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On Monday, Iran's state TV broadcast a purported confession by one of those arrested in which the unidentified young man said he underwent training in Israel on how to place bombs on cars. The man said he received training at a military camp between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. "Two new Iranian-made motorbikes were there. ... They told me where to go, where to stop, who to call and how to do things back in Iran," he said. What exactly made the slain physics professor a target remains a mystery. He had no prominent political voice, no published work with military relevance and no declared links to the country's nuclear program, though his work included some aspects of nuclear theory. Still, Iran sought to portray his killing as part of an attack on the country's scientific and nuclear advances. Israel, the United States and other nations suspect Iran is intent on using its civil nuclear energy program as cover for developing atomic weapons. Iran insists its nuclear work is entirely peaceful.
[Associated
Press;
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