First-hand testimony: The son of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, the scientist who was assassinated in Iran on Friday a week ago, spoke over the weekend in an interview with Iranian state television about his father's last moments, and claimed that the assassination was not carried out with a machine gun activated by a satellite, as claimed.
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""There was a real war there," said the son, who was with his father in the car at the time of the incident. Also with them was Fakhrizadeh's wife, who was not injured by the gunfire. "My father was hit four or five times by bullets." The scientist's sons also said that their father was warned by his security team not to go out on the day of the assassination. But he went out anyway, because he intended to attend an important meeting. According to a report in Kan News, a New York Times reporter who covers Iran and the Middle East speculated that based on this information, it can be assumed that the shooter was skilled, and that it was not a machine gun controlled via satellite, as the Revolutionary Guards had announced.