Tehran holds symbolic funeral for Hamas leader amid tight security
Supreme Leader's unusual glances during Ismail Haniyeh's funeral on August 1, 2024 spark speculation about his heightened security concerns.
Tehran hosted a pre-burial funeral ceremony for Ismail Haniyeh, a top Hamas leader who was killed a few hours after attending the the swearing-in ceremony of President Masoud Pezeshkian.
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The intense security measures, including a declared no-fly zone on Thursday, underscored the Iranian government's heightened concerns over potential threats during the ceremony after the assassination of the Hamas political chief on Iran's watch. He will be buried in Qatar, his main host country, reportedly on Friday.
It reveals the deepening vulnerability of the Islamic Republic’s security apparatus, now evidently struggling to shield itself from external and internal threats alike after what is believed to have been a precision missile killed the militant in the heart of Tehran.
From 6am to 12 noon on Thursday, the airspace over central Tehran, including the area around Tehran University and the residence of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, was off-limits to all air traffic, including drones.
Despite official denials from Reza Kargar of the Iran Airports Company about any impact on commercial flights, the restrictions reflected a clear state of alert.
At the funeral, significant figures such as Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian and Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf paid their respects to the man who had personally cultivated close ties to Iran and the Supreme Leader since becoming the political leader in 2017.
Ghalibaf, addressing the assembled mourners, described the assassination of Haniyeh as a "strategic mistake" by Israel, warning that Israel would "pay a hefty price for this."
"Their second mistake," he continued, "is ignoring our leader's words that the era of hit-and-run is over."
Khamenei's presence to lead prayers over Haniyeh’s body was marked by notable moments of tension. A video from the event, widely shared on social media, shows Khamenei casting anxious glances around.
The assassination of Haniyeh, coming on the heels of other high-profile attacks, has exposed the fragility of Iran's internal security.
Ahmad Alavi, an economist and analyst, blamed "corruption and inefficiencies within Iran's security apparatus" which has left it exposed to sophisticated foreign intelligence operations. "When resources are misused and oversight is weakened, it's inevitable that foreign agents can exploit these weaknesses," Alavi said.
The New York Times, citing Iranian sources, reported that Khamenei has instructed the Supreme National Security Council to respond directly from Iranian soil, with military plans targeting Tel Aviv and Haifa.
Journalist Jamshid Barzegar says Iran's responses so far have not seen a match against Israel and its ally, the US. In April, when Iran launched over 350 rockets, drones and missiles towards Israel, the first direct attack on the Jewish state, the majority were intercepted by Israel and a US-led coalition.
"While Israel and the US have delivered significant blows to the Islamic Republic's human and material resources, Iran has struggled to respond with equivalent actions," he said.
He pointed out that, unlike Israel and the US targeting key figures, Iran has attempted to target Israeli civilians or businesspeople abroad, often unsuccessfully, leading to international embarrassments with dozens of plots foiled in countries including Greece, Azerbaijan and Belgium.
Amid growing concerns over transparency and foreign influence, US lawmakers are intensifying their scrutiny of the Biden administration's handling of Iran-related affairs.
On Tuesday top lawmakers overseeing US foreign policy threatened to subpoena the State Department following the agency’s failure to provide information about suspended Iran envoy Robert Malley. Meanwhile, on Wednesday other US lawmakers raised concerns about potential Iranian influence within the Biden administration, specifically questioning Vice President Kamala Harris’s national security advisor, Philip Gordon.
In a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, US Senate Foreign Relations Committee Ranking Member Jim Risch and House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul expressed deep frustration with the State Department's lack of transparency regarding the suspension of Robert Malley's security clearance. They condemned the Department's failure to respond to repeated inquiries since June 2023 as "deeply troubling" and unacceptable.
The lawmakers demanded the Department "provide fulsome answers" to their queries by no later than close of business on August 2, 2024. They warned that should the Department miss this deadline, they would be "compelled to pursue compulsory processes to secure any documents, materials, and testimony" relevant to their investigation from members of the State Department.
Risch and McCaul emphasized that they sent a letter on May 6, 2024, requesting immediate answers but have since received more information from the press than from official channels. They stated, "We have been made aware that there may be a classified response to our letter but have yet to receive it. This vague assurance, however, failed to include any information on when we could expect your reply or whether it would address all of our questions." Risch had previously stated that it was likely they would not get any answers unless they issued a subpoena.
In late May, Semafor reported, quoting people familiar with a Congressional probe into Malley's handling of classified information, that Biden’s Iran envoy transferred documents to his personal devices “with classifications ranging from sensitive but unclassified to classified,” and may have shared some with unauthorized people, “to advance his diplomatic efforts.” Among the documents downloaded by Malley on his personal devices, Semafor reported, were "detailed notes of the diplomat’s encounters with Iranian officials in the months leading up to his suspension.
