear facility in the desert, striking the heart of the country’s efforts to enrich uranium.

The steady drumbeat of attacks, which intelligen­ce officials said were carried out by Israel, highlighte­d the seeming ease with which Israeli intelligen­ce was able to reach deep inside Iran’s borders and repeatedly strike its most heavily guarded targets, often with the help of turncoat Iranians.

The attacks, the latest wave in more than two decades of sabotage and assassinat­ions, have exposed embarrassi­ng security lapses and left Iran’s leaders looking over their shoulders as they pursue negotiatio­ns with the Biden administra­tion aimed at restoring the 2015 nuclear agreement.

The recriminat­ions have been caustic.

The head of parliament’s strategic center said Iran had turned into a “haven for spies.” The former commander of Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard called for an overhaul of the country’s security and intelligen­ce apparatus. Lawmakers have demanded the resignatio­n of top security and intelligen­ce officials.

Most alarming for Iran, Iranian officials and analysts said, was that the attacks revealed that Israel had an effective network of collaborat­ors inside Iran and that Iran’s intelligen­ce services had failed to find the moles.

“That the Israelis are effectivel­y able to hit Iran inside in such a brazen way is hugely embarrassi­ng and demonstrat­es a weakness that I think plays poorly inside Iran,” said Sanam Vakil, deputy director of the Middle East and North Africa Program at Chatham House.

The attacks have also cast a cloud of paranoia over a country that now sees foreign plots in every mishap.

Over the weekend, Iranian state television flashed a photograph of a man said to be Reza Karimi, 43, and accused him of being the “perpetrato­r of sabotage” in an explosion at the Natanz nuclear enrichment plant last week. But it was unclear who he was, whether he had acted alone and if that was even his real name. In any case, he had fled the country before the blast, Iran’s Intelligen­ce Ministry said.

On Monday, after Iranian state news media reported that Brig. Gen. Mohammad Hosseinzad­eh Hejazi, the deputy commander of the Quds Force, the foreign arm of the Revolution­ary Guard, had died of heart disease, there were immediate suspicions of foul play.

The general would have been the third high-ranking Iranian military official to be assassinat­ed in the last 15 months. The United States killed Gen. Qasem Soleimani, the leader of the Quds Force, in January 2020. Israel assassinat­ed Mohsen Fakhrizade­h, Iran’s chief nuclear scientist and a brigadier general in the Revolution­ary Guard, in November.

Even if Hejazi died of natural causes, the cumulative loss of three top generals was a significan­t blow.

The attacks represent an uptick in a long-running campaign by the intelligen­ce services of Israel and the United States to subvert what they consider to be Iran’s threatenin­g activities.

Chief among them are a nuclear program that Iran insists is peaceful, Iran’s investment in proxy militias across the Arab world, and its developmen­t of precision-guided missiles for Hezbollah, the militant movement in Lebanon.

An Israeli military intelligen­ce document in 2019 said that Hejazi was a leading figure in the last two, as the commander of the Lebanese corps of the Quds Force and the leader of the guided missile project. Revolution­ary Guard spokesman Ramezan Sharif said that Israel wanted to assassinat­e Hejazi.

Israel has been working to derail Iran’s nuclear program, which it considers a mortal threat, since it began. Israel is believed to have started assassinat­ing key figures in the program in 2007, when a nuclear scientist at a uranium plant in Isfahan died in a mysterious gas leak.

In the years since, six other scientists and military officials said to be critical to Iran’s nuclear efforts have been assassinat­ed. A seventh was wounded.

Another top Quds Force commander, Rostam Ghasemi, said he had escaped an Israeli assassinat­ion attempt during a visit to Lebanon in March.

But assassinat­ion is just one tool in a campaign that operates on multiple levels and fronts.

In 2018, Israel carried out a daring nighttime raid to steal a half-ton of secret archives of Iran’s nuclear program from a warehouse in Tehran.

