How the Israelis sold
nuclear-capable missiles to
Iran in the 1970's
DOCUMENTS DETAIL ISRAELI MISSILE DEAL WITH THE SHAH
1 April, 1986
Before
the fall of the Shah in 1979, Israel was involved in a
multibillion-dollar project to modify advanced, surface-to-surface
missiles for sale to Iran, according to documents said to have been
left in Teheran by Israeli diplomats.
The
documents reveal that the Israelis told the Iranians that the
missiles could be fitted with nuclear warheads, although this
possibility was not pursued. The two sides agreed that if Iran wanted
a nuclear ability, this would pose a problem with the Americans.
The
Israelis left shortