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FOREIGN AFFAIRSTOP

Israel Strikes Iran’s Nuclear facilities and Military Elite, Signals a Dangerous New Phase

By Shyam Bhatia

London, June 13. In one of the most audacious operations in modern Middle East history, Israeli forces have killed at least eight of Iran’s most senior security and scientific figures in a series of precision airstrikes on targets in and around the capital.

Among the dead are Major General Hossein Salami, commander of Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard Corps, and Major General Mohammad Bagheri, chief of the armed forces general staff. But perhaps even more consequential is the simultaneous assassination of six top nuclear scientists — including former Atomic Energy Organization chief Fereydoon Abbasi-Davani, theoretical physicist Mohammad Mehdi Tehranchi, and reactor specialist Ahmadreza Zolfaghari.

The attack marks the most significant decapitation strike on Iranian leadership since the 2020 US drone killing of General Qassem Soleimani. Iranian officials have vowed retaliation, while analysts warn that the operation could provoke a regional escalation and reshape the future of Iran’s nuclear programme.

This was not merely a symbolic blow. It was a coordinated attempt to destroy Iran’s scientific and military command infrastructure in a single night.

Twelve hours after the strikes, by some 200 war jets over 100 Iranian targets, Israel said its operations would continue till its objective of securing itself against a radical Iranian regime is achieved.

Blackouts and Iran’s Brain Trust

In the early hours of June 13, 2025, the lights flickered and dimmed across northern Tehran. Moments later, shockwaves from precision airstrikes reverberated through the capital and beyond. This was not just another covert operation. It was a declaration — delivered with missiles, drones, and surgical firepower — that Israel is willing to strike at the very core of Iran’s strategic brain trust.

The scale and precision of the attack stunned even seasoned observers. It was the most significant targeted killing of Iranian leaders since the US drone strike that eliminated General Qassem Soleimani in Baghdad five years earlier. But this time, the losses cut deeper. Iran’s most senior military officials and leading nuclear scientists were struck down in a single coordinated assault.

Among the dead were two of the most powerful men in Iran’s military establishment:

  • Major General Hossein Salami, commander-in-chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), widely seen as the ideological heartbeat of Iran’s armed forces.
  • Major General Mohammad Bagheri, chief of staff of the Iranian armed forces, a strategist who oversaw Iran’s coordination of conventional, proxy, and missile forces.

Their deaths alone would have sent shockwaves through the Islamic Republic. But the real gut-punch came with the simultaneous assassination of six nuclear scientists — men whose collective knowledge had taken decades to build Iran’s nuclear pride:

  • Fereydoon Abbasi-Davani, a nuclear physicist and former head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, had already survived one assassination attempt in 2010. This time, he was not so lucky.
  • Professor Mohammad Mehdi Tehranchi, theoretical physicist and president of Islamic Azad University, was one of the rare scholars who bridged the academic and defense worlds.
  • Abdolhamid Minouchehr, dean at Shahid Beheshti University, had helped shape Iran’s next generation of nuclear engineers.
  • Ahmadreza Zolfaghari, also from Shahid Beheshti, was a respected reactor systems expert.
  • Seyyed Amirhossein Feqhi and Dr. Motalleblizadeh — less known publicly, but with senior technical roles in Iran’s nuclear infrastructure — rounded out the fatal tally.

In a single night, Israel succeeded in doing what no combination of sanctions, cyberattacks, or diplomatic negotiations had managed: it wiped out the front line of Iran’s nuclear intellectual elite.

Israeli Objective

Israel’s strategic intent appears twofold: to degrade Iran’s capacity for developing a nuclear weapon, and to signal to both allies and adversaries that it retains unmatched reach and intelligence inside the Islamic Republic. But this campaign of “decapitation by drone” comes at a cost—and it may prove to be a deeply destabilising one.

In the short term, Iran will grieve, rage, and retaliate. In the long term, it will adapt, militarise, and harden. The scientists may be dead, but the programme would live on, as Iran says, and it may now evolve into something far more dangerous.

How Iran May Rebuild

That Iran will attempt to rebuild its nuclear programme is not in doubt. The real question is how — and how quickly.

