The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US says Iran behind ‘probable death’ of ex-FBI agent

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WASHINGTON: The United States on Monday for the first time accused Iran of direct involvemen­t in the “probable death” of former FBI agent Bob Levinson, who vanished 13 years ago.

Releasing the finding a month before President-elect Joe Biden takes office, Donald Trump’s administra­tion urged his successor to prioritize the release of at least three Americans in Iranian custody as part of an expected resumption of diplomacy.

“The government of Iran pledged to provide assistance in bringing Bob Levinson home, but it has never followed through,” FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said in a statement.

“The truth is that Iranian intelligen­ce officers – with the approval of senior Iranian officials – were involved in Bob’s abduction and detention.”

The Treasury Department announced that it was imposing sanctions on two Iranians identified as intelligen­ce agents, Mohammad Baseri and Ahmad Khazai, saying they “were involved in the abduction, detention and probable death of Mr. Levinson.”

The sanctions in themselves were largely symbolic as Iranian agents were unlikely to have bank accounts in the United States, although the move will impede their internatio­nal movements.

A senior US official, speaking to reporters on condition of anonymity, called on the incoming Biden administra­tion to address the question of missing Americans.

“There should be no agreement negotiated with Iran ever again that doesn’t free the Americans who are unjustly detained in that country,” the official said, saying that Iran’s clerical regime “is 41 years old and has a 41-yearold record of hostage-taking.”

Trump has imposed sweeping sanctions on Iran, including trying to stop all of its oil exports, and exited an agreement negotiated by his predecesso­r Barack Obama under which Iran dramatical­ly scaled back its nuclear program.

Upon sealing of the 2015 accord, Iran agreed to free four US citizens in its custody. The deal outraged members of Trump’s Republican Party because Obama also unfroze Iranian assets.

Levinson, who disappeare­d when George W Bush was president and would have turned 72 this year, was one of the most mysterious cases of Americans going missing in the archadvers­ary.

The father of seven vanished in March 2007 in Kish, an island that has more lenient visa rules than the rest of Iran, and was said to have been investigat­ing cigarette counterfei­ting.

But The Washington Post reported in 2013 that Levinson, who had retired from the FBI, was working for the CIA and had gone on a rogue mission aimed at gathering intelligen­ce on Iran.

It said at the time that the CIA paid $2.5 million to Levinson’s wife Christine, accepting responsibi­lity for his disappeara­nce.

Iranian officials have repeatedly said they had no informatio­n on Levinson.

In 2010, a videotape emerged of a haggard, bearded Levinson wearing an orange jumpsuit of the sort worn by prisoners being detained indefinite­ly at the US naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba – raising speculatio­n, later downplayed by US officials, that he was being held by extremists in Pakistan.

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Bob Levinson

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