Quds Force Colonel Assassinated in Tehran

 A photo published moments after the assassination of a leader in the Revolutionary Guard, east of Tehran (IRNA)
A photo published moments after the assassination of a leader in the Revolutionary Guard, east of Tehran (IRNA)
TT

Quds Force Colonel Assassinated in Tehran

 A photo published moments after the assassination of a leader in the Revolutionary Guard, east of Tehran (IRNA)
A photo published moments after the assassination of a leader in the Revolutionary Guard, east of Tehran (IRNA)

In a rare assassination, a colonel in the Quds Force, the foreign arm of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, was killed by unknown gunmen who attacked his car outside his home in the east of the capital, Tehran, according to Iranian official media.

According to Tasnim news agency, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, the slain officer was identified as Hassan Sayyad-Khodayari.

“He was assassinated in his car outside his personal residence,” said the agency, adding that Sayyad-Khodayari’s wife was the first to find his body.

The Guard -- the ideological arm of Iran's military -- described the man as a “defender of the sanctuary,” a term used for anyone who works on behalf of Iran in Syria or Iraq.

One of the witnesses told the Revolutionary Guards' Fars News Agency that they heard a loud sound of a motorbike moving away from the scene, adding that he reached Sayyad-Khodayari car, who was breathing his last, and called the ambulance teams immediately.

In contrast to the Tasnim Agency, the Revolutionary Guard said in an official statement that the killed officer was Colonel Sayyad Khodai.

The Guard described the targeting of Khodai as a “terrorist operation,” accusing what it called “elements linked to global arrogance” of being behind it.

The Guard said they launched an investigation to identify the “aggressor or aggressors.”

The Fars news agency reported that the state prosecutor visited the scene of the killing and ordered the “quick identification and arrest of the authors of this criminal act.”

The assassination came within a short time after the Guard’s intelligence service announced the discovery and arrest of members of an Israeli spy network, according to the government's ISNA news agency.

A statement said the suspects were involved in a series of crimes, including “robberies, kidnappings and vandalism.”

The killing of Khodai is the most high-profile murder inside Iran since the November 2020 killing of top nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh.



Iran Is ‘Pressing the Gas Pedal’ on Uranium Enrichment, IAEA Chief Says 

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi speaks at the Annual Meeting of World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025. (AP)
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi speaks at the Annual Meeting of World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025. (AP)
TT

Iran Is ‘Pressing the Gas Pedal’ on Uranium Enrichment, IAEA Chief Says 

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi speaks at the Annual Meeting of World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025. (AP)
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi speaks at the Annual Meeting of World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025. (AP)

Iran is "pressing the gas pedal" on its enrichment of uranium to near weapons grade, UN nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi said on Wednesday, adding that Iran's recently announced acceleration in enrichment was starting to take effect.

Grossi said last month that Iran had informed the International Atomic Energy Agency that it would "dramatically" accelerate enrichment of uranium to up to 60% purity, closer to the roughly 90% of weapons grade.

Western powers called the step a serious escalation and said there was no civil justification for enriching to that level and that no other country had done so without producing nuclear weapons. Iran has said its program is entirely peaceful and it has the right to enrich uranium to any level it wants.

"Before it was (producing) more or less seven kilograms (of uranium enriched to up to 60%) per month, now it's above 30 or more than that. So I think this is a clear indication of an acceleration. They are pressing the gas pedal," Grossi told reporters at the World Economic Forum in Davos.

According to an International Atomic Energy Agency yardstick, about 42 kg of uranium enriched to that level is enough in principle, if enriched further, for one nuclear bomb. Grossi said Iran currently had about 200 kg of uranium enriched to up to 60%.

Still, he said it would take time to install and bring online the extra centrifuges - machines that enrich uranium - but that the acceleration was starting to happen.

"We are going to start seeing steady increases from now," he said.

Grossi has called for diplomacy between Iran and the administration of new US President Donald Trump, who in his first term, pulled the United States out of a nuclear deal between Iran and major powers that had imposed strict limits on Iran's atomic activities. That deal has since unraveled.

"One can gather from the first statements from President Trump and some others in the new administration that there is a disposition, so to speak, to have a conversation and perhaps move into some form of an agreement," he said.

Separately, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said at Davos that Iran must make a first step towards improving relations with countries in the region and the United States by making it clear it does not aim to develop nuclear weapons.