Over the weekend, however, an editorial in Iran's Kayhan pro-regime newspaper warned that compared to the April attack, Tehran's attack this time would target areas deep inside Israel, including Tel Aviv, Haifa, the homes of Israeli officials, and strategic centres.
The Iranian sources also told Reuters that in a bid to prevent a wider West Asia (Middle East) war, Shoigu's visit was only one of the several avenues that Moscow had employed to relay the need for restraint to Tehran, while condemning Haniyeh's killing as "a very dangerous assassination" at the same time.
While Iran initially claimed that an Israeli missile fired from nearby was responsible for killing Haniyeh in a Tehran guesthouse, Biden officials reportedly said that the Iranian government had privately accepted that a bomb placed in his room led to his death.
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