‘New Iranian Terror Group’ Claims Responsibility For Attacks Across Europe

Original article here


A group that did not exist online or anywhere else before March 9, 2026, has suddenly claimed responsibility for a string of low-tech arson and attempted bombings at synagogues and USĀ banks across Belgium, the Netherlands, France, and the UK.

Police in Paris at the scene of the thwarted attack on the offices of Bank of America Ā© Nathan Laine/Bloomberg

Mainstream outlets likeĀ FTĀ and counter-terrorism analysts are rushing to label Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia (HAYI, or “Ashab al-Yamin”) as an Iranian intelligence “hybrid warfare” front.Ā But a closer look raises seriousĀ red flags: the group’s amateurish execution, suspiciously perfect timing amid the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, and a pattern that seems tailor-made to stoke the antisemitism narrative and justify further crackdowns on Tehran and its proxies.

TheĀ first claim surfaced on March 9 via Telegram channels tied to Iraqi pro-Iranian militias. Two days later, HAYI took credit for firebombing a synagogue in LiĆØge, Belgium. Subsequent claims included attacks on a Rotterdam synagogue (March 13), a Jewish school in Amsterdam (March 14), a site linked to Bank of New York Mellon in Amsterdam (March 16), HatzolaĀ Jewish ambulances in London’s Golders GreenĀ (March 23), and a foiled plot outside Bank of America in Paris (March 28). An attempted synagogue strike in Heemstede, Netherlands, was also stopped on March 20. Some other claims, including an alleged Greece attack – appear to beĀ outright disinformation.

European police have rounded up suspects aged 14-23. In the Netherlands, at leastĀ 10 arrests. FranceĀ charged four, including minors. In the UK, three young men (two Brits aged 19–20 and a 17-year-old dual national)Ā were chargedĀ with the London ambulance arson, with a fourth arrest.

On arson attack on community ambulances in north London last month Ā© Henry Nicholls/AFP/Getty Images

Orthodox Jewish communities in London and elsewhere have their own ambulances operated by Hatzola (also spelled Hatzolah or Hatzalah), a private volunteer-run, community-funded emergency medical service.

French prosecutors revealed one teen claimed he was recruited on Snapchat, offered €500–€1,000, and initially told the “bomb” was revenge on a cheating girlfriend – before being instructed to film it for the cause. Many suspects were released on bail.

The “group” that wasn’t there yesterday

Researchers at the International Centre for Counter-Terrorism (ICCT) noteĀ HAYI had “no known references, neither online nor offline” before March 9. Its statements containĀ linguistic quirks, misspellings, and inconsistencies. Claims were amplified almost immediately by channels linked to IRGC-aligned militias—yet the operation relies on disposable online recruits for pocket-change jobs. Julian LanchĆØs at ICCT called it unusual and suggested an Iranian intelligence project for deniability.

Doubts regarding the authenticity of HAYI are, however, not only raised by the appearance of its Telegram channel and the likely falsely claimed attack in Greece, butĀ also by inconsistencies within the claim material itself.Ā For example, the videos contain noticeable linguistic errors. Further, the Arabic inscription beneath the group’s logo, which closely resembles the flag of Hezbollah and other pro-Axis groups, except for featuring a Soviet SVD sniper rifle instead of the more typical AK-style imagery,Ā includes multiple mistakes, including the misspelling of the word ā€œIslamic.ā€

Skeptics aren’t buying it.Ā The Grayzone’s Wyatt Reed highlighted glaring questions: Why aren’t these “Iranian” operatives hitting targets in countries most aggressively involved in the war on Iran? Why the focus on symbolic Jewish and U.S. bank sites with minimal actual damage and zero casualties? Why do some communiquĆ©s contain phrasing that reads like it was generated with odd Israeli terminology quirks (e.g., references to “the Land of Israel”)? And why were multiple suspects quickly released on bail while the “terror campaign” narrative rolls on?

MintPress NewsĀ investigative piece by David Miller goes further, arguingĀ HAYI looks like a fabricated “fake Iranian terror groupĀ invented precisely to accelerate efforts to proscribe the IRGC as a terrorist organization across Europe – long a goal of pro-Israel lobbying networks amid the Iran war.

Cui bono? The timing is impeccable

The wave of attacks kicked off right as U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran intensified in late February 2026. Jewish communities were already on edge from post-October 7, 2023, tensions. UK groups like the Community Security Trust linked the London incident to rising antisemitism. Dutch officials openly probed “Iranian involvement.” U.S. banks in Paris told staff to work from home.Ā All of it feeds a story that Iran is exporting chaos.Ā 

Iran’s London embassy flatlyĀ denied involvement,Ā calling the claims “unfounded” and reaffirming non-interference. But in the current climate, denials are dismissed as standard procedure.

Online discourse is splitĀ  –Ā with some X posts and independent commentary (including from figures who faced backlash) have pointed to Mossad-style operations, citing historical precedents and the fact that the attacks generate maximum narrative value with minimum real risk.Ā A UK mayor in Bath resignedĀ after sharing posts suggesting the Hatzola ambulance arson was staged.

Even some mainstream analysts admitĀ the group operates like a hastily assembled brand.

To analyse the activities of HAYI,Ā we examined its digital footprint, including the first public mentions of the attacks online and the initial dissemination of the corresponding claim videos. This analysis was conducted using the OSINT tools XNetwork and TGStat, which were queried using Arabic-language keywords. In addition, an AI-based detection tool was employed, which indicated that all claim videos were likely genuine recordings.Ā 

There are no known references, neither online nor offline, to HAYI prior to 9 March,Ā when a post of the group was circulated in a Telegram channel seemingly affiliated with theĀ Iraqi pro-Iranian militia Liwa Zulfiqar. In this post, HAYI announced ā€œthe start of its military operations against US and Israeli interests around the world,ā€ although it made no reference to the attack against the synagogue in LiĆØge that occurred on the same day.Ā This would suggest that HAYI is a new group, established for the purpose of this bombing campaign. -Julian LanchĆØs, ICCT

Recruitment teens via Snapchat and Telegram for one-off gigs isn’t exactly what hardened jihadists do – is it?

Hybrid warfare… or hybrid narrative?

Pro-Iran voices and anti-war skeptics argue this fits a familiar playbook: manufacture or exaggerate a threat, amplify it through friendly think-tanks (some with clear ideological alignments),Ā then use the panic to justify expanded surveillance, sanctions, military posture, and silencing dissent on Gaza or Iran policy. The low-body-count, property-only focus maximizes fear without crossing into “existential terror” that might backfire.

Whether HAYI is a sloppy Iranian cutout using disposable locals, a pure astroturf job, or something more orchestrated to serve specific agendas remains under investigation. Meanwhile the story has already succeeded in sowing anxiety, polarizing communities, andĀ providing fresh ammunition for those pushing Europe deeper into the Iran conflict.

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About the Author: Patriotman

Patriotman currently ekes out a survivalist lifestyle in a suburban northeastern state as best as he can. He has varied experience in political science, public policy, biological sciences, and higher education. Proudly Catholic and an Eagle Scout, he has no military experience and thus offers a relatable perspective for the average suburban prepper who is preparing for troubled times on the horizon with less than ideal teams and in less than ideal locations. Brushbeater Store Page: http://bit.ly/BrushbeaterStore

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