The Jerusalem Post

Iran’s web of proxies is engulfing the world

Tehran strategica­lly avoids direct conflict by leveraging its proxies, impacting regional stability

- • By KEREN SETTON/ THE MEDIA LINE

Iran has been pulling the strings behind the scenes of the current unrest in the Middle East through several terrorist organizati­ons it has backed, supported, and trained in recent years.

Since the Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979, Tehran has called for the destructio­n of Israel and has been antagonist­ic toward the US. It has cultivated a web of organizati­ons that threaten rival regional powers as well as American interests and Israel.

Iran has proxies operating worldwide. From Latin America to Africa and the Middle East, the Islamic Republic seeks to exert its influence globally.

The groups comprising Iran’s “axis of resistance” in the Middle East operate inside their respective countries as well as against Israel, the US, and other Western countries.

Dr. Menahem Merhavy, a research fellow and expert on Iran at the Harry S. Truman Institute for the Advancemen­t of Peace at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said that spreading its network is one of the basic principles of Iran’s policy.

“Iran does its best to avoid operations stemming from its territory and to ensure there will be no combat on Iranian soil, but somewhere else,” Merhavy told The Media Line.

These are the main Iranian-backed organizati­ons operating in the Middle East right now:

IN IRAQ, Shi’ite Iranian-backed resistance movements; two decades of instabilit­y in Iraq have provided fertile ground for a range of Iranian-backed Shi’ite terrorist organizati­ons.

Leading them is the radical Kataib Hezbollah, a union of several pro-Iranian groups that was formed to operate against the American and British forces that overthrew Saddam Hussein’s regime in 2003.

Kataib Hezbollah is believed to be behind the attack that killed three American soldiers on the Syria-Jordan border last weekend. In the attack’s aftermath, several US politician­s called for US retaliatio­n against Iran.

Merhavy said that some of the organizati­ons are direct proxies of the Iranian regime, while others receive little or no support. The closer to and more dependent on Iran they are, the more authority it can exert on them.

Kataib Hezbollah was designated a terrorist organizati­on by the US State Department in 2009. According to the US

National Counterter­rorism Center, the group is believed to have about 10,000 members and to possess a wide variety of weapons, including armored vehicles, artillery, missiles, portable air defense systems, and sniper rifles. It has also received extensive training, funding, and intelligen­ce from Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps Quds Force.

The US has attacked Kataib Hezbollah forces several times over the years.

IN YEMEN: The Houthi movement has been present in Yemen since the 1960s. During the Arab Spring a decade ago, which saw a wave of anti-government protests throughout the Arab world, it came to the frontlines of Yemen’s political scene, flourishin­g against the backdrop of a prolonged period of instabilit­y.

The organizati­on is widely believed to be backed by Iran as part of Iranian efforts to goad Saudi Arabia, and as another tool to irritate Israel. Yemen is just one front in the regional rivalry between Iran and Saudi Arabia, with the kingdom backing the sitting government in Yemen while the Houthis push for a more hardline Islamic regime. The Houthis have launched attacks against Saudi Arabia, including targeting its critical oil industry.

Often during protests, Houthis have chanted calls for the destructio­n of the US and Israel but never acted on them until the beginning of the current war between Hamas and Israel. Since the beginning of the Gaza war, the Houthis have officially declared war on Israel and have launched several missile attacks against it, although most were thwarted by longrange air defense systems and have not resulted in casualties on Israel’s side. The Houthis also successful­ly downed an American drone flying in the region, an attack that was acknowledg­ed by the US.

The attacks are a Houthi show of support for Hamas and another attempt by Iran to irritate Israel but are also an attempt to improve their position as negotiatio­ns with Saudi Arabia on the future of Yemen progress.

“Israel is a convenient target if one wants to gain popularity in the Arab world,” Merhavy said. “But more importantl­y the Houthis want to project their strength and be able to make more demands in the negotiatio­ns on the future of Yemen after the civil war ends.” Iran sees the Houthis as another part of its puzzle, more to agitate Saudi Arabia than Israel. The Houthi rebels have also used the opportunit­y of the Gaza war to threaten Israeli

and Western ships passing through the Red Sea at the Bab el Mandeb Strait, off the coast of Yemen. The group is believed to possess a wide range of missiles and drones, all possibly supplied by Iran.

Yemen’s critical geographic­al location means that any unrest in the strait leaves the global economy especially vulnerable.

But with their domestic agenda, the Houthis are less committed to Iran than other proxies may be.

“Iran uses such proxies to sting its adversarie­s as a means to apply pressure on them,” Merhavy said.

Hezbollah is a Lebanese-based Shi’ite terrorist group that has for years operated against Israel and the US. It is behind attacks against Americans that have killed dozens of American civilians and soldiers.

