Iran security chief says 'rootless' Netanyahu pushing Americans to suicide
Security chief Ali Larijani poses beside the Iranian flag in this file photo
Ali Larijani, Iran’s newly appointed security chief, courted controversy on Monday by suggesting Americans could be driven to suicide when hearing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu describe Israel as a bulwark of American civilization.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said Israel’s September 9 strike on Hamas leaders in Doha amounted to terrorism and warned that no Arab or Muslim capital is safe from future attacks.
"There should be no doubt that last week’s attacks on Doha were pure terrorism; proof that the Tel Aviv regime has cast aside every moral and legal restraint," Pezeshkian told an emergency summit of Arab and Islamic leaders in Doha on Monday.
The Iranian president said the strike was a pre-planned attempt to destroy diplomatic efforts to end the war in Gaza.
“This aggression against diplomacy is more than a crime; it is an open and shameless declaration that now military power, and not law, is decisive,” he added.
Israeli warplanes bombed a Hamas office in Doha on Tuesday, in what Israel described as ac targeted attack against the group’s senior leadership.
They missed their intended targets, killing a Qatari security official and five lower-ranking Hamas personnel.
Qatar denounced the attack as “criminal and cowardly,” while Iran called it an “extremely dangerous” violation of sovereignty and international law.
Pezeshkian accused the United States and Western powers of giving Israel decades of impunity through vetoes, trade and diplomatic protection.
“When a rogue regime receives weapons, financing and diplomatic support under any circumstances, it learns that there are no limits. History will remember the guilt of those who supported this aggression,” he said.
“The Zionist regime has declared war against our sovereignty, dignity and future. We will not be intimidated, we will not be divided, and we will not remain silent. From the ashes of Gaza, justice will rise. From the rubble of destroyed buildings in Doha, Beirut, Tehran, Damascus and Sanaa, a new order will emerge,” Pezeshkian said.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, meanwhile, said on Monday he would not rule out further strikes on Hamas leaders “wherever they are.”
The September 9 strike in Doha marked a sharp escalation of Israel’s campaign, in a region already convulsed by conflict since the Hamas-led October 7, 2023 attacks that ignited an ongoing war in Gaza.
It appeared to push a negotiated solution to the Gaza conflict further away and left in doubt the next chapter of a regional confrontation pitting Iran against Israel and the United States.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday told reporters in Jerusalem that their surprise attacks on Iranian nuclear sites in June helped save the West from attack.
They pledged unity and opposition to Iran as diplomatic calls intensify to end a new Israeli offensive in Gaza against Iran-backed Hamas fighters and blessed a European initiative to restore United Nations sanctions on Tehran over its nuclear activities.
"(Iran) chanted, 'Death to America, Death to Israel.' To achieve Death to America, they have to achieve first death to Israel, because we are America's front line here," Netanyahu said.
"They began to race to the bomb ... and so they began to work secretly to activate their weaponization team," Netanyahu said without citing any publicly available evidence. "We knew that if we didn't act within a year they'd have one atomic bomb, possibly two."
Israel launched a 12-day war in June which killed Iranian nuclear scientists along with hundreds of military personnel and civilians, capped off with US bombings of three key nuclear sites.
31 Israeli civilians and an off-duty soldier were killed in Iranian counterattacks.
'Change course'
The joint appearance came as the US-Israeli posture on a post-war Iran remained unclear. US President Donald Trump said the attacks had 'obliterated' Iran's nuclear program and has been ambivalent about the need for further diplomacy.
European powers have urged renewed talks to end the nuclear standoff once and for all, while Israel continues to moot attacks on its foe while Iran remains defiant.
Rubio said the threat from Iran extended beyond Israel to the Persian Gulf and beyond, adding that missiles Tehran sought to build could have reached Europe.
He added that if the Islamic Republic does not "change course," the administration will continue to apply "maximum pressure" sanctions.
Britain, France and Germany last month triggered the so-called snapback mechanism enshrined in a partly lapsed 2015 international nuclear deal with Iran to restore international sanctions within 30 days over Iran's alleged non-compliance.
Iran denies seeking a nuclear bomb or threatening the West and labels the sanctions move diplomatic blackmail aimed at its sovereignty. Tehran has threatened to halt cooperation with UN nuclear inspectors advanced by an interim deal with the inspectors last week if the sanctions move goes ahead.
Rubio said he supported the European initiative "100%" and that Iran had obviously violated its nuclear obligations.