Malley was appointed by President Joe Biden in early 2021 to revive the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, advocating for sanctions relief in exchange for nuclear restrictions. Despite efforts, the deal has not been reinstated since Trump's 2018 withdrawal. In April 2023, Malley was placed on leave and had his security clearance suspended. Iran International first reported the incident two months later, but the State Department blocked all attempts to find more information about Malley’s case.
Separately, on Wednesday US Senator Tom Cotton and US Congress Member Elise M. Stefanik Elise M. Stefani wrote to Vice President Kamala Harris regarding her national security advisor, Philip Gordon's connections to Ariane Tabatabai, a senior Department of Defense official involved in an Iranian government operation to expand Tehran’s influence in the United States.
In 2023, Iran International and Semafor investigation uncovered the Iran Experts Initiative (IEI) - a scheme devised by Iran’s foreign ministry in 2014 to bring together a network of scholars outside Iran to advocate Iran's foreign policy and nuclear strategy. A few were been named in the report, including Ariane Tabatabai, who entered the State Department after Biden was elected.
Cotton and Stefanik cited Mr. Gordon's past collaborations with Ms. Tabatabai and his associations with the National Iranian American Council (NIAC), an alleged Iranian influence organization.
"We write to express concern about your national security advisor Mr. Philip Gordon’s connections to Ms. Ariane Tabatabai," Cotton and Stefanik stated in their letter. They added that Ms. Tabatabai was "reportedly involved in an Iranian government operation to expand Tehran’s soft power in the United States."
Cotton and Stefanik requested answers to several questions, including whether Mr. Gordon underwent security screening, his awareness of Ms. Tabatabai’s connections, and what actions Vice President Harris plans to take to address Iranian sympathizers within the administration. They set a deadline of August 9, 2024, for a response.
Details surrounding the operation that led to the killing of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran remain unclear. Neither Iran nor Israel, which is suspected of being behind the operation, has provided specifics.
Yet, there are numerous reports that may provide clues for experts to speculate on how the operation was carried out – and whether it involved advanced weaponry or a sophisticated drone strike.
Where and when?
In one of its statements, the IRGC announced that the attack resulting in Haniyeh's death occurred at two in the morning and stated that he was killed by "a projectile from the air" while stationed at one of the "special residences for war veterans in northern Tehran."
Hours later, the Iran-aligned Lebanese network Al-Mayadeen reported that the missile used to attack Haniyeh's residence was launched not from within Iran, but from another country.
Since then, however, Israel’s Channel 12 reported that Iranian officials were coming to the conclusion that the projectile was actually fired from within the country’s borders.
Where did Haniyeh reside in Tehran?
Although the Iranian state’s Fars news agency reported that Haniyeh was staying at a special residence for war veterans in northern Tehran, little is known about the building.
Some unofficial sources inside Iran, have suggested that Haniyeh could have been killed near the Saadabad Palace – a historic royal complex located in the northern part of Iran’s capital. Boasting hundreds of acres, the complex has been used by the Islamic Republic for various official events for many years.
Some reports have also suggested that the Basij al-Zahra camp in the northwest of this complex was Haniyeh’s residence.
The building in Saadabad complex where Haniyeh was staying.
During President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani's administration, leading up to the Islamic Summit Conference in Tehran in 1991, a building was reportedly constructed at Saadabad Palace to accommodate special guests. This facility might have been used to host distinguished visitors, although specific details about Haniyeh’s residence there are not well-documented.
Was there an explosion?
Some local witnesses reported hearing an explosion in the Saadabad area early Wednesday morning.
State-run media outlet Tejarat Online published a story that suggested that the explosion's sound was "so loud that it triggered all the car alarms and was heard throughout northern Tehran, with smoke and dust from the explosion covering the area."
According to sources connected to Hamas, the building targeted in the attack was also occupied by his bodyguard, Ziad Nakhalah, the leader of Islamic Jihad, along with a Hamas delegation.
So far, however, there have been no reports indicating that these individuals were harmed.
In addition, no reports have emerged about other residents of the building being injured, leaving the door open to assume that despite the precision of any operation to kill Haniyeh, the explosion's power and intensity were likely limited.
Missile vs drone?
Although the IRGC's statement referred to "a projectile from the air," the origin of the projectile remains unclear.
Sky News Arabia reported that based on its Iranian sources, that the building Haniyeh was in, was targeted by a missile fired from a nearby building.
