The Jerusalem Post

Germany sold Iran tech for use in Syrian chemical attacks

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL

Germany’s Federal Office for Economic Affairs and Export Control approved a license for a company to sell military applicable technology to Iranian companies that subsequent­ly was used in Syrian regime chemical weapons attacks, reported the German publicatio­n Bild on Monday.

The German company Krempel, located near the southern city of Stuttgart, sold electronic press boards to Iranian companies that were used in the production of rockets.

The Jerusalem Post reported in 2017 that multiple German intelligen­ce reports revealed that Iran sought chemical and biological weapon technology in the federal republic.

The research of the human rights group, Syrians for Truth and Justice, Bild and the online investigat­ive journalist website Bellingcat, showed photograph­s of the rocket remains with the company logo of Krempel and the product signature: “Made in Germany.”

The rocket debris was found after two poisonous gas attacks were conducted by Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime. Krempel confirmed the delivery of the electronic technology “Presspan PSP-3040,” an insulating material with a cellulose base used for insulation.

The chemical attacks took place on January 22 and February 1. The gas attack in January resulted in 21 injuries, including many children.

Bild quoted Eliot Higgins from Bellingcat, who said that both gas attacks showed that “the rockets were produced in 2016 and delivered from Iran.”

The Krempel Group describes itself on its website as “an independen­t manufactur­er of high quality semi-finished products and a leading global system supplier of modern materials. Our electrical insulation­s, composites, solar and electronic materials, as well as special laminates, enjoy an excellent reputation worldwide and we are global market leaders in many of these sectors.”

The company has facilities and distributi­on companies in the UK, Poland, China, the UK, US and Austria. It is unclear if the Krempel delivery of the advanced technology is a violation of UN regulation­s and US sanctions.

A spokesman for Krempel told Bild that the company was “shocked... that its Presspan PSP-3040 apparently was used in motors that were applied to weapons of war.”

Bild wrote that the delivery of dual-use technology to Iran, which can be used for both military and civilian purposes, raises questions whether Germany’s export control policy is feeble.

Germany is Iran’s largest and most important EU trade partner. German exports to Iran increased in 2017 by 19%, amounting to just under €2.4 billion in export volume. The country’s Iran regime-friendly foreign minister Sigmar Gabriel has traveled with two business delegation­s to Iran to boost trade.

The British publicatio­n, Jane’s Defence Weekly, reported in 2005 that the Islamic Republic would work with Syria to build an “innovative chemical warfare program.” Iran’s role was to build equipment to produce “hundreds of tons of precursors for VX, sarin and mustard [gases].”

A June intelligen­ce report from the southweste­rn state of Baden-Württember­g, where Kremple is located, 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 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 cyberwarfa­re, espionage, terrorism and weapons of mass destructio­n procuremen­t activities 49 times.

A Chinese import-export company contacted a company in the German state that sells “complex metal producing machines,” the intelligen­ce agency wrote. The technology would aid Iran’s developmen­t of ballistic missiles, it said.

Iran made nearly 40 attempts to obtain illicit nuclear and missile goods from Germany during 2016.

According to a WikiLeaks dispatch on Tehran’s role in chemical warfare: “New Zealand assesses that the cooperatio­n is mainly driven by Iran’s desire for increased strategic importance in the region. New Zealand also assesses that Iran’s biotechnol­ogy sector is far more advanced than Syria’s, and Iran does not mind sharing its knowledge with Syria.”

Assad first used sarin nerve gas to attack the Damascus suburb of Ghouta in 2013, killing nearly 1,500 civilians, including 426 children.

 ?? (Ammar Abdullah/Reuters) ?? A MAN BREATHES through an oxygen mask as another one receives treatment after what rescue workers described as a suspected gas attack in Idlib, Syria last year.
(Ammar Abdullah/Reuters) A MAN BREATHES through an oxygen mask as another one receives treatment after what rescue workers described as a suspected gas attack in Idlib, Syria last year.

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