End Of Days News
Officers were killed in a mysterious 
twin-car bomb explosion Friday, Jan. 25 at Syrian regional intelligence 
headquarters in Quneitra on the Syrian side of the Golan Heights. Some 
of the fatalities were Syrian, but Western intelligence sources 
disclosed to debkafile
 that most were high-ranking Iranian Al Qods Brigades and Hizballah 
officers. The blasts sent tensions shooting up on the Israeli and 
Jordanian borders with Syria.  Israeli, Jordanian and US Special Forces 
posted in the kingdom went on high alert. Heavy Syrian reinforcements 
were seen streaming toward the two borders.
 Syrian regime sources said the explosive devices were attached to the 
intelligence command building’s outer walls. But the Western 
sources report that two large bomb cars were lying in wait on both sides
 of the road leading to the Syrian HQ and were detonated as the two-car 
convoy of Iranian and Hizballah officers drove by. There were no 
survivors.
 Those sources also refute reports that the al-Qaeda linked Jabhat 
al-Nusrah fighting with the Syrian rebels claimed responsibility for the
 attack. This was a rare occasion when no Syrian opposition group issued
 any statement at all, they said. The speed with which Syrian army 
helicopters flew in to remove the casualties indicated their high rank.
 In the view of a Jordanian military source, this attack by an unknown 
hand has delayed Bashar Assad’s advanced preparations for an all-out 
armored offensive to finally crush the revolt against his regime. His 
first targets were to have been the rebel-held villages along the 
Israeli and Jordanian borders.
 The Syrian ruler was working to a plan of operations his generals had drawn up with Iranian Al Qods Brigades strategists.
 Saturday, Ali Akbar Velayati, an aide to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali 
Khamenei, warned that Iran would consider any attack on Syria an attack 
on itself: "Syria has a very basic and key role in the region for 
promoting firm policies of resistance [against Israel]... For this 
reason an attack on Syria would be considered an attack on Iran and 
Iran's allies."
 Meanwhile in Iran itself, the Fordo underground uranium enrichment 
plant was again reported targeted for sabotage, according to an 
unconfirmed report published by Reza Kahlil, who is described as a 
former Iranian Revolutionary Guards officer who worked under cover as a 
double agent for the CIA until he escaped to the United States.
 Kahlil reported that at 11:30 a.m., Monday, Jan. 21, the day before 
Israel’s general elections, a large explosion occurred 100 meters deep 
inside the underground plant, trapping 240 nuclear staff in the third 
centrifuge chamber.  Among them, he said, were Iranian and Ukrainian 
technicians.
 There was no information about casualties or the extent of damage to 
the 2,700 centrifuges which have been turning out 20-percent enriched 
uranium.
 Khalil cited his source as Hamidreza Zakeri, a former Iranian 
Intelligence Ministry agent, who said the regime believes the blast was 
sabotage and the explosives could have reached the area disguised by the
 CIA as equipment imported for the site or defective machinery.
 None of the information about an explosion at Fordo has been verified either by US officials or regime sources in Tehran.
 Thursday, Jan. 24, Israel’s Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz and 
Military Intelligence Director Maj. Gen. Aviv Kochavi ceremonially 
promoted Col. G., commander of the elite Sayeret Matkal, to the rank of 
major general in recognition of his unit’s “outstanding covert 
operations.”
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