The shadow war between Israel and Iran extends to Turkey

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With the deaths of two people responsible for the space program, six Iranians have been killed in strange circumstances in less than a month, all linked to the regime’s military wing

The shadow war between Iran and Israel is becoming more visible and escalating one more step with the death in strange circumstances this weekend of two leaders of the Islamic republic’s space program. Two more cases for a long list that culminated on May 22 with the shooting in the heart of Tehran of Colonel Hassan Khodaei of the Revolutionary Guards Corps. The Persian regime is pointing at the Mossad, crying out for revenge, and according to the Jewish State media, Israeli and Turkish intelligence agencies have managed to abort an operation to kidnap Israeli tourists in Istanbul.

This situation prompted Jerusalem’s Foreign Minister Yair Lapid to raise the security warning to the maximum and ask his citizens to “cancel” any non-essential travel to Turkey because “the danger is real”. From the Iranian government, they assured that any response to Israel will take place within the Jewish state and not in a third country.

Six Iranians have already been killed in strange circumstances in less than a month, all linked to the regime’s military wing. The latter two were identified as Ali Kamani, a member of the Revolutionary Guards’ space division who was killed in an alleged traffic accident; and Mohammad Abdous, a Defense Department official also linked to the space program, who died “in the line of work,” according to the Fars agency. The media called both “martyrs,” a term used when Tehran believes they have been murdered.

Adding to these deaths is the escalation of Israel’s attacks in Syria, where it bombed Damascus airport on Friday and shut down its runways. From Jerusalem, they neither confirm nor deny these operations, but accuse Iran of transporting weapons to Damascus to bolster the Lebanese Shia Hezbollah militia.

Russia, an ally of Bashar al-Assad, denounced that these attacks “are contrary to the fundamental norms of international law”. It would be very difficult for Israel to conduct these operations without Moscow’s approval. The price the Israelis pay in return is to stay out of Russia’s international boycott for the war in Ukraine and not sell weapons to the government of Volodymyr Zelensky.

Source: La Verdad

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