“Job Antzari, a senior scientist at the AIO Research and Development Institute and a doctor of aeronautics, was invited to a professional dinner by another person at the end of last month. On his way back to his home, he suddenly felt ill and collapsed. Antzari was rushed to Sa’id al-Shuhada Hospital in the city of Yazd, where strenuous attempts were made to fight for his life – but he was eventually pronounced dead,” London-based Iran International reported.
Since the incident, security forces in Iran have launched a manhunt for Antzari’s host suspected of poisoning. However, the same sources said on the same evening the meal took place, the host fled the country in the dead of night.
Yesterday, on Saturday, it was reported that Dr. Ayub Antzari was responsible for several major aerospace projects on Yazd’s technology campus. Sayyid al-Shuhada Bizd.
Will you offer us a hand? Every gift, regardless of size, fuels our future.
Your critical contribution enables us to maintain our independence from shareholders or wealthy owners, allowing us to keep up reporting without bias. It means we can continue to make Jewish Business News available to everyone.
You can support us for as little as $1 via PayPal at [email protected].
Thank you.
Iran denies the reports, claiming that Antzari was a full-time man who worked in an industrial plant. Authorities insisted he died of an illness and ordered the certificate revoked shortly afterward. According to them, one of his relatives “published lies on the networks – and the police will take care of him.”
Antzari’s death joins a string of other incidents and assassinations in Iran in the past month. On May 26, about two weeks ago, Quds Force officer Hassan Siad Khodayari was assassinated. On Thursday, Iranian media reported that another commander in Unit 840 of the Quds Force of the Revolutionary Guards died this week – Ali Ismailazadeh, after falling from a roof. The suspected death of Dr. Cameron Malafor, a nuclear expert who worked at the Natanz facility in Isfahan province, has also been reported in recent days. The various and contradictory reports raised questions about the circumstances of his death – whether it was a suicide or assassination.
“May affect Iran’s motivation to respond”
“The deaths of two Iranian scientists are added to reports of cyber attacks and the departure of a senior member of Unit 840,” wrote the Institute for National Security Studies director and former head of the Armed Forces, Maj. Gen. Tamir Heiman, on his Twitter account. But from a strategic point of view. “
“While the New York Times allegedly took Israel out of the closet in the case of the thwarting of the deputy commander of Unit 840, who was reportedly responsible, among other things, for planning assassinations against Israelis abroad. “This time there is ambiguity around the incidents (and it is good that this is the case). Yet must examine whether the Iranians will also choose to attribute the recent events to Israel, which will affect the increased motivation to react in what they call ‘deterrence equations’.”
“In the broad context,’ Hyman continues, “we must remember some important events – Prime Minister Bennett’s meeting with the CEO of SBA this week, the convening of the SBA Board of Governors later this week, and the continued shuffle in negotiations to return to a nuclear agreement, all in parallel with the announcement. On specific warnings regarding harm to Israelis in Turkey,”
Hyman added: “we must also mention Prime Minister Bennett’s strategy for dealing with Iran, which in some places has been called ‘death by 1,000 cuts’ – if it is indeed a regime of overthrowing a regime, it will probably take a long time. “We are not interested in this at this stage. The complementary move is a nuclear agreement which will ensure that while this strategy is being implemented, Iran will not continue to advance in the nuclear program.”