In November 2020, a convoy carrying Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, Iran's most prominent 
nuclear scientist, came under fire. He was killed with an artificial 
intelligence-assisted remote control machine gun. 

Carrying out an assassination in such a surgical fashion against a moving 
target without any civilian casualties requires real-time intelligence on the 
ground. 
After the killing, Iran's intelligence minister, Mahmoud Alavi, claimed that 
two months earlier, he had warned security forces that there was an 
assassination plot targeting Mr Fakhrizadeh at the exact location where he was 
shot.  
Mr Alavi said the person who planned the killing was "a member of the armed 
forces. We couldn't carry out intelligence operations on the armed forces".

In November 2020, a convoy carrying Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, Iran's most prominent 
nuclear scientist, came under fire. He was killed with an artificial 
intelligence-assisted remote control machine gun. 

Carrying out an assassination in such a surgical fashion against a moving 
target without any civilian casualties requires real-time intelligence on the 
ground. 
After the killing, Iran's intelligence minister, Mahmoud Alavi, claimed that 
two months earlier, he had warned security forces that there was an 
assassination plot targeting Mr Fakhrizadeh at the exact location where he was 
shot.  
Mr Alavi said the person who planned the killing was "a member of the armed 
forces. We couldn't carry out intelligence operations on the armed forces".
But he indirectly implied the perpetrator was a member of the Islamic 
Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC), Iran's most elite military unit. If so, the 
agent would have to have been high up enough in the IRGC to have been able to 
brush off the warning and carry out the plan at the set date, time and 
location. 

Mohsen Fakhrizadeh is also known to have been a member of the IRGC.

Sources inside Tehran's Evin prison security ward, where those who are accused 
of spying for foreign countries are held, have told the BBC there have been 
scores of high-ranking IRGC commanders held there. 

The Iranian government does not publicise their names and ranks to avoid 
tarnishing the reputation of the Revolutionary Guards.
A former intelligence officer for the IRGC Quds Force (its overseas operations 
arm) has told the BBC foreign agencies have gathered evidence against a number 
of Iranian ambassadors and IRGC commanders. 

He said it includes information about relationships with women, which he said 
could be used to blackmail those officials to force them to co-operate with 
foreign spies.

In late January 2018, in the dead of night, a dozen men broke into a storage 
facility in an industrial district, 20 miles (30km) from the capital, Tehran. 

There were 32 safes, but they knew which ones contained the most valuable 
materials. In less than seven hours, they melted the locks of 27 of them, took 
half a tonne of clandestine nuclear archives and left without a trace. It was 
one of the most audacious heists in Iran's history, but officials kept quiet.

Three months later, the stolen documents appeared 1,200 miles (2,000 km) away, 
in Tel Aviv in Israel. 

Benjamin Netanyahu, the then Israeli prime minister, showcased the stolen 
material - the result, he said, of a Mossad operation. Iranian officials at the 
time called the documents fabrications and they said such an incident never 
took place.

On his last day in office, in August 2021, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani 
confirmed Israel stole Iran's nuclear documents and showed the evidence to US 
President Donald Trump.
Presenting the archives at a specially convened news conference in April 2018, 
Mr Netanyahu highlighted Mohsen Fakhrizadeh's role in what he said was an 
undeclared nuclear weapons programme.
"Dr Mohsen Fakhrizadeh… remember that name," he reiterated. Mr Fakhrizadeh was 
assassinated two years later.

'Shoot, don't talk'
In the past two decades, a number of Iran's most prominent nuclear scientists 
have been killed. There have been multiple sabotages in Iran's nuclear and 
military facilities, but so far the Iranian security forces have mainly failed 
to prevent or capture the assailants and plotters.

In the final year of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's presidency in 2013, there were 
rumours that IRGC commanders, intelligence officers and even panegyrists 
(officials who deliver religious eulogies) had been arrested for spying for the 
Mossad. But those allegations were never officially confirmed. 

One of the accused was the officer in charge of counter-intelligence against 
Israel in Iran's ministry of intelligence. An Iranian Revolutionary court 
quietly convicted him, sentenced him to death, and executed him without any 
publicity.

■   Iran and Israel's shadow war takes a dangerous turn
Only last year, Mr Ahmadinejad confirmed the Mossad had infiltrated his 
intelligence ministry. He said: "Is it normal that the most senior officer 
responsible for the control of Israeli spies, responsible for confronting 
Israeli plots in Iran, himself turned out to be an Israeli agent?" 

Israel rarely comments about the Mossad's activities. Retired Israel Defense 
Forces (IDF) general and former defence ministry official Amos Gilad told the 
BBC this was for a good reason.
"I'm against any publicity. If you want to shoot, shoot, don't talk… the 
Mossad's reputation is to do fantastic operations, allegedly, clandestine, 
without publicity."
Today, former Iranian officials are concerned that the Mossad has reached 
officials high up in Iranian security and intelligence institutions. 

Ali Yunesi, a former Iranian intelligence minister and top adviser to President 
Rouhani, issued this warning in an interview: "The Mossad's influence in many 
parts of the country is so vast that every member of the Iranian leadership 
should be worried for their lives, for their safety."

Roland.
Toronto.

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