Iranian Hardliner Advocates Weakening Israel For Enhanced Security

While the international community condemns Hamas' attack on Israel, a hardliner Iranian parliament member argues that weakening Israel will enhance Iran's security.

While the international community condemns Hamas' attack on Israel, a hardliner Iranian parliament member argues that weakening Israel will enhance Iran's security.
Fereydoun Abbasi, in a statement to local media on Wednesday, asserted, "The current moment demands a devastating blow against Israel, and we require an even stronger strike; this is currently a prelude to a final strike."
Abbasi is the former head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization.
He further suggested that Israel's involvement in its own issues will reduce hostile actions within Iran, adding, "If we look at our region, we can observe that all the disruptions are rooted in the policies of the Zionist regime, which sometimes benefits from American support, and these actions' adverse effects will undoubtedly affect other regional countries."
In the official Iranian regime terminology, Israel is referred to as "the Zionist entity" or the "Zionist regime."
Meanwhile, 97-year-old cleric Ahmad Jannati, the Secretary of the Guardian Council, characterized Hamas assault on Israel as a "victorious and promising operation," and said, "The operation has demonstrated that Israel is on a path to destruction, and any government aligning with it will become complicit in its demise."
Such remarks come as the death toll in the Israel-Hamas conflict continued to rise on the fifth day since the Palestinian militant group launched a large-scale. The brutal assault has resulted in over 1,200 deaths in Israel, among them at least 22 Americans. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has declared, "We are in a state of war."

A delegation of Iranian lawmakers is set to travel to Syria and Lebanon to meet with Palestinian militants.
The head of the National Security Committee of the Iranian Parliament announced on Wednesday that they held a meeting with representatives of the Islamic Jihad, Hamas, and relevant organizations to evaluate the developments in Gaza and Palestine.
According to Vahid Jalalzadeh, they also discussed “future operations.”
"We have informed the authorities that the parliament is ready to provide any support in this regard. The Islamic Republic undoubtedly has its own policies, and parliamentarians are at the forefront of the struggle against the Zionist regime and will not hesitate to offer their support," he added.
In the official terminology employed by the Iranian government, Israel is referred to as "the Zionist entity" or the "Zionist regime." Over the course of its 44-year history, Iran's clerical leaders have consistently advocated for the "elimination" or "destruction of Israel."
In 2015, Iran's ruler Ali Khamenei declared that Israel would no longer exist within the next 25 years. Subsequently, in 2016, the Iranian government installed a countdown clock in Tehran's Palestine Square, symbolically marking the time remaining. This followed the signing of a nuclear agreement between Iran and global powers in July 2015.
The comments by Jalalzadeh came amid growing suspicions regarding Iran's involvement in a surprise attack by Hamas on Israel on a Saturday morning. Since the start of the conflict, it has resulted in more than 1,200 Israeli casualties, with over 2,000 individuals sustaining severe injuries and dozens being taken hostage in Gaza.

Israel’s declaration to dismantle the Iran-backed Hamas in the Gaza Strip for its terror attack could have consequences for the Iranian regime.
Intense expert debates over whether Israel will launch full-scale war against Iran’s main strategic ally, Hezbollah, is underway amid the Lebanese terrorist entity’s aerial incursions into Israel.
Iran International contacted a number of leading Israeli and American experts about the possibility of a military clash between Israel and the clerical regime in Tehran.
Yigal Carmon, the former Israeli counter-terrorism adviser who predicted Hamas’ war against Israel in early September on Iran International, said “The Americans are there to preempt Iran.“
The US military sent additional naval groups to the Eastern Mediterranean, including the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford. Iran International was the first news organization to report on Carmon’s prescient MEMRI article from August 31.

Carmon, whose voice has been ubiquitous in the international and Israeli media since the outbreak of the war, said, “Hezbollah is deterred,” but he quickly noted that the Lebanese Shiite terrorist movement could flip and lash out at Israel. Carmon, who served as the counter-terrorism advisor to Israeli Prime Ministers Yitzhak Shamir and Yitzhak Rabin, added “Hezbollah is still listening to Tehran” and “Tehran wants to use everyone else to fight for them.”
According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, Iran’s regime directly helped Hamas prepare its massacre of over 1,200 people in southern Israel.
In a debate on Israel’s channel 13 on Wednesday, one of the panelists argued for an Israeli preemptive military strike against Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Yaakov Katz, the former editor-in-chief of the Jerusalem Post and defense expert, said, “I don’t see Israel initiating an attack against Iran right now. There is no benefit for Israel to expand this conflict and this war beyond what is happening in Gaza.”
He continued that “On the contrary, Israel wants to contain the war to one place and to Gaza. However, if Iran were to attack Israel, and to think they can take advantage of the situation, in that case, I think we would definitely see a significant Israeli response, if Iranian missiles, for example, were fired at Israel.”
Katz is the author of “Shadow Strike: Inside Israel's Secret Mission to Eliminate Syrian Nuclear Power.”
David Wurmser, a former Senior Advisor for nonproliferation and Middle East strategy for US vice president Dick Cheney, said, “Israel needs to reverse fundamentally the strategic momentum regionally, which accelerated against it dramatically following the catastrophe of the last few days. To do so, it cannot sufficiently deliver such a tectonic geostrategic shift within the confines of Gaza alone, although this must clearly result in a thorough exorcism of Hamas from Gaza.”
Wurmser, who was also the National Security Advisor to John Bolton, added, “Iran’s strategic vulnerability emanates from its most critical assets. First its deployment via Hezbollah in Lebanon, and Assad’s regime in Syria, which in turn also relies heavily on Hezbollah’s and the IRGC presence in Syria. Their destruction, and the destabilization of Assad’s regime, thus can administer a devastating blow that begins to seize the geostrategic momentum and turn the tide from last weekend’s disaster into anxiety in Iran’s regime.”
According to Wurmser, “This in turn can encourage Iranians to escalate their own quest for freedom, thus devastatingly exacerbating Tehran’s anxiousness, and the resulting image of besieged weakness. In this way, the war began in Gaza, but must end in Tehran.”
Wurmser warned that “Israel just learned that waiting to allow your enemy to get close or to amass great power must not inform action. Iran’s nuclear program cannot be allowed to remain at the level it currently is. It will not yield voluntarily, any more than Hamas, akin to a cobra, can be tamed.”
Carmon argues that Hamas should not be compared to the terrorist Islamic State movement, rather to the German Nazi paramilitary Einsatzgruppen. He wrote that “The mission of Hamas was to carry out a typical Hamas Einsatzgruppen attack: They hunted down Jewish women, men, children, Holocaust survivors, and the elderly, and murdered them with unspeakable cruelty.”
Carmon continued “Videos of the horrific crimes carried out by Hamas were published for public consumption. MEMRI is creating a quasi-Yad Vashem repository of the atrocities, so that no one forgets, and no one is allowed to forget.”