Israel is continuing a push to overrun Gaza City to crush Hamas fighters there and release hostages - a campaign which has drawn criticism from the United Nations and rights groups but is supported by Washington.
Netanyahu said that military successes over Iran did not void the need for an Israeli victory in Gaza.
"We acted like somebody who has two lumps of cancer. One lump is the atomic cancer, the specter of atomic bombs, and the second one is the specter of 20,000 ballistic missiles, one ton ballistic missiles that fall Mach six to Mach eight right from the sky," he said.
"We were fighting not only our enemies. We were fighting your enemies, and now we're circling back to Gaza to finish the job where it all began."
Iran’s nuclear chief Mohammad Eslami told the International Atomic Energy Agency’s annual general conference in Vienna on Monday that Tehran’s atomic program will not be destroyed by military operations, accusing Israel and the United States of illegal strikes on its facilities.
“Enemies of Iran should know that our nuclear industry has deep roots and cannot be eliminated through military action,” Eslami said in his address to the 69th General Conference.
He added that “Iran will not yield to political or military pressure and will not give up its inherent rights.”
The head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran said Tehran’s cooperation with the IAEA “has been broad and consistent,” but accused the agency of failing to condemn what he called aggressive acts against Iranian nuclear sites.
“Despite our formal request, the agency did not condemn the attacks by the United States and Israel on the nuclear centers of the Islamic Republic,” he said. “This silence and inaction will remain as a stain on the Agency’s history.”
Eslami also criticized European efforts to trigger the “snapback” mechanism to restore UN sanctions on Iran, calling them illegal.
He said the 2015 nuclear deal, formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), had shown diplomacy could succeed, but argued that Western states had undermined it.
“Today, on the anniversary of the JCPOA, we see unlawful attempts to activate the snapback mechanism,” he said. “These efforts are a mockery of Resolution 2231.”
Eslami also said Israel’s attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities had targeted not only infrastructure but also diplomacy itself. “The Zionist regime’s goal is not merely to destroy our nuclear centers but to derail the path of diplomacy and peace,” he said.
Eslami also Iran would table a resolution at the conference to ban attacks on nuclear facilities and would hold meetings with states cooperating with Tehran.
The comments come as Iran’s Supreme National Security Council has laid out conditions for future IAEA inspections under a new arrangement signed in Cairo last week by Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi.
The council said any inspection of damaged facilities would require its approval, and warned that implementation would stop if hostile actions, including reinstated UN resolutions, were taken against Iran.
Britain, France and Germany triggered the snapback process on August 28, demanding Iran return to talks and account for missing uranium stockpiles. Unless the Security Council blocks the move, sanctions will automatically resume by late September.
The IAEA reported earlier this month that Iran’s 60% enriched uranium stockpile rose to 440.9 kilograms before the June strikes on its facilities. Grossi said the Cairo deal aims to re-establish monitoring once technical procedures are agreed.
Israel’s Mossad has sufficient knowledge of the location of Iran’s highly enriched uranium stockpiles and could intervene if Tehran attempts to use them, The Jerusalem Post reported on Sunday citing unnamed sources.
Iran had 440.9 kilograms (972 pounds) of uranium enriched up to 60% before the Israeli and US airstrikes in June, according to the UN nuclear watchdog.
While the international community has been pressing Iran to disclose the whereabouts of the near weapons-grade stocks, The Jerusalem Post says Mossad knows their location and could intervene if Tehran tried to make any new dangerous moves with the uranium.
On Thursday, Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi acknowledged that Iran’s inventory of highly enriched uranium is buried under rubble following the strikes.
Araghchi’s comments came after the UN nuclear watchdog warned that Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium is “a matter of serious concern,” saying the agency has no visibility country’s activities since the June strikes on its nuclear facilities.
However, unnamed Israeli defense officials cited by the Jerusalem post believe that even if Iran immediately began rebuilding the bombed components of its nuclear program, it would take roughly two years before it could attempt to produce a nuclear weapon.
Female Mossad agents in Iran
Dozens of female Mossad agents were deployed inside Iran during Israel’s June strikes on Tehran’s nuclear and missile programs, The Jerusalem Post report said citing unnamed sources.
The report added Mossad Director David Barnea viewed the women’s role during the 12-day conflict as “very substantial.”
While their exact activities remain classified, the Post said that the spy agency has increasingly assigned women to all types of missions, from surveillance to kinetic operations.
