TEHRAN – Abbas Ahondi, an assistant professor at Tehran University and former Minister of Road and Urban Development, filed a fierce indictment of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director-General Rafael Grossi on Friday, directly responsible for enabling Israel’s attacks on Israel’s Iran’s nuclear capabilities.
In a virus social media post, Akhoundi declared:
Scholars argued that they acted completely foresee the outcome.
Akhondi condemned the IAEA chief’s continued silence despite President Donald Trump’s public threat to Iran’s nuclear presence – violation of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
“You haven’t condemned Israel’s attacks yet. Hypocrisy will never win,” he said.
Akhoundi’s claim is consistent with Tehran’s assessment that Grossi’s politically-timed report served as an excuse for the Israeli attack.
Iranian officials have revealed that the actions of the IAEA Chiefs are attributed to calculated bids for electricity.
Sources told the Tehran Times in April that Grossi was trying to get something by rebuking Tehran.
This “devil deal” theory was further driven on Thursday when Mohammad Eslami, head of Iran’s atomic energy organization, officially notified of impending legal action against Israel’s “inaction” against Israel’s “recurring wild attacks” on protected nuclear sites.
Eslami emphasized that the IAEA Commission operates under “guidance, impact and support of three European countries, the US and Zionist regimes.” This is a structure that Iran repeatedly warned before the strike on June 13th.
The Israeli attack began shortly after Grossi reported to the controversial June 12th session of IAEA Board of Directors.
The administration’s first strike targets the target section of the Natantz enrichment plant, but Thursday’s attack targeted a protected Arak heavy water reactor.
Ali Larijani, an advisor to the leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Khamenei, confirmed that accountability awaits.
The Iranians reject Grossi’s June 20th CNN statement. “In the Iranian elements, there was no indication of an aggressive and systematic plan to build nuclear weapons” – as a disingenuous gesture that was too late, too late.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei declared that Grossi “betrayed the non-proliferation regime” and that the IAEA had “turned into an unfair war of attacks into a partner.”