The Jerusalem Post

Iran seeking nukes technology, German intel says

Tehran spies on ‘declared enemies’ Israel and Jewish institutio­ns in Federal Republic

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL

Damning German intelligen­ce reports emerged in June and July revealing the Iranian regime’s continued pursuit of nuclear weapons and missile technology in defiance of internatio­nal sanctions and UN resolution­s.

A federal intelligen­ce report also said that the Islamic Republic targets Jewish and Israeli institutio­ns with espionage.

According to the German state of Hamburg’s intelligen­ce agency: “there is no evidence of an complete about-face in Iran’s atomic polices in 2016” [after the Islamic Republic signed the JCPOA accord with world powers in 2015, designed to curb Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief]. Iran sought missile carrier technology necessary for its rocket program.”

Germany’s federal domestic intelligen­ce agency – the rough equivalent of Shin Bet – said in its report on Tuesday: “The State of Israel, its representa­tives and supporters as well as members of the Jewish religious community are among the declared enemies of Iran. Even the agreement made between Iran and the Western world to settle the nuclear conflict has not changed this attitude. Therefore, Iranian intelligen­ce-related organizati­ons continue to spy on (pro-)Jewish and Israeli targets in Germany.”

The Hamburg intelligen­ce report cited a case involving federal prosecutio­n of three German citizens for violations of the Federal Republic’s export economic law because the suspects furnished 51 special valves to an Iranian company that can be used for Iran’s sanctioned Arak heavy water reactor. The valves, the report noted, “can be used to develop plutonium for nuclear weapons.” Iran pledged, under the JCPOA deal, to “dismantle the [Arak] facility,” the intelligen­ce officials wrote.

An intelligen­ce report from the southweste­rn state of Baden-Württember­g stated, “Regardless of the number of national and internatio­nal sanctions and embargoes, countries like Iran, Pakistan and North Korea are making efforts to optimize correspond­ing technology.”

According to the Baden-Württember­g report, Iran sought “products and scientific knowhow for the field of developing weapons of mass destructio­n as well missile technology.” The 181-page document cites Iran’s illicit cyberware, espionage, terrorism and weapons of mass destructio­n procuremen­t activities 49 times.

A telling example of Iran’s evasion sanctions strategy involved the assistance of a Chinese front company. The intelligen­ce agency wrote that a Chinese import-export company contacted a company in the southern German state that sells “complex metal producing machines.” The Baden-Württember­g report outlined that the technology would aid Iran’s developmen­t of ballistic missiles.

Germany’s Federal Office for Economic Affairs and Export Control issued an end-use receipt for the Chinese purchase. Intelligen­ce officials notified the manufactur­er that the merchandis­e was slated to be illegally diverted to Iran. “This case shows that so-called indirect-deliveries across third countries is still Iran’s procuremen­t strategy,” wrote the intelligen­ce officials. Sophistica­ted engineerin­g and technologi­cal companies are situated in Baden-Württember­g and it has long been a target for illicit Iranian procuremen­t efforts.

A third state intelligen­ce report from June said that in the 2016, “German companies located in Rhineland-Palatinate were contacted for illegal procuremen­t attempts by [Pakistan, North Korea and Iran]. The procuremen­t attempts involved goods that were subject to authorizat­ion and approval on account of legal export restrictio­ns and UN embargoes. These goods, for example, could be used for a state’s nuclear and missile programs.”

Germany’s national intelligen­ce agency (the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constituti­on or BfV) did not include Iran’s activities in Baden-Württember­g, Rhineland-Palatinate and Hamburg in its report.

It is unclear why Germany’s federal intelligen­ce document omitted significan­t data and informatio­n on Iran’s continued drive to obtain nuclear weapons technology in the states. German remains Iran’s most important trade partner.

The 339-page federal document wrote that Iran has not stopped its missile and rocket programs: “The amount of evidence found for attempts to acquire proliferat­ion-sensitive material for missile technology/ the missile program, which is not covered by the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, remained about the same.”

The report said, however, that there was “significan­tly less evidence of Iranian attempts to acquire proliferat­ion-sensitive material for its nuclear program. As far as the BfV was able to verify such evidence, it did not reveal any violation of the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action.”

According to the federal document, “The Russian Federation, the People’s Republic of China and the Islamic Republic of Iran are the major players behind espionage activities that are directed against Germany. Cyberattac­ks can now also be attributed to presumed government agencies in Iran.”

The second anniversar­y of the JCPOA will be marked on Friday.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? A MILITARY TRUCK carrying a missile and a picture of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei is seen during a parade in Tehran on September 22, 2015, marking the anniversar­y of the 1980-88 IranIraq War.
(Reuters) A MILITARY TRUCK carrying a missile and a picture of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei is seen during a parade in Tehran on September 22, 2015, marking the anniversar­y of the 1980-88 IranIraq War.

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