The Mercury News

U.S. seeks to sabotage Iranian missiles

- By The New York Times

WARSAW, POLAND >> The Trump White House has accelerate­d a secret American program to sabotage Iran’s missiles and rockets, according to current and former administra­tion officials, who described it as part of an expanding campaign by the United States to undercut Tehran’s military and isolate its economy.

Officials said it was impossible to measure precisely the success of the classified program, which has never been publicly acknowledg­ed. But in the past month alone, two Iranian attempts to launch satellites have failed within minutes.

Those two rocket failures — one that Iran announced on Jan. 15 and the other, an unacknowle­dged attempt, on Feb. 5 — were part of a pattern over the past 11 years. In that time, 67 percent of Iranian orbital launches have failed, an astonishin­gly high number compared to a 5 percent failure rate worldwide for similar space launches.

The setbacks have not deterred Iran. This week, President Hassan Rouhani singled out Tehran’s missile fleets as he vowed to “continue our path and our military power.”

The Trump administra­tion maintains that Iran’s space program is merely a cover for its attempts to develop a ballistic missile powerful enough to send nuclear warheads flying between continents.

Hours after the Jan. 15 attempt, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo noted that Iran’s satellite launchers have technologi­es “virtually identical and interchang­eable with those used in ballistic missiles.”

The launch failures prompted The New York Times to seek out more than a half-dozen current and former government officials who have worked on the U.S. sabotage program over the past dozen years. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the covert program.

The officials described a far-reaching effort, created under President George W. Bush, to slip faulty parts and materials into Iran’s aerospace supply chains. The program was active early in the Obama administra­tion, but had eased by 2017, when Pompeo took over as the director of the CIA and injected it with new resources.

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