{"id":14568,"date":"2025-08-07T19:14:07","date_gmt":"2025-08-07T19:14:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/?p=14568"},"modified":"2025-08-07T19:14:07","modified_gmt":"2025-08-07T19:14:07","slug":"israel-secretly-recruited-iranian-dissidents-to-attack-iran-from-within-propublica","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/?p=14568","title":{"rendered":"Israel Secretly Recruited Iranian Dissidents to Attack Iran From Within \u2014 ProPublica"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>\n<\/p>\n<p>ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they\u2019re published.<\/p>\n<h3 class=\"highlights__heading\">Reporting Highlights<\/h3>\n<ul class=\"highlights__list\">\n<li class=\"highlights__highlight\"><span class=\"highlights__subheading\">Covert Ops: <\/span> Commandos that the Mossad, Israel\u2019s intelligence service, recruited from Iran and neighboring nations destroyed Iranian air defenses in the first hours of a June attack.<\/li>\n<li class=\"highlights__highlight\"><span class=\"highlights__subheading\">Intelligence Gathering: <\/span> Israeli operatives identified the bedrooms in which Iranian nuclear scientists were sleeping, enabling precise airstrikes.<\/li>\n<li class=\"highlights__highlight\"><span class=\"highlights__subheading\">Cyber Deception: <\/span> Israel sent a fake message that summoned senior Iranian military leaders to a phantom meeting in a bunker that was then bombed by Israeli jets.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p class=\"highlights__disclaimer\">\n        These highlights were written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story. <span id=\"survey-placeholder\"\/>\n    <\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"1.0\">In the early morning hours of June 13, a commando team led by a young Iranian, S.T., settled into position on the outskirts of Tehran. The target was an anti-aircraft battery, part of the umbrella of radars and missiles set up to protect the capital and its military installations from aerial attack.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"2.0\">Across the country, teams of Israeli-trained commandos recruited from Iran and neighboring nations were preparing to attack Iranian defenses from within.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"3.0\">As described by their handlers, their motives were a mix of personal and political. Some were seeking revenge against a repressive, clerical regime that had imposed strict limits on political expression and daily life. Others were enticed by cash, the promise of medical care for family members or opportunities to attend college overseas.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"4.0\">The attack had been planned for more than a year by the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service. Just nine months earlier, the spy agency had shocked the world with its technical prowess \u2014 executing a plot hatched in 2014 by its director at the time, Tamir Pardo, that crippled Hezbollah by detonating pagers booby-trapped with tiny but lethal amounts of explosives. According to Hezbollah, the blasts killed 30 fighters and 12 civilians, including two children, and injured more than 3,500.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"6.0\">At 3 a.m. on June 13, S.T. and a foreign legion of roughly 70 commandos opened fire with drones and missiles on a carefully chosen list of anti-aircraft batteries and ballistic missile launchers. (His handlers in the Mossad would only tell us his initials.) The next day, another group of Iranians and others recruited from the region launched a second wave of attacks inside Iran.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"8.0\">In detailed interviews, 10 present and former Israeli intelligence officials described the commando raids and a wealth of previously undisclosed details of the country\u2019s decadeslong covert effort to prevent Iran from building a nuclear bomb. They requested anonymity so they could speak freely.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"9.0\">The officials said the commando attacks were pivotal in June\u2019s airstrikes, allowing Israel\u2019s air force to carry out wave after wave of bombing runs without losing a single plane. Informed by intelligence gathered by the Mossad\u2019s agents on the ground, Israeli warplanes pounded nuclear facilities, destroyed around half of Iran\u2019s 3,000 ballistic missiles and 80% of its launchers, and fired missiles at the bedrooms of Iranian nuclear scientists and military commanders.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"11.0\">As they had with the pagers, Israeli spies took advantage of their ability to penetrate their adversary\u2019s communications systems. Early in the aerial attack, Israeli cyberwarriors sent a fake message to Iran\u2019s top military leaders, luring them to a phantom meeting in an underground bunker that was then demolished in a precision strike. Twenty were killed, including three chiefs of staff.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"12.0\">The strategic map of the region has been dramatically redrawn since the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks in which Hamas killed more than 1,200 Israelis and took 251 hostages. Public attention, particularly in recent weeks, has focused on Israel\u2019s retaliation against Gaza, which has caused scores of thousands of deaths and a deepening famine that has been globally condemned.