The Israeli defense minister accused Iran’s Revolutionary Guards of using civilian ships in the Gulf as a platform for launching missiles and drones, among others. The minister said that the Revolutionary Guards were trying to spread Iran’s influence throughout the region and beyond.
On Monday, Israeli defense minister Yoav Gallant said during the Herzliya Conference security forum that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps were turning commercial ships into platforms to launch missiles, drones, and commandos. Gallant said that the IRGC was looking to spread its clandestine influence in the waters even beyond the Gulf.
Gallant showed photos of six allegedly repurposed Iranian ships, referring to them as “floating terror bases,” with one ship, particularly, having transited through the Gulf of Aden.
“This follows directly on the maritime terrorism Iran has been imposing on the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Sea. It is working to expand its activity to the Indian Ocean too and later to the Red Sea and to the Mediterranean Sea as well,” said Gallant.
The allegation comes amidst flared tensions between the two regional rivals over Iran’s nuclear program and the support for Palestinian and Lebanese paramilitary groups. Israel and Iran have been blaming each other for incidents of unclaimed attacks on their ships in the Gulf in recent years.
Previously, Iran said on Sunday that it was capable of securing regional waters in cooperation with other regional actors at a ceremony near Iran’s southern waters to welcome back two Iranian warships that traveled around the world in eight months.
This follows the move by the Middle East-based commanders of France, the United Kingdom, and the United States to tour the Strait of Hormuz on the USS Paul Hamilton in a show of unity against Tehran and indicate oversight of the security of ships transiting through the waters.
Iranian armed forces Chief of Staff Mohammad Bagheri said the Western countries involved must explain their activities in the Strait of Hormuz, which was thousands of kilometers away from their respective territorial waters.
US Vice Admiral Brad Cooper, who oversees the US Navy’s 5th Fleet, said during their transit around Hormuz that Iran had seized eight ships and attacked seven others in the last two years. Washington has called the seizures “unlawful.”
Photo: US Department of State/Wikimedia Commons(CC by 2.0)


Ohio Man Indicted for Alleged Threat Against Vice President JD Vance, Faces Additional Federal Charges
U.S. to Begin Paying UN Dues as Financial Crisis Spurs Push for Reforms
Trump Lifts 25% Tariff on Indian Goods in Strategic U.S.–India Trade and Energy Deal
TrumpRx Website Launches to Offer Discounted Prescription Drugs for Cash-Paying Americans
Federal Judge Restores Funding for Gateway Rail Tunnel Project
Missouri Judge Dismisses Lawsuit Challenging Starbucks’ Diversity and Inclusion Policies
Jack Lang Resigns as Head of Arab World Institute Amid Epstein Controversy
TrumpRx.gov Highlights GLP-1 Drug Discounts but Offers Limited Savings for Most Americans
Trump Signs Executive Order Threatening 25% Tariffs on Countries Trading With Iran
Pentagon Ends Military Education Programs With Harvard University
Norway Opens Corruption Probe Into Former PM and Nobel Committee Chair Thorbjoern Jagland Over Epstein Links
China Warns US Arms Sales to Taiwan Could Disrupt Trump’s Planned Visit
U.S. Lawmakers to Review Unredacted Jeffrey Epstein DOJ Files Starting Monday
Japan Election 2026: Sanae Takaichi Poised for Landslide Win Despite Record Snowfall
Trump’s Inflation Claims Clash With Voters’ Cost-of-Living Reality
Nighttime Shelling Causes Serious Damage in Russia’s Belgorod Region Near Ukraine Border 



