Ambiguity Surrounds Murder of Iranian Arms Dealer in Italy

Ambiguity still surrounds the murder of Iranian arms dealer Said Ansary Firouz in Formello in Rome’s northern outskirts. (AFP)
Ambiguity still surrounds the murder of Iranian arms dealer Said Ansary Firouz in Formello in Rome’s northern outskirts. (AFP)
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Ambiguity Surrounds Murder of Iranian Arms Dealer in Italy

Ambiguity still surrounds the murder of Iranian arms dealer Said Ansary Firouz in Formello in Rome’s northern outskirts. (AFP)
Ambiguity still surrounds the murder of Iranian arms dealer Said Ansary Firouz in Formello in Rome’s northern outskirts. (AFP)

Ambiguity still surrounds the murder of Iranian arms dealer Said Ansary Firouz, who was shot dead last week at his office in Formello in Rome’s northern outskirts.

Italian police reports said Firouz was killed by his driver, 47-year-old Foloty Kave, who shot his employer before turning the weapon on himself.

Recent investigative data showed that Kave’s motive was blackmail. The gendarmerie reports said Firouz was shot dead in the head and that the relationship between the two men had worsened since last year after Kave was fired from his job.

The reports said the murderer had blackmailed the victim and demanded large sums of money in exchange for information he knew about him.

Firouz was under investigation for a shipment of arms destined for Tehran, police sources said.

The son of a former Iranian ambassador to Italy during the Shah era, Firouz was the middleman and a crucial link connecting supply with demand.

Other Italian news outlets said the victim had ties with the Calabrian or 'Ndrangheta mafia, which may have been behind the assassination and Kave’s suicide attempt. The driver was connected to this criminal organization, which is the most violent in Italy.

Days before his death, the Special Investigative Department (ROS) of the Carabinieri had issued Firouz an indictment notice for international trafficking in weapons of war.

Nine others of Iranian and Italian nationality were also being investigated.

Il Messaggero reported that in 2016 Firouz met in London with Safarian Nasab Esmail, who is under investigation in Rome for international terrorism.

Firouz ran a profitable business selling and renting vintage cars to celebrities and football players.



Iran Unveils New Underground Naval Base

A screenshot from Iranian state TV shows a newly built underground naval base, January 18, 2025.
A screenshot from Iranian state TV shows a newly built underground naval base, January 18, 2025.
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Iran Unveils New Underground Naval Base

A screenshot from Iranian state TV shows a newly built underground naval base, January 18, 2025.
A screenshot from Iranian state TV shows a newly built underground naval base, January 18, 2025.

The naval arm of Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) unveiled on Saturday an underground base in the country’s southern waters, according to footage aired by state television.

The broadcaster, AFP said, showed that the base houses dozens of assault boats equipped with missile launchers.

“This facility, which houses missile assault boats, lies 500 meters underground on the southern waters of Iran,” the report said. It did not reveal the location of the base.

IRGC commander General Hossein Salami toured the base with naval arm commander, Rear Admiral Alireza Tangsiri, the footage showed.

“We assure the great nation of Iran that their young people are capable of coming out honorable and victorious from a battle on the seas against enemies big and small,” Salami said.

Salami's visit comes just days before Donald Trump's inauguration as US president on Monday for a second term of office.

During his first term, Trump pursued a policy of “maximum pressure” against Iran, abandoning a 2015 nuclear agreement and reimposing sweeping sanctions.

State television said some of the vessels kept at the base unveiled on Saturday were “capable of destroying US warships and destroyers.”

In a rare video released on January 10, the Iranian state TV showed Salami and Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh touring an underground missile storage facility that had been used to launch around 200 missiles at Israel last October. These included for the first time hypersonic weapons.

At the time, Iran said the attack came in retaliation for the assassination in July of Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh, and in response to the Israeli air strike in the southern suburbs of Beirut on September 27 that killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah and Brig-Gen Abbas Nilforoushan, the operations commander of the IRGC’s overseas arm, the Quds Force.

Israel announced in late October that it had struck military targets inside Iran in response to the Iranian attacks.