Photo Credit: FNA
'Missile Strike' -- a new anti-Israel game launched by Iran.

Iran has come up with a new video game that features a missile attack on Haifa. This is a reality Israelis have lived with for years.

Iranian-backed Hezbollah terrorists in Lebanon have fired Katyusha rockets at northern Israeli civilians not only during the past two Lebanon Wars but also at various intervals in between as well.

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Now, apparently, the attacks on northern Israel have become the subject of a cellphone game.

‘Missile Strike’ was unveiled Friday on International Quds Day – the Iranian-created international holiday devoted to the destruction of Israel.

The new anti-Israel game “displays Iran’s missile power and the Zelzal, Zolfaqar and Sejjil missiles (all built in Iran)” which are used by the players in the game’s first stage, according to game production project manager Mehdi Atash Jaam, who spoke with Iranian news agency FNA on Saturday.

‘Missile Strike’ , the anti-Israel game created by Iranian scientists, is intended to be played on a cell phone.

“In this game, users break into the Zionist regime’s air defense and target Israel,” he explained.

Elaborating on the reason for developing a game in which the Iranian missiles destroy targets in Israel, Atash Jaam said that it was “a move in retaliation for the console game, ‘Battlefield’, that includes scenes simulating attacks on Tehran and its Milad Tower.”

The United States and five other world powers are expected to conclude a deal with Iran that will allow its scientists to continue their work on nuclear technology, albeit surreptitiously. Israel is concerned this may result in the country’s ultimate achievement of its goal: the creation of a nuclear weapon with which to make good on its vow to annihilate the State of Israel.


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Hana Levi Julian is a Middle East news analyst with a degree in Mass Communication and Journalism from Southern Connecticut State University. A past columnist with The Jewish Press and senior editor at Arutz 7, Ms. Julian has written for Babble.com, Chabad.org and other media outlets, in addition to her years working in broadcast journalism.