Israel has also reached around the world, tracking down equipment in other countries that is bound for Iran to destroy it, conceal transponde­rs in its packaging or install explosive devices to be detonated after the gear has been installed inside of Iran, according to a former high-ranking U.S. intelligen­ce official.

In addition to setting back Iran’s uranium enrichment program, the attacks are likely to weaken Iran’s hand in indirect talks with the United States over restoring the 2015 nuclear agreement.

President Donald Trump withdrew from the agreement, in which Iran accepted limits on its nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of sanctions, in 2018. President Joe Biden has made restoring it one of his top foreign policy objectives.

Israel opposed the agreement and the timing of its latest attack, while the nuclear talks were taking place in Vienna, suggested that Israel sought if not to derail the talks, to at least diminish Iran’s leverage.

The United States said it was not involved in the attack but has not publicly criticized it either.

It would have been difficult for Israel to carry out these operations without inside help from Iranians, and that may be what rankles Iran most.

Security officials in Iran have prosecuted several Iranian citizens over the past decade, charging them with complicity in Israeli sabotage and assassinat­ion operations. The penalty is execution.

But the infiltrati­ons have also sullied the reputation of the intelligen­ce wing of the Revolution­ary Guard, which is responsibl­e for guarding nuclear sites and scientists.

A former Guard commander demanded a “cleansing” of the intelligen­ce service, and Iran’s vice president, Eshaq Jahangiri, said the unit responsibl­e for security at Natanz should be “be held accountabl­e for its failures.”

The deputy head of parliament, Amir-hossein Ghazizadeh Hashemi, told the Iranian news media on Monday that it was no longer enough to blame Israel and the United States for such attacks. Iran needed to clean its own house.

As a publicatio­n affiliated with the Guard, Mashregh News, put it last week: “Why does the security of the nuclear facility act so irresponsi­bly that it gets hit twice from the same hole?”

But the Revolution­ary Guard answers only to Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and so far there has been no sign of a top-down reshufflin­g.

After each attack, Iran has struggled to respond, sometimes claiming to have identified those responsibl­e only after they had left the country or saying that they remained at large. Iranian officials also insist that they have foiled other attacks.

Calls for retaliatio­n grow louder after each attack. Conservati­ves have accused the government of President Hassan Rouhani of weakness or of subjugatin­g the country’s security to the nuclear talks in hopes they will lead to relief from U.S. sanctions.

But any overt retaliatio­n risks an overwhelmi­ng Israeli response.

“They are not in a hurry to start a war,” said Talal Atrissi, a political science professor at the Lebanese University in Beirut. “Retaliatio­n means war.”

And if the repeated Israeli attacks had the effect of fomenting a national paranoia, an intelligen­ce official said, that was a side benefit for Israel. The steps Iran has taken to to root out potential spies has slowed down the enrichment work, the official said.

 ?? ISLAMIC REPUBLIC IRAN BROADCASTI­NG VIA AP ?? Centrifuge machines line a hall damaged April 11 at Iran’s Natanz Uranium Enrichment Facility, south of Tehran. Iran named a suspect Saturday in the attack as Reza Karimi and said he had fled the country “hours before” the sabotage happened.
ISLAMIC REPUBLIC IRAN BROADCASTI­NG VIA AP Centrifuge machines line a hall damaged April 11 at Iran’s Natanz Uranium Enrichment Facility, south of Tehran. Iran named a suspect Saturday in the attack as Reza Karimi and said he had fled the country “hours before” the sabotage happened.
 ?? VAHID SALEMI / AP FILE (2006) ?? Brigadier Gen. Mohammad Hosseinzad­eh Hejazi, left, attends a military parade in Tehran, Iran. Hejazi, a deputy commander in Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard, has died, the Guard Corps announced Sunday. The death raised immediate suspicions of foul play.
VAHID SALEMI / AP FILE (2006) Brigadier Gen. Mohammad Hosseinzad­eh Hejazi, left, attends a military parade in Tehran, Iran. Hejazi, a deputy commander in Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard, has died, the Guard Corps announced Sunday. The death raised immediate suspicions of foul play.

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