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Israel arrests Ashkelon man on suspicion of spying for Iran

Dec 4, 2025, 08:46 GMT+0
An anti-Israeli billboard with a picture of Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Former Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant is displayed on a building in Tehran, Iran November 24, 2024.
An anti-Israeli billboard with a picture of Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Former Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant is displayed on a building in Tehran, Iran November 24, 2024.

Israeli police and the Shin Bet said they arrested an Ashkelon resident, 37-year-old Amir Malka, on suspicion of spying for Iran over several months, allegedly earning several thousand dollars.

He was detained last month in a joint probe by Jerusalem District detectives and the Shin Bet; police did not detail the alleged espionage.

Malka is to be indicted in the Beersheba District Court.

The agencies said they are intensifying efforts to deter Israelis from spying for Iran following the 12-day war in June, with the Shin Bet working with municipalities.

Bat Yam Mayor Tzvika Brot this week urged residents who contacted Iranian agents to come forward, implying leniency.

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How Iran's theocratic rule takes hits but persists

Dec 3, 2025, 18:04 GMT+0
•
Ata Mohamed Tabriz

A lopsided war with Israel and the United States in June rattled Iran’s political order, but it survives through smarter coercion and the disarray of forces that might otherwise bring it down.

Internal contestation is harsher than at any time in recent memory, with competing factions trying to preserve or redefine their place in a system that has lost the capacity for reform or institutional expansion.

Yet Iran's nearly 50-year-old theocracy persists, compensating for poor governance with stiff security control and the careful redistribution of shrinking resources.

Just as authorities have slackened enforcement of Islamic social rules, allowing unveiled women and open-air concerts in public, it has stepped up a crackdown on political dissent and alleged spies.

Opposing this order are three forces whose interaction with the securitized state produces neither fundamental change nor imminent collapse, but something closer to endurance through erosion.

Those are: people inside Iran fighting localized economic and professional battles without organized networks, an exiled opposition adept at narrative and symbolism but detached from lived realities inside Iran and foreign actors committed to curbing Tehran’s nuclear and regional strength but not to toppling it.

One system, many channels

The Islamic Republic is structured around the Supreme Leader, whose authority ultimately resolves all major decisions. Around this axis sits an intricate constellation of parallel institutions, security councils, loyalty networks and overlapping hierarchies.

Policymaking is multi-layered. But decision-making is ultimately his sole prerogative.

President Masoud Pezeshkian recently issued a telling statement that unmanageable infighting would ensure should Ali Khamenei somehow exit the scene. It underscores a basic fear: without the Leader’s centrality, the power networks would drift apart.

Nothing illustrates this better than the way “system” is used interchangeably for both the political order and the leader himself.

Khamenei functions less as the manager of a unified apparatus than as the referee of internal conflicts. The state bureaucracy is not the engine of governance but one node among political, security and economic bodies each pursuing their own interests.

The 12-day war intensified these fissures. The removal of influential IRGC figures disrupted long-standing balances and sharpened factional sensitivities.

The Babak Zanjani affair illuminates the power politics at play.

Sprung with little explanation from a death sentence for corruption, the disgraced tycoon now not only walks free but weighs in regularly on politics, even appearing to threaten former President Hassan Rouhani with death in a tweet this week.

Such a rapid rehabilitation could not occur without powerful establishment backing.

Unorganized discontent

The war’s economic toll—passed on to society through inflationary policies—has deepened hardship and widened discontent. Iran’s society today is in ferment but unorganized: protests erupt across workplaces and cities, but without intermediary institutions they remain local and short-lived.

A recent nurses’ strike in Mashhad, much like the truck drivers’ strike before it this spring, showed the pattern clearly: strong anger, weak connective tissue.

The labor market’s collapse into unstable, platform-based work illustrates a society living in permanent emergency. Eight million rideshare drivers do not prove total collapse, but they reveal a mass shift toward insecure livelihoods.

Economic stress drains the psychological capacity for sustained organization; survival overrides solidarity.

Provincial centers skew toward economic protests, while peripheral regions experience conflict mainly through security confrontation.

The recurring demolition of homes in Baluchistan in southeastern Iran is one example of a strategy that provokes local resistance but rarely ratchets up because no networks link periphery grievances to central demands.

Inside Iran, opposition forces function like isolated islands. Outside, the opposition produces abundant media output but struggles to translate daily grievances into a shared political language.

The gap between “voice” abroad and “life” inside has produced an opposition that amplifies frustrations but does not alter the balance of power.

Survival on the edge

The Islamic Republic continues not as an effective state but as a mechanism that defers crises day by day. Security has replaced policy; the cost of maintaining power rises constantly as the quality of governance decays.

The system persists because no countervailing power with organizational depth has yet emerged.

European-triggered international sanctions and intermittent threats from the United States and Israel show that containment—not internal transformation—may be the ultimate priority from outside powers.

External pressure accelerates economic and infrastructural decay but cannot substitute for domestic political change.

For the West, Iran remains a security file, not a political project.

Foreign actors may accelerate or intensify pressure, but the indispensable condition for change is alignment between internal and external forces around a shared language and objective.

Until such convergence forms, the Islamic Republic will remain in a state of endurance through erosion—able to enforce the status quo even as it becomes less capable of maintaining stability or basic services.

Copies of Iranian Shaheds, US suicide drones set to be deployed to Mideast

Dec 3, 2025, 16:32 GMT+0

The US military has created a task force to field its first squadron of new kamikaze attack drones in the Middle East, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said on Wednesday.

US arms developers reverse-engineered a captured Shahed drone from Iran to produce the new model, CNN reported citing a US defense official.

The unit, called Task Force Scorpion Strike, was formed after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered the Pentagon to speed up the delivery of low-cost drone technology to troops.

