Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Iran puts killing of scientist on Israel

Bid to start war, Tehran claims

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TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani on Monday claimed that Israel was behind the killing of a scientist who founded the Islamic Republic’s military nuclear program in the 2000s in an effort to start a war in the last days of President Donald Trump’s administra­tion.

Rouhani’s comments at a news conference marked the first time he has directly accused the Jewish state of carrying out the killing of Mohsen Fakhrizade­h last month.

Israel, long suspected of killing Iranian nuclear scientists over the past decade, has repeatedly declined to comment on the attack.

“Waging instabilit­y and war in the final days of the Trump administra­tion was the main aim of the Zionist regime in the assassinat­ion,” Rouhani said.

Rouhani vowed to avenge the killing but said his country will not allow Israel to decide the “time or venue” of any action. He said Iran will not allow instabilit­y in the region.

Fakhrizade­h headed Iran’s so-called AMAD program, which Israel and the West have alleged was a military operation looking at the feasibilit­y of building a nuclear weapon. The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency says that “structured program” ended in 2003. U.S. intelligen­ce agencies concurred with that assessment in a 2007 report.

After the killing of Fakhrizade­h, a top Iranian security official, Ali Shamkhani, accused Israel of using “electronic devices” to remotely kill the scientist.

Israel insists Iran still maintains the ambition of developing nuclear weapons, pointing to Tehran’s ballistic missile program and research into other technologi­es. Iran has long maintained that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.

Rouhani also referred yesterday to the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers, from which Trump removed the U.S. in 2018. “We believe the situation will be changed under the new U.S. administra­tion,” he said.

President-elect Joe Biden has said the U.S. could potentiall­y return to the nuclear deal.

In November, Elliott Abrams, the U. S. special representa­tive for Iran, insisted that a pressure campaign of sanctions targeting Iran would continue into the Biden administra­tion.

Abrams said sanctions targeting Iran for human rights violations, its ballistic missile program and its regional influence would remain in place.

Rouhani also said the reaction of the European Union to Saturday’s execution of Iranian journalist Ruhollah Zam, whose work helped inspire nationwide economic protests in 2017, was an “interventi­on” in Iran’s domestic affairs.

Iran on Sunday summoned the German and French envoys to Tehran after the European Union condemned Zam’s execution by hanging.

Rouhani said the case was handled according to Iranian law. “A court has reviewed the case and issued the verdict. We do act in the framework of our regulation­s.”

Rouhani said he thought it unlikely the case would harm Iran’s relations with Europe.

Zam, 47, had been imprisoned after Iranian authoritie­s seized him while he was traveling in neighborin­g Iraq last year. He had been living in exile in France before that.

On Monday, U. N. High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet in a statement also condemned Zam’s fate. “His death sentence and execution by hanging are emblematic of a pattern of forced confession­s extracted under torture.”

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