Iran’s nuclear infrastructure was always built with redundancy in mind —personnel, documentation, and technical procedures are dispersed across multiple sites, many of them underground or within military compounds. While the deaths are a grievous blow, they are unlikely to halt progress entirely.

Expect a migration underground—not just physically, but bureaucratically.

What was once run through semi-civilian institutions like universities may now be fully absorbed by the IRGC. Scientists may no longer publish or travel. New facilities may be built in tunnels, shielded by radar-absorbing concrete, far from the eyes of IAEA inspectors.

Iran may intensify partnerships with Russia, China, and of course North Korea, which has already expressed support. These states, under varying degrees of Western sanctions, share Iran’s interest in counterbalancing US-led hegemony.

Russian advisors may assist with security hardening. Chinese institutions could offer remote training and access to modelling software. North Korea might even share weaponisation data — covertly, of course, and at a price.

Emphasis on Science and Nuclear Studies

Iran’s academic institutions still churn out thousands of science graduates every year.

Though expertise at the level of Tehranchi or Abbasi cannot be replicated overnight, the Islamic Republic has a pipeline of young scientists, many trained abroad. These recruits may now be fast-tracked into military-academic programmes under tight ideological screening and protection.

In a society that reveres martyrdom, the assassinated scientists will be lionised. Already, posters of the slain physicists are being raised on campuses. Their stories are being told not as tales of caution, but of sacrifice. In a paradoxical twist, the killings may motivate more young Iranians to join the nuclear programme — not despite the danger, but because of it.

The June 13 strikes do not exist in isolation. They represents a larger trend — the erosion of boundaries between war and peace, civilian and military, intelligence and academia.

Iran has long walked a careful line: enriching uranium but stopping short of a bomb; conducting missile tests but avoiding open conflict.

That line may now disappear. With its moderates dead and its facilities vulnerable, Iran has little incentive to remain ambiguous. It may move faster and more openly toward the threshold of nuclear capability—not as deterrence, but as insurance.

Israel’s policy of pre-emptive assassination — rarely acknowledged but widely understood — has successfully bought time. But time is not the same as peace.

Tehran may now feel compelled to respond in kind, whether through asymmetric proxy action, cyber sabotage, or attacks on Israeli or Western interests abroad. In killing the minds behind the machine, Israel may have triggered a cycle that even it cannot control.

When professors and researchers are killed for their knowledge, the consequences ripple far beyond national borders. Academic collaboration becomes suspect. Conferences become targets. The global scientific commons, already fractured by politics, may now become militarised. Who would dare study nuclear physics in Iran—or publish a paper on it—knowing what it might cost?

This strike formalises a doctrine that has been building since the 2000s: that nuclear and military scientists are combatants, and ideas are munitions.

The implications for international law, academia, and ethics are vast. It invites a new kind of cold war—one fought not just with weapons, but with knowledge.

Iran’s retaliation is inevitable. But the danger lies not in the immediate response, but in the long-term shift in posture. Tehran has already announced that it will suspend cooperation with international nuclear inspectors. More troublingly, satellite imagery suggests a fresh flurry of construction activity near the nuclear enrichment plant at Natanz and Fordow.

In the wider Middle East, Sunni Arab states allied with the West are nervously watching. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt have all flirted with nuclear power. If Iran resumes its weapons path, others may follow. The region’s fragile balance of terror may tip into a full-blown arms race.

Deterrence

Israel, meanwhile, has gambled everything on deterrence.

Its message is clear: no capability, no personnel, no institution is beyond its reach. But in doing so, it has also exposed itself to a deeper truth: that permanent security is an illusion. Every act of control invites challenge. Every silencing of a mind invites the birth of another.

What happened on June 13 was not simply an act of war. It was an attempt to erase memory — to decapitate a state by killing its thinkers. It may succeed in delaying Iran’s nuclear ambitions. It may even save lives, in the narrow logic of deterrence. But it has also transformed the battlefield.

The war over Iran’s nuclear future is no longer about enrichment percentages or breakout timelines. It is about legacy, imagination, and who controls the future of scientific knowledge in a contested world.

From an Iranian viewpoint, the scientists are dead. But their notebooks remain. Their students remember. And the machine they built, battered but intact, continues to hum beneath the desert floor — quieter now, but no less determined.

(Shyam Bhatia is author of Nuclear Rivals in the Middle East)

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