"The alliance linking Iran and its proxy, the Shiite jihadist
group Hezbollah, to the authoritarian regimes of Cuba and Venezuela continues
to pose a threat to the United States in the region, a year after an attack by
another Iranian terror proxy sparked an ongoing war in the Middle East.
Experts have long denounced Iran’s decades-long plan to
expand its influence in the region by brokering alliances via “cooperation
agreements” with countries led by far-left governments in several fields such
as military and economy. Most recently, and most alarmingly, has been the case
of Bolivia, which the executive director of the Center for a Secure Free
Society (SFS) Joseph Humire describes as Iran’s “most successful project” in
the region.
Hezbollah has maintained a presence in the region for
decades, acting on behalf of Iran to attack Israeli targets in Argentina during
the 1990s. Hezbollah is responsible for the 1994 bombing of the
Argentine-Israeli Mutual Association (AMIA) and the 1992 bombing of the Israeli
embassy in Buenos Aires. The 1994 AMIA bombing was the deadliest terrorist
attack in the Western Hemisphere prior to the September 11, 2001, attacks.
The Venezuelan and Cuban regimes share longstanding deep,
anti-U.S., and anti-Israel ideological relations with Iran. Those regimes’ ties
to Iran were reinvigorated in recent years through the exchange of official
head of state visits, starting with the visit of socialist dictator Nicolás
Maduro to Tehran in 2022. Late Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi traveled to the
region in June 2023 and the Cuban figurehead “president” Miguel Díaz-Canel
visited Iran in December.
Both countries recently expressed their support of Iran’s
latest missile attack on Israel, justifying it as Iran’s “legitimate defense
against threats and crimes of the Israeli regime.”
In the case of Venezuela, Iran established its firm foothold
in the country following the arrival of late socialist dictator Hugo Chávez’s
“Bolivarian Revolution” to power in 1999. Chávez and Iran’s former president
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad held several encounters through the years in which
Ahmadinejad often reiterated his support for Venezuela in “confronting
imperialism” – namely, the United States.
Raisi claimed in June 2023 that Iran and Venezuela have a
“strategic relation” with “common interests, views,” and “enemies.” The
Venezuelan-Iran alliance “opened” the gates for Hezbollah’s increased presence
in the region.
Maduro confirmed his regime’s military cooperation with Iran
during his visit to Tehran in 2022. At the time, both countries signed a broad
20-year cooperation agreement. In March, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF)
warned of Iran’s growing military influence in Venezuela and the presence of
military assets that directly pose a threat to U.S. cities within its attack
range, such as Miami, Florida.
“The Venezuelan Armed Forces are the first to have armed
drones in their inventory, courtesy of Iran. As well as the shipment of
Iranian-made precision-guided short-range missiles, probably to arm the
drones,” Humire said in February. “All has been delivered under the guise of
commercial cargo shipment. This has been Iran’s modus operandi, as it did with
Yemen; now we are seeing it in the region.”
It is largely believed that Tarek El Aissami, a former
protegé of Hugo Chávez, served as the main liaison between the socialist regime
and the Shiite jihadists. El Aissami, actively wanted by U.S. on multiple drug
trafficking charges, occupied several high-ranking positions in the Venezuelan
regime until he was purged by Maduro in 2023 in a purported “anti-corruption
probe” and stands accused of stealing $3 billion in oil revenue from Venezuelan
state coffers.
Several reports published in 2017 accused El Aissami of
providing Venezuelan passports — often highly difficult for Venezuelan citizens
to obtain — to Hezbollah members during his tenure as Interior Minister. El
Aissami is also believed to have allowed Hezbollah members to sneak into
Venezuela, granting them protection as the Shiite jihadists went into drug
trafficking business in the region.
The Venezuelan Maduro regime increased its dependency on
Iranian aid following the collapse of socialism in Venezuela during the 2010s.
Since then, the Islamic regime has granted significant assistance to the
Venezuelan regime, helping it stay afloat amidst the ongoing collapse of the
country, providing it with oil amidst widespread shortages in 2020, repairing
Venezuela’s rundown oil refineries, and refining its own Iranian oil in
Venezuelan territory.
In return, the Maduro regime — in addition to allowing Iran
to continue to grow its presence in the country through the 20-year cooperation
agreement — gifted a supermarket chain that the socialists seized from private
entrepreneurship to Iranian individuals linked to the Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps (IRGC). Venezuela also gave away one million hectares of land to
the Islamic regime in 2022.
In the case of Cuba — a U.S. designated state sponsor of
terrorism — the communist Castro regime established ties with Iran in 1979 with
the arrival of the Islamic revolution. During Raisi’s visit to Havana in 2023,
Miguel Díaz-Canel vowed to continue the communist regime’s fight against “Yankee
imperialism” with Iran, describing the late Iranian president’s visit as proof
of the existence of “common values” between both countries.
“You have visited three Latin American countries that have a
significant relationship with Iran’s Revolution, Venezuela, Nicaragua, and
Cuba,” Díaz-Canel said at the time. “These nations, together with Iran, have
had to heroically confront, with tenacious resistance, the sanctions,
pressures, threats, blockades and interference of Yankee imperialism and its
allies.”
“This visit reinforced our conviction that we have in Iran a
friendly nation in the Middle East, with which to confide and talk about the
most complex global issues,” he added.
Hezbollah directly expressed its support to the Castro
regime during the historic July 2021 wave of anti-communist protests in Cuba,
when dozens of thousands took the streets to demand an end of more than six
decades of communist rule."
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