Turkey said to nab Iranian cell planning attacks on Israelis
ISTANBUL, Turkey — Turkey has detained several people
allegedly working for an Iranian intelligence cell that planned to assassinate
or snatch Israeli tourists in Istanbul, local media reported Thursday.
The news of the bust came weeks after Israel ordered its
citizens in Istanbul to leave immediately, warning of an imminent Iranian
attack plot targeting Israelis in Turkey.
Among those who were being targeted for kidnapping were a
former Israeli diplomat and his wife, Hebrew media reported, citing Turkish
outlets. The diplomat’s name was not published.
Israel’s Mossad spy agency chartered a private plane to
immediately bring the pair and others back to the country, reports said.
The suspects, who were not all Iranian nationals, were
detained in a raid last week in three houses in Istanbul’s popular Beyoglu
district, the IHA news agency reported. The outlet said eight people had been
arrested.
Turkey’s Hurriyet newspaper reported on Thursday that
Turkish authorities detained five Iranian nationals on Wednesday suspected of
involvement in the alleged plot to assassinate Israeli citizens in Istanbul.
Reports of the detentions came as Israel’s Foreign Minister
Yair Lapid arrived in Turkey Thursday for high-level talks, amid a recent
rapprochement between the countries after years of frayed ties.
The terror warnings had both strained ties as Ankara chafed
at being portrayed as an unsafe tourism destination in international media
reports, but also allowed the two countries to showcase newly revived ties by
cooperating on intelligence and security.
Iran and Israel have been engaged in a years-long shadow war
but tensions have ratcheted up following a string of high-profile incidents
Tehran has blamed on Israel.
The Islamic republic claimed Israel was responsible for the
killing of Revolutionary Guards Colonel Hassan Sayyad Khodaei in his Tehran
home on May 22.
Khodaei’s assassination was the most high-profile killing
inside Iran since the November 2020 killing of top nuclear scientist Mohsen
Fakhrizadeh.
IHA said Iran sent agents disguised as businessmen, tourists
and students to Istanbul to assassinate Israelis in retaliation for Khodaei’s
murder and other attacks.
It said the Iranians had split into four groups of two
assassins who could better track their Israeli targets.
The suspects rented apartments and hotel rooms in the area,
and had $30,000 to set up a network of age Police seized two pistols and two
silencers in searches conducted in houses and hotels where the suspects were
staying, according to the Hurriyet report.
“The hitmen in the assassination team, who settled in two
separate rooms on the second and fourth floors of a hotel in Beyoglu, were
[detained] with a large number of weapons and ammunition,” IHA said.
Later Thursday, Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guards
Corps, which also handles operations outside of the country, announced that it
was replacing the head of its intelligence unit Hossein Taeb, who had held the
position for over a decade.
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