Target Tehran How Israel is using sabotage, cyberwarfare, assassination--and secret diplomacy--to stop a nuclear Iran and create a new Middle East

Yonah Jeremy Bob

Book - 2023

"Drawing on confidential sources in Mossad, Israel's equivalent to our CIA, Bob and Evyatar, reporters for The Jerusalem Post, tell the remarkable story behind the most stunning development in the Middle East in recent years: the Abraham Accords that normalized relations between Israel and the UAE, Bahrain, Morocco, and Sudan. They show how Israel used sabotage, assassination, cyberwar -- and diplomacy -- to forge a new Middle East, uniting Israel with Sunni Arab nations in a determined, and so far successful, effort to delay Iran's development of a nuclear weapon"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Simon & Schuster 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Yonah Jeremy Bob (author)
Other Authors
Ilan Evyatar (author)
Edition
First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition
Physical Description
xi, 351 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [269]-331) and index.
ISBN
9781668014561
9781668014578
  • Primary Cast of Characters
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. The Heist
  • Chapter 2. Divine Intervention
  • Chapter 3. Tell Your Friends You Can Use Our Airspace
  • Chapter 4. Changing Circumstances
  • Chapter 5. Code Name Callan
  • Chapter 6. The Reveal
  • Chapter 7. An Alliance Emerges
  • Chapter 8. Death of the Shadow Commander
  • Chapter 9. Cyber Winter Is Here
  • Chapter 10. Opportunity from Strange Quarters
  • Chapter 11. The Mossad Sends a Message
  • Chapter 12. The Father of the Bomb Is No More
  • Chapter 13. A Beautiful Attack
  • Chapter 14. Death by a Thousand Cuts
  • Chapter 15. The Abraham Accords, the Saudis, and the Future
  • Conclusion: The Mossad's Promise
  • Supplemental Cast of Characters
  • Acknowledgments
  • Note on Sources
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Jerusalem Post journalists Bob and Evyatar survey in their vigorous debut outing Israel's 20-year clandestine war against Iran's nuclear program. Among other episodes, the authors detail several bombings of the Natanz uranium-enrichment plant (in 2021, the Israelis managed to embed explosives in the plant's foreign-supplied equipment before it was shipped to Iran); the Stuxnet computer-worm attack that wrecked hundreds of enrichment centrifuges at Natanz, first detected by the Iranians in 2010; numerous assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists; and the 2018 theft of an archive detailing secret Iranian nuclear activities, which helped President Trump justify abrogating the Iranian nuclear treaty negotiated by the Obama administration. As a complement to the cloak-and-dagger, Israel also waged a patient campaign to forge closer ties with Sunni Arab countries that feared Iran's nuclear ambitions, culminating in the 2020 Abraham Accords normalizing relations with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. Drawing on interviews with Mossad officials, the authors' well-paced narrative steeps readers in intricate spy craft and high-wire diplomacy, making these events feel like a true-life James Bond mission that's carefully calibrated to shape American foreign policy and Middle East geopolitics. The result is an engrossing look at one of the most effective covert-ops projects of recent times. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Two respected journalists delve into Israel's moves to counter Iran's nuclear gambit. The Middle East has long been a labyrinth of age-old grudges and ever shifting allegiances. In the past two decades, Iran has emerged as a player with nuclear ambitions, prompting Israel to think of the nation as one of its major enemies. Bob and Evyatar, both contributors to the Jerusalem Post, have deep connections to Israel's security agencies and government processes, and they begin their book with Mossad's theft of a truckload--literally--of documents from Iran's nuclear archive in 2018. The material provided proof that the country had been systematically violating a range of treaties and agreements but also indicated how far Iran was prepared to go to attain nuclear capability. Israel's response was a multitiered campaign, combining cyberwarfare, sabotage, airstrikes, drones, and assassinations. The authors fill out the details through interviews with numerous Mossad officers, but the most important change, they suggest, might turn out to be the willingness of several Arab states to reconsider their attitudes toward Israel. Growing Iranian belligerence toward everyone in the region made some level of acceptance start to look desirable, and a series of secret meetings took place. The outcome of these moves was the U.S.--sponsored Abraham Accords, which have evolved into a broad framework for cooperation. The problem is that Iran shows no sign of shelving its nuclear plans. It has become better at hiding and protecting assets and is building cyberwarfare and drone weapons of its own. "The Mossad's secret war is not over," write the authors. "Indeed, it may never end." It is a sobering conclusion, but it is hard to see any alternatives. Throughout this remarkable narrative, the authors provide valuable context to the new Middle East picture. Built on meticulous, diligent research, this book is key reading for those interested in geopolitical issues. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.