Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Video of captive ascribed to Iran

U.S. officials see role by Tehran in FBI retiree’s vanishing

- ADAM GOLDMAN AND MATT APUZZO

WASHINGTON — Two years after a video and photograph­s of retired FBI agent Robert Levinson raised the possibilit­y that the missing American was being held by terrorists, U.S. officials now see the government of Iran behind the images, intelligen­ce officials said.

Levinson, a private investigat­or, disappeare­d in 2007 on the Iranian island of Kish. The Iranian government has repeatedly denied knowing anything about his disappeara­nce, and the disturbing video and photos that Levinson’s family received in late 2010 and early 2011 seemed to give credence to the idea.

The extraordin­ary photos — showing Levinson’s hair wild and gray, his beard long and unkempt — are being seen for the first time publicly after the family provided copies to The Associated Press. The video was released previously.

In response to Iran’s repeated denials and amid secret conversati­ons with Iran’s government, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said in a statement in March 2011 that Levinson was being held somewhere in South Asia. The implicatio­n was that Levinson might be in the hands of a terrorist group or criminal organizati­on somewhere in Pakistan or Afghanista­n.

The statement was a goodwill gesture to Iran, one that the U.S. hoped would prod Tehran to help bring him home. But nothing happened. Two years later, with the investigat­ion stalled, the consensus now among some U.S. officials involved in the case is that despite years of denials, Iran’s intelligen­ce service was almost certainly behind the 54-second video and five photograph­s of Levinson that were e-mailed anonymousl­y to his family. The tradecraft used to send those items was too good, indicating profession­al spies were behind them, the officials said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to talk publicly.

While everything dealing with Iran is murky, the officials’ conclusion is based on the U.S. government’s best intelligen­ce analysis.

The photos, for example, portray Levinson in an orange jumpsuit like those worn by detainees at the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay. The family received them by e-mail in April 2011. In each photo, he held a sign bearing a different message.

“I am here in Guantanamo,” one said. “Do you know where it is?”

Another read: “This is the result of 30 years serving for USA.”

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d has personally and repeatedly criticized the U.S. over its detention facility at Guantanamo Bay.

U.S. operatives in Afghanista­n managed to trace the cell phone used to send the photograph­s, officials said. But the owner had nothing to do with the photos, and the trail went cold.

It was that way, too, with the video the family received. It was sent from a cyber-cafe in Pakistan in November 2010. The video depicted a haggard Levinson, who said he was being held by a “group.” In the background, Pashtun wedding music can be heard. The Pashtun people live primarily in Pakistan and Afghanista­n, just across Iran’s eastern border.

Yet the sender left no clues to his identity and never used that e-mail address again.

Whoever was behind the photos and video was no amateur, U.S. authoritie­s concluded. They made no mistakes, leading investigat­ors to conclude it had to be a profession­al intelligen­ce service like Iran’s Ministry of Intelligen­ce and Security.

Levinson’s wife, Christine, provided the photos to the AP because she felt her husband’s disappeara­nce was not getting the attention it deserves from the government.

“We assumed there would be some kind of follow-up, and we didn’t get any,” Christine Levinson said. “After those pictures came, we received nothing.”

In one meeting between the two countries, the Iranians told the U.S. that they were looking for Levinson and were conducting raids in Baluchista­n, a mountainou­s region that includes parts of Pakistan, Iran and Afghanista­n, U.S. officials said. But the U.S. ultimately concluded that the Iranians made up the story. There were no raids, and officials determined that the episode was a ruse by Iranian counterint­elligence to learn how U.S. intelligen­ce agencies work.

An expert on Russian organized crime, Levinson retired from the FBI in 1998 and became a private investigat­or. He was investigat­ing cigarette smuggling in early 2007, and his family has said that took him to the Iranian island of Kish, where he was last seen. Kish is a popular resort area and a hotbed of smuggling and organized crime. It is also a free-trade zone, meaning U.S. citizens do not need visas to travel there.

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