“This new task force sets the conditions for using innovation as a deterrent,” CENTCOM commander Admiral Brad Cooper said in a statement.

“Equipping our skilled warfighters faster with cutting-edge drone capabilities showcases US military innovation and strength, which deters bad actors.”

CENTCOM said the task force has already built a squadron using what it calls Low-cost Unmanned Combat Attack System drones, or LUCAS, developed by the Arizona-based company SpektreWorks.

'Flipping the script'

The drones can fly long distances, operate autonomously and be launched by catapult, rocket-assisted systems or mobile vehicles.

The LUCAS drones were created after developers reverse-engineered a Shahed drone from Iran, which the US captured a few years ago, CNN reported citing a US defense official.

CNN's report said the defense official acknowledged that the US military’s focus on larger and more expensive precision systems had “put our forces at a disadvantage” against cheap drones like those used by Iran.

“But now we’re flipping the script,” the official added.

The official declined to say how many drones the new squadron has, saying only there were “many” and more would be added. Each drone costs about $35,000, the official said.

'Low-cost option'

The official also told CNN that a damaged Iranian Shahed drone captured by the United States several years ago was examined by US companies, which worked to reverse-engineer elements of the system and use those findings in the development of LUCAS.

The official described the result as a US-produced, low-cost attack drone built to meet the needs of current conflicts.

Task Force Scorpion Strike, which helped lead the development of the drones, consists of nearly two dozen personnel, led by service members from Special Operations Command Central.

Not all of the personnel are based in the Middle East, CNN's report said citing the official.

Iran taekwondo athlete quits tournament to avoid Israeli rival

Dec 3, 2025, 09:24 GMT+0

An Iranian taekwondo athlete withdrew from the world under 21 championships in Kenya after the competition draw placed her against an Israeli opponent in the first round.

Rozhan Goudarzi, who won a bronze medal last month in the women’s under 51 kilogram category at the Islamic Solidarity Games in Riyadh, pulled out in line with Iran’s long standing policy that bars its athletes from competing against Israelis.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei repeated in a speech last year that athletes must not face Israeli opponents and called on sports bodies to compensate those who withdraw, describing such decisions as a “sacrifice” for national and religious ideals.

He said “we must not neglect the well being of this athlete,” urging officials to support competitors who refuse to take part.

The policy has been in place since 1979 and has led to athletes forfeiting matches or intentionally losing to avoid Israeli rivals. Authorities have punished athletes who violate it, including a lifetime ban issued against a weightlifter who shook hands with an Israeli competitor at an event in Poland.

Rights groups and sports analysts say the stance has contributed to a rise in Iranian athletes leaving the country in recent years, with several competing abroad under new flags or joining the International Olympic Committee’s Refugee Team.

Iran-linked hackers target infrastructure in Israel, cyber firm says

Dec 3, 2025, 08:52 GMT+0

Cybersecurity firm ESET said it found new activity by the Iran aligned MuddyWater group that targeted critical infrastructure in Israel and one organization in Egypt.

MuddyWater, also known as Mango Sandstorm or TA450, has links to Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and National Security and has targeted government and infrastructure in the Middle East and beyond since at least 2017.

Researchers said victims in Israel included technology, engineering, manufacturing, local government and education sectors. They said the group used new custom tools to improve its ability to hide and stay active inside networks, including a backdoor called MuddyViper that can gather system data, run commands, move files and steal Windows credentials and browser data.

  • US offers reward for information on two Iran-linked cyber actors

    US offers reward for information on two Iran-linked cyber actors

The report said the attackers used Fooder, a loader that reflects malware into memory and at times imitates the classic Snake game, to deploy MuddyViper. It said the group also used several credential stealers and avoided interactive sessions to reduce detection.

Researchers said the campaign relied on spearphishing emails that sent victims to installers for remote monitoring tools hosted on free file sharing sites. They said the operators used a range of malware, including VAX One, which imitates products such as Veeam and AnyDesk.

Past MuddyWater operations include attacks in Saudi Arabia and campaigns that overlapped with Lyceum, suggesting the group may serve as an initial access broker for other Iran linked actors.

Trump says Iraq more friendly after US attacks on Iran

Dec 2, 2025, 19:34 GMT+0

President Donald Trump on Tuesday said US strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities in June curbed Tehran's regional dominance and rendered Iraq more friendly to the United States.

“Iraq has been a much different place since we hit them with those B-2 bombers and knocked out and obliterated Iran’s nuclear capability," Trump told reporters at a cabinet meeting in the White House.

“Iran has gone down many, many steps … they’re really not the bully of the Middle East anymore,” Trump said. "I will tell you, Iraq has been a much friendlier place. They talk to us."

He was responding to a question from an Iraqi Kurdish journalist about a rocket attack on Thursday at Khor Mor gas field in the region which halted production for four days. No casualties were reported in the attack, which local officials blamed on Iran-backed militias.

The United States launched surprise strikes on three key Iranian nuclear sites on June 22, in attacks Trump has repeatedly said "obliterated" Tehran's capabilities.

"I saved a lot of lives," Trump continued, "Iraq nominated us for the Nobel Prize, and that was great honor. We didn't expect that from Iraq. Iraq has been a much different place since the taking out of Iran, the nuclear capability.”

Emerging from years of civil war which followed a US invasion in 2003, Baghdad is caught between the competing influence of Tehran and Washington.

US envoy to Iraq Mark Savaya condemned the gas field attack as the work of “armed groups operating illegally and driven by hostile foreign agendas.”

Kurdish authorities have frequently accused armed groups aligned with Tehran of targeting energy infrastructure to pressure the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and undermine US-linked projects.

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani condemned the attack as “an assault on all of Iraq” and said a joint investigation with Kurdish authorities would be launched.