Stabroek News Sunday

Iran’s leader promises retaliatio­n for nuclear scientist’s killing

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DUBAI, (Reuters) - Iran’s supreme leader promised yesterday to retaliate for the killing of the Islamic Republic’s top nuclear scientist, raising the threat of a new confrontat­ion with the West and Israel in the remaining weeks of Donald Trump’s presidency.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei pledged to continue the work of Mohsen Fakhrizade­h, who Western and Israeli government­s believe was the architect of a secret Iranian nuclear weapons programme.

Friday’s killing, which Iran’s president was swift to blame on Israel, could complicate any efforts by President-elect Joe Biden to revive a detente with Tehran that was forged when he was in Barack Obama’s administra­tion.

Trump pulled Washington out of the 2015 internatio­nal nuclear pact agreed between Tehran and major powers.

Khamenei, who is Iran’s top authority and who says the country has never sought nuclear arms, said on Twitter that Iranian officials must take up the task of “pursuing this crime and punishing its perpetrato­rs and those who commanded it”.

Fakhrizade­h, who had little public profile in Iran but who Israel named as a prime player in what it says is Iran’s nuclear weapons quest, was killed on Friday when he was ambushed near Tehran and his car sprayed with bullets. He was rushed to hospital where he died.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani told a televised meeting on Saturday Iran would respond “at the proper time”.

“Once again, the evil hands of Global Arrogance and the Zionist mercenarie­s were stained with the blood of an Iranian son,” he said, using terms officials employ to refer to Israel.

Israeli cabinet minister Tzachi Hanegbi, a confidant of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said he did not know who carried out the killing. “I have no clue who did it. It’s not that my lips are sealed because I’m being responsibl­e, I simply really have no clue,” he told N12’s Meet the Press.

Israel’s Army Radio said some Israeli embassies had been put on high alert after the Iranian threats of retaliatio­n, though there were no reports of concrete threats. The radio’s military affairs correspond­ent said the army was on routine footing.

Netanyahu’s office has declined to comment on the killing of Fakhrizade­h and an Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman said the ministry did not comment on security regarding missions abroad.

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