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Technical glitch nearly jeopardized Hamas leader's killing in Tehran, report says

Dec 29, 2024, 09:55 GMT+0Updated: 11:59 GMT+0
A scene of the service for Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran
A scene of the service for Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran

Just days after Israel admitted it had killed Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran last summer, its intelligence service has revealed that the operation was nearly scuppered after a technical glitch in the site of the killing.

A report from Israel’s Channel 12 revealed that an explosive device was planted in advance in the bedroom of the secret Neshat compound of the Revolutionary Guards, before an air conditioning malfunction almost jeopardized the entire operation.

Haniyeh was guarded by the IRGC’s elite Ansar al-Mahdi unit, known for their expertise in hand-to-hand combat, staying in the IRGC’s Neshat compound, a top secret accommodation facility which hosts top government officials and foreign dignitaries.

Haniyeh slept in the same room around eight times, making the location ideal for an assassination but when the air conditioner in Haniyeh's room broke down, he was forced to leave after a bomb had been planted ready for the killing.

"The operation was on a tightrope," a senior security source told Channel 12. "There was a fear that his room would be replaced with another. Finally, they managed to fix the air conditioner, and he returned to his original room until the sky went up.”

A hole was blown through the outer wall, shaking the whole compound at around 1:30 am, with a massive explosion.

A first aid team on the compound ran to the site and Haniyeh’s bodyguard found his body bleeding on the floor. The report says he fell to his knees and burst into tears in the dramatic moment the group, designated terrorists by countries including the US and UK, began to see its top leadership crumbling.

One of the boldest and most complex operations of its kind, Israel had ruled out killing Haniyeh in Qatar for fear of jeopardizing hostage negotiations which Qatar was mediating, while killing him in Turkey, the group’s other outpost, risked the wrath of both Turkey and its ally Russia.

After October 7, documents found in Gaza revealed Haniyeh, once considered less a target than the likes of Hamas’s Gaza leader, Yahya Sinwar, revealed the leader in exile was closely tied to the plans which led to the most deadly single day for Jews since the Holocaust.

Over the years, he had evaded multiple assassination attempts, and Iran was an unlikely location, but the channel 12 report has shown that plans were underway for an operation to take place while Haniyeh was attending the funeral of Ebrahim Raisi, killed in a mysterious helicopter crash in May.

That plan was shelved due to concerns of killing civilians, and decided to take place after the President’s inauguration, so as not to overshadow the incoming president’s state ceremony.

Haniyeh was the critical link in building Hamas’s ties with Iran since he took over as the political chief in 2017. In March 2022, Haniyeh revealed that the Islamic Republic paid a total of $70 million to Hamas to help it develop missiles and defense systems, in an interview with Al Jazeera.

The July 31 killing led to huge unrest among Iran’s security chiefs, with the head of the IRGC’s Quds Force, Esmail Qaani, disappearing and later reappearing amid the embarrassment. Now, Iran’s top leaders have yet to discover and reveal the source of the infiltration, leaving deep suspicion in the heart of Iran’s once impenetrable IRGC.

Haniyeh was replaced by Gaza leader Yahya Sinwar, who took over as the group’s political head, shortly before he was also killed by Israel in October, just over a year since the October 7 attacks he had masterminded.

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Suicide bombing in southern Iran kills intelligence official

Dec 28, 2024, 18:50 GMT+0

A suicide bomber attacked the front of a police headquarters in Bandar Lengeh in southern Iran on Saturday night, killing the head of the port city's military intelligence, the IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News reported.

Captain Mojtaba Shahidi Takhti succumbed to his injuries in the hospital, and one accompanying officer identified as Captain Javad Chatr-Sahar was also injured, the report said citing the local governor.

The bomber was positioned on the two police officers' exit route and triggered the explosion with a remote control, the report by Tasnim said.

Security forces promptly arrived at the scene after the incident and confirmed the attacker was also killed, governor Foad Moradzadeh said.

It was not immediately clear who was behind the attack.

Jaish Al-Adl militants who seek to break away from Iran operate more in Iran’s southeast rather than its central coast.

Radical Sunni Islamic State militants have also launched repeated deadly suicide attacks against state and military targets in the Shi’ite theocracy.

Shahidi Takhti and the other officer injured in the attack "were immediately transported to the hospital," governor Moradzadeh added. However, the former succumbed to the injuries despite the efforts of the medical team.

The condition of injured officer Chatr-Sahar is currently reported as stable, a local judiciary official was quoted as saying.

Launching military drills, Iran says it is not next after Syria

Dec 28, 2024, 17:25 GMT+0

Iran’s defense minister announced a surprise series of military drills starting Saturday to show the Islamic Republic would not crumble easily like Bashar al-Assad's Syria.

"They are signaling that Yemen and Iran are next after Syria. But the truth is, it is their turn next, as these powers won’t leave them alone," Aziz Nassirzadeh said in remarks carried by Iranian media.

The United States, he said, employs Israel - a "70-year-old cancerous tumor" - to exploit the Middle East's resources, in familiar rhetoric for top Tehran officials.

“We have no issues on the hard warfare front. We are building power by all means and will remain prepared.” Nassirzadeh said, speaking on Friday during a ceremony commemorating Razi Mousavi, a Revolutionary Guards commander killed in Syria last year.

The drills, described as a display of Iran’s strengthened defensive capabilities, come in response to growing regional tensions and threats by Israeli officials to strike Iran directly if their Yemeni Houthi allies keep up missile attacks.

