Israel says it foiled Iranian plot to smuggle weapons into West Bank
An image of Iranian weapons seized in the West Bank, released by Shin Bet on October 8, 2025.
Israel’s Shin Bet security agency said on Wednesday that it thwarted an Iranian operation to move a large cache of advanced weaponry into the occupied West Bank for planned attacks on Israeli targets.
The haul contained dozens of explosive devices, drones, anti-tank weapons, grenades, handguns, rifles, machine guns and hundreds of rounds of ammunition, according to the security agency. Similar smuggling attempts were blocked in March and November last year, it said.
The investigation began months ago after Israel’s military arrested a weapons dealer near the Ramallah area of the West Bank.
His questioning led Shin Bet investigators to a wider network of smugglers and eventually to the shipment.
Shin Bet said Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps was behind the operation through its Unit 400, led by Jawad Ghafari, and Unit 18840 in Syria, which it said reports to Asghar Bakri, the head of the covert Unit 840.
Two IRGC operatives, Salah al-Husseini and Muhammad Shuayb, who were killed in Israeli strikes in Lebanon in July, were also allegedly involved in the smuggling network.
The agency said the plot was part of a broader Iranian strategy to supply armed groups in the West Bank with weapons to carry out attacks on Israeli civilians and military personnel.
Iran and its armed allies in the region have suffered punishing Israeli blows over the course of a two-year war regional conflict sparked by a Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023 which killed 1,200 Israelis and abducted 251.
Tehran-backed Hamas and Islamic Jihad militants mostly based in Gaza have been worn down by a devastating Israeli incursion into the coastal enclave which local health officials say killed at least 67,000 people.
The groups have a smaller presence in the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since a 1967 Mideast war, and have faced off with Israeli forces in sporadic clashes.
Australia has introduced legislation that would, for the first time, allow its government to designate foreign state entities -- including Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) -- as terrorist organizations.
Attorney-General Michelle Rowland presented the bill to Parliament, saying it aims to close a major legal gap in Australia’s counterterrorism framework by permitting the listing of state-backed organizations accused of supporting or conducting terrorist acts.
The move follows findings by the Australian Security Intelligence Organization (ASIO) that the IRGC was involved in two anti-Semitic attacks in Sydney and Melbourne in 2024.
Rowland said the new Criminal Code Amendment (State Sponsors of Terrorism) Bill 2025 would strengthen Australia’s ability to respond to “malicious foreign actors” and serve as a warning to any state seeking to threaten the country through violence or coercion.
“This bill strengthens Australia’s counterterrorism framework, creating an environment in which it is more difficult, more risky, and more costly for foreign actors to cause harm,” she told Parliament.
Under the proposed law, the government would gain the power to list foreign state agencies or entities as state sponsors of terrorism if they are found to have directly or indirectly planned, supported, or financed acts of terrorism against Australia.
Once listed, it would become a criminal offence to collaborate with, fund, or provide material assistance to those entities. Limited exemptions would apply for diplomatic or legal obligations.
The legislation introduces new criminal offences, including preparing or participating in state-sponsored terrorist acts and offering material support to listed state actors. Intelligence and law enforcement agencies would also receive expanded powers to investigate and disrupt suspected state-linked terrorism.
A flag flutters above the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Canberra, Australia, August 26, 2025.
ASIO findings link IRGC to attacks in Australia
The bill comes after a series of actions by Canberra against Tehran. In August, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese expelled Iranian Ambassador Ahmad Sadeghi following ASIO’s conclusion that the IRGC directed two arson attacks on Jewish sites -- one at a kosher restaurant in Sydney and another at a synagogue in Melbourne.
“ASIO has now gathered enough credible intelligence to reach a deeply disturbing conclusion that the Iranian government directed at least two of these attacks. Iran has sought to disguise its involvement,” Albanese said.
He described the incidents as “extraordinary acts of aggression orchestrated by a foreign nation on Australian soil.”
The proposed law would align Australia more closely with allies such as the United States, which designated the IRGC as a terrorist organization in 2019.
The group, established in 1979 after Iran’s Islamic Revolution, reports directly to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and wields significant military, political, and economic influence at home and abroad. Its Quds Force oversees operations that have supported armed groups in Lebanon, Gaza, Yemen, and Syria.
Australia’s move follows its decision last week, along with New Zealand, to implement revived United Nations sanctions on Iran after European powers triggered the snapback mechanism over Tehran’s nuclear program. The sanctions reimposed restrictions on arms, finance, and missile activities.
