The Guardian (USA)

Iranian MPs seek to harden nuclear stance after killing of scientist

- Patrick Wintour and Dan Sabbagh

The Iranian foreign ministry has been forced to disown a bill passed by the country’s parliament requiring the government to step up uranium enrichment closer to the level needed for a nuclear weapon in retaliatio­n for the assassinat­ion of a top nuclear scientist.

The bill also included a provision requiring the government to suspend UN nuclear inspection­s if western powers that are still part of the 2015 nuclear accords, as well as China and Russia, do not re-establish Iran’s access to world banking and oil markets within a month.

The foreign ministry said parliament did not have the powers to direct negotiatio­ns on the future of the Iran nuclear deal, saying this was the prerogativ­e of the supreme national security council and not elected MPs.

Saeed Khatibzade­h, Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman, said the ministry had not been consulted about the resolution, and described it as neither necessary or useful.

The government spokesman, Ali Rabiei, told reporters: “The government believes that, under the constituti­on, the nuclear accord and the nuclear programme ... are under the jurisdicti­on of the supreme national security council ... and parliament cannot deal with this by itself.”

Parliament has often demanded a hardening of Iran’s position on the nuclear issue in recent years, without much success. The government must weigh any response to Friday’s killing of the nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizade­h against potentiall­y risking improved ties with the US once Joe Biden takes over as president.

In a warning shot to Iran, the director of the UN’s Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Grossi, said: “It is very important to give the necessary and credible assurances to the world that there will be no deviation from the nuclear programme to military goals.”

There have been a number of conflictin­g accounts of the attack on Fakhrizade­h, which Iran has blamed on Israel. Israeli officials have declined to comment on the killing and no one has claimed responsibi­lity.

Western intelligen­ce sources voiced scepticism about a theory advanced by the secretary of Iran’s supreme national security council on Monday that Fakhrizade­h was killed solely by a remote-controlled device.

“The operation was very complex and took place using electronic devices, and no one was present at the scene,” Ali Shamkhani told Iranian media at Fakhrizade­h’s funeral.

But sources said an attack plot of such political sensitivit­y would require “eyes on” active surveillan­ce – and those carrying it out would want to be sure they had achieved their goal, which would typically require a presence on the ground of some kind.

The idea of a remote plot could have advantages for Tehran, they added, because it would not require Iran to engage in a high-profile hunt for the killers in the run-up to Biden’s inaugurati­on, even if it made the deadly plot look sophistica­ted as a result. That could help manage public opinion in Iran and temper pressure for an immediate response.

A close friend of Fakhrizade­h’s wife said on Monday that the couple were driving in their own car, with their bodyguards in a separate vehicle, at the time of the attack.

Shohreh Pirani, herself the widow of an assassinat­ed nuclear scientist, said that after an explosion in a car parked by the side of the road, Fakhrizade­h opened the door and got out of his car. As he reached the car of his bodyguards, two bullets hit him in the

shoulder, Pirani said. His wife – who survived the attack – was standing close to him. Pirani said after Fakhrizade­h was injured, the bodyguards threw themselves at him but he was shot four times.

A separate account published by Javad Mogoei, a documentar­y filmmaker living in Iran, suggested 12 people were present during the attack, four of whom were on motorbikes. Mogoei said Fakhrizade­h had two escort cars but that his own vehicle was not bulletproo­f.

According to this account, after the initial shootings a Nissan pickup truck exploded and then Fakhrizade­h and his bodyguards were shot again, with

Fakhrizade­h dying in hospital.

 ?? Photograph: Iranian Defence Ministry Office/Zuma Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Soldiers carry the coffin of the Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizade­h during his funeral in Tehran.
Photograph: Iranian Defence Ministry Office/Zuma Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Soldiers carry the coffin of the Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizade­h during his funeral in Tehran.

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