On 12 January 2010, at 07:58 am, a motorbike rigged with explosives and parked near his car exploded while he was leaving home in
Gheytariyeh neighbourhood of northern Tehran, for university. The windows of residences around the scientist's home were shattered by the force of remote controlled explosion, and it was reported that two other people were also injured in the blast. Iranian state media accused Israel and the US of responsibility, while the
US State Department called the allegation "absurd".
Ynetnews stated that "there is no known connection between his participation" in the
SESAME, an international
synchrotron-radiation facility located in Jordan, and the assassination. According to US intelligence sources, Israel is running a secret war against Iran, among techniques used are the killing of important persons in the Iranian atomic energy program. Another source found the assassination of "a 50-year-old researcher with no prominent political voice, no published work with military relevance and no declared links to Iran's nuclear program", as puzzling, although there were comparisons with the disappearance of
Shahram Amiri in 2009 and the death of
Ardeshir Hosseinpour in 2007.
Funeral On 14 January, Ali-Mohammadi was buried. His burial was arranged at Emamzādeh Ali-Akbar Chizar in Tehran on Thursday 14 January 2010. Timesonline described it as "Supporters of Iran's regime hijacked the funeral." As his body was carried from his home in northern Tehran hundreds of government loyalists surrounded it and were shown on Iranian state television waving Iranian flags and chanting anti-American and anti-Israeli slogans.
State investigation Twenty-four-year-old
Majid Jamali Fashi was arrested days after the killing, and in January 2011, Iranian state television aired a confession by Fashi to having killed Ali-Mohammadi on behalf of
Mossad. Fashi's arrest may have come as a result of a September 2009
WikiLeaks diplomatic cable from the US Embassy in
Baku,
Azerbaijan. The cable quoted an Iranian source who was a licensed martial arts coach who was in contact with the Americans. Fashi was reportedly in Baku to participate in an international martial arts competition days before the cable was written. On 28 August 2011, Fashi was convicted and sentenced to death by the
Islamic Revolutionary Court. He was hanged on 15 May 2012 at
Tehran's
Evin Prison.
Media speculation The
BBC's Tehran correspondent
Jon Leyne said "Iranian media were unusually quick off the mark to report the killing, to show television pictures, and to give the sort of details that usually only emerge after hours, days, or weeks in this secretive state". An anonymous former senior official expressed doubt about the official account of Ali-Mohammadi's assassination and expressed concern that the assassination could be used as an excuse for violence against opposition protesters: "This is an old trick. ... They did it themselves but blame it on opposition groups so that they can easily begin issuing death sentences for protesters. I think this means there could be more violence against the opposition." According to Iranian-Israeli analyst
Meir Javedanfar, It is "possible that [Ali-]Mohammadi was assassinated by a foreign intelligence agency" with the aim of stopping the
Iranian nuclear program and also causing embarrassment for the government of Ahmadinejad. Flynt Leverett, director of
New America Foundation, said that while it is "highly unlikely that the United States was directly involved" in the assassination, it is "possible that a group or an individual" who received financial support as part of the $400 million US covert activities program initiated under Bush administration against Iran, might have carried out the assassination. However, Iranian analyst Muhammad Sahimi thinks it unlikely that the murder was directed against Iran's nuclear program as it is engineers, not nuclear physicists, who are "leading" that program, and in any case Ali-Mohammadi's research was in the general area of particle physics, "which is of a fundamental, rather than practical nature". Ali-Mohammadi was also not under contract with
Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, according to its spokesman
Ali Shirzadian, nor was he affiliated with the universities under the control of the
Revolutionary Guard (
Malek-Ashtar University of Technology and
Imam Hossein University). On the other hand, "a source in Tehran" told Sahimi that Ali-Mohammadi had worked with the
Islamic Revolution Guards "on several projects in the past," and this knowledge combined with the Guard's penchant for exacting vengeance against "anyone who deserts them and joins the opposition" adds to "the suspicion that the hardliners may have had something to do with" his murder.
The Economist also quoted anonymous Western sources describing him as "one of the most important people involved in the [nuclear] programme". It was also reported that he was a professor at Tehran University's Physics faculty as well as a professor at the
IRGC run,
Imam Hossein University which houses a physics research center apparently under control of the IRGC. There were also reports of Israel's involvement in these covert actions, while other reports suggested the creation of a joint assassination team put together by western democracies to neutralize Iranian scientists and engineers. An article in
Time magazine claimed that a Western intelligence source confirmed the truth of the confession made by
Majid Jamali Fashid, who said he assassinated Massoud Ali-Mohammadi on behalf of
Mossad, Israel. The source confirmed that Iranian intelligence had cracked one cell trained and equipped by Mossad, and blamed a "third country" for exposing the cell. ==See also==