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"13.0\">The secret war between Israel and Iran has attracted far less public attention but has also played a significant role in the region\u2019s changing balance of power.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"14.0\">In 2018, Israeli-trained operatives broke into an unguarded Tehran warehouse and used high-temperature plasma cutters to crack safes containing drawings, data, computer disks and planning books. The material, weighing over 1,000 pounds, was loaded onto two trucks and driven into neighboring Azerbaijan. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu displayed the material at a press conference in Tel Aviv and said it proved Iran had been lying about its nuclear intentions.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"16.0\">Two years later, the Mossad killed one of Iran\u2019s top physicists, using artificial intelligence-enhanced facial recognition to direct a remotely operated machine gun parked on a roadside near his weekend house.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"17.0\">In the lead-up to June\u2019s air attacks, according to Israeli planners, they arranged for unwitting truck drivers to smuggle into Iran tons of \u201cmetallic equipment\u201d \u2014 the parts for the weapons used by the commando teams.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"18.0\">Israeli officials said these operations reflect a fundamental shift in the Mossad\u2019s approach that began about 15 years ago. The agents in Iran who broke into the safes, set up the machine guns, blasted the air defenses and watched the scientists\u2019 apartments were not Israelis. All were either Iranians or citizens of third countries, according to senior Israeli officials with direct knowledge of the operations. For years, such missions in Iran had been the exclusive work of Israeli field operatives. But officials said the growing unpopularity of the Iranian regime has made it much easier to attract agents.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"19.0\">S.T. was one of them. Israeli officials said he grew up in a working-class family in a small town near Tehran. He enrolled in college and was living a seemingly ordinary student life, when he and several classmates were arrested by Iran\u2019s feared Basij militia and taken to a detention center where they were tortured with electric shocks and brutally beaten.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"20.0\">S.T. and his friends were ultimately released, but the experience left him enraged and eager for revenge. Soon after, a relative living overseas provided his name to an Israeli spy whose job was to identify disaffected Iranians. Messages were exchanged via an encrypted phone app, and S.T. accepted a free trip to a neighboring country.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"21.0\">A case officer from the Mossad invited him to work as a covert operative against Iran. He agreed, asking only that Israel pledge to take care of his family if anything went wrong. (Iran summarily executes anyone caught spying for foreign countries, especially Israel.)<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"22.0\">He was trained for months outside of Iran by Israeli weapons specialists. Just before the attack was to begin, he and his small team slipped back into the country to play their role in one of the biggest and most complex military operations in Israel\u2019s history.<\/p>\n<h3>The Origins of a Secret War<\/h3>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"23.0\">The Mossad made Iran its top priority in 1993 after Israelis and Palestinians signed the Oslo Accords on the White House lawn, seemingly ending decades of conflict.<\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__caption\">Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, center-right \u2014 flanked by, from left, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, Israeli negotiator Joel Singer, President Bill Clinton and Yasser Arafat, chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization \u2014 signs the Oslo Accords in 1993. The agreement sought to end decades of conflict between the Israelis and Palestinians.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__credit\"><br \/>\n        <span class=\"a11y\">Credit: <\/span><br \/>\n        J. David Ake\/AFP via Getty Images<br \/>\n    <\/span><\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"25.0\">Israel had long had a complicated relationship with Iran. For decades, it maintained a strategic alliance with the shah of Iran. But Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and the Islamists who overthrew the monarch in 1979 described the Jewish state as a \u201ccancerous tumor\u201d that should be excised from the Middle East.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"26.0\">Israel\u2019s strategy is, in effect, to protect its nuclear monopoly in the region. It does not publicly acknowledge its arsenal, estimated at more than 90 warheads. The Israeli air force destroyed Iraq\u2019s nuclear reactor in 1981 and a Syrian reactor under construction in 2007.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"27.0\">After the Iraq airstrike, Israel\u2019s prime minister, Menachem Begin, declared that his country had a right to prevent neighbors from building their own bomb. \u201cWe cannot allow a second Holocaust,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__caption\">Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, left, in 1981 with Ariel Sharon, who at the time was the defense minister and would become prime minister in 2001. Begin said that his country had a right to prevent its neighbors from building a nuclear bomb.