Iran's latest terrorist plots
Iran is continuing its blatant belligerence against the international community, especially the Middle East, despite President Donald Trump and his administration threatening to take major action. During the past month alone, Iran has test-launched a number of ballistic missiles enjoying the capability of delivering a nuclear payload. This includes last weekend's pair of ballistic missile launches.
Knowing its military capabilities are outdated and limited, Iran is resorting to a range of different terrorist measures in an attempt to maintain the leverage gained through the preposterous concessions they enjoyed during the Obama years.
The most recent scenario involves fast-attack vessels approaching a U.S. Navy surveillance ship in the Strait of Hormuz in a threatening manner, described as "unsafe and unprofessional" in a recent statement.
Iran's Revolutionary Guards, under major discussion in Washington to be designated as a foreign terrorist organization, has suffered a major blow after the discovery of a terrorist network in Bahrain. This unveils, yet again, further aspects of Iran's unbridled meddling in the region.
The IRGC Bahrain network consists of 54 members focusing on planning and executing terrorist plots. To date, 25 such individuals have been arrested. These individuals were coordinating with Tehran to assassinate, terrorize, and target Bahrain security forces.
Following their raids, Bahrain authorities announced that a significant cache of arms, explosives, and ammunition were also confiscated.
All individuals are reportedly Bahrain natives, further indicating the sophistication of Iran's blueprints in using locals for such plots. Following their arrest, it was revealed that the cells received support from both Iran and Lebanon, procuring arms or coordinates where such logistics were hidden. In the past weeks, Bahrain witnessed two bomb blasts killing and injuring civilians, and, most specifically, Shiite Muslims. This can be assumed as an attempt to instigate Shiite dissent in the small Gulf island.
It is crystal-clear how the IRGC commanded this proxy group, as the individual calling the shots is currently in Iran. Other members of this group are even stationed in Iraq and directly involved in the attacks carried out in Bahrain.
Iran also has intentions to increase its use of suicidal drone boats in Yemen through the Houthi militias. The U.S. Navy command issued a recent warning over this threat against ships in the Red Sea. This warning follows a recent revelation of the Houthis obtaining drone boats in their attack against a Saudi navy frigate.
Vice Adm. Kevin Donegan, commander of the Bahrain-based U.S. Fifth Fleet and head of U.S. Naval Forces Central Command, accused Iran of supporting the Houthis in preparing such boats.

This new development can pose a major threat to shipping lines in strategic naval routes, Donegan said in an interview with Defense News, adding that terrorist groups can now obtain such lethal boats.
It is worth noting that the attack on the Saudi frigate Al-Madinah on January 30 was carried out with a remote-controlled suicide boat drone packed with explosives. This was the first such attack resembling actual suicide attacks in the past.
The U.S. has recently issued a warning that the Iran-backed Houthis and forces loyal to former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Salah are placing underwater mines in the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait passage near the entrance of Port Mokha.
The Bab-el-Mandeb Strait, narrowing to 25 kilometers in width at some points, is of grave importance for global shipping lines, providing access to the Red Sea, the Suez Canal, and the Mediterranean Sea. Much of the world's oil and other goods are transferred through these strategic waterways.
More than 60 ships containing commercial goods pass through the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait each day, carrying around 3.3 million barrels of crude oil. The U.S. Navy's warning indicates the closing of such a crucial water passage can lead to major financial costs and a significant rise in global oil prices.
Further reports also indicate that Iran is having a tough time digesting a series of defeats suffered by the Houthis in Yemen. In response, Iran is weighing the possibility of dispatching Shiite militias from Iraq to Yemen, according to Khalij Online. As the fighting has decreased in Iraq, Tehran may dispatch units of the 140,000-strong Popular Mobilization Front, consisting of 54 different sectarian militia groups, to Yemen.
In an international scene undergoing drastic changes, all of them threatening Iran's short- and long-term interests, the mullahs in Tehran are desperately searching for a method to both keep a straight face and maintain their previous leverage across the Middle East.
Such developments gain even more importance as we inch closer to Iran's presidential elections in May, when the regime in its entirety will face a major test.
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