The Iranians know how to do these things.
Dr Masoud Ali Mohamedi’s car is a shocking sight, its twisted Tehran registration plate – 53Y392 – still attached but the bodywork laced with shrapnel holes, punched through with steel, the driver’s seat tossed over. Dr Mohamedi was one of Iran’s most prestigious nuclear scientists when a motorcycle exploded beside his car as he left home for Tehran University.
Iran inevitably blamed Mossad; the Israelis predictably denied all responsibility. No proof ever emerged that Mohamedi worked on Iran’s nuclear projects although he must have known he was a target. Only months earlier, his colleague Dr Majid Shahriari met a similar fate. And there was Mohamedi’s shredded Peugeot this week, at the entrance to the Islamic Conference centre, providing a special “welcome” for delegates from 60 nations to the “anti-terrorism” get-together in Tehran.