Aerial projectiles can be launched from either fighter jets or military drones. For such strikes, military aircraft would typically utilize the airspace of neighboring countries. While using the airspace of other countries without authorization and conducting operations near border areas is challenging, it is not impossible.
In Israel’s April attack on the 8th Tactical Airbase in Isfahan, American officials confirmed that Israeli aircraft launched three missiles from outside Iran's borders targeting a radar site protecting the Natanz nuclear facility. Iranian officials, however, attributed the incident to enemy drones at this military base.
According to Israeli Channel 14 military correspondent Hallel Bitton Rosen, however, the attack was not carried out by launching a missile, but with another weapon that exploded close to him.
Drawing on Israel’s past operations, the country has a history of conducting drone attacks on Iranian soil.
In February 2023, the Wall Street Journal reported that Israel was responsible for a drone attack on a Defense Ministry workshop complex in Isfahan and an explosion at a munitions center in the city. Iranian officials described the attack as "unsuccessful" and stated that it caused only limited damage.
What are some experts saying?
Israel has not claimed responsibility for the attack, but one Israeli and two US officials told Axios that Israel was behind the strike.
About two hours before Haniyeh’s death, Richard Goldberg, a senior advisor at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, appeared to allude to the attack, saying "The Israeli Air Force is demonstrating its range tonight."
After the news of the killing of the Hamas leader broke, Goldberg, in reference to Israel striking Iran previously, posted on X: "If you can hit a radar next to a nuclear site, you can hit a house in Tehran. Ayatollah is exposed."
Major Andrew Fox, a researcher at the Jackson Institute and a former British paratrooper, told Iran International English that the attack might have been carried out with a missile launched from outside Iran. According to him, the Caspian Sea, given its proximity to Tehran, is a suitable option for this operation.
Fox, drawing on his experience and emphasizing that such missiles are guided with precise laser technology, said: "A soldier on the ground targets the laser pointer exactly at the point where he wants the missile to hit, guiding the missile to the impact point."
The expert also noted that Israel has missiles designed to use the kinetic energy from the speed and weight of the warhead for lethality. This explains why, in some missile attacks, fewer casualties and less noise are observed compared to those with explosive warheads.
Ronen Solomon, an Israeli intelligence and security analyst, highlighted the proximity of Baku and Tel Aviv, as well as Azerbaijan’s common border with Iran. He suggested that the use of Azerbaijani airspace for the attack is highly likely due to the short distance and the presence of Israeli weapons in the region.
Shaken by the embarrassment of Ismail Haniyeh's assassination in Tehran, top Iranian officials are issuing threats of harsh retaliation against Israel, attempting to put a brave face on a monumental security failure.
Blaming Israel, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei stated that he considers it a “duty to seek justice for him, who was martyred within the territory of the Islamic Republic of Iran.”
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) issued a statement attributing the attack to "the Zionist regime" and declared that this "crime" would be met with a "harsh and painful response" from the Resistance Front, particularly from Iran.
Even the ostensibly 'moderate' Pezeshkian adopted a harsh tone, vowing that the Islamic Republic would defend its territorial "integrity, dignity, honor, and pride," and promising to make the "terrorist occupiers" regret their actions.
The Iranian foreign ministry released a statement accusing the US of being an "accomplice and supporter of Israel in the killing of Ismail Haniyeh," and indicated that the Islamic Republic considers an "appropriate response" to this action. Iran’s former acting foreign minister, Ali Bagheri-Kani, stated that Iran has the right to respond to the assassination of Haniyeh, describing the attack as a "cowardly act" and a “breach of international law and the UN Charter.” Senior Iranian diplomats also vowed significant retaliatory actions.
Iran’s UN Mission posted on X, stating, “The response to an assassination will indeed be special operations—harder and intended to instill deep regret in the perpetrator.” Mojtaba Amani, Iran’s ambassador to Lebanon, also stated that “Iran, in return, will not allow this region to be prey to the joint US and Israeli administrations.”
The only official adopting a somewhat more measured tone was First Vice President Mohammad Reza Aref, who refrained from mentioning any retaliation and stated, “The high power of the establishment will not be affected by these mischievous actions.”
Aref also remarked that the attack aimed to create a new crisis in the region and complicate Iran's regional and international relations, particularly at the onset of the new administration's term.
One could argue that Aref has a point, as the attack and Iran's vow of retaliation for the Hamas leader's assassination cast doubt on the portrayal of the establishment as having shifted to a more 'moderate' direction.
