The same as Iran’s proxies’ tunnels, but without all the digging.
Bandar Abbas, November 17 – Escalating strikes between the Islamic Republic of Iran and Israel have leaders of the former worried about the vulnerability of its military and merchant vessels, a weak point in the regime’s economic security, and as a result they have given preliminary approval to a plan that will send those vessels to the bottom of the Persian Gulf to prevent Israeli airstrikes or cruise missiles from hitting them, sources in Tehran reported today.
The Islamic Republic’s continued support for various terrorist militias around the Jewish state, plus its own multiple ballistic and cruise missile attacks, prompted several Israeli reprisals and preemptive operations, the latest of which neutralized Iran’s air defense systems, among other strategic targets, rendering sensitive and precarious pieces of the regime’s strategic assets only one airstrike or other attack away from destruction or severe damage. Among those assets are elements of Iran’s nuclear weapons program and the country’s oil export facilities. Tehran will likely send those tankers and a number of both dockside and floating facilities to the sea bed, out of reach of Israeli bombs, missiles, or drones.
“Underwater environments wreak havoc with missile guidance systems,” explained Iranian military expert Ayeet Mehrd. “Even pilots attempting to sight their targets visually cannot do so if the target lies below a certain depth. It makes obvious sense to protect whatever Iran can by sinking it in the Persian Gulf preemptively.”
Analysts compared the move to siting important military installations or positions underground. “We know that tunnels and underground facilities are a staple of Iran and its proxies in the region,” noted Mideast commentator Ahopyu Draoun. “Recent reports even have the Khamenei regime digging tunnels in Tehran itself. The principle for the maritime and naval assets is the same, but without all the digging.”
Draoun also noted some potential pitfalls of the move. “Israel has a navy and even submarines,” he observed. “Iran’s defensive capabilities in that area are… less than impressive. Still, an Israeli operation all the way around the Arabian Peninsula, beyond the Strait of Hormuz, to hit those now-underwater targets, and back again, probably exceeds Israeli naval capabilities. Probably.”
The Iranian sources further disclosed that the senior leadership of the regime had begun to lean in the direction of the submerging of the assets rather than a rival proposal involving the movement of the tankers into the interior of the country where Israeli naval assets could not reach them.
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