The Jerusalem Post

Israel’s heist a setback for Iran

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM and TOVAH LAZAROFF

Israel delivered a blow to Iran’s nuclear program by spiriting a cache of some 100,000 documents from a secret vault in Tehran that included details about nuclear-weapons production and test sites, senior Israeli officials told reporters on Tuesday.

The comments came one day after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held a press conference in which he detailed the find.

After Netanyahu spoke, questions were raised about the significan­ce of the find, which focused on Project Amad, an Iranian nuclear-weapons program that existed from 1999 to 2003.

It was widely expected that Netanyahu would present proof that Iran is now violation of the 2015 nuclear deal in advance of a May 12 deadline for US President Donald Trump to scrap the deal.

Senior Israeli intelligen­ce officials said the importance of the documents was in the definitive proof they provided of Iran having had a nuclear weapons program and that the country had not destroyed essential documentat­ion related to those efforts.

It was significan­t that Israel could obtain so many documents from Tehran and now has a wealth of new informatio­n about Iran’s nuclear program, the officials added.

Among the critical documents is a map of five secret nuclear test sites. One official quipped that any tests Iran might now do at those sites would no longer remain secret.

Much of the informatio­n contained in the documents involves complex diagrams, graphs and informatio­n, while will take time to reassemble, an official noted, hinting that Israel had captured a number of original documents instead of merely copies.

He refused to speculate on how long it would take for Iran to make up for the loss.

According to a senior intelligen­ce officer involved in the operation, Israel has never received so much original intelligen­ce at one time. The trove includes 55,000 pages of documents and another 50,000 files on 183 compact discs.

“It’s a significan­t amount of informatio­n which expands the knowledge we had on Iran’s program,” the officer said, adding that the best translator­s in the Mossad are still working on the documents, which are written in Farsi, allowing for the possibilit­y that additional intelligen­ce will be gleaned from the remaining documents.

The authentici­ty of the informatio­n makes it impossible for Iran to continue to deny their nuclear program, the officer continued, who said the evidence Israel now has is on a “whole different level.”

According to the officer, Israel cannot present all of the “truly incriminat­ing photos” that Jerusalem now has in its possession “because they clearly show how to build an atomic weapon.

“We have a different level of proof of their weapons programs, and that it was ordered by the Iranian leadership. We have new details on the equipment the Iranians have, who the people involved are, and more. Iran will need to explain all of them,” he said.

While a half-ton of documents were smuggled out of what was described as a “dilapidate­d warehouse” in the southern Tehran neighborho­od of Shorabad to Israel, some documents were left behind because “it was very heavy,” the intelligen­ce officer said.

According to The New York Times, “Israel’s Mossad intelligen­ce service discovered the warehouse in February 2016, and had the building under surveillan­ce since then. Mossad operatives broke into the building one night last January, removed the original documents and smuggled them back to Israel the same night.”

One senior intelligen­ce officer stated, “There’s also a question of why they have this archive and why they actively hid it in a building which from the outside looks abandoned. If Iran never developed and never planned to develop nuclear weapons, then why would they do this?”

The documentat­ion gives the internatio­nal community the ability to confront Iranian lies with truth regarding its nuclear ambitions, officials said.

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