Although chants of “Death to Israel” and “Death to America,” alongside calls for “wiping Israel off the map,” remain central to the Islamic Republic’s political discourse, officials had hinted at a strategy shift under new president Masoud Pezeshkian. In early July, Iran's former Acting Foreign Minister, Ali Bagheri-Kani, addressed the United Nations Security Council in New York, emphasizing Pezeshkian's foreign policy aimed at "opening new horizons" to foster "friendly relations with other nations based on dialogue, cooperation, equality, and mutual respect."
Despite these diplomatic assertions, Iran has continued to publicly prioritize and defend its support for sponsored militias, revealing a fundamental contradiction. While the West accuses Iran of sponsoring terrorism, thereby hindering mutual dialogue, Iran remains steadfast in its stance.
When asked whether Pezeshkian’s election would alter the US negotiating position, White House spokesman John Kirby unequivocally responded, "No," citing Iran's continued support for militant groups. “They’re still supporting terrorist groups like Hamas and Hezbollah. They’re still supporting the Houthis as the Houthis attack ships in the Red Sea. They’re still attacking shipping as well,” Kirby stated at a press conference. “So no, no.”
The presence of militia leaders, including Hamas' Political Bureau Head Ismail Haniyeh, Islamic Jihad Secretary-General Ziyad al-Nakhalah, and Yemeni Houthi spokesman Mohammed Abdul-Salam, at Pezeshkian's inauguration on Tuesday in parliament, starkly underscores Tehran's true priorities.
Haniyeh's killing early on Wednesday suggested that sponsoring regional militias carries significant consequences, and while seeking the removal of sanctions, exposes inherent contradictions, underscoring the impossibility of having one's cake and eating it too.
Iranians have taken to social media to express their views on Ismail Haniyeh’s targeted killing in Tehran, raising concerns about the security and intelligence agencies’ failure to protect him.
The political leader of Hamas who had traveled to Tehran to participate in the inauguration of President Masoud Pezeshkian Tuesday was targeted at a highly guarded compound set within a park at the foothills of high mountains in the northern Niavaran district in the early hours of Wednesday.
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has vowed revenge for Haniyeh’s killing without specifying its type. Still, ultra-hardliners on social media are demanding a missile and drone strike on Israel similar to the attack in April dubbed “Operation True Promise” with the hashtag “Operation True Promise 2”.
Iranian netizens are extensively speculating about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s possible motivations in choosing the time and place of the assassination. They are concerned that a retaliation, if Khamenei decides to strike Israel again, may ignite a full-on regional war.
“Haniyeh’s assassination in the heart of Tehran was the most humiliating action against the Islamic Republic that Israel or America have taken in recent years,” a dissident netizen posted on X.
“It was even more humiliating than the killing of [Qasem] Soleimani,” he wrote while pointing out that Soleimani was killed under very different circumstances in a different country where Iran did not exercise its own intelligence and security controls.
There are allegations of significant Israeli infiltration within these agencies, which many Iranians claim are diverting their resources to suppress intellectuals and activists, and to crack down on women for hijab violations, rather than focusing on real threats.
These agencies are predominantly under the control of hardliners and ultra-hardliners. Some netizens are alleging that these agencies have been heavily infested with Israeli infiltrators and spies given the many operations that Jerusalem is believed to have conducted in Iran since 2010.
“Iran's intelligence and security apparatus has been totally destroyed since [Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad’s time [in office],” a tweet about the assassination contendedwhile holding “spies and infiltrators” responsible for the intelligence failure in this instance.
“Tehran has practically become the stage for Israel’s operations! The best place for Israel to assassinate Haniyeh was Tehran so that it would not entail problems in its relations with Arab [states] for assassination on their soil and to show off its power in Tehran,” a post on Xsaid about the choice of location for the operation.
Netizens are also extensively speculating about the equipment -- a quadcopter, a drone, or a cruise missile, and the possible involvement of a “neighboring country” from where the attack could have been launched.
In a tweet, journalist Ata Bahrami asked why no one heard the blast in Niavaran if Haniyeh was targeted by a rocket launched from outside Iran which could have caused a massive explosion. “The assassination was done from inside [the country]!” he speculated.
“The problem now is not whether it was a missile or a knife [that killed Haniyeh]. The message and the security disaster is what matters,” another netizen responded to such speculations.
Others have accused the Israeli Prime Minister of seeking to sabotage any future talks between the new government in Tehran and Washington that could improve their relations.
“The cowardly Zionists always try to sabotage whenever they feel talks and improvement of the situation is possible,” one of them posted on X.
Iran's former Communications Minister Mohammad-Javad Azari-Jahromi who played a major role in Pezeshkian’s campaign in a tweet has similarly accused Israel of trying to sabotage Pezeshkian’s promised efforts to improve Iran's relations with the world.
