An-Najah News - Yesterday, Monday, the Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, Iran will revenge as a result of Israel bombing the Natanz nuclear facility
The Iranian Atomic Energy Organization Spokesman, Behrooz Kamalindi, announced that there had been an "incident” in the electricity production halls at the Uranium enrichment plant at Natnuz, while intelligence sources confirmed that Israel is behind the bombing.
Zarif threatening in a speech he delivered in parliament “we will not allow Israel to retaliate against the progress in the way to lift sanctions through Natanz incident” adding that Iran will take revenge on Zionists for their practices.
Two US and Israeli intelligence officials said that “the electricity outage of Natanz site in Iran, Monday dawn was caused by a massive explosion, which Israel played a role in this, and completely destroyed the power system that feeds the centrifuges, “New York times “reported.
The two officials described the explosion of the Iranian nuclear facility as a severe blow against Iran, as it might take 9 months for Iran to be able to enrich Uranium and restart the facility, which is located 250 kilometers south of Tehran.
Israeli media said that the Mossad was behind the bombing of the Natnuz reactor, and suggested that the attack was cyber, while Channel 13 reported that the explosion was caused by planting a bomb inside the facility.
The Public Broadcasting Corporation "Kan 11" quoted intelligence officials as saying that the damage resulted from Natnuz incident is greater than what Iran has reported, and according to what they suggested, the explosion was associated with a number of new and old centrifuges, but they are the most important devices in everything related to uranium enrichment at many levels. They also stressed that the timing of the attack was not accidental.
In Tehran, the head of the Iranian Atomic Energy Organization, Ali Akbar Salehi, said that what happened in Natnuz was a "nuclear terrorism," and that the IAEA has to face these measures, and added that Iran "reserves the right to hit back."
Channel 13 military analyst, Alon Ben David, estimated that the explosion led to the electricity outage to the centrifuges at the facility, "which made Iran lose the ability to enrich uranium in this facility, which contains about 7,000 centrifuges," and added that it is estimated that the damage needs months to be repairable.