The New York Times on Saturday described the assassinated mastermind of Iran’s illicit nuclear weapons program as having “wanted to live a normal life,” someone who enjoyed poetry and spending time with family. Mohsen Fakhrizadeh was killed last November in an operation attributed to Israel’s Mossad spy agency.
Then-Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu had previously shared intelligence about Fakhrizadeh’s leading role in Tehran’s development of an atomic weapon. A former brigadier general in the US-designated IRGC terror organization, he had been personally sanctioned by both the United States and United Nations.
Nevertheless, the “newspaper of record” highlighted Fakhrizadeh’s love of driving through the countryside, prompting ridicule from many. Many pointed out that Iran has repeatedly threatened to fully annihilate Israel, and that Fakhrizadeh headed the initiative that could give the mullahs the means to actualize their genocidal ambitions.
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Related Reading: Is Killing Iran’s Nuclear Scientists a War Crime?
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