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Israel says 7 citizens caught spying for Iran after sharing info that could “aid enemy missile attacks”

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Jerusalem — Israeli police on Monday said they had arrested seven Israeli citizens accused of being a spy network gathering information on Israel’s military bases and energy infrastructure for Iranian intelligence.

The internal security agency and police “successfully dismantled a spy network involving seven Israeli citizens who were operating on behalf of Iranian intelligence,” the police said in a statement, adding that all seven had been arrested. The seven Israelis were from the city of Haifa and other northern areas of the country.

“This network was engaged in gathering sensitive information on IDF (military) bases and energy infrastructure,” it said.

Israeli investigations had revealed that the group carried out several missions under the direction of two Iranian agents known as “Alkhan and Orkhan” over a period of two years, the police said.

“The network members were aware that the intelligence they provided compromised national security and could potentially aid enemy missile attacks,” the police said. “The network conducted extensive reconnaissance missions on IDF bases nationwide, focusing on air force and navy installations, ports, Iron Dome system locations, and energy infrastructure such as the Hadera power plant.”

ISRAEL-PALESTINIAN-CONFLICT
An Israeli army training base in Beit Guvrin, central Israel, is seen in a Sept. 23, 2024 file photo.

AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP/Getty


It added that the group received hundreds of thousands of dollars for the work, often through crypto-currency payments.

The work often involved photographing and documenting strategic sites, with the collected data being handed over to Iranian agents, the police said.

“The investigation led to seizure of substantial materials compiled by the network members for Iranian agents,” an official from Israel’s internal security agency was quoted as saying in the police statement.

“These included photographs and videos of numerous IDF bases across Israel, ports, and energy infrastructure. It is assessed that these activities have inflicted security damage on the state,” the police said.

Members of the group were also tasked with collecting intelligence on several Israeli citizens at the behest of the Iranian agents, it said.

Monday’s announcement comes just weeks after Israeli police said they had arrested an Israeli on suspicion of having been recruited by Iran to plot the assassination of top officials including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. 

Over the weekend, Israeli officials said the Iran-backed group Hezbollah had targeted Netanyahu’s private residence in central Israel with a drone attack, but he and his wife were not home at the time, and there were no casualties. Israeli officials did not link the attack to the alleged Iranian espionage efforts.

Israeli media identified the man accused in the assassination plot as Mordechai Maman of the coastal city of Ashkelon. Maman was a businessman who lived in Turkey and had visited Iran, police said at the time.


Israeli strikes hit near Beirut airport as conflict in Lebanon grows

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Israel is currently engaged in a multi-front conflict with Iran-backed groups including Hezbollah, Hamas in the Gaza Strip and the Houthi rebels in Yemen. Fighting on all those fronts was sparked by Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attack on Israel, which saw militants murder some 1,200 people and take 251 others back into Gaza as hostages.

The war in Gaza alone has killed more than 42,000 people, according to the decimated Palestinian enclave’s Hamas-run health ministry, while Lebanese officials say a month of relentless Israeli airstrikes and ground operations has killed almost 2,000 people and displaced some 1.2 million from their homes.

Israel has also vowed to retaliate over a missile attack launched by Iran on October 1.



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How U.S.-Mexico border towns feel about immigration, recent migrant wave

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How U.S.-Mexico border towns feel about immigration, recent migrant wave – CBS News


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CBS News national correspondent Omar Villafranca is touring U.S.-Mexico border towns between Texas and California as immigration continues to be a vital topic in the 2024 election. Here’s what residents in those towns are thinking before Nov. 5.

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Why Robert Roberson didn’t testify at Texas hearing

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Why Robert Roberson didn’t testify at Texas hearing – CBS News


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Robert Roberson’s lawyers explained why the death row inmate didn’t testify at the Texas committee hearing set after his execution was paused. CBS News’ Nikki Battiste has more.

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Biden administration extends repayment freeze for 8 million student loan borrowers

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Federal student loan payments for about 8 million Americans will stay on hold for at least another six months, the U.S. Department of Education confirmed on Monday. 

As first reported by CNBC, the decision impacts those enrolled in the White House’s “Saving on a Valuable Education,” or SAVE, plan, which is temporarily blocked by a federal appeals court. Those who signed up for the plan are excused from their monthly payments and will be put in an interest-free general forbearance, a spokesperson for the agency told CBS MoneyWatch.

The 8 million borrowers in SAVE, and anyone who has applied for the debt relief program, should expect to remain in interest-free forbearance for at least six more months pending the outcome of legal challenges to the SAVE plan according to the agency.

President Joe Biden made helping people saddled with student debt a key plank of 2020 campaign. But his efforts have been stymied by opposition, chiefly from lawmakers in Republican-led states. In 2023, Supreme Court ruled 6-3 against Biden’s plan to erase the student debt of more than 40 million people. 

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit in June temporarily blocked SAVE, barring the Biden administration from implementing elements of the plan that were not already being challenged by two lower court rulings.

Ahead of the legal sparring, the Education Department had forgiven total $5.5 billion in student debt for 414,000 under the SAVE plan. 

The outcome of the November presidential election could determine whether such programs survive, experts say. The next administration would have the option of defending or ending the government’s loan relief efforts, with Vice President and Democratic nominee Kamala Harris vowing to reduce student debt.

Critics of the moves to forgive student debt include Republican nominee and former President Donald Trump. While in the White House, Trump’s 2020 budget proposal called for eliminating the loan forgiveness program for public employees.

Mr. Biden late last week said an additional $4.5 billion in student debt was being canceled for about 60,000 teachers, nurses, firefighters and others, bringing to more than 1 million the number of public service workers to get debt relief during his administration. 



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