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Shadow attacks cover all key objects.
Israel and Iran have been waging a decades-long war disguised as separate strikes and sabotage aimed at high-ranking Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps officials and Tehran's nuclear facilities. Last week, Israel again attacked Iran's military infrastructure. These actions only add to the long list of previous attacks that Israel has been blamed for or confirmed.
In recent years, many high-ranking officers of the Guard Corps have been killed in various strikes, especially outside Iran's borders. Among the latest victims is a general killed in late September next to Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah on the outskirts of Beirut. In April 2024, an Israeli airstrike destroyed the building of the Iranian consular department in Damascus, which Tehran claimed killed seven Iranian soldiers, including two high-ranking officers.
Israel has also been linked to the deaths of several Iranian physicists working on the country's nuclear program. The most famous of them is Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, who was killed in 2020. In 2011, an explosion at an ammunition depot killed General Hassan Moghadam, who was in charge of the weapons program. Israel and the United States were often accused of such sabotage.
At the same time, Israel has been repeatedly suspected of sabotaging Iran's nuclear facilities, especially the Natanz complex. This facility was the site of a famous cyberattack in 2010 using the Stuxnet virus, which disabled hundreds of centrifuges for uranium enrichment, causing significant damage to the program. In 2021, another attack led to a small explosion in the same complex, and while Tehran called the incident sabotage, it was also assumed that Israel was behind it.
Israeli sabotage operations are not limited to airstrikes and cyberattacks. In 2021, Israeli forces were accused of attacking Iranian oil tankers en route to Syria, using underwater mines to damage ships.
This long-running conflict, unfolding behind the scenes on the international stage, continues to grow, influencing a growing number of Iranian supporters and leaving behind a string of attacks and sabotage that have added layers of tension to the regional standoff.
Source
Israel and Iran have been waging a decades-long war disguised as separate strikes and sabotage aimed at high-ranking Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps officials and Tehran's nuclear facilities. Last week, Israel again attacked Iran's military infrastructure. These actions only add to the long list of previous attacks that Israel has been blamed for or confirmed.
In recent years, many high-ranking officers of the Guard Corps have been killed in various strikes, especially outside Iran's borders. Among the latest victims is a general killed in late September next to Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah on the outskirts of Beirut. In April 2024, an Israeli airstrike destroyed the building of the Iranian consular department in Damascus, which Tehran claimed killed seven Iranian soldiers, including two high-ranking officers.
Israel has also been linked to the deaths of several Iranian physicists working on the country's nuclear program. The most famous of them is Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, who was killed in 2020. In 2011, an explosion at an ammunition depot killed General Hassan Moghadam, who was in charge of the weapons program. Israel and the United States were often accused of such sabotage.
At the same time, Israel has been repeatedly suspected of sabotaging Iran's nuclear facilities, especially the Natanz complex. This facility was the site of a famous cyberattack in 2010 using the Stuxnet virus, which disabled hundreds of centrifuges for uranium enrichment, causing significant damage to the program. In 2021, another attack led to a small explosion in the same complex, and while Tehran called the incident sabotage, it was also assumed that Israel was behind it.
Israeli sabotage operations are not limited to airstrikes and cyberattacks. In 2021, Israeli forces were accused of attacking Iranian oil tankers en route to Syria, using underwater mines to damage ships.
This long-running conflict, unfolding behind the scenes on the international stage, continues to grow, influencing a growing number of Iranian supporters and leaving behind a string of attacks and sabotage that have added layers of tension to the regional standoff.
Source