French authorities on Tuesday froze the assets of the internal security section of Iran's Intelligence Ministry as well as those of two Iranians, and all but pointed a finger at Tehran as the force behind an alleged plot to bomb an Iranian exile group's rally near Paris in June.
Israel's national intelligence agency, the Mossad, tipped off French authorities before the planned Iranian terrorist attack on French soil.
Police also raided the headquarters of a Muslim religious association in northern France, seizing weapons and detaining three people. The building houses a Shiite federation, an anti-Zionist party and other groups. The assets of the groups and their leaders were frozen as well.
A joint statement by France's interior, economy and foreign ministers said the six-month lien imposed on the Intelligence Ministry's internal security section was linked to the alleged attempt to bomb the June 30 rally outside Paris of the People's Mujahideen of Iran, or MEK.
"An attempted attack was thwarted," the statement said. "This act of an extreme gravity envisioned on our territory could not go without a response."
The ministers called the action "preventative, targeted and proportionate." The statement did not explain what funds might be in France.
In the second move, authorities froze the assets of Centre Zahra France, a Muslim association in the town of Grande-Synthe, outside Dunkirk, as well as those of three organizations and four men linked to the groups.
The three groups are under Zahra France's wing and include the Shiite Federation of France and the Anti-Zionist Party.
One of Zahra France's leaders, Yahia Gouasmi, is president of the Anti-Zionist Party. In 2010, he met with the Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in Lebanon.
The previous year, he met in Tehran with then-Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who predicted Israel's demise.
Responding to Tuesday's events, Gouasmi, 68, told reporters: "It's Israel that's behind this."
One of the two Iranians targeted in the freeze of the Intelligence Ministry section was Assadollah Asadi, a Vienna-based Iranian diplomat who is a suspect in the alleged attack on exile group MEK's rally.
Assadi was arrested in July near the German city of Aschaffenburg on a European warrant after a couple with Iranian roots was stopped in Belgium and authorities reported finding powerful explosives in their car. A German court Monday approved the diplomat's extradition to Belgium.
The other Iranian identified by the French ministries was Saeid Hashemi Moghadam. His alleged role in the attack plot was not immediately clear.
"We must dry up the channels of financing of terrorists to end their intolerable activities," Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire said in the statement.
A French official said freezing assets of the Iranian government's internal security section and of Zahra France was a "signal that France wants to send to Iran" that "no form of interference" on France territory would be tolerated.
"Behind all this was a long, meticulous and detailed investigation by our [intelligence] services that enabled us to reach the conclusion, without any doubt, that responsibility fell on the [Iranian] intelligence ministry," he said, saying that Moghadam had ordered the attack.