The Mossad recruited Iranian nuclear scientists to carry out covert operations that led to the explosion of one of the Iranian regime's most sensitive nuclear facilities, according to the British-Jewish newspaper "Jewish Chronicle".
The Mossad reportedly contacted ten scientists from the Iranian nuclear program who agreed to take part in an operation that led to the almost complete destruction of the underground uranium enrichment space in Natanz, where imminent sarcasm developed by regime scientists were destroyed.
The script that the newspaper describes sounds like it belongs in the field of science fiction.
It is alleged that the UAV dropped the explosives used by the scientists to blow up the facility, and other explosives were smuggled to the well-secured facility inside cardboard boxes containing food and arrived on a catering company truck.
The blast created such a large crater that a senior Iranian man fell into it and was moderately injured.
Following the incident, an unknown opposition organization claimed responsibility for the act and authorities in Iran circulated a photo and details of a suspect who had never been apprehended.
The blast caused chaos and a general power outage at the facility, and ninety percent of the hubs were taken out of action, leading to a significant delay in the development of the Iranian bomb and harming the country's ability to enrich uranium to a military level.
The newspaper also revealed in the newspaper that Israel was also behind the UAV attack on the production facility of the centrifuge blades in Karj, which used explosive UAVs that were smuggled into Iran in pieces and each weighed like a motorcycle.
Previous damage to uranium enrichment facility in Iran // Photo: AP,
The source who provided the information to the Jewish newspaper claimed that all the scientists who participated in the sabotage were alive and that their condition was good.
They were smuggled out of the country after the sabotage.
The scientists agreed to act in the service of the institution for various reasons, the source said, but did not elaborate on the reasons.
It was alleged that in both operations, along with the assassination of the head of the Iranian military program, Muhsin Fahrizda, nearly 1,000 different agents worked.
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