Information disasters shaking Korea Published: 07 Aug. 2024, 20:19 Chung Jae-hong The author is an international, diplomatic, and security news editor of the JoongAng Ilbo. The assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh through a detonated explosive device shed fresh light on the capabilities of the Israeli intelligence service Mossad.

Despite the grave consequences from committing terrorism in another state — Iran — and further destabilizing the Middle East by providing a cause for a tit-for-tat attack and jeopardizing ceasefire talks, the Israeli secret service for its part had successfully carried out its mission. According to foreign media reports, Haniyeh had returned to his heavily-guarded guesthouse in Tehran on July 30 after attending the inauguration of Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian. Around 2 a.

m. the following day, an AI-controlled explosive device planted in a room was detonated remotely, instantly killing the leader and his bodyguard. The bomb is suspected to have been stashed in the guesthouse in Tehran two months earlier.

How Israeli agents were able to sneak into the residence heavily guarded by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and keep the bomb hidden for weeks and how Mossad closely kept tabs on Haniyeh’s whereabouts underscore Mossad’s composite and precision intelligence capabilities — HUMINT (intelligence-gathering through human sources), SIGINT (intelligence gathering by signals and communication/weapons systems) and IMINT (image in.