TEHRAN, Iran - An Iranian hard-line student group unveiled a new video game
Monday that simulates an attempt to rescue two Iranian nuclear experts kidnapped
by the US military and held in Iraq and Israel.
 Iranian Alireza Masaeli, designer of the first Iranian made
Nuclear Energy computer game 'The Special Operation' speaks during
presentation of the game in Tehran Monday July 16, 2007. [AP]
 |
The "Rescue the Nuke Scientist"
video game, designed by the Union of Students Islamic Association, was described
by its creators as a response to a US-based company's "Assault on Iran" game,
which depicts an American attack on an Iranian nuclear facility.
"This is our defense against the enemy's cultural onslaught," Mohammad Taqi
Fakhrian, a leader of the student group, told reporters Monday.
Iran and the US have been in a standoff over Iran's nuclear program, which
Washington alleges is a cover for developing atomic weapons. Tehran denies the
charges and says its nuclear projects have peaceful purposes.
Tensions also have escalated over the detention of five Iranians in Iraq. US
authorities have said the five include members of Iran's elite Quds Force, which
is accused of arming and training Iraqi militants. Iran has denied the
allegations and insists the five are merely diplomats.
In "Rescue the Nuke Scientist," US troops capture a husband-and-wife team of
nuclear engineers during a pilgrimage to Karbala, a holy site for Shiite
Muslims, in central Iraq. Game players take on the role of Iranian security
forces carrying out a mission code-named "The Special Operation," which involves
penetrating fortified locations to free the nuclear scientists, who are moved
from Iraq to Israel.
To complete the game successfully, players have to enter Israel to rescue the
nuclear scientists, kill US and Israeli troops and seize their laptops
containing secret information.
If players fail a mission, a message pops up saying: "With resistance, you
can battle the enemy."
"We tried to promote the idea of defense, sacrifice and martyrdom in this
game," Fakhrian said.
Fakhrian said his group was trying to market the video game first in Iran and
other Muslim countries. But the group also has plans to bring the game, which
comes on a CD for computers, to Western countries, he said.
The game comes from the same student group that was behind the infamous
"World Without Zionism" conference in 2005 where President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
called for Israel to be "wiped off the map."
Ali Reza Masaeli, leader of the group that designed the new game, said it
took three years for his technical team to produce it. The team was based in
Isfahan, a city in central Iran that houses a nuclear site.
"It is an entirely Iranian product in response to the US cyber war against
Iran," Masaeli said.
This game follows the free "Assault on Iran" online series from New
York-based Kuma Reality Games. That game simulates US Special Forces destroying
the Natanz uranium enrichment facility in central Iran. A message left with
Kuma's public relations agency was not immediately returned.