TEHRAN: Iran and allied groups warned the other day they would execute Israeli and American captives if Israel moves forward with legislation allowing the death penalty for Palestinian prisoners convicted of serious offenses.
The threat came after Israeli lawmakers advanced proposals to expand the use of capital punishment, which is currently on the books but rarely applied. The measures, aimed at Palestinians convicted of attacks on Israelis, have triggered protests and vigils in Gaza and drawn condemnation from Palestinian factions and their supporters.
“Iran and the resistance axis will respond in kind,” a statement carried by Iranian‑aligned media said. “If Palestinian prisoners are executed, Israeli and American prisoners held by us and our allies will face the same fate.”
🟥 SONDAKİKA
İran, Filistinli mahkumların idam edilmesi halinde İran, Lübnan ve Irak’ta tutulan İsrailli ve Amerikalı mahkumların da aynı şekilde idam edileceği uyarısında bulundu. pic.twitter.com/W8ROScouKv
— Sabri Amca (@SabriAmca1453) April 1, 2026
Thousands of Palestinians are held in Israeli jails, many on terrorism‑related charges. Israel’s far‑right ministers have celebrated tougher sentencing policies, citing ongoing regional violence.
Iran and groups such as Hezbollah in Lebanon and Shiite militias in Iraq have a history of detaining foreigners, dual nationals and alleged spies, often using them as leverage in prisoner swaps or negotiations. Past cases have involved journalists, aid workers and individuals accused of espionage.
Analysts said the warning fits into the broader shadow war between Israel and Iran, which has intensified in recent years with cross‑border strikes, assassinations and proxy clashes from Gaza to Lebanon and Iraq. Tehran casts itself as a defender of the “Axis of Resistance,” which includes Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
Middle East observers noted that such threats are part of the psychological warfare that defines the conflict. “These statements raise the stakes but do not always translate into immediate action,” one regional diplomat said. “They complicate diplomacy and prisoner exchanges, and serve as deterrence and signaling to domestic audiences.”















