BY Guy D. McCardle
While missiles dominate the headlines overseas, the more unsettling question unfolding inside intelligence channels is whether Iran’s long-practiced playbook of proxies, deniable operatives, and patient retaliation could quietly shift the battlefield onto American soil.
The missiles flying over the Persian Gulf are the loud part of the war with Iran.
The quiet part is happening in briefing rooms across Washington, inside FBI field offices, and in the encrypted chatter moving through intelligence networks.
The question no one wants to ask out loud is this: if Tehran decides it cannot win the war overseas, will it try to bring the war here?
That concern intensified after U.S. intelligence intercepted an encrypted transmission believed to have originated from Iran shortly after the strike that killed Iran’s supreme leader in late February. A federal alert circulated to law enforcement warned the signal could serve as a trigger message for operatives outside the country. Officials stress that no specific plot has been identified, and the exact origin or intended recipients of the transmission remain unclear.
Still, the signal alone was enough to put counterterrorism units across the United States on heightened alert…
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