Canberra has also joined G7 nations in condemning Iran’s repression of dissidents abroad and intimidation of diaspora communities. In September, Australia warned of “transnational repression” targeting journalists and Jewish groups.
Rowland said the latest legislative step reflects Australia’s evolving security environment. “The threats we face are changing,” she said. “This bill ensures that our national security laws remain fit for purpose -- robust, balanced, and capable of protecting all Australians.”
Two years after Hamas-led October 7 attack on Israel, Daniel Lifshitz believes the tragedy that shattered his family was aided by Iran but insists peace, not vengeance, must define the future.
“The wound is very open,” he told Iran International.
“Forty-eight people are still in Gaza, nine from my community. Every time we mark this date, it feels like a funeral all over again.”
Daniel’s grandparents, Oded and Yocheved Lifshitz, were abducted from Kibbutz Nir Oz, a community near the Gaza border that lost more than a quarter of its residents that day, killed and captured.
They were lifelong peace activists who ferried Gazan patients to Israeli hospitals and spent decades advocating coexistence.
Daniel Lifshitz holding a photo of his grandfather Oded Lifshitz.
Yocheved, then 85, was released after 16 days — frail and traumatized. Oded, 83, was shot and dragged unconscious into Gaza, where he later died in captivity.
“He was a journalist, the first (Israeli) to interview Yasser Arafat,” Daniel said. “He warned everyone about Hamas.”
During captivity, Yocheved came face-to-face with Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, who assured her in Hebrew she would soon be freed.
“She was only released because she was hours from dying,” Daniel said. Even now, he added, “she wakes every morning saying she still feels like she’s in a tunnel.”
Photo of Oded and Yocheved Lifshitz.
Daniel was in Paris when the attack began; his mother and daughter had left the kibbutz just hours earlier. His best friend, Dolev Yahud, was murdered, while Dolev’s sister, Arbel, spent 482 days in captivity before her release.
Although Daniel blames Iran’s longtime backing of Hamas for making the massacre possible, his message this year is clear: no more war.
Earlier this year, Daniel spoke at a two-state solution conference in Paris, where he called for renewed education and engagement between Israelis and Palestinians. “Everything begins with education,” he said.
“We don’t want any war between Israel and Iran,” Daniel said. “Change in Iran must come from the Iranian people.”
But Daniel also directed anger toward Israel’s own leadership, saying years of complacency and misjudgment left the country vulnerable.
“I do blame 100 percent our Prime Minister,” he said. “He’s been the Prime Minister for the last 20 years, and it’s his decision to neglect the diplomatic arena.”
Reflecting on Israel’s past strategy toward Hamas, Daniel said leaders wrongly believed the group could be managed or pacified through financial incentives.
He praised the Iranian diaspora for their empathy and courage. “The only people outside Israel who truly understood our pain were Iranians abroad,” he said. “They know what it’s like to live under terror.”
Standing on Tel Aviv’s Pinsker Street — one of those struck by Iranian missile fire earlier this year — Daniel reflected on resilience. “If we lose compassion, we lose who we are.”
Israel says the attack by Palestinian militants two years ago killed 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and took 251 people captive in Gaza, of whom some 20 are believed to be still alive there.
Palestinian health authorities say Israel's subsequent ground incursion and air attacks have killed more than 67,000 Palestinians.
In Washington, US President Donald Trump said this week that Iran had sent “a very strong signal” it wanted progress toward a Gaza agreement, describing “tremendous progress” in talks.
Iranian spokeswoman Fatemeh Mohajerani responded that Tehran would support any “lasting peace that benefits the people of Palestine and helps stop genocide.”
For Daniel, those diplomatic signals matter most if they lead to the end of the war and the return of the hostages.
“I hope the mark of two years will bring us to a year of healing,” he said. “Not another year of trauma.”
Daniel says he now carries his grandfather’s mission with him — the conviction that peace, empathy, and education are the only weapons strong enough to outlast war.
The commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps' Aerospace Force said on Tuesday that Iranian forces had recovered from a 12-day war with Israel in June and were ready to respond to any fresh attack.
Majid Mousavi, who assumed the position after his predecessor Amirali Hajizadeh was assassinated during the June war, produced a report on the military organization’s role in the conflict, asserting its full recovery and readiness.
