Hebrew media has highlighted Iran's increasing recruitment of Israeli spies for its benefit, enabling it to gather information and capture images, considering that the main reason for this increase is that it targets the marginalized class in "Israel".
The Israeli advisor Meir Suissa said that "news of uncovering more espionage cases for Iran has become commonplace, which means we are facing a truly dangerous phenomenon, although there is a direct link between all recent recruitment cases: they are not high-ranking officers, nor people in government administration, nor generals in the General Staff, but ordinary Israelis from the marginalized, and they will not receive special media coverage, because they are allegedly not of real intelligence value, and not a program with four cameras".
He added in an article he published that we "are facing a phenomenon much more dangerous than recruiting a high-level security official, because it does not tell the story of one person who fell, but the story of the entire Israeli society, as Iran is not only seeking security knowledge, but a vulnerability, and this vulnerability is despair, and therefore we do not really know the number of Israeli collaborators with it, and few overt Zionists are willing to sell information to a photographer for a thousand or two thousand shekels, then publish it, and cooperate, desperate youth, adults living on the edge, and exposed to Iran".
He explained that "Israel was supposed to take care of these young people targeted by Iranian intelligence, through social welfare programs, economy, and reducing the cost of living, but when society abandons them, the enemy recruits them, and this betrayal is not ideological, but existential. It is not hatred for the people, but a feeling of detachment from the state, from those who feel rejected, as if they are unimportant, and non-existent, they are suicidal spies, living in relative comfort, but in their depths they have surrendered to the enemy, and are ready to betray the state even before they betray it, because they have no way to secure a livelihood".
He pointed out that "if Mordechai Vanunu had acted with a Kodak camera out of rejection and revenge, and leaked photos from inside the Dimona reactor, then many today feel the same, but without ideology or drama, with a camera in their pockets through easy access, knowing that in the darkest days of austerity that Israelis went through in previous decades, Arab countries could not buy the loyalty of any of them, but Tel Aviv today, as a regional power, has many weak people armed with a blue ID card, and buried anger towards a state that does not see them".
He clarified that "the ministers who should stand at the forefront of combating this phenomenon are not only ministers of war, but also ministers of welfare, finance, and economy, because the high cost of living is an enemy more dangerous than Iran, and perhaps one of them should whisper a simple idea to the National Insurance Institute and government ministries about the necessity of conducting a preventive campaign, not against espionage, but against despair, by taking care of the desperate Israelis exposed to falling into the Iranian intelligence trap".
Iran is not only seeking security knowledge, but a vulnerability, and this vulnerability is despair.





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Hebrew Media: Iran Targets the Marginalized Class in Israel to Recruit Spies