The domestic intelligence agencies in Germany are the functional equivalent of Israel's Shin Bet.
By Benjamin Weinthal
A new German intelligence report from the city-state of Hamburg on
Thursday said Iran's regime continues to seek weapons of mass
destruction, delivering another intelligence agency blow to Chancellor
Angela Merkel's belief that the 2015 atomic deal with the Islamic
Republic has been effective in curbing Tehran's nuclear weapons
ambitions.
The Jerusalem Post reviewed the 211-page document that states "some of
the crisis countries... are still making an effort to obtain products
for the manufacture of atomic, biological and chemical weapons of mass
destruction (proliferation) and the corresponding missile carrier
technology (rocket technology)."
The Hamburg report added that "the current main focus points of
countries in the area of relevant proliferation activities are: Iran,
Syrian, Pakistan and Syria."
Hamburg's intelligence agency conclusions covering Iran's alleged
illicit conduct conform with the intelligence data from 2018 state
agency reports in Bavaria, Baden-Württemberg, North Rhine-Westphalia and
Hesse.
The domestic intelligence agencies in Germany are the functional equivalent of Israel's Shin Bet.
The Hamburg intelligence official wrote that that "Iran still
constitutes, because of its previous nuclear relevant activities, the
focus of Germany in the sector of counter-proliferation."
The report said that "Iran continues to pursue unchanged an ambitious
program to modernize its rocket technology with the goal of a continued
increase of the reach of the missiles."
Merkel said on July 9 that "[Germany] remains committed to the nuclear agreement. We think it was well-negotiated."
The US government pulled out of the Iran deal, formally known as the
Joint Comprehensive of Plan of Action (JCPOA), in May because of the
agreement's failure to prevent Tehran from building a nuclear weapon
device. Merkel has not commented on the intelligence findings of state
agencies that appear to significantly undermine her strong defense of
the effectiveness of the atomic deal reached with world powers in July
2015.
Iran's activities - ranging from espionage to support for Hezbollah and
the spread of religious extremism - are cited 48 times in Hamburg's
intelligence report.
Hesse's state intelligence agency published in June a document on
countering the spread of weapons of mass destruction, singling out the
Islamic Republic of Iran as one of two states seeking to obtain the
ultimate form of powerful weapons.
According to the document: “Weapons of mass destruction are a continued
instrument of power politics that also, in regional and international
crises situations, can shatter the entire stability of state structures.
States like Iran and North Korea attempt, in the context of
proliferation, to acquire and spread such weapons by, for example,
disguising the transportation ways through third countries.”
The Post reported in early June that the intelligence agency of
Baden-Württemberg wrote in its report: “Iran continued to undertake, as
did Pakistan and Syria, efforts to obtain goods and know-how to be used
for the development of weapons of mass destruction and to optimize
corresponding missile-delivery systems.”
Bavaria’s intelligence agency noted in its April report: “Iran, North
Korea, Syria and Pakistan are making efforts to expand their
conventional weapons arsenal through the production of weapons of mass
destruction.”
The Islamic Republic of Iran sought to obtain illicit goods for its
missile program from Germany, the intelligence agency for Germany’s most
populous state, North Rhine-Westphalia, the Post reported in June.
The North Rhine-Westphalia intelligence agency wrote: “Because of the
demand for relevant goods for its rocket program, Iran continues to
represent proliferation defense in our work.”
German exports to Iran rose to 3.5 billion euros in 2017 from 2.6 billion euros in 2016.
The Federal Republic conducts dual-use deals with the Islamic Republic,
in which German technology and equipment can be used for military and
civilian purposes. The Post reported in February that Iranian
businessmen purchased industrial material from the Krempel company in
Baden-Württemberg that was later found in chemical rockets used to gas
Syrian civilians in January and February.
A total of 24 Syrians were severely injured in those poison gas attacks.
Germany’s Federal Office for Economic Affairs and Export Control told
the Post that the Krempel material was not a dual-use item, and declined
to stop trade between Krempel and the Islamic Republic.
Amir Taheri, a leading Iranian journalist, wrote Thursday on Twitter
that the "Russian steel firm Sursthal ceases trading with Iran, citing
threat of US sanctions. Its Iranian partner Fulad Mubarakah says it is
in talks with German firms to fill the gap with Berlin govt. backing
(Strange world: Putin on Trump's side, Merkel on the opposite side?!)"
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