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US intelligence documents detailing the Jewish state’s plans for a strike on Iran were leaked into the public domain last week
There is no indication that Israel will delay an expected strike on Iran, despite leaked US intelligence documents revealing details of its preparations, the War Zone has reported, citing an anonymous American official.
The Times newspaper has claimed that Israel has been forced to postpone its retaliation to the missile barrage launched by Iran on October 1, after details of the Jewish state’s plans found its way into the public domain.
Top secret materials apparently prepared by the Pentagon’s National Geospatial Intelligence Agency (NGA) were published last Friday on an anonymous Telegram channel named Middle East Spectator. The papers detailed Israel’s supposed preparations for a large-scale attack on the Islamic Republic in response to the strike by Tehran earlier this month.
The US authorities have not disputed the authenticity of the documents, with the FBI confirming on Tuesday that it had launched an investigation into the leak.
In its article on Thursday, the War Zone quoted an unnamed US official as insisting that “we have no indication that Israel is delaying any action because of the document leak.”
Read moreThe report came after The Times, citing an anonymous “intelligence source with knowledge of Israeli deliberations,” claimed earlier in the day that the “leak of the American documents delayed the [Israeli] attack due to the need to change certain strategies and components.”
“There will be a retaliation, but it has taken longer than it was supposed to take,” the source added.
According to the British newspaper, “Israel is concerned the leak could help Iran predict certain patterns of attack,” which has supposedly forced it to “develop an alternative plan.”
The Middle East Spectator Telegram channel, described by the Western media as pro-Iranian, claimed last Saturday that it had received the secret US intelligence documents from an “anonymous source on Telegram who refused to identify himself.”
Last week, the Washington Post alleged that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had promised US President Joe Biden that he would refrain from targeting Iran’s oil or nuclear infrastructure.
On October 1, Iran fired nearly 200 ballistic missiles at Israel in response to the killings of the Hamas and Hezbollah leaders and an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) general. While the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has insisted that the majority of the projectiles were intercepted, Tehran claimed to have hit several Israeli military targets.
Israel has since threatened to deliver a “deadly, pinpoint accurate, and surprising” retaliation, without specifying any time frame.
Tehran has warned Israel against conducting any strikes, vowing a “decisive and regretful” response, should it do so.