Series of shady incidents: Relationship between Iran's fires and its involvement in Gulf waters
After the
tensions that occurred in the waters of the Gulf region against the backdrop of
accusing the Iranian regime of hijacking and attacking ships and commercial
tankers sailing near the Strait of Hormuz and the exchange of attacks in
Lebanon between the Tehran-backed Hezbollah and Israel, shady incidents have
begun to appear again in Iran at a time when people were waiting for the
response to those attacks, which the US Secretary of State pledged would be a
collective response.
In what
appears to be the beginning of the return of the phenomenon of a series of
fires in Iran, local media reported that a fire broke out in a tank at the
Kharg Petrochemical Complex in the southwest of the country, indicating that
the situation was brought under control. The local media declined to publish
any details related to this fire or reveal the cause of its outbreak at this
time, especially as it comes after another fire broke out at a petrochemical
plant in the southwest of the country as well, which was announced by the
Iranian Radio and Television Authority on August 3.
The
authority quoted the director of Mahshahr Port as saying that the fire broke
out in a waste warehouse in a factory in an economic zone designated for
petrochemicals.
During the
nuclear negotiations in Vienna, which lasted from last April to June, Iran
witnessed a number of major accidents that targeted different sites across the
country, which Tehran accused the United States and Israel of carrying out. For
example, a fire broke out in April inside a factory for explosives and
firecrackers in the central Iranian province of Isfahan, which resulted in the
injury of nine workers, the causes of which were not determined. On May 8, a
large fire broke out at the entrance to the southern city of Bushehr, which
includes a famous nuclear plant, and the Natanz reactor in Isfahan province was
exposed to more mysterious explosions. On one occasion, the authorities
described them as sabotage operations targeting the nuclear program. A massive
fire also broke out in the largest logistics ship belonging to the army.
A major fire
also broke out in the port of Bushehr in last July, which led to the burning of
at least seven ships, without causing any casualties. In recent months, the
country witnessed a wave of fires in companies and factories in several cities,
including Qom, Isfahan and Qazvin, without the reasons being disclosed.
Tehran is
afraid of confrontation so as not to create internal resentment against its
ruling regime. The levels of destruction inside Iran during any major
confrontation mean a complete destruction of the country’s military and
infrastructure, at a time when the regime is suffering from protests and
popular anger, while Iran’s opponents prefer to target it with intelligence and
cyber attacks in order to prevent getting involved in a full-blown conflict,
especially since their hidden methods ensure that the goals are achieved.