Fakhrizadeh's assassination has implications for Iran
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has accused Israel of involvement in the assassination of his country's top nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh.
Iran,
he said, would respond to Fakhrizadeh's assassination.
Nevertheless,
the Iranian leader said his country would not take hasty decisions in this
regard.
Fakhrizadeh
breathed his last at a hospital in Iranian capital Tehran after his car was
attacked near Tehran.
There
is belief that his assassination was approved by the United States. American
President Donald Trump threatened earlier this month to attack Iran's nuclear
facilities.
Fakhrizadeh's
assassination dealt a painful blow to the Iranian regime. It compounds a series
of assassinations of important Iranian figures, including Quds Force commander
Qasem Soleimani. Tehran also witnessed a series of mysterious bombings.
Fakhrizadeh's
assassination throws light on the future prospects of the Iranian regime
itself.
It
shows that Iran has already become an easy target for its enemies and
opponents.
Together
with the bombings, including some inside Iranian nuclear facilities, the
assassination also divulges the presence of security loopholes in Iran and the
weakness of Iranian intelligence.
The
same developments give insight into the presence of conflicts between the
different branches of the Iranian regime. There is apparently a conflict
between different generations in this regime, namely between the old guards and
the new generation.
This
generational struggle portends a change within the regime itself.
Iran
may resort to attacking American interests and the interests of American allies
in the Gulf.
It
can also turn to its traditional populist rhetoric with the aim of putting
pressure on the new administration in the US to return to the negotiating table
on Iran's nuclear file.