The Iranian mission to the United Nations has acknowledged that Tehran has provided Palestinian fighters with the necessary skills to carry out operations against Israel.
However, the mission told The Newsweek on Tuesday that Iran was not directly involved in the devastating Hamas infiltration attack that occurred over the weekend.
Iran's Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, praising the Hamas attack, has denied Tehran's involvement. Over 1,200 Israelis, mostly civilians were killed, and the operation has led to a significant Israeli military response in Gaza, resulting in the deaths of hundreds of Palestinians.
On Tuesday, the Iranian mission to the UN echoed Khamenei's statements while recognizing that Tehran has empowered Palestinian armed groups to launch attacks against Israel. The mission stated,” We have supported Palestinian fighters in acquiring fishing skills…They independently determine when, where, and how to engage in fishing according to their very own needs and interests."
The mission alleged that reports of direct Iranian involvement are intended to identify "a scapegoat to shift the blame.".
Khamenei mentioned on Tuesday that Israel and its supporters have been spreading rumors, including the claim that Islamic Iran was behind the action, which he refuted.
Hamas initially confirmed direct support from Iran and Lebanese Hezbollah for its infiltration attack but later revised its statement to suggest broader backing from Tehran, though not direct operational assistance. Both US and Israeli officials have also stated that so far there is no evidence of Iran taking an active role in the attack.

An advisor to former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says the Islamic Republic stands by anyone who fights against Israel, even if that person is a porn star.
Abdolreza Davari, a former confidant of Ahmadinejad said in a message on X social platform “We stand by anyone who fights against Israel, even if that person is Mia Khalifa, a former porn star, who has now cleansed her record of [moral] corruption through her explicit support for the oppressed Palestinian people and her struggle against the crimes of the Zionists.”
Mia Khalifa is a Lebanese-American media personality and former adult film actress and webcam model. Born and raised in Lebanon, she and her family relocated to the United States in 2001. Her choice of career sparked controversy in the Arab world and beyond, particularly after the release of a video in which she appeared in a sex video while wearing a hijab. The scene brought her both immediate fame and criticism from writers and religious figures. In 2015, Khalifa was named the "Number 1 Porn Star" on Pornhub.
Khalifa has faced various controversies over her opinions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. After the Hamas attack on Israel, she received backlash for a post on X in which she encouraged Palestinian militants to "flip their phones and film horizontally" after several videos emerged depicting Israeli civilians being killed. As a result, Playboy ended its association with Khalifa, and the Canadian broadcasting company Red Light Holland also terminated their contract with her.

Israel has announced its intention to escalate its response following the recent terror attack by Hamas, even preparing for the possibility of a ground offensive.
In sustained air strikes, Israel targeted more than 200 locations within a Gaza City neighborhood that Hamas had reportedly been using as launch sites for their attacks. The Gaza health ministry reported at least 950 fatalities and 5,000 injuries in the densely populated enclave.
Hamas invasion of southern Israel on October 7 has resulted in over 1,200 Israeli casualties, primarily among civilians. Some individuals were taken hostage and paraded through Gaza's streets. Hamas issued threats to execute Israeli captives in response to each Gaza home struck, but it remained uncertain if these threats were carried out.
Meanwhile, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant made a commitment to bring "significant changes to Gaza," hinting at the possibility of a ground offensive. Report say that more than 1,000 gunmen from Gaza were killed.
Reports also emerged of rocket fire originating from Lebanon and Syrian territory towards Israel, raising concerns about the conflict's potential expansion. Israeli forces responded with retaliatory actions.
"We do not yet know if these rockets were fired by the Syrian armed forces, by any of the many Iranian militias that exist and are welcomed by the Syrian regime, or Hezbollah or any other action," said Israel's Lieutenant Colonel Conricus.
"What we do know is that we retaliated fire toward the sources of fire, and currently the situation there is quiet."
With the escalating violence, numerous countries undertook efforts to evacuate their stranded citizens due to flight cancellations.
The conflict also spilled over into the West Bank and East Jerusalem, leading to casualties and injuries among Palestinians involved in clashes with Israeli forces.