
Vahid Razavi, a member of the Vadi family, told the dissident media site that Rouzbeh Vadi was detained a year and a half ago after a dispute at work.
Executed Iranian nuclear scientist Rouzbeh Vadi only confessed to spying for Israel after torture and after the regime threatened his mother, a relative told Iran International in an article published Friday.
Vahid Razavi, a member of the Vadi family, told the dissident media site that Vadi was detained a year and a half ago after a dispute at work.
“Rouzbeh was tortured intensely, to the point that bones in his leg and two ribs were broken, and then his mother was arrested and jailed,” Razavi said.
Interrogators, he claimed, photographed Vadi’s mother in custody and showed the images to him “to extract a forced confession,” Razavi claimed.
The judiciary claimed Vadi was convicted after he transferred classified information about one of the scientists killed in the June attacks to Mossad.
Iranian nuclear scientists confesses to espionage for Israel
Interrogators forced Vadi to confess and deliver his confession in a televised address by threatening to torture his mother.
"Key facilities were Fordow and Natanz (uranium enrichment plants), for which I sent information. I told them I knew this and that about Fordow, they (Mossad agent) told me to send everything," Vadi said in what IRIB described as a confession video it ran on the air.
"The entry and exit of nuclear material into the Uranium Conversion Facility (UCF) and Fuel Manufacturing Plant (FMP) were very important to them," Vadi, who held a PhD in nuclear engineering from Amir Kabir University of Technology, added.
A voiceover in the video said that Vadi met five times with Mossad agents while in Vienna and was asked to open a cryptocurrency account to receive payment for his services. The defendant said in the video that Mossad had promised him a foreign passport should he complete a long-term collaboration.
latest_posts
- 1
The Reduced Portage Horse: An Inheritance Reconsidered for Present day Experience - 2
Your big brain makes you human – count your neurons when you count your blessings - 3
Research highlights potential dangers of ultra-processed foods for women under 50 regarding precancerous polyps - 4
Foot fossil discovery could reshape human evolutionary history - 5
Ultra-Orthodox protests erupt across Israel on haredi IDF enlistment day
Fiber is something most people could use more of. But experts advise caution with 'fibermaxxing'
Egypt's cafés and shops forced to close early due to Iran war
Well known SUVs With Low Energy Utilization In 2024 vote
Euclid space telescope sees gorgeous cosmic cloud | Space photo of the day for Nov. 18, 2025
International issues on the agenda as Frances's Macron visits China
Lucrative Positions in the Advancing Position Market of 2024
At UN climate conference, some activists and scientists want more talk on reforming agriculture
The 12 biggest space stories of 2025 — according to you
Instructions to Figure out the Various Phases of Cellular breakdown in the lungs













