Iran officials accuse Israel of attack on nuclear site
IRAN has blamed Israel for a sabotage attack on its underground Natanz nuclear facility that damaged its centrifuges.
The incident imperils ongoing talks over its tattered nuclear deal and brings a shadow war between the two countries into the light.
Israel has not claimed responsibility for the attack.
It rarely does for operations carried out by its secret military units or its Mossad intelligence agency.
However, Israeli media widely reported that the country had orchestrated a devastating cyber-attack that caused a blackout at the nuclear facility.
Meanwhile, a former Iranian official said the attack set off a fire.
The incident further strains relations between the US, which under President Joe Biden is now negotiating in Vienna to re-enter the nuclear accord, and Israel, whose Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to stop the deal at all costs.
Mr Netanyahu met on Monday with US defence secretary Lloyd Austin, whose arrival in Israel coincided with the first word of the attack.
At a news conference at Israel’s Nevatim air base on Monday, where he viewed Israeli air and missile defence systems and its F-35 combat aircraft, Mr Austin declined to say whether the Natanz attack could impede the Biden administration’s efforts to re-engage with Iran on its nuclear programme.
“Those efforts will continue,” Mr Austin said.
The previous American administration under Donald Trump had pulled out of the nuclear deal with world powers, leading Iran to begin abandoning its limits.
Details remained scarce about what happened early on Sunday at the facility.
The event was initially described only as a blackout in the electrical grid feeding its aboveground workshops and underground enrichment halls — but later Iranian officials began referring to it as an attack.
A former chief of Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard said the attack had also set off a fire at the site and called for improvements in security.
In a tweet, General Mohsen Rezaei said the second attack at Natanz in a year signalled “the seriousness of the infiltration phenomenon”.
Gen Rezaei did not say where he got his information.
“The answer for Natanz is to take revenge against Israel,” Iran Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said.
“Israel will receive its answer through its own path.”