Doctored
blueprints for nuclear weapon components supplied to Iran by the CIA 15 years
ago could force the IAEA to review its conclusions on Iran’s atomic program,
which was potentially based on misleading intelligence, Bloomberg reports.
The details of the Central Intelligence
Agency operation back in 2000 were made public as part of a judicial hearing
into a case involving Jeffrey Sterling, an agentconvicted
of leaking classified information on CIA spying against Iran.
“The
goal is to plant this substantial piece of deception information on the Iranian
nuclear-weapons program, sending them down blind alleys, wasting their time and
money,” a
May 1997 CIA cable submitted to the court reads.
The
intelligence in question pertains to fake designs of atomic components that
were transferred to Iran in February 2000.
Now
it turns out the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) could be forced to
reassess their earlier conclusions regarding Iran’s atomic program, the
publication quoted two anonymous Western diplomats as saying. Part of the
IAEA’s suspicions about the alleged Iran's nuclear weapons program relies on
information provided by multiple intelligence agencies.
“This
story suggests a possibility that hostile intelligence agencies could decide to
plant a ‘smoking gun’ in Iran for the IAEA to find,” Peter
Jenkins, the UK’s former envoy to the Vienna-based agency told Bloomberg. “That
looks like a big problem.”
In
the latest quarterly report, the atomic watchdog said that the
team of experts is still concerned about Iran’s nuclear intentions, prompting
an immediate reaction from Israel.
“The
agency remains concerned about the possible existence in Iran of undisclosed
nuclear-related activities involving military-related organizations, including
activities related to the development of a nuclear payload for a missile,” it
reads.
Whether
or not the revealed CIA secret will change this assessment remains to be seen,
but Tehran has always insisted that its atomic energy program is peaceful.
“This
revelation highlights the dangers of reliance by the IAEA upon evidence
concerning Iran provided to it by third party states whose political agendas
are antithetical to Iran,” Dan
Joyner, a law professor at the University of Alabama told Bloomberg.
In
response to the news, the IAEA told the publication that it conducts thorough
assessments of the information it receives and uses. The CIA has so far failed
to comment.
In
2013, Iran agreed to an interim deal with Russia, the United States, China,
France, Great Britain and Germany under which Tehran would promise to flatline
its nuclear program, in exchange for a loosening of the severe banking and oil
sanction earlier imposed by the West. Published time: February 21, 2015 00:16 RT.
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