Iran’s ambassador to London has dismissed allegations that the Islamic Republic was involved in threats against UK-based Iranian journalists in his first appearance before the UK Parliament.
Ambassador Ali Mousavi was attending a meeting of the UK Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee on the Iran-Israel conflict on June 17, where MPs grilled him over what they called Tehran-backed plots against dissident Iranian journalists in Britain.
“These issues are some allegations against and blaming my country,” he said according to an official transcript. “We have some criticism regarding BBC Persian’s activities. They are intervening in Iranian domestic affairs.”
Pressed by MP John Whittingdale on more than 20 plots cited by MI5 targeting exiled Iranian journalists, Mousavi denied Iranian involvement and pushed for bilateral security discussions instead.
“If you have any evidence, please submit it, and we will consider it,” he said.
Iran's ambassador to London Ali Mousavi (left) and Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araghchi
Mousavi said Tehran was ready to co-operate with British agencies but deflected on specific allegations.
In the meeting with Mousavi, MP Whittingdale said he had visited the headquarters of Iran International "whose journalists have been subjected to threats from Iran on a daily basis."
The lawmaker, who leads the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Media Freedom, also cited constant harassment of the families of BBC Persian journalists in Iran.
Mousavi appeared before the UK parliament a few days before the family of an Iran International presenter was detained in Tehran in what the Persian-language broadcaster called an attempt to coerce her resignation.
“This deeply reprehensible tactic marks a dangerous escalation,” Iran International said.
Earlier this month, the BBC also accused Iran of intensifying its harassment of BBC Persian journalists by threatening their families inside Iran. The broadcaster described the actions as “a sharp and deeply troubling escalation” of its long-running campaign of intimidation.
RSF urges global action
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) on Wednesday called for global action over what it described as Iran’s escalating use of transnational repression, which appears to have intensified in response to the uncensored coverage of the Israel-Iran conflict.
In a statement, the RSF said it has documented the targeting of hundreds of Iranian diaspora journalists abroad, warning that these actions form part of a broader strategy by Iranian authorities to suppress dissent and restrict press freedom beyond their borders.
In March, the UK government decided to place the Islamic Republic’s intelligence and security establishment on the highest tier of its foreign influence watchlist following threats to Iranian journalists over the past three years.
Under the designation, Iran and anybody acting on its behalf would be deemed a potential security threat and compelled to register their activities in the UK. Not doing so would potentially incur a five-year prison sentence.
Israel's Joint Chief of Staff, General Eyal Zamir, said on Wednesday there had been "systemic" damage to Iran's nuclear program.
“Based on the assessment of senior officials in the Military Intelligence Directorate, the damage to the nuclear program is not a pinpoint strike but a systemic one,” General Zamir added. “We will not allow Iran to produce weapons of mass destruction.”
Intercepted communications suggest that Iranian military leaders have been misrepresenting the scale of destruction to the country’s political leadership, Axios reported Wednesday citing Israeli officials, who described damage to the nuclear sites as very significant.
"The Iranians themselves still do not have a clear understanding of what has happened to some of their nuclear facilities,” one of the sources said.
The above-ground enrichment facilities in Natanz have been completely destroyed, Axios cited another Israeli official as saying, and there are indications that the underground infrastructure at this site has also collapsed.
Central Intelligence Agency Director John Ratcliffe said on Wednesday that solid new evidence indicated the Iranian nuclear program was set back by years by US attacks, without specifying the evidence.
"This includes new intelligence from a historically reliable and accurate source/method that several key Iranian nuclear facilities were destroyed and would have to be rebuilt over the course of years," Ratcliffe said in a statement.
"We have never trusted and never will trust this barbaric foe," the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps chief commander said, referring to Israel.
"All our fighters are ready to shoot, and if the adversary makes any mistake, we will reciprocate to the same extent we have in the last 12 days," Mohammad Pakpour said on Wednesday.
"We never doubt for even a second our duty to defend this country."