Iran newspaper: Strike Haifa if Israel killed scientist
 
 
An opinion piece published by a hard-line Iranian
newspaper on Sunday suggested Iran should attack the Israeli port city of Haifa
if Israel carried out the killing of a scientist linked to its disbanded
military nuclear program.
Though the hard-line Kayhan newspaper has long
argued for aggressive retaliation for operations targeting Iran, Sunday’s
opinion piece went further, suggesting any assault be carried out in a way that
destroys facilities and “also causes heavy human casualties.”
Israel, suspected of killing Iranian nuclear
scientists over the past decade, has not commented on Friday’s slaying of
Mohsen Fakhrizadeh.
Iranian officials roundly have blamed Israel for the
attack, raising the specter of renewed tensions that could engulf the region,
including U.S. troops stationed in the Persian Gulf and beyond.
Kayhan published the piece written by Iranian
analyst Sadollah Zarei, who argued Iran’s previous reactions to suspected
Israeli airstrikes that killed Revolutionary Guard forces in Syria didn’t go
far enough to deter Israel.
Striking Haifa and killing a large number of people
“will definitely lead to deterrence, because the United States and the Israeli
regime and its agents are by no means ready to take part in a war and a
military confrontation,” Zarei wrote. He said an assault on Haifa needed to be
greater than Iran’s ballistic missile attack against American troops in Iraq
following the U.S. drone strike that killed a top Iranian general in January.
Haifa, on the Mediterranean Sea, has been threatened
in the past by both Iran and one of its proxies, the Lebanese militant group
Hezbollah. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah recently suggested striking Haifa’s
stores of ammonium nitrate, a highly explosive fertilizer that fueled the
deadly Beirut port blast in August that killed 193 people and wounded 6,500
others.
While Kayhan is a small circulation newspaper in
Iran, its editor-in-chief Hossein Shariatmadari was appointed by Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and has been described as an adviser to him in the past.
The Iranian parliament on Sunday held a closed-door
hearing about Fakhrizadeh’s killing. Afterward, parliament speaker Mohammad
Baqer Ghalibaf said Iran’s enemies must be made to regret killing him.
“The criminal enemy does not regret it except with a
strong reaction,” he said in a broadcast on Iranian state radio.
State television broadcast images of Fakhrizadeh’s
casket being flown to Mashhad, a holy Shiite city in Iran’s east home to the
shrine of Imam Reza.
Analysts have compared Fakhrizadeh to being on par
with Robert Oppenheimer, the scientist who led America’s Manhattan Project in
World War II that created the atom bomb.
Fakhrizadeh headed Iran’s so-called AMAD program
that 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. Iran long has maintained
its nuclear program is peaceful.
His killing likely complicates the plans of
President-elect Joe Biden, who has said his administration will consider reentering
Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers. It also raises the risk of an open
conflict in the remaining weeks in office for President Donald Trump, who
unilaterally withdrew the U.S. from the atomic accord in 2018, beginning a
series of escalating incidents between Tehran and Washington.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


