As Iran mulls retaliation for nuclear scientist’s death, a riddle remains. What
A local witness told CNN he heard a huge blast on the Friday of the attack, and then about 10 minutes of exchanges of gunfire — an account consistent with a bomb and ambush.
The scientist’s son told state media that his father had been discouraged by his security detail from making the trip that morning along the quiet, verdant streets of Absard, a hilly retreat two hours’ drive outside of Tehran. “My father said he had a class, one he could not teach virtually, and an important meeting, so they could not persuade him to go back,” Hameed Fakhrizadeh told IRIB.
The outgoing Trump administration thinks the answer to all of the questions are simple: no. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, an undying proponent of the White House’s “maximum pressure” strategy of sanctions and loud rhetoric, said Friday: “we know our campaign is working as the Iranians are desperately signalling their willingness to return to the negotiating table to get sanctions relief.”
Iran is far more ambiguous — its leaders are furious, but split between moderates and hawks on what to do next. Parliament set the clock ticking on diplomacy by passing a motion on Thursday that gave the US two months to lift some sanctions or face Iran enriching uranium up to about 20% purity by early next year — in the first weeks of President-elect Joe Biden’s administration.
President Hassan Rouhani opposed parliament, appealing to Iran to let those with 20 years’ experience in diplomacy with the US try to reignite negotiations. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei responded immediately to the assassination by demanding retaliation and that Fakhrizadeh’s work be continued.
Professor Sayeed Mohammed Marandi, from the University of Tehran, said that if Iran sought a nuclear weapon, it was technologically advanced enough by now to have made one. “Its conventional military capabilities that are indigenous show Iran’s strength,” he said, raising another issue that dogs any future diplomacy.
Iran has made no secret that its conventional arsenal has advanced fast, while the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers has left its nuclear program dormant — until recently, when Tehran began to back away from the pact after Trump pulled out of it.
Marandi said the only deal Iran would join again would be the old deal — that Iran had already negotiated once and did not need to start again. “The Iranians will not accept any additions to the [2015 deal] and they will not negotiate their defense capabilities, and they will not negotiate their alliances in the region,” he said, speaking for many of the ascendant, tougher voices in Iran.
Yet diplomacy is often preceded by bluster. The larger issue immediately is whether any retaliation for the deaths of Fakhrizadeh and Soleimani kills the prospect of talks before they even get off the ground. Retaliation for the death of Soleimani was limited to a strike on the…
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