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Opinion

Welcome to the spy game, but do keep it secret, PM

Naftali Bennett needs to learn from Bibi how to use Mossad's work to maximum effect

October 7, 2021 17:40
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5 min read

The Islamic Republic of Iran is a formidable regime. Despite crippling sanctions that have caused major shortages in power and food and cut its economy off from the global banking networks, and despite Israeli and American sabotage, it has succeeded in building a nuclear programme which has brought nearly to the threshold of weapons capabilities. It has also transformed itself over the past two decades into a regional power, with varying degrees of control over Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Iraq. All this while crushing any signs of dissent against the theocratic overlords.

It comes somewhat as a surprise therefore that Iran’s efforts to carry out secret operations outside the region have been such an abject failure. In their attempts at assassinations and abductions in the west and the far east, Iran’s agents are rarely successful and often picked up by local security agencies long before even getting close to their targets and their bombs, if they even manage to set them off, seldomly cause actual damage. More Mr Bean than James Bond. You’d have to go back to the Burgas bombing in 2012, when five Israeli tourists were killed in Bulgaria, to find a successful Iranian-planned terror attack against an Israeli target abroad, and that had been subcontracted to Hezbollah.

Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that urbane and cosmopolitan Iranians with western education, and there are many of those, are normally used to being regarded as enemies of the regime, rather than working on its behalf as secret agents. Otherwise it’s hard to explain why the latest assassin, allegedly sent by Tehran on a revenge mission against Israelis in Cyprus, was an Azeri with a Russian passport who seems to have been easily picked up, in possession of a revolver with a silencer, shortly after he crossed over from the Turkish-occupied zone.

Contrary to some early reports, his target wasn’t even the online-gambling tycoon Teddy Sagi. Just Israelis in general. The Cypriot security services probably also had a useful tip-off from a friendly intelligence service in the region.