The report added that Barnea sent hundreds of agents, including Iranian dissidents recruited by Mossad, into operations in Iran simultaneously. Targets included radar platforms, ballistic missiles, and sites struck by Israeli jets.
Iran’s new agreement with the UN nuclear watchdog contains no clause preventing the reimposition of UN sanctions on Tehran under the snapback mechanism, an ultraconservative lawmaker said Sunday, citing the text of the deal he said he had reviewed.
“I read the text of the agreement with the Agency. The text does not state that ‘implementation of this agreement is conditional on no hostile action against Iran, including snapback,’ whereas Araghchi said that in an interview," Hamid Rasaee said.
The hardline cleric said lawmakers attending a Saturday briefing with Araghchi believed this key condition was included in the text, but it was not.
"So the agreement does not prevent the implementation of the snapback mechanism. It was the same in the JCPOA, where the text did not match the claims,” Rasaee wrote on X.
Hamid Rasaee
Iranian lawmakers, including the cleric, convened an emergency meeting with Araghchi on Saturday to review the government’s new cooperation agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), signed in Cairo last week.
Neither Araghchi nor Grossi provided any details after signing the agreement.
Rasaee said parliament had not been given access to the text, criticizing Araghchi for keeping it confidential.
"Mr. Araghchi has said that it was agreed with the agency that the text of the agreement must be kept confidential and publishing it would be against diplomatic norms," he said in a video message posted on X Sunday.
According to Rasaee, only parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and the head of the national security and foreign policy committee had received copies of the agreement on Saturday night.
Alleged details
Rasaee said the text of the deal that he reviewed explicitly condemns attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities and also establishes that future inspections will be conducted under a new procedure.
The agreement specifies that the UN nuclear watchdog must carry out its inspections in line with the law passed by Iran’s parliament, he said.
Under the terms, he claimed, inspections of sites that have not been targeted in attacks will only be made upon specific requests.
"Such requests will be reviewed by Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, which will decide whether to grant authorization."
For facilities that have been attacked, the arrangement sets out a more restrictive process, according to Rasaee. The Atomic Energy Organization of Iran must first perform environmental and related assessments and submit a report.
"That report will be passed to the IAEA only if it is approved by the Supreme National Security Council. Even after that stage, each step of the inspection process requires further approval from the Council. The IAEA will not be permitted to conduct inspections without these clearances."
"The question is: why should the text remain confidential?! If it is a good text, if all our conditions are met in it, why keep it secret?" he said.
Shortly after Rasaee's criticism, Iran's Supreme National Security Council confirmed it had approved the cooperation protocol, with its secretariat saying the agreement reached between Araghchi and IAEA chief Rafael Grossi had been approved by the council.
The body led by Ali Larijani also said that Tehran will submit reports to the Agency only after the Council’s review.
"When a rootless child-killing criminal like @Netanyahu calls himself 'the frontline of American civilization', you can’t blame Americans if they feel like suicide," Ali Larijani wrote on X.
Larijani is a relative moderate and veteran insider who was elevated to lead Iran's Supreme National Security Council following a 12-day war in which Israel and the United States pounded Iranian nuclear and military sites, leaving hundreds dead.
It was unclear what Larijani meant by the assertions. "Rootless cosmopolitan" was a slur deployed in the Soviet Union directed at intellectual figures and particularly Jews, and the descriptor has been consistently deployed by anti-Semitic polemicists.
Critics of Israel have frequently scorned the relatively recent arrival of its leaders or their families from other countries in the twentieth century.
The Israeli premier's father, who was born in Poland as Benzion Mileikowsky, later adopted the Biblical surname Netanyahu and became a preeminent scholar or early modern Spain.
Larijani's assertion on the United States was less direct and could have been a reference to a fraught moment in American politics as political polarization deepens in the wake of the assassination of prominent political commentator Charlie Kirk.
Holding a PhD in philosophy and the rank of brigadier general in Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Larijani has long plied a deft course around public debates which have divided Iran's ruling factions.
Larijani also serves as Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's personal representative to the key decision-making SNSC, an apparent key endorsement by Tehran's top authority.
His new mandate is widely seen as righting Iran's security tack after lapses allowing Israeli attacks to kill nuclear scientists along with hundreds of military personnel and civilians.
In the sensitive new role, Larijani has stepped up the frequency and edge of his social media criticism of Israel and the United States, especially following the 12-day war in June.