The inside story! Israel used a one-ton remote-controlled gun for 8 months of surveillance to accurately kill Iranian nuclear scientist

According to Israeli media reports, before Israel assassinated Iranian nuclear scientist Fakhrizadeh, the Mossad, an intelligence agency, turned a ton of remote-controlled guns into pieces and secretly transported them into Iran over several months, eventually succeeding in assassinating Fakhrizadeh without harming innocent people in the process. This detailed report disproves many past rumors.

According to the report, a team of more than 20 agents, including Israeli and Iranian nationals, carried out the ambush of Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh after eight months of surveillance.

The world’s oldest Jewish newspaper, the Jewish Chronicle, revealed that Mossad smuggled a one-ton remote-controlled gun into Iran piece by piece over an eight-month period, eventually taking out the top nuclear expert.

The Jewish Chronicle reports that intelligence sources revealed that the high-tech strike was carried out by a 20-strong spy team of Israeli and Iranian nationals, after eight months of painstaking surveillance.

The attack was carried out by Israel’s feared intelligence agency, Mossad, and the assassination device was mounted on a Nissan pickup truck, the report said.

This specially designed weapon, operated remotely by ground agents observing the target, was so heavy because it included a bomb that destroyed evidence after the assassination.

Neither the wife of the Iranian nuclear expert nor his security team was harmed in the attack, which was carried out using an ultra-precise automatic weapon designed to protect civilians from collateral damage.

“Mossad has documented proof that Fakhrizadeh worked on several nuclear warheads, each capable of causing five Hiroshimas,” said Jacob Nagel, one of Israel’s top defense officials and Netanyahu’s national security adviser

“He’s serious and he still intends to do what he plans to do, so some people think he’s been on Earth long enough.”

The report said

To understand the need for such a high-profile, high-risk operation, one must go back to the night of Jan. 31, 2018, to a shadowy business district on the outskirts of the Iranian capital and a blinding flash inside a darkened warehouse.

It was the start of one of the most important intelligence operations carried out by Mossad in recent times. After a year of surveillance, agents obtained the documents from 32 huge safes using a welding torch at 2,000 degrees Celsius, stealing a vast amount of Iran’s classified nuclear files.

Starting with black ring binders containing the most important information, the agents took away 50,000 pages of documents and 163 CDs containing full details of Iran’s secret nuclear weapons program.

As soon as those black ring binders were opened in 2018, Israeli analysts knew that Mohsen Fakhrizadeh was destined – in Mossad jargon – to be “gone.”

“Inside were original documents ordering the concealment of the nuclear program, many of them in Fakhrizadeh’s handwriting,” said one source.

“Analysts realized that they looked at his ink, his fingerprints, the pressure he put on the paper when he wrote. He was the one behind the deception.

“Fakhrizadeh is the father of everything we found in the archives. Everything was under his command, from the science and secret locations to the people and technology. He led an operation to hide it from the world. From that point on, it was only a matter of Time.”

In March 2020, a team of Israeli agents was sent to Iran to liaise with local agents.

The team consisted of more than 20 agents who launched a meticulous surveillance operation. “The team developed an extremely detailed minute-by-minute plan,” said one source.”” For eight months, they breathed with this guy, woke up with him, slept with him and traveled with him. They smelled his aftershave every morning, if he used it to shave. “

It was finally decided to kill the scientist on the way east from Tehran to an exclusive country retreat in Absad, where he owned a villa.

The team knew that Fakhrizadeh traveled there from Tehran on Friday.” They knew his daily route, speed and time, and they knew exactly which doors they would go out through,” a source said.

The Jewish Chronicle confirmed that the assassins did use a sophisticated remote-controlled gun with a small bomb built in that allowed it to self-destruct (contrary to Iranian claims, it was not “satellite-operated”).

The custom device, which weighed a ton including explosives, was smuggled into Iran in small pieces over a period of months. It was then assembled and mounted on a Nissan pickup truck and parked on the side of the road.

On Nov. 27, in a convoy carrying 12 bodyguards, Fakhrizadeh and his wife rode in a black Opel sedan, unaware that a team of Israeli spies was watching their every move, waiting to operate a remote-controlled gun from a distance.

As the car passed the designated spot, they pushed the button and the ultra-precise weapon opened fire. Thirteen rounds hit Fakhrizadeh head-on, while his wife, sitting 10 inches away, was unharmed.

As the Mossad squad fled, the one-ton weapon blew itself up, adding to the chaos of the scene.” Thank God we got all the people out, they didn’t get anybody. They didn’t even get close.” One person familiar with the operation said.” Their security wasn’t bad at all, but Mossad’s security was much better. It was a major event, a dramatic operation.”

The source revealed, “It hit the Iranians hard. Tehran has assessed that it will take six years to find a replacement for Fakhrizadeh. Israeli analysis now puts the breakthrough time (the deadline for Iran to complete a nuclear bomb) at two years. Before Fakhrizadeh left, it was about three months.

Two years is a conservative estimate. top Mossad sources privately believe that the time for Iran to complete the bomb will be closer to five years.

Further assassinations are planned for the future, but on a different scale than Fakhrizadeh or Suleimani, the sources said.” Yes, Mossad may have plans for further ‘departures,'” the source said, “We need to keep the pressure on, Israel will definitely keep fighting, and we have created big holes in al-Qaeda and (Iranian special forces) Quds Force.”

According to Mossad’s analysis, Iran is responsible for 80 percent of the threats facing the Jewish state. There is no doubt that Israel will “defend itself” regardless of the U.S. approach to Iran.

“Our main strategy for exerting influence on the United States is to submit our 2018 intelligence to the International Atomic Energy Agency,” one source said.” But if it doesn’t work, we will act, and the U.S. won’t like it, but we will maintain our sovereignty and fight every threat that exists.” Many al-Qaeda and Iranian personnel have left, and now that Fakhrizadeh has left, it has made a big impact. “

“But if the situation becomes critical, we will not ask anyone’s permission. We will take out the nukes.”

The sources said the attack was carried out by Israel alone, without U.S. involvement, but U.S. officials were given some form of advance notice, according to the report.