Muhsin Fahrizade killed with satellite-controlled artificial intelligence



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Assassination in Iran

EPA

Rear Admiral Ali Fadavi, one of the main commanders of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, announced that in the assassination of physics professor Muhsin Fahrizade, one of the key figures in the country’s nuclear program, who was assassinated in recent weeks, a weapon with “artificial intelligence”.

According to reports in the Iranian press, Fadavi claimed that the weapon used “focused” on Fahrizade’s face and fired 13 shots.

Fadavi added that Fahrizade had 11 guards at the time of the incident and that four bullets hit him.

Fadavi, emphasizing that the pistol was placed in the Nissan brand truck, said: “The pistol was only aimed at Fahrizade’s face. His wife, who is only 25 centimeters from him, does not even have a nosebleed.”

Fadavi added that the weapon was “controlled via the Internet” via satellite and that it uses advanced camera and artificial intelligence technologies while aiming.

Nuclear physicist Muhsin Fahrizade, who is considered the architect of Iran’s nuclear program, died in late November after an armed attack near the capital, Tehran.

Iranian officials had previously made statements blaming Israel and the Mojahedin People’s Organization for the murder.

In the Iranian press, there were reports containing different information about the Fahrizade assassination.

In some reports, it was claimed that Fahrizade died as a result of the crossfire and other news due to the explosion.

Prominent Iranian scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh in an undated photo

Reuters

Why is Fahrizade a big name?

Born in 1958 in Qom, Iran, Fahrizade was one of the most important scientists working on Iran’s nuclear program.

In a report published in the New York Times in 2015, Fahrizade was compared to Robert Oppenheimer, who was the head of the Manhattan Project, which was carried out by the United States to develop an atomic bomb during World War II.

In documents that Israel shared with some media outlets claiming to belong to Iran’s nuclear program, Fahrizade was depicted as the head of Iran’s nuclear program.

In a statement to the Reuters news agency in 2014, a diplomat suggested that if Iran continues to enrich uranium, Fahrizade would also be known as the “father” of the country’s nuclear bomb.

Four nuclear scientists were killed in Iran between 2010 and 12, and the Tehran administration blamed Israel for these actions.

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