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__credit\"><br \/>\n        <span class=\"a11y\">Credit: <\/span><br \/>\n        STF\/AFP via Getty Images<br \/>\n    <\/span><\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"29.0\">A few years later, Iran began researching nuclear weapons, drawing on the expertise of a Pakistani engineer, Abdul Qadeer Khan, who had once worked for a Dutch company that produced enriched uranium.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"31.0\">Shabtai Shavit, the Mossad director whose term ended in 1996, said Israel was aware of Khan\u2019s travels in the region but did not initially detect his crucial role in Iran\u2019s program. \u201cWe didn\u2019t fully understand his intentions,\u201d Shavit told us in an interview before his death in 2023. \u201cIf we had known, I would have ordered my combatants to kill him. I believe that could have reversed the course of history.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"32.0\">According to United Nations nuclear inspectors, the Iranians used blueprints provided by Khan to begin building the centrifuges needed to enrich uranium they purchased from Pakistan, China and South Africa.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"33.0\">In 2000, Shavit\u2019s successor drew up plans for the Mossad\u2019s special missions unit known as Kidon \u2014 Hebrew for \u201cbayonet\u201d \u2014 to assassinate Khan while he was visiting what one official described as \u201ca Southeast Asian country.\u201d The mission was shelved when Pakistan\u2019s president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, told President Bill Clinton he would rein in Khan\u2019s global activities.<\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__caption\">Iran turned to Abdul Qadeer Khan, a Pakistani engineer who had worked for a Dutch company that produced enriched uranium, as Iran began researching nuclear weapons.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__credit\"><br \/>\n        <span class=\"a11y\">Credit: <\/span><br \/>\n        Robert Nickelsberg\/Getty Images<br \/>\n    <\/span><\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"35.0\">That promise wasn\u2019t kept.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"36.0\">That same year, the Mossad discovered that the Iranians were building a secret enrichment plant near Natanz, a city about 200 miles south of Tehran. The spy agency tipped off an Iranian dissident group, which went public with the revelation two years later.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"37.0\">Mossad veterans said that operatives \u2014 likely Israelis posing as Europeans installing or servicing equipment \u2014 walked around Natanz wearing shoes with double soles that collected dust and soil samples. Testing eventually revealed that the Iranian-made centrifuges were enriching uranium well beyond the 5% level needed for a nuclear power plant. (Medical isotopes use 20% enriched uranium; bombs need 90%.)<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"38.0\">In 2001, Israel elected Gen. Ariel Sharon, famous for his belligerent toughness, as prime minister. The following year, Sharon named one of his favorite generals, Meir Dagan, as director of the Mossad. Both had a reputation for pushing boundaries and defying norms.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"39.0\">Dagan, who led the Mossad from 2002 to 2011, decided to make stopping Iran\u2019s nuclear program the spy agency\u2019s main goal.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"40.0\">Like Begin, who was born in Poland, Dagan was haunted by the Holocaust. Heads of foreign intelligence agencies recalled visiting his office and seeing a photograph of Nazi soldiers brutalizing Dagan\u2019s grandfather on the wall. Explaining the photo\u2019s meaning at an anti-Netanyahu rally in 2015, he said: \u201cI swore that that would never happen again. I hope and believe that I have done everything in my power to keep that promise.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__caption\">Meir Dagan, who led the Mossad from 2002 to 2011, had this photograph of Nazi soldiers brutalizing his grandfather on the wall of his office. He explained its meaning in 2015: \u201cI swore that that would never happen again. I hope and believe that I have done everything in my power to keep that promise.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__credit\"><br \/>\n        <span class=\"a11y\">Credit: <\/span><br \/>\n        Yad Vashem<br \/>\n    <\/span><\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"42.0\">Under Dagan\u2019s leadership, the Mossad organized an array of covert operations to slow the Iranian program. Israeli agents began assassinating Iran\u2019s nuclear scientists, sending operatives on motorcycles to attach small bombs to cars in traffic.<\/p>\n<h3>The Art of Recruitment<\/h3>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"43.0\">Dagan took pride in the Mossad\u2019s growing ability to recruit Iranians and others for covert operations inside Iran.