Earlier this week, Gholamali Rashid, commander of IRGC’s Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters had mooted plans for “powerful defensive and offensive drills” in the coming weeks.

The announcement follows threats by Iranian officials that Tehran would launch True Promise 3, a third retaliatory attack against Israel in response to its October airstrikes on Iran.

However, after the fall of al-Assad’s in Syria, Tehran’s rhetoric on direct retaliation has subsided, with a focus now shifting to defensive readiness.

Nassirzadeh remarked: “We no longer have a presence in Syria, but even our statements instill fear in the enemy, leading them to issue warnings against us. Their fear stems from the strength of the resistance.”

Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has previously vowed to reclaim Syria from opposition forces and encouraged Syrian youth to resist the new government. However, Syrian interim Foreign Minister Asaad Hassan Sheibani recently issued a warning to Iran, urging it to avoid interference in the country’s affairs.

The military drills starting Saturday are seen as part of Iran’s efforts to bolster its defensive posture as military setbacks abroad put the home front into focus.

Iran has plunged into multiple crisis in recent weeks, with energy shortages and a rapidly falling currency, creating a sense of weakness amid popular discontent.

Engineer pleads not guilty in US case of helping Iran's drone program

Dec 28, 2024, 08:15 GMT+0

A former engineer for a semiconductor company, Mahdi Sadeghi, pleaded not guilty in federal court on Friday to charges of illegally procuring US technology for an Iranian company linked to a drone attack that killed three US service members in January.

Sadeghi was indicted on December 19, along with the arrest of Mohammad Abedini in Milan, Italy, who was also involved in illegal military technology transfers to Iran.

Sadeghi, a dual US-Iranian citizen, was charged with violating US export control and sanctions laws. His arrest on December 16 led to his dismissal from Analog Devices, where he had worked since 2019. Prosecutors allege that Sadeghi used his position to facilitate the procurement of US-origin electronic components for San’at Danesh Rahpooyan Aflak Co, an Iranian navigation systems manufacturer headed by Mohammad Abedini.

On Friday, news emerged that an Italian reporter, Cecelia Sala, 29, was detained in Iran on the same day when the news about Sadeghi and Abedini became public. In the past, Iran has detained foreigners in similar cases to later exchange them with its agents arrested in the West.

According to prosecutors, Abedini's company supplied navigation systems to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps for use in military drones. One such drone was reportedly involved in an attack on Tower 22, a US outpost near the Syrian border in Jordan, which killed three Army Reserve soldiers and injured 47 others.

The White House attributed the attack to the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, a coalition of Iran-backed militant groups. Iran, however, has denied involvement, with its foreign ministry calling the arrests of Sadeghi and Abedini a violation of international law.

Court filings reveal that Sadeghi traveled to Iran in 2016 seeking funding for a startup. Through an affiliated company, he allegedly began procuring U.S. technology for Abedini’s firm. Prosecutors claim that, after joining Analog Devices, Sadeghi helped Abedini’s Swiss front company secure contracts with the Massachusetts-based firm, allowing Abedini to access sensitive technology.

The components procured were reportedly used in the navigation system of the drone involved in the attack.

Sadeghi has remained in custody since his arrest. A hearing is scheduled for January 2 to determine potential bail conditions as discussions between the defense and prosecutors continue.

Iran announces weekend drills to prove military mettle

Dec 27, 2024, 21:47 GMT+0

Iran announced surprise military drills on Saturday to showcase its continued strength after the Israeli blows to its defense systems as well as the loss of Syria to rebels marked one of the Islamic Republic's biggest military setbacks yet.

"You will see that our power has not diminished, contrary to what the enemy claims in its psychological warfare, but has actually increased," Iranian media quoted Iran's Defense Minister, Brigadier General Aziz Nassirzadeh as saying.

"Today, some deliberately and others inadvertently present analyses suggesting the weakening of resistance," he added.

"I believe these individuals fail to grasp the essence of resistance, which is an ideology," Nassirzadeh added, referring to the strength of Iran's allied groups in the region despite the setbacks.

In October 26 retaliatory strikes again Iran, Israel took out nearly all of Iran’s air defense system, according to Western officials including the UK's Chief of Defense Staff.

Israel has decimated Hamas infrastructure in Gaza, assassinated many of its leaders, including Ismail Haniyeh and Yahya Sinwar, and targeted Hezbollah’s commanders after killing successive leaders of the Lebanese group.

Notwithstanding, Iranian officials including the country's ultimate military decision maker, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, described the conflict as a victory.

Fresh airstrike hits Sana’a as Israel prepares for new battlefront

Dec 27, 2024, 19:40 GMT+0

A new airstrike on Friday struck the capital of Yemen, Sana’a, just a day after Israeli warplanes targeted key sites in Yemen to disrupt Houthi military operations, including their entry points from Iran.

The Iran-backed Houthi militants have blamed the US and Britain for the new attack. There has been no immediate comment from the US, Britain, or Israel.

An armed Shi'ite movement which controls most of northern Yemen, the Houthis are armed by Iran and part of its so-called Axis of Resistance against Israel.

After killing the top leaders and destroying the assets of other Iran-backed militant groups like Hezbollah and Hamas, Israel is now preparing for a new front against the Houthis in Yemen, which it calls "the last man standing" among Iran's armed allies, after rebels toppled Iran's key ally Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced Thursday that the fight against the Houthis “is only getting started.”