“Praise be to God, with the repair of the inflicted damages, we have full readiness to decisively and swiftly counter any enemy threat or adventure,” Mousavi said, according to the IRGC-affiliated Tasnim news agency.
During the June conflict, Israel's air force took control of Iranian airspace, delivering a significant blow to the country's air defenses, while Iran's armed forces responded with successive waves of missile and drone attacks on Israeli territory.
Israeli military officials say that 120 air defense systems were destroyed or disabled since the first wave of attacks—around a third of Iran’s pre-war total. Long-range systems, including Russian-supplied S-300s and Iran’s Bavar-373 batteries, were among those targeted.
'US preparing to seize Iran ships'
Hezbollah-affiliated Al Mayadeen reported on Tuesday that the United States is preparing to seize Iranian ships on the high seas under the UN sanctions renewed late last month.
The report cited unspecified sources suggesting that any US action against Iranian vessels would trigger a swift and decisive response from Iran’s naval forces, which are ready “to neutralize threats to the maritime security of the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman.”
According to the report, Iran’s naval fleet and missile bases along its southern coastline are on high alert and ready to respond immediately to any hostile action targeting commercial or civilian Iranian vessels.
Iran’s Oil Minister said on Tuesday that despite restrictions and sanctions, new records have been set in crude oil exports and production.
“Current crude oil production has increased by more than 120,000 barrels per day,” Mohsen Paknejad told state media.
“After implementing the ‘Ship Act’ law last year, we faced heavy restrictions, but with necessary measures these were managed and sanctions circumvented,” Paknejad said.
The Stop Harboring Iranian Petroleum (SHIP) Act is a US law targeting foreign ports, refineries, and entities involved in trading or processing Iranian petroleum products.
Paknejad added that renewed UN sanctions would not impose new restrictions beyond what Iran had previously weathered.
Iran said on Tuesday it would soon stage a joint naval exercise in the Caspian Sea with the other four littoral states, saying the sea was off-limits to outside powers.
“The Caspian Sea belongs only to its five coastal states – Iran, Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan – and they will resolve related issues themselves,” navy commander Shahram Irani said at a gathering of naval chiefs in St. Petersburg.
Irani said the littoral states had developed “very good relations” in security, economic and environmental fields and had the capability to ensure stability without foreign involvement. “There is no place in the Caspian Sea for extra-regional powers,” he said.
He said a recent joint exercise in Iran’s Bandar Anzali and along the southern Caspian coast had strengthened cooperation, and that another drill would be held soon.
Iran navy chief Rear Admiral Shahram Irani meets commanders of Caspian littoral states in St. Petersburg, Russia.
Iran maintains two distinct naval forces. The army navy, commanded by Irani, operates in the Gulf of Oman, the Indian Ocean, and the Caspian Sea, while the Revolutionary Guard navy controls the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz.
In August, Iran’s army navy fired a range of anti-ship cruise missiles in large-scale exercises in the Gulf of Oman and northern Indian Ocean, following a separate Iran-Russia drill in the Caspian a month earlier. Officials said the systems were radar-evading and high-precision, and warned that any new conflict with Israel would bring a stronger response from Tehran.
The Caspian Sea, bordered only by the five littoral states, has long been treated by Tehran and Moscow as off-limits to foreign militaries.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Iran is developing long-range ballistic missiles capable of reaching the United States, warning that Tehran’s expanding weapons program poses a global security threat.
“Iran can blackmail any American city,” Netanyahu warned in an interview with Ben Shapiro, alleging that Tehran is developing intercontinental ballistic missiles with a range of 8,000 kilometers.
“People don’t believe it. Iran is developing intercontinental missiles with a range of 8,000 kilometres, add another 3,000, and they can get to the East Coast of the US.”
He said the missiles could “put New York City, Boston, Washington or Miami under their atomic guns.”
“That’s a really big danger, you don’t want to be under the nuclear gun of these people, who are not necessarily rational and chant ‘death to America,’” he added.
Netanyahu said Israel is “doing great work keeping that away,” crediting cooperation with Washington for bolstering regional defense.
He said Israel and the United States are co-developing “the most advanced offensive weapons on the planet,” and claimed Israeli intelligence had prevented attacks by ISIS, including plots against US targets.
Turning to Gaza, he said Israel is “close to the end of the war, but not there yet,” adding that “we smashed the Iranian axis with most of their proxies.”
Netanyahu said Israel’s campaign would only conclude once Hamas rule in Gaza ends and the remaining hostages are freed.