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"45.0\">One key to the spy agency\u2019s success is the ethnic composition of Iran. Israeli officials noted in interviews that roughly 40% of the country\u2019s population of 90 million is made up of ethnic minorities: Arabs, Azeris, Baluchis, Kurds and others.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"46.0\">Shortly before he died in 2016, Dagan told us that \u201cthe best pool for recruiting agents inside Iran lies within the country\u2019s ethnic and human mosaic. Many of them oppose the regime. Some even hate it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"47.0\">Present and former officials said Dagan championed the shift to relying on foreign-born agents. In the early years of the effort to penetrate Iran, the spy agency had relied mostly on Israelis, known to Mossad insiders as \u201cblue and white\u201d \u2014 a reference to the colors of Israel\u2019s flag.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"48.0\">Under Dagan, the Mossad\u2019s leadership came to believe they could find highly effective agents in Iran or among Iranian exiles and others living in one of the seven countries that border it.<\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__caption\">Meir Dagan, seen in an undated photograph, was a proponent of using foreign-born agents for the Mossad\u2019s missions against Iran.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__credit\"><br \/>\n        <span class=\"a11y\">Credit: <\/span><br \/>\n        Yaakov Saar\/GPO\/Getty Images<br \/>\n    <\/span><\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"50.0\">Present and former officials said the recruits fell into two categories. Some gravitated to the realm of traditional espionage, gathering intelligence and passing it on to their handler. Others expressed a willingness to carry out violent operations, including attacks on nuclear scientists.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"51.0\">Not surprisingly, given the risk of summary execution, many had initial doubts.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"52.0\">\u201cConvincing someone to betray their country is no small feat,\u201d said a former senior Mossad officer who oversaw units handling foreign agents. \u201cIt\u2019s a process of gradual erosion. You start with a minor request, an insignificant task. Then another. These are trial runs. If they perform well, you assign them something larger, more meaningful. And if they refuse \u2014 well, by then you have leverage: pressure, threats, even blackmail.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"53.0\">Spymasters, he said, try to avoid threats or coercion. \u201cIt\u2019s better to guide them to a place where they act willingly \u2014 where they take the first step themselves,\u201d the former officer said.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"54.0\">The most critical element is trust. \u201cYour agent must be loyal and emotionally tied to you. Like a soldier who charges forward despite the danger, trusting his comrades, so it is with agents. He goes on the mission because he trusts his handler and feels a deep sense of responsibility toward him.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"55.0\">Most of the people who agreed to work for Israel expected payment for the risks they were taking. But the present and former officials said the driving force for people who agree to spy on their own country is often more primal.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"56.0\">\u201cFinancial reward is, of course, important,\u201d the former Mossad officer said. \u201cBut people are also driven by emotion \u2014 hatred, love, dependence, revenge. Yet it always helps when the recruit\u2019s motives are supported by some kind of tangible benefit: not necessarily a direct payment but some type of indirect help.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"58.0\">This is how S.T. was recruited.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"59.0\">His handlers said he was consumed by hatred toward the regime and what had been done to him by the Basij militia. But what finally pushed him to cooperate was the Mossad\u2019s offer to arrange medical treatment unavailable in Iran for a relative.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"60.0\">For decades, medical care has been one of the Mossad\u2019s signature recruitment methods. Israeli intelligence has links with doctors and clinics in several countries, and arranging surgery and various therapies was also used to penetrate Palestinian extremist groups. It has featured even more in approaches to Iranians, in the hope of persuading them to help Israel.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"61.0\">The Mossad also uses the internet to attract agents, creating websites and publishing social media posts aimed at Iranians that offer to help people suffering from life-threatening illnesses such as cancer. These posts include phone numbers or encrypted contact options.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"62.0\">Israeli intelligence can mobilize its international network to find trusted doctors or clinics \u2014 places that won\u2019t ask too many questions. The Mossad typically pays the bills directly and discreetly.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"63.0\">Another incentive used to entice potential spies is higher education in a foreign country. Based on years of research and experience, Mossad recruiters know that Iranians crave access to quality education. Even the fundamentalist religious regime of the current supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, encourages academic advancement. This makes offers of placement in Western universities, or boarding schools for teenagers, an especially compelling tool.