Kuwait Times

Iran hits out at Israel for ‘sabotage’

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Iran charged yesterday that its arch-enemy Israel was behind an attack on its Natanz uranium enrichment plant and vowed it would take “revenge” and ramp up its nuclear activities. The Atomic Energy Organizati­on of Iran (AEOI) said a “small explosion” had hit the plant’s electricit­y distributi­on center Sunday in what the foreign ministry labeled an Israeli act of “terrorism”.

The latest of a string of incidents hitting Iran’s nuclear program came days after talks resumed in Vienna to salvage the battered 2015 Iranian nuclear deal that former US president Donald Trump abandoned. His successor Joe Biden wants to revive the accord between Iran and a group of world powers, which places limits on the Islamic republic’s nuclear program in return for relief from biting economic sanctions.

Israel strongly opposes the 2015 Iran nuclear deal and has vowed to stop Iran from building an atomic bomb-a goal Tehran has always strongly denied pursuing. Iran initially reported a power blackout had hit the Natanz site Sunday, a day after it announced it had started up advanced uranium enrichment centrifuge­s banned under the deal.

Israel did not claim responsibi­lity for the incident, but unsourced media reports in the country attributed it to the Israeli security services carrying out a “cyber operation”. The New York Times, quoting unnamed US and Israeli intelligen­ce officials, also said there had been “an Israeli role” in the attack in which an explosion had “completely destroyed” the power system which fed the site’s “undergroun­d centrifuge­s”.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, while hosting US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin in Jerusalem, reiterated yesterday his stance that Israel will prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon, without mentioning the Natanz incident. “I will never allow Iran to obtain the nuclear capability to carry out its genocidal goal of eliminatin­g Israel, and Israel will continue to defend itself against Iran’s aggression and terrorism,” he said.

Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Khatibzade­h earlier vowed that Iran’s response to the Natanz incident would be to take “revenge on the Zionist regime” when and where Tehran chooses. “Of course the Zionist regime, with this action, tried to take revenge on the people of Iran for their patience and wise attitude regarding the lifting of sanctions,” he said. The head of the AEOI, Ali Akbar Salehi, said that “this incident was certainly sabotage”, state news agency IRNA reported.

In a separate report by the Fars news agency, Salehi was quoted as saying that “the damaged centrifuge­s will be replaced with even more powerful” ones. In a related incident, an AEOI spokesman, Behrouz Kamalvandi, suffered an accident Sunday while inspecting the site when he “fell from a few meters and suffered light fractures on his feet and head,” an IRNA report said. Kamalvandi gave a video interview from his hospital bed yesterday to the Tasnim news agency, in which he voiced confidence that after the “small explosion” the damage could be fixed soon. “Fortunatel­y, no one was hurt and the situation is such that in my opinion they can quickly repair the damaged areas,” Kamalvandi added.

Tehran has blamed Israel’s Mossad spy agency for previous attacks on its nuclear facilities and experts-including the killing last November of its top nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizade­h. Natanz was the site of a previous incident last July, during which a building was damaged, an incident for which some Iranian media also blamed Israel. Israel and Iran have long fought a regional shadow war, with Israel often striking Iran-allied forces in war-torn Syria. Since early March, both countries have also accused each other of a number of attacks on each other’s ships.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said yesterday that Tehran would not allow the Natanz attack to affect the Vienna talks. Iran must avoid “falling in the trap” set by Israel, he told a parliament­ary meeting. The European Union said it “rejects any attempts” to undermine the Vienna talks and stressed the “need to clarify the facts” over the incident. The Russian foreign ministry said it was closely following the situation surroundin­g the “serious incident” and that “if it is confirmed that someone’s malicious actions are behind this incident, then such intent deserves strong condemnati­on”. The ministry added that it is “alarming how this situation” could affect talks in Vienna, which are set to resume tomorrow.

Germany, a partner to the nuclear accord, also warned that the “developmen­t in Natanz” was “not a positive contributi­on” to the negotiatio­ns. — AFP

 ??  ?? TEHRAN: An Iranian woman walks past closed shops in the capital Tehran yesterday. Iran charged yesterday that its arch-enemy Israel was behind an attack on its Natanz uranium enrichment plant and vowed it would take ‘revenge’.— AFP
TEHRAN: An Iranian woman walks past closed shops in the capital Tehran yesterday. Iran charged yesterday that its arch-enemy Israel was behind an attack on its Natanz uranium enrichment plant and vowed it would take ‘revenge’.— AFP

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