On November 12, 2011, an explosion destroyed a secret missile base near Tehran, killing seventeen Revolutionary Guards and reducing dozens of missiles to charred scrap. General Tehrani Moghaddam, the "father" of the long-range Shehab missiles, also responsible for the Iranian missile program, perishes in the explosion. But he wasn't the target of the attack. It was a solid-fuel engine for a rocket capable of carrying a nuclear payload more than 9,000 kilometers away, from the underground silos of Iran to the territory of the United States.
The new missile the Iranian leaders planned to equip themselves with should have brought America's major cities to their knees and made Iran a world power. An explosion in November delayed the project for several months. Although the target of the new long-range missile was America, it is likely that the explosions that destroyed the Iranian base were triggered by Israel's secret service, the Mossad. Since its creation more than sixty years ago, the Mossad has intervened clandestinely, without weakening, against the dangers which threaten Israel and the West. And more than ever before, Mossad's intelligence-gathering capabilities and operations impact America's security, both at home and abroad.
At this very moment, he would be fighting against the explicit desire of the Iranian authorities to wipe Israel off the map. Stubbornly waging a shadow war against Iran by sabotaging nuclear facilities, assassinating scientists, supplying defective raw materials and equipment to Iranian factories through front companies, arranging the defection of generals and personalities from the nuclear program, introducing fearsome Esorts Girlsin the high ranks of experts in the country's computer systems, the Mossad would thus be busy fighting the nuclearization of Iran, a threat to the United States and to the rest of the world. If he succeeded in delaying the manufacture of an Iranian nuclear bomb for several years, the secret battle is now reaching its climax, before the last resort is called for: a military strike. Since the 1970s, in its fight against terror, the Mossad has captured and eliminated dozens of terrorist leaders in their strongholds in Beirut, Damascus, Baghdad and Tunis, or even before they strike, in Paris, Rome, Athens and Cyprus. On February 12, 2008, in Damascus, according to Western media, Mossad agents allegedly ambushed and killed Imad Mughniyeh, the military leader of Hezbollah. Mughniyeh was a sworn enemy of Israel, but he was also on the FBI's most wanted list. He had planned and carried out the massacre of 241 American Marines in Beirut, and left behind him a bloody trail, strewn with the corpses of hundreds of Americans, Israelis, French and Argentines. Currently, the leaders of Islamic Jihad and Al-Qaeda are being hunted throughout the Middle East. Argentinians. Currently, the leaders of Islamic Jihad and Al-Qaeda are being hunted throughout the Middle East. Argentinians. Currently, the leaders of Islamic Jihad and Al-Qaeda are being hunted throughout the Middle East.
And yet, when the Mossad warned the West that the Arab Spring was in danger of degenerating into the Arab Winter, no one seemed to have listened. Throughout 2011, the West hailed what it believed to be the dawning of a new era of democracy, freedom and the defense of human rights in Arab countries. Hoping to secure Egyptian support, the West pressed President Mubarak, its most trusted ally in the Arab world, to step down. But as soon as the crowd invaded Tahrir Square in Cairo, they burned American flags, then stormed the Israeli embassy, demanding the repeal of the peace treaty treaty a with the Hebrew state, and arrested members of American NGOs.