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"64.0\">Once a candidate is identified, the Mossad sets up an initial meeting in an accessible location \u2014 often in neighboring countries such as Turkey, Armenia or Azerbaijan, which are relatively easy for Iranians to enter. Other options include destinations in Southeast Asia like Thailand and India that allow Iranian citizens to apply online for business, medical or tourist visas.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"65.0\">Candidates undergo a series of meetings and psychological evaluations. Psychologists observe their behavior, often from behind one-way mirrors. They fill out detailed questionnaires about their personal history, including intimate details about their family life, and are questioned by a polygraph examiner.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"66.0\">Agents are regularly retested after they begin working in the field. Every action, whether minor or major, is followed by another lie detector test to confirm continued loyalty.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"67.0\">They receive extensive training and supervision. To avoid arousing suspicion, they are told what to wear, where to buy their clothing, what cars to drive, and even how, when and where to deposit the money they receive.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"68.0\">The agent-handler relationship is critical, as a former Mossad operative who \u201cran\u201d agents explained. In many cases, the handler is simultaneously confessor, babysitter, psychologist, spiritual mentor and surrogate family member.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"70.0\">The goal is to build a bond so strong that the agent feels safe and supported \u2014 comfortable enough to share even their deepest personal secrets, including their sexual relationships.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"71.0\">Any and all information about the agent can be valuable to the Mossad, either as a red flag marking a potential vulnerability to Iran\u2019s secret police or another aspect of the agent\u2019s life that the handlers can put to use. Among the key questions: Who\u2019s in the person\u2019s social circle? Can he or she use that relationship to the Mossad\u2019s benefit?<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"72.0\">The operatives who were assigned to assassinate nuclear scientists on the street received extensive training from Mossad case officers. They were taught to ride motorcycles and either shoot their targets at close range or plant explosives on their vehicles.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"73.0\">The intent was both to deprive the Iranian program of expertise and to discourage promising scientists from working on nuclear weapons. From 2010 to 2012 the Israelis killed at least four scientists and barely missed another.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"74.0\">The operations were managed by Israelis, down to the smallest details, often from nearby countries or directly from Mossad headquarters north of Tel Aviv, and occasionally by Israeli intelligence officers who briefly entered Iran.<\/p>\n<h3>Operation Rising Lion<\/h3>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"76.0\">Over the years, the Mossad and Israel\u2019s military repeatedly drew up plans to halt Iran\u2019s nuclear program by bombing its key facilities. Israel\u2019s political leaders always drew back under pressure from American presidents who feared an attack would trigger a regional war, destabilizing the Middle East. Hezbollah, Iran\u2019s proxy in Lebanon, had stockpiled tens of thousands of missiles, enough to overwhelm Israel\u2019s air defenses and hit its largest cities.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"77.0\">Those calculations shifted dramatically in the past year.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"78.0\">In April and October of 2024, Iran fired missiles and drones directly at Israel. Nearly all were shot down with the help of the United States and allies. The Israeli air force responded with airstrikes that destroyed much of Iran\u2019s air defenses.<\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__caption\">The remains of an Iranian missile ended up near the Dead Sea in Israel on Oct. 2, 2024.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__credit\"><br \/>\n        <span class=\"a11y\">Credit: <\/span><br \/>\n        Erik Marmor\/Getty Images<br \/>\n    <\/span><\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"80.0\">The Israeli military had begun planning a bombing campaign against Iran in mid-2024 that it hoped would be ready within a year. With Donald Trump\u2019s victory in the November election, and Hezbollah neutralized, Israeli officials saw a window of opportunity.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"81.0\">Israel\u2019s American-trained pilots had been secretly flying over Iran since 2016 \u2014 learning the landscape and exploring various routes to minimize the chances of detection.