Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Fresh blast near Israeli embassy in Denmark

The explosion happened five days after two blasts, likely caused by hand grenades, went off near the diplomatic mission.

Senior police inspector Jens Jespersen addresses a press conference in Copenhagen regarding arrests in connection with the two explosions at the Israeli embassy on , Oct. 2, 2024. Photo by Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images.
Senior police inspector Jens Jespersen addresses a press conference in Copenhagen regarding arrests in connection with the two explosions at the Israeli embassy on , Oct. 2, 2024. Photo by Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images.

A blast occurred near the Israeli embassy in Denmark on Monday, the one-year anniversary of Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre in southern Israel, Agence France-Presse reported.

The explosion happened about 500 meters from the diplomatic mission in Copenhagen, and five days after two blasts, likely caused by hand grenades, went off near the building.

“We are of course looking into whether there could be a connection to the (earlier) incident at the Israeli embassy,” Copenhagen police inspector Trine Moller told reporters on Monday.

“There is no indication that this is the case,” she said, adding that the reported explosion may have been caused by gunfire.

Danish police arrested three Swedish nationals on Wednesday in connection with the first incident.

Iran may have orchestrated the Copenhagen attack as well as the targeting of the Israeli embassy in Stockholm on Tuesday, according to Swedish intelligence agency SÄPO.

Fredrik Hallstrom, head of operations at SÄPO, said that “there are some things that could point in that direction” of Iranian involvement.

In May, the agency confirmed that Tehran was recruiting members of Swedish criminal gangs to commit “acts of violence” against Israeli targets.

Swedish public broadcaster SVT reported on Wednesday that the two embassy attacks had been ordered by the Swedish criminal network Foxtrot at the behest of Iran.

The incident was reported some 30 minutes before Iran fired 180 ballistic missiles at the Jewish state in its second-ever direct attack; the first one was back in April.

Ahead of the assault, Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz summoned an emergency meeting with all Israeli ambassadors on “how to act with heads of state in the various capitals in view of the recent attacks.”

Iran is behind a series of terrorist attacks carried out by criminal gangs targeting Israeli embassies in Europe, including Sweden, over recent months, the Mossad intelligence agency revealed earlier this year.

“The outrage only exposes how the press and those poisoned by anti-Israel propaganda will twist anything to blame the Jews,” Lizzy Savetsky told JNS.
Israel said that it “firmly rejects” the charges, which it said targeted the Jewish state “camouflaged as measures against violence.”
Pro-Israel groups sponsored 14 congressional trips to the Jewish state, accounting for more than a quarter of the $1.62 million spent on such travel through April.
The New Haven Police Department told JNS that Paul Smith is accused of targeting three Jews, shoving a fourth person who tried to intervene, throwing a rolled-up newspaper at them and of having “pointed at the yarmulke one of the victims was wearing and slapped it off his head, causing it to fall on the ground.”
“Equal protection under the law demands consistency, not selective application,” Jayne Zirkle of EndJewHatred told JNS.
“Those who seek to advance the objectives of foreign terrorist organizations should expect a swift and coordinated response from federal law enforcement,” stated the U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey.