The weapon was reportedly able to target the scientist in a car — while sparing his wife sitting next to him.

Machine Gun

Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, Iran's top nuclear scientist, was killed on November 27 by a "smart satellite-controlled machine gun" that used AI, the country's Revolutionary Guards commander Brig-Gen Ali Fadavi told local media, as the BBC reports.

The scientist was allegedly killed by a weapon mounted to a pickup truck, which shot Fakhrizadeh inside a vehicle from a distance — but spared his wife sitting right next to him.

The weapon "focused only on martyr Fakhrizadeh's face in a way that his wife, despite being only 25cm [10 inches] away, was not shot," Gen Fadavi, Revolutionary Guards deputy commander, told a ceremony on Sunday, as quoted by the BBC.

Arch Nemeses

None of these claims have yet to be verified by outside sources and no proof has yet to be provided by Iranian officials.

If Iran's officials are to be believed, Israel could be behind the attack, an assassination targeting the brains behind Iran's efforts to develop nuclear weapons, as Al Jazeera points out.

Israel has neither confirmed nor denied involvement.

Killer Robots

Some doubt the assassination was carried out via robot, as experts told CNN. Technologies would have to be smuggled into the country, including a communications relay, which could easily be intercepted by Iranian forces.

Fakhrizadeh has however been a target of Israeli for a long time, a senior US administration official told CNN.

If confirmed, the assassination could set a troubling precedent.

"If such devices were autonomous, using face-recognition to pinpoint and kill people, we would be on a downhill roll that would entirely disrupt global security," Noel Sharkey, a member of the Campaign Against Killer Robots, told the BBC.

READ MORE: Mohsen Fakhrizadeh: 'Machine-gun with AI' used to kill Iran scientist [BBC]

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