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"82.0\">One nuclear target in Iran, however, was considered so formidable that the Israeli air force had no plan for destroying it. The Iranians had built a uranium-enrichment facility at Fordo and buried it inside a mountain \u2014 nearly 300 feet beneath the surface. Iran tried to keep Fordo a secret, but the Mossad and American and British intelligence were able to track movements in and out of the mountain. President Barack Obama disclosed its existence in 2009, and United Nations inspectors who visited the site soon after found that Iran was planning for up to 3,000 highly advanced centrifuges to enrich uranium.<\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__caption\">A 2013 satellite image shows a uranium-enrichment facility in Fordo, Iran.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__credit\"><br \/>\n        <span class=\"a11y\">Credit: <\/span><br \/>\n        DigitalGlobe via Getty Images<br \/>\n    <\/span><\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"84.0\">Only the United States had a bomb powerful enough to pierce a mountain: the GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator, the world\u2019s largest conventional bomb known as a \u201cbunker buster.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"86.0\">And so Israeli military planners drew up a plan for a highly risky ground operation, details of which are disclosed here for the first time. Under the plan, elite commandos were to be smuggled to the Fordo site without being detected. Then they would storm the building, taking advantage of the element of surprise. Once inside, their mission would be to blow up the centrifuges, grab Iran\u2019s enriched uranium and escape.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"87.0\">The new head of the Mossad was skeptical. David Barnea, known as Dadi, had long pushed for aggressive actions against Iran. He had overseen the remote-machine gun attack in 2020 just before being promoted to the top job. Yet he thought the plans for a commando attack on Fordo were far too risky. Barnea worried that some of Israel\u2019s best soldiers and spies would be killed or taken hostage, a nightmare for Israelis already deeply pained by the ordeal of Israeli hostages held by Hamas in Gaza since the attack of Oct. 7, 2023.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"88.0\">Barnea and other Israeli officials came to believe that the Trump administration might join an Israeli attack on Iran, with U.S. warplanes dropping the massive \u201cbunker busters\u201d on Fordo. Trump had repeatedly and publicly declared that he would not allow Iran to obtain a nuclear bomb.<\/p>\n<p>\n                <strong class=\"story-promo__hed\">The Man Running Israel\u2019s Intelligence Operation<\/strong>\n                            <\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"90.0\">To prepare for what would be dubbed Operation Rising Lion, the Mossad and the military intelligence agency, Aman, stepped up their tracking of Iran\u2019s military leaders and nuclear teams. Several of the operation\u2019s planners said that Barnea significantly expanded the Mossad\u2019s Tzomet, or Junction, division, which recruits and trains non-Israeli agents. The decision was made to entrust this foreign legion with Israel\u2019s most sophisticated equipment for paramilitary operations and communications. The cover stories for each agent, known as their legends, were checked and rechecked for inconsistencies.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"91.0\">The Mossad\u2019s espionage efforts were helped by a geographic fact. Iran is bordered by Iraq, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Pakistan, Turkmenistan and Afghanistan. Smuggling is a way of life in the region, as thousands of people earn their living using donkeys, camels, cars and trucks to carry drugs, fuel and electronics across the borders.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"92.0\">The Mossad had developed contacts with smugglers \u2014 and often with the government intelligence agencies \u2014 in all seven nations.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"93.0\">\u201cBringing equipment in and out is relatively easy,\u201d said an Israeli who has worked with Mossad on logistics, \u201cand the Mossad also used front companies that legally shipped boxes and crates by sea and on trucks driven legitimately through border crossings.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"94.0\">The material was delivered to \u201cinfrastructure agents,\u201d Mossad operatives inside Iran who store the material until it\u2019s needed. Mossad veterans said the gear can be hidden in safe houses for years, updated as technology evolves or maintenance is needed.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"95.0\">Officials said the Mossad trained the non-Israeli agents who would attack Iranian targets for about five months. Some were brought to Israel, where models had been built to enable practice runs. Others rehearsed their missions in third countries where they met Israeli experts.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"96.0\">There were two groups of commandos, each with 14 teams of four to six members. Some already lived in Iran. Others were anti-regime exiles who slipped into the country on the eve of the attack.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"97.0\">Each had their instructions, but they were also in touch with Israeli planners who could change or update the attack plan. Most of the teams were tasked with striking Iranian air defenses from a list of targets provided by the Israeli air force.