“The people of the world should know that the occupying Zionist regime committed a terrorist act on the same day that the Iranian President, on his first day in office, called the world to peace and friendship,” Azari-Jahromi wrote while calling Israel a “cancerous tumor” that threatens peace in the whole world. He failed to mention that during Pezeshkian's swearing-in ceremony in parliament those present were chanting "death to America."
Expatriate journalist Dariush Memar responded to Azari-Jahromi that the Islamic Republic cannot form “the biggest terrorist network in the world” and invite its leaders to the inauguration of its president while calling the world to peace and calm. “The world cannot be deceived,” he tweeted. Other netizens have expressed similar views.
Experts suspect the assassination of Hamas’s political leader Ismail Haniyeh possibly used a special precision missile with special forces in Tehran guiding it to its target.
It meant that such a strike would take out the Iran-backed terror-designated group’s figurehead while causing the least collateral damage.
Major Andrew Fox, a research fellow at the Henry Jackson Society and a former British paratrooper, said locating Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh had made the assassination, early on Wednesday, nothing more than “fairly straightforward intelligence”.
Haniyeh made regular media appearances during his multiple visits to Tehran, making it an accessible target for Israel, which had promised Qatar not to strike him there—one of Hamas's two exile offices, alongside Turkey.
“They put themselves on the radar so it’s fairly straightforward intelligence work to find them. The time of day was very sensible. In Afghanistan we did night raids as we knew where the target would sleep.”
Based on his many years of experience, he said the likelihood of the cause of the strike was a missile launched from outside Iran and guided in with precision laser technology, operated by special forces on the ground.
“The soldier on the ground points a laser pointer at the exact spot they want to hit so the laser guides the missile to the point of impact,” he said. “The UK, US and others have this technology.”
Causing minimal damage, it also came in almost unnoticed with very little sound to warn of its approach.
“There are kinetic missiles Israel has been using that kill using kinetic energy that essentially uses the speed and weight of the warhead to do the killing. We’ve seen that in strikes on kills where a classroom is hit that’s being used by Hamas. It explains why less people got killed and it was less noisy than an explosive warhead,” he explained.
What this also means is that, unlike the assassination in Beirut of Hezbollah’s top commander on Tuesday, Fuad Shuker, which injured at least 60 others and damaged a huge chunk of a large building, the impact is far less.
“It’s really clever to use this as it doesn’t wipe out a whole chunk of Tehran. There isn’t so much damage that Tehran is forced to retaliate with huge force. If they’d levelled a city block, Iran would have no choice but to be more aggressive than I think they will be. It was one house. It’s embarrassing for Iran but in terms of damage it’s not a huge beast,” added Maj Fox.
Israeli intelligence and security analyst, Ronen Solomon, said the hit in Tehran will be a major embarrassment for Iran. While in Qatar, Haniyeh has a huge circle of security around him. However, he had just one bodyguard in Tehran, ironically, the one place he felt he was safe.
But he left a huge footprint leading Israel straight to him. “Ismail Haniyeh came with a group of Palestinians so there is a wide [intelligence] signature. They came from Qatar and usually it’s by a private plane,” he explained.
The root of the strike remains unconfirmed by either Iran or Israel but Solomon said what was unusual was the lack of sound and sight.
“Usually if there is an explosion we see it. You can hear it. We didn’t get this on this occasion. If there was a strike, north of Tehran there is the Caspian Sea,” he said, suggesting this was the direction of attack.
“If I’m a special unit with guided missiles I can do it from the sea with roaming missiles" The Caspian Sea in the north is not far from Tehran, he said.
With Israel’s close ally, Azerbaijan, bordering Iran, Solomon says the chances of it having been used to launch the attack are high. Just a few hundred kilometers away, it already has Israeli weaponry and shared intelligence.
However, he says another option, as has been seen before, is a drone attack that could be done with a range of 30km sent from inside Tehran, launched by an opposition cell.
Such a method would be realistic for an operation of this kind, and Israel has this capability as has been seen in the past with operations Iran accused Israel of plotting.
“This would have been a very quick operation with little time to plan after the announcements he was in Tehran which also shows the determination of Israel,” Solomon said.
However, with both sides staying silent on the details, the operation remains a mystery. “There wasn’t any kinetic signature and Israel hasn’t taken responsibility, so it’s still unclear, which is good for Israel as it gives room for denial,” he said.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant has already said, “We don’t want war, but we are preparing for all possibilities.”
Iran's Revolutionary Guards said that "the killing of Haniyeh will be met with a harsh and painful response," and Ali Larijani, adviser to supreme leader Ali Khamenei, said Israel will "fall into a new quagmire" due to the attack.