Yet another strange and unexplained explosion has rocked central Iran on Sunday, reports state-owned Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA).
Citing no injuries during the large explosion, it occurred at a power station in the city of Islamabad, which is in the central province of Isfahan.
At this point, the spate of 'mystery' blasts and fires which has damaged key military, nuclear, and industrial sites across Iran - especially in and around Tehran - is approaching a dozen in only the past month.
Separately on Sunday, cellophane factory in northwest Iran erupted in fire. Video and images showed a huge cloud of smoke billowing from the site through the day as firefighters struggled to put it out.
Iran’s civil defense organization chief, Ghulam Reza Jalali, was cited in state media as saying Iran is not ruling out sabotage on the power plant either by internal opposition groups or externally supported entities.
To review, all of this comes after earlier this month an advanced centrifuge assembly plant at Iran's Natanz nuclear site was destroyed in a mysterious fire which is increasingly being blamed on Israeli or US intelligence:
Mainstream media is also increasingly laying blame on an Israeli Mossad sabotage campaign, especially prior to the US presidential election, given concern that if Joe Biden takes the White House, Israel will be pressured to stop such sabotage campaigns possibly leading to war.
"Israel has long targeted nuclear programs in the Middle East in secret, open, and openly secret ways," writes Vox. "Simply put, officials in Jerusalem worry Iran could more credibly threaten Israel’s existence if it had a nuclear weapon," the report adds.
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