Los Angeles Times

Iran says it foiled CIA spy ring

Some of accused have been sentenced to death, Tehran asserts. U.S. denies the claims.

- By Ramin Mostaghim and Nabih Bulos Special correspond­ent Mostaghim reported from Tehran and Times staff writer Bulos from Beirut.

Tehran boasts that 17 Iranians working for the U.S. have been arrested and that some have been sentenced to death. Washington dismisses the claim.

TEHRAN — Iran claimed Monday that it had smashed a CIA spy ring on its soil, saying some of the 17 Iranian nationals netted by authoritie­s had already been sentenced to death.

U.S. Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo, in an interview with Fox News, dismissed the claims, insisting that “the Iranian regime has a long history of lying.”

“It’s part of the nature of the ayatollah to lie to the world,” Pompeo said in reference to Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. “I would take with a significan­t grain of salt any Iranian assertion of actions they have taken.”

President Trump weighed in with a tweet, calling the claim “totally false.”

“The Report of Iran capturing CIA spies is totally false. Zero truth. Just more lies and propaganda (like their shot down drone) put out by a Religious Regime that is Badly Failing and has no idea what to do. Their Economy is dead, and will get much worse. Iran is a total mess!”

Speaking to dozens of journalist­s assembled in the undergroun­d press club of Iran’s Ministry of Culture, an Iranian counterint­elligence official said the 17 detained Iranian nationals had been working in a number of key private-sector institutio­ns in “economic, nuclear, infrastruc­ture, military and cyber fields.”

“We have intelligen­ce dominance over the CIA’s espionage activities in Iran,” said the official, who identified himself as “directorge­neral of the Intelligen­ce Ministry’s counteresp­ionage department” but declined to give his name.

An accompanyi­ng presentati­on provided to journalist­s showed business cards for a number of U.S. diplomats based in Turkey, Austria, Zimbabwe and elsewhere who Iranian officials said recruited the spies when they were applying for U.S. visas.

“Some of the Iranian citizens get into the ‘visa trap’ and they are asked to become spies if they want to receive visas,” the official said.

Others, he said, were framed by the CIA when they wanted to “maintain or extend their visas.”

CIA officers also approached Iranian citizens through shell companies or “on the sidelines of scientific conference­s in European, African and Asian countries,” he said.

The spies were foiled through inter-service cooperatio­n with Iran’s intelligen­ce allies, the official said. Countries whose intelligen­ce services allowed the CIA to recruit on their soil would “be held responsibl­e,” he warned.

The presentati­on also featured images, said to be of CIA operatives, taken from the suspected spies’ phones. The spies were enticed, said the official, with promises of immigratio­n to the U.S. as well as jobs and money once there.

In March, Intelligen­ce Minister Mahmoud Alavi said in an interview with the Iranian news agency Tasnim that authoritie­s had apprehende­d 290 suspected spies. Iranian intelligen­ce services routinely claim to have captured spies working for the United States or Israel.

Monday’s assertions come amid tensions between Tehran and Washington, as well as an Iranian standoff with Britain over tit-for-tat seizures of oil tankers at sea.

The alleged spy bust, the official said, was “another global failure for the CIA.”

“Considerin­g that CIA has been crippled, it will be natural that this service tries to restore and rebuild itself, and of course Iranian intelligen­ce community will always be wakeful and vigilant,” he said.

 ?? Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader ?? IRAN, under Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has a history of lying, U.S. officials said.
Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader IRAN, under Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has a history of lying, U.S. officials said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States