The US State Department blackliste­d the organizati­on in 1997, as did many other countries. Backed and heavily financed by Iran, Hezbollah’s ties and commitment to Tehran are ironclad. Intelligen­ce organizati­ons estimate that Hezbollah has accumulate­d around 150,000 unguided rockets since its last war with Israel, in 2006, and that this strengthen­ing has been led by Iran.

According to the National Counterter­rorism Center, Hezbollah has some 40,000 fighters. Israel considers Hezbollah its most formidable enemy. Since the beginning of the war in Gaza, Hezbollah has fired hundreds of rockets towards northern Israel. Casualties have been very limited as the area was almost completely evacuated by the Israeli government. Unable to resettle the area, the Israeli government is facing a serious dilemma on how to deal with Hezbollah. Meanwhile, the US is trying to reach a political settlement to avert a wider war.

Hamas and Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad

Founded in the late 1980s, Hamas is an Islamist group, a branch of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, and is dedicated to the destructio­n of Israel. It is a Sunni group, in contrast to Iran, where most Muslims are Shi’ite.

Many countries, including the US, UK, Canada, Japan, and Israel, as well as the European Union, have designated the group as a terrorist organizati­on.

The organizati­on is believed to have begun the war on Israel with some 25,000 operatives. Israel estimates some 10,000 of them have been killed since October.

According to Merhavy, the initial contact between Iran and Hamas began in the 1990s and then developed into more assistance, especially with weapons. In addition to a wide range of rockets and anti-tank missiles, Hamas also spent years developing a web of undergroun­d tunnels that serves its leadership until today. According to the National Counterter­rorism Center, the organizati­on also “uses cyber espionage and computer network exploitati­on operations.”

Several media reports after Hamas’s surprise massacre on October 7 suggested that the organizati­on was disappoint­ed that Iran had not instructed its other proxies to join more intensivel­y in the effort against Israel. There were conflictin­g reports regarding the extent of coordinati­on between Hamas and Iran on the timing of the attack. While supported by Iran, Hamas seems to have made this decision independen­tly.

Hamas also operates against Israel in the West Bank. For Iran, which seeks to exhaust Israel on the path to achieving its destructio­n, the West Bank is yet another arena from where it can achieve this goal.

In the late summer of 2023, after an uptick in attacks against Israelis in the West Bank, Israeli leaders and defense officials began pinpointin­g Iran as the culprit for some of the anti-Israeli activity.

The claim was that Iran was behind the escalation in the West Bank, before the war that broke out in October, which included failed attempts to launch missiles from the West Bank into Israel. The reappearan­ce of the use of improvised explosive devices against Israeli forces in the West Bank and the capture of other such devices in Israeli military raids has exposed intelligen­ce agencies to increased Iranian involvemen­t in this arena.

For years, Israel and Iran have been engaged in a shadow war against each other. Israel’s military is believed to be behind hundreds of airstrikes against Iranian targets in the Middle East, in addition to cyberattac­ks against major infrastruc­ture in the Islamic Republic. Iran is believed to be behind attacks against Israeli-operated oil tankers and attempts to abduct and kill Israelis in countries like Cyprus and Turkey last year.

The Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad, a much smaller terrorist organizati­on that operates both in Gaza and the West Bank, is considered much closer to Tehran and much more subservien­t to its commands.

 ?? (Aziz Taher/Reuters) ?? HUSSEIN, SON of Wissam Tawil, a commander of Hezbollah’s elite Radwan forces killed in an Israeli airstrike on south Lebanon, holds his picture at a memorial ceremony in southern Lebanon in mid-January.
(Aziz Taher/Reuters) HUSSEIN, SON of Wissam Tawil, a commander of Hezbollah’s elite Radwan forces killed in an Israeli airstrike on south Lebanon, holds his picture at a memorial ceremony in southern Lebanon in mid-January.
 ?? (Thaier Al-Sudani/Reuters) ?? PEOPLE CARRY the coffin of an Iraqi Kataib Hezbollah fighter, killed in a US airstrike, during his funeral in Baghdad in December 2023.
(Thaier Al-Sudani/Reuters) PEOPLE CARRY the coffin of an Iraqi Kataib Hezbollah fighter, killed in a US airstrike, during his funeral in Baghdad in December 2023.
 ?? (Jaafar Ashtiyeh/AFP via Getty Images) ?? HAMAS PRISONERS released by Israel on Dec. 1 are welcomed by supporters holding the flag of Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad. They were freed in exchange for Israeli hostages.
(Jaafar Ashtiyeh/AFP via Getty Images) HAMAS PRISONERS released by Israel on Dec. 1 are welcomed by supporters holding the flag of Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad. They were freed in exchange for Israeli hostages.
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