Espionage and terrorism networks: Iran's tools to threaten Belgium
Belgium is considered one of the European countries with thorniest relations with Iran because of Tehran’s tools to penetrate the region, whether through diplomatic espionage or recruitment operations and sectarian and political containment. From another angle, Austria’s decision on May 15 to ban the military and political wings of Hezbollah has paved the way for discussions inside Brussels about the likelihood of the militia being classified as terrorist at home.
In the case of Belgium, the country is one of the most recently affected by Tehran’s policy in the region, as Iranian diplomat Assadollah Assadi and citizens of Brussels attempt to set off a bomb France, which means that Belgium has become a window in the stronghold of the European Union through which operatives can infiltrate.
Iran's tools mess with Belgium's security
On May 5, a court in Belgium announced that the decision to
imprison Assadi for 20 years has become final after the accused was withdrawn
for appeal. In February, the court had issued a ruling to punish the Iranian
diplomat, as well as a Belgian couple of Iranian origin, with 18 years
imprisonment for Nasimeh Naami and 17 years for her husband Amir Saadouni, for
cooperation in trying to blow up a conference of the People's Mujahedin
Organization of Iran (PMOI) in Paris.
Evidence indicates that Assadi, who was working at the
country's embassy in Austria, used the privileges of his position of immunity
to deliver and receive a shipment of explosives to the other defendants in
Brussels and Paris to carry out the attack. The Belgian court stripped the
spouses of their nationalities, confirming that the operation was not subject
to the personal management of the implementers, but it was an intelligence
arrangement by the Iranian state.
Belgium argues that the accused elements, most notably
Assadi, were running a terrorist intelligence network under the administration
of Iran, and that his movements were carried out based on orders issued by the
government in Tehran to destabilize Europe. The Iranian network was active in
the region by preparing for the alleged Paris attack.
The Iranian administration of spy networks in Belgium means something sensitive to the euro bloc that hosts its headquarters, and despite the fact that intelligence operations and the exchange of spies are commonplace around the world. However, directives to carry out terrorist operations and to deliver explosives while not only spying on information remain the scope of danger for Europe's security, because it in itself means the existence of recruiting networks working to include new loyal elements.
Iran-Europe
conflict between terrorism and espionage
Belgian concerns about Iran's tools are pushing toward a
political and media debate about Hezbollah's elements and the possibility of
classifying the Iranian-backed militia as a terrorist group to avoid employing
suspects in operations for Tehran or using the country as a platform for financing
extremism internationally. Thus, speculation increases about Belgium joining
Austria, Germany and the Netherlands, and these countries consider all of
Hezbollah a terrorist organization, not just its military wing as the European
Union.
The successive classifications of Hezbollah in Europe
constitute pressure on the countries affected by the mullahs’ activities to
develop more stringent strategies towards combating terrorism in the region,
and therefore Brussels is of special importance to the region's politicians for
its symbolism of the European entity, its cohesion and the extent to which it
maintains its political and social security.
In 2019, the European Union's Agency for Cybersecurity
issued a warning against Iran using digital programs and hidden processors to
spy on the region's databases and track down opponents in the eurozone.