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"99.0\">The Mossad had code names for each of the teams and their assignments, which were based on combinations of musical notes.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"100.0\">On the night of June 12, the teams arrived at their positions as orchestrated. The Israelis in charge of the covert operations directed the agents to leave little or no equipment behind. (Iranian media reports after the attack asserted that the infiltrators had missed their targets and fled without their gear; Israeli officials said what the Iranians found were insignificant components \u2014 the equivalent of gum wrappers.)<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"101.0\">\u201cOne hundred percent of the anti-aircraft batteries marked for the Mossad by the air force were destroyed,\u201d a senior Israeli intelligence official said. Most were near Tehran in areas where the Israeli air force had not previously operated.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"102.0\">In the first hours of the war, one of the commando teams struck an Iranian ballistic missile launcher. Israeli analysts believe this mission had a disproportionate impact, causing Iran to delay its retaliatory salvo against Israel out of fear that other missile launchers were vulnerable to attacks from inside Iran.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"103.0\">Officials emphasized that the military logistics of the plan were the work of Aman and the Israeli air force, which hit more than a thousand targets over the 11 days of airstrikes. But officials agree that the Mossad contributed key intelligence for one aspect of Rising Lion: the assassinations of senior Iranian commanders and nuclear scientists.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"104.0\">The Mossad compiled detailed information on the habits and whereabouts of 11 Iranian nuclear scientists. The dossiers even mapped the locations of the bedrooms in the men\u2019s homes. On the morning of June 13, Israeli air force warplanes fired air-to-ground missiles at those coordinates, killing all 11.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"105.0\">After a delay, Iran retaliated with a barrage of missiles. Most were intercepted, but the ones that got through did considerable damage. Israel reported 30 civilian deaths and estimated its reconstruction costs at $12 billion. Iran\u2019s state media put the death toll in their country at more than 600.<\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__caption\">An aerial view of the destruction after an Iranian ballistic missile hit Ramat Gan near Tel Aviv, Israel, on June 14.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>        <span class=\"attribution__credit\"><br \/>\n        <span class=\"a11y\">Credit: <\/span><br \/>\n        Yair Palti\/Anadolu via Getty Images<br \/>\n    <\/span><\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"107.0\">The question of how much Iran\u2019s nuclear efforts were set back remains in dispute. Trump has insisted the American airstrikes on Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan \u201cobliterated\u201d Iran\u2019s program. Analysts in Israeli and American intelligence have been more restrained.<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"108.0\">\u201cThis war significantly set them back,\u201d said a former head of Aman, Gen. Tamir Hayman. \u201cIran is no longer a nuclear threshold state, as it was on the eve of the war. It could be able to return to threshold status in one or two years at the earliest, assuming a decision by the Supreme Leader to break out toward a bomb.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-pp-blocktype=\"copy\" data-pp-id=\"109.0\">Hayman, who now heads the Institute for National Security Studies in Israel, said it\u2019s possible the assault might have the opposite of its intended effect, if Iran becomes even more eager to build a bomb that could deter future Israeli attacks.<\/p>\n<p>Yossi Melman is a commentator on Israeli intelligence and a documentary filmmaker. Dan Raviv is a former CBS correspondent and host of \u201cThe Mossad Files\u201d podcast. They are the co-authors of \u201cSpies Against Armageddon: Inside Israel\u2019s Secret Wars.\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they\u2019re published. Reporting Highlights Covert Ops: Commandos that the Mossad, Israel\u2019s intelligence service, recruited from Iran and neighboring nations destroyed Iranian air defenses in the first hours of a June attack. Intelligence Gathering: Israeli operatives<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":14569,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[55],"tags":[673,8192,84,1836,214,247,8191,8190],"class_list":{"0":"post-14568","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-social-issues","8":"tag-attack","9":"tag-dissidents","10":"tag-iran","11":"tag-iranian","12":"tag-israel","13":"tag-propublica","14":"tag-recruited","15":"tag-secretly"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14568","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=14568"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14568\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/14569"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=14568"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=14568"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=14568"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}