Analysis: The cyberattacks on Islamic Republic’s Revolutionary Guard-run transit system are an open act of war designed to make the Iranians vulnerable, but Tehran has already proven that it is very much capable of retaliating; how it chooses to do so remains to be see
Iran’s rapid transit system is operated by a subsidiary of its paramilitary Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). According to U.S. officials, the system was used for covert transportation of military equipment.
This is just one example of the IRGC’s firm grip over the Islamic Republic’s transportation system.
In 2019, they managed to hack Israel’s water supply, along with several private companies and continued to persistently carry our attacks on the country’s financial systems and national infrastructure.
In response, Israel reportedly shut down Iran’s main shipping harbor in Bandar Abbas on the Persian Gulf.
Cyberattacks on such a large scale are another element in the covert cold war between the two nations.
Israel, for its part, maintains a global campaign to foil any Iranian attacks on its assets abroad, the latest reportedly occurring on Friday, when Belgian authorities arrested a woman suspected of taking part in an Iranian plot to collect intelligence on Israeli targets at the Brussels Airport.
Just last week, Iranian-backed militias launched four rocket and drone strikes on U.S. targets in Iraq, including the embassy in Baghdad.
These tit-for-tat blows come in the midst of rigorous talks to revive the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action or the Iran nuclear deal as it is commonly known.
An Iranian response is imminent, aimed directly at all its “usual suspects.”
Iran has already shown its capability to reverse engineer weapons used against it. A computer virus attributed to Israel was later used by Tehran to destroy vast parts of Saudi energy company Aramco’s computing systems.
How will Iran retaliate next? Only time will tell.
As reported by Ynetnews