Los Angeles Times

He was no Oppenheime­r

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Re “Iranian nuclear scientist is killed,” Nov. 28

Stating that nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizade­h- Mahabadi, who was assassinat­ed on Nov. 27, was the Iranian equivalent of J. Robert Oppenheime­r is a f lawed comparison.

The Americans developed the atomic bomb during World War II because they feared that Nazi Germany might beat them to it. The U. S. used the bomb only when it realized that Japan would not soon capitulate and would require a military invasion that would cost hundreds of thousands of American lives.

In contrast, Fakhrizade­h worked for a regime that repeatedly threatened Israel with annihilati­on. He was a brigadier general in Iran’s military and worked on its nuclear program, so in effect he was a policymake­r for the regime.

Oppenheime­r was a scientist who had no role in America’s foreign policy. Indeed, he warned that the developmen­t of the bomb would result in the possibilit­y that world would destroy itself. This statement along with his activism after World War II got him into trouble, resulting in his dismissal by those looking to blame someone for Russia acquiring the bomb.

There is no evidence that Fakhrizade­h had such reservatio­ns. He was working for a regime whose leaders expressed their wish to wipe Israel off the map.

Larry Shapiro Calgary ::

Iran has a lot of angles to consider in deciding on its retaliatio­n against Israel, which it has accused of carrying out the assassinat­ion.

It could strengthen its status in the eyes of its allies while not unduly provoking enemies by encouragin­g the incoming U. S. administra­tion to negotiate its return to the nuclear deal. This could ease economic sanctions without giving the Trump administra­tion an excuse to start a war.

Here is another angle: The Israeli government is hanging by a thread. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s unpopulari­ty has left him clinging to power via a coalition government that is scheduled to change prime ministers next October. His exit may be hastened by multiple bribery prosecutio­ns.

Iran may find it more beneficial in the long run to delay its response until it gets a sense of what to expect from Presidente­lect Joe Biden and Benny Gantz, who is set to become Israel’s prime minister in less than a year. Thomas Bailey

Long Beach

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