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Iran's Mossad paranoia grows, amid fears of Israeli spies wearing ‘masks, hats and sunglasses'

Iran's Mossad paranoia grows, amid fears of Israeli spies wearing ‘masks, hats and sunglasses'

CNN —
Iran has arrested dozens of people on suspicion of spying as fears grow in the Islamic Republic over the extent of its infiltration by Israel's Mossad intelligence service.
Since Israeli strikes began Friday, 28 people in the capital have been arrested and accused of spying for Israel, while on Monday, one man arrested on that charge two years ago was hanged in what appeared to be a message to any would-be collaborator.
The Iranian regime has also arrested scores of people across the country for allegedly sharing articles online 'in support of the Zionist regime' – accusing them of disrupting the 'psychological security of society' – including 60 people in Isfahan, where Israel claims to have targeted a nuclear site.
The wave of arrests comes as Tehran reels from the revelation that Mossad operatives smuggled weapons into Iran before Israel's unprecedented attack and used them to target the country from within.
So heightened have Iranian suspicions become since then that its Intelligence Ministry has been asking the public to report suspicious activity and issuing guidance on how to spot collaborators.
One statement from the ministry urges people to be wary of strangers wearing masks or goggles, driving pickup trucks and carrying large bags or filming around military, industrial, or residential areas.
Few pedestrians walk along the historic Grand Bazaar as shops remain shuttered, in Tehran, Iran, on Monday.
Vahid Salemi/AP
Elsewhere, a poster published by the state-affiliated Nour News – which is close to Iran's security apparatus – singled out for suspicion people who wear 'masks, hats, and sunglasses, even at night' and those who receive 'frequent package deliveries by courier.'
The poster asks people to report 'unusual sounds from inside the house, such as screaming, the sound of metal equipment, continuous banging' and 'houses with curtains drawn even during the day.'
Another poster, attributed to the police and published on state media, advised landlords who had recently rented their homes to notify the police immediately.
Meanwhile, journalists in Iran have told CNN they are prohibited from taking pictures on the street.
The fears of Israeli penetration only amplify the anxieties felt by the increasingly isolated leadership of the Islamic Republic, which has been rocked in recent years by anti-regime protests sparked by the death of a young woman in the custody of the country's so-called morality police.
The same force used to crack down on those protests, the Basij (a paramilitary wing of Iran's Revolutionary Guard) has been deployed in night patrols to increase 'surveillance' in the wake of the Israeli infiltration, according to Iran's state-controlled media.
In a video statement Monday, Iran's chief of police Ahmad-Reza Radan urged 'traitors' to come forward, suggesting those who realized they had been 'deceived by the enemy' might receive more lenient treatment and be 'honored' by Iran – while those who were caught would be 'taught a lesson that the Zionist enemy is being given now.'
The head of Iran's judiciary Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Eje'i called for 'swift' punishment of those accused of collaborating with Israel.
'Let's say we have apprehended someone who is collaborating with (Israel), this matter under these war-like conditions … must be prosecuted swiftly and punished swiftly,' he said.
The Iranian regime's rising paranoia comes as more details emerge of the Mossad operation that smuggled weapons into Iran ahead of the first strikes on Friday.
According to Israeli officials, operatives established a base for launching explosive drones inside Iran, then used those drones to target missile launchers near Tehran.
Precision weapons were also smuggled in, they say, and used to target surface-to-air missile systems, clearing the way for Israel's Air Force to carry out more than 100 strikes with upward of 200 aircraft in the early hours of Friday local time.
Intelligence gathered by the Mossad in Iran also reportedly gave Israel's Air Force the ability to target senior Iranian commanders and scientists.
Since then, according to Iranian media outlets, the government has seized equipment allegedly used during the Israeli operation – including 200 kilograms of explosives, several suicide drones, launchers and equipment used to manufacture the drones – in the city of Rey in Tehran province.
A video published by the state-affiliated Fars News Agency showed a building with drone parts and other equipment.
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