Iran a ‘Formidable’ Danger to Europe, Says Netanyahu/ Senior Hamas official: No more military assistance from Iran

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 Senior Hamas official: No more military assistance from Iran
Elior Levy/Ynetnews/Published: 07.28.15 / Israel News

 As the group’s political wing moves closer to the Saudis, Abu Marzouk admits Iran has withdrawn support; military wing reportedly attempting to mend relations with Islamic Republic. Senior Hamas official Mousa Abu Marzouk on Monday repeated a statement voiced by leaders before, saying that Iran has ceased providing most of its financial assistance to the group. “The aid has stopped and it is still suspense – as was the military aid, whose absence is difficult to deal with, and aid to the residents of the Gaza Strip,” said Abu Mazouk. Despite this, he emphasized that Hamas is working to retain close and robust relations with the Islamic Republic. Abu Marzouk’s declaration came amid a crisis in Hamas-Iran relations, which began with the beginning of the Syrian Civil War over four years ago, when Hamas backed the rebels while Iran and Hezbollah supported Assad. Relations have continued to cool, especially after Hamas began to improve relations with Iran’s major regional rival, Saudi Arabia. Hamas chief Khaled Mashal is a great supporter of becoming closer to the Saudi axis, and most of the group’s political leadership agrees. The opposition to this process is led by Mohammed Deif and the group’s military wing, which desperately needs the financial assistance to rehabilitate and rearm itself after Operation Protective Edge.

 The military wing is also interested in Iranian military aid – both military experts and attempts to smuggle weapons into the Gaza Strip. Deif has been sending delegates to various countries in the region in the hopes of defrosting relations with Iran and regaining the coveted assistance. Some in Israel are well-aware of the internal divisions in Hamas about assistance from Iran. At the beginning of July, the Southern Command’s intelligence officer said that “the military wing turned to Iran to get financial assistance to allow it to build up ahead of the next campaign against Israel, in contrast to the general sentiment in the movement that prefers the Saudi axis to the Iranian one. “These are sums the military wing will not get from the organization’s budget, and when there’s no alternative at home – they turn to the Iranians, who supply the money because they are first of all interested in a foothold against Israel in every possible sphere.”

Iran a ‘Formidable’ Danger to Europe, Says Netanyahu
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/28 July/15/

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday that Iran posed a “formidable” threat to Europe, accusing its proxy Hizbullah of operating cells across the continent. Just last month, a member of the Lebanese group was jailed in Cyprus for plotting attacks on Israeli targets on the Mediterranean island. Netanyahu, on an official visit to Nicosia, said “Iran and Hizbullah organize a terrorist network that covers over 30 countries on five continents, including just about every country in Europe.”Iran and leading world powers signed a deal this month on Tehran’s controversial nuclear program, an accord the Israeli leader criticized as a “stunning, historic mistake”.

Netanyahu said Israel and Cyprus were faced with the dual dangers of Iran and the extremist attacks perpetrated by the Islamic State group, which controls large parts of Iraq and Syria.

“ISIS obviously endangers European societies, Western societies, African societies, the whole world,” the premier said, using an alternative acronym for IS. “These are two formidable dangers. They are expressed in many weapons, in many attacks, but the most prevalent one that concerns Cyprus and Europe is of course the terrorism that emanates from these areas,” he added. Last month, a Cypriot court jailed a Lebanese-Canadian man for six years after he pleaded guilty to terror charges linked to 8.2 tonnes of potential bomb-making material found in his home. Authorities said the man was a member of the military wing of Hizbullah and had helped the group plan “terrorist attacks” on “Israeli interests in Cyprus”. Cyprus is not known for its militant activity despite its proximity to the Middle East. But in 2013, a Cypriot court sentenced a Lebanon-born Swedish man who admitted he was a Hizbullah member, to four years in jail after he was found guilty of targeting Israelis on the island. A botched bomb attack on the Israeli embassy in 1988 claimed the lives of three people.

Israel has repeatedly criticized the Iran nuclear deal and insists it is not bound to respect Tehran’s accord with the West. Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades said he and Netanyahu had discussed the accord, adding that Cyprus expressed “hope that this deal will help generate stability… and assist in addressing the security concerns of the State of Israel”. Tuesday’s talks also focused on security, defense and the exploration of oil and gas reserves in the eastern Mediterranean, according to Anastasiades.

The Aphrodite field, discovered off Cyprus’ southeast coast in 2011, is estimated to contain between 3.6 trillion and 6 trillion cubic feet (102 billion-170 billion cubic meters) of gas. Israel has found large reserves off its own shoreline and the two countries are looking to cooperate on energy issues such as exporting Israeli nature gas. “We think that by cooperating with each other we think that we can take it (natural gas) out more easily and market it better to the betterment of both our societies,” Netanyahu said.