Israel says killed Iran intel chief, tells military to hunt down officials

No immediate comment or confirmation from Iran

Iran's Minister of Intelligence Esmail Khatib sits with Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian before a speech to defend his cabinet selection to members of parliament in the capital Tehran on August 17, 2024. PHOTO FILE: AFP

Israel said on Wednesday its forces had killed another top Iranian official, Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib, and said its military was authorised to kill any senior figure of the Islamic republic in its sights.

The announcement, the day after Iranian security chief Ali Larijani was confirmed killed in an Israeli strike, is part of a longstanding strategy by Israel to target its enemy's leaders.

"Last night, Iran's Intelligence Minister Khatib was also eliminated," Israeli Defence Minister Katz said in a statement.

"Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and I have authorised the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) to eliminate any senior Iranian official for whom the intelligence and operational circle has been closed, without the need for additional approval," he added.

"We will continue to thwart and hunt them all down."

Read More: Kremlin condemns ‘murder’ of Iranian leadership after Larijani killed in US-Israeli strikes

There was no immediate comment or confirmation from Iran, which had responded with fury and vows of revenge to the death of Larijani.

The two sides have been at war for more than two weeks since US-Israeli attacks on Iran on February 28 assassinated supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and ignited a regional conflict.

Israel said this week it had also targeted Akram al-Ajouri, head of the military wing of the group Palestinian Islamic Jihad, in a strike in Iran.

And it has vowed to hunt down Iran's new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, who has not appeared in public since he succeeded his father.

David Khalfa, co-founder of the Atlantic Middle East Forum, described Israel's strategy as "a campaign of 'counter-regime warfare".

It was "aimed at dismantling the regime's politico-security architecture to make it waver on its foundations", he wrote on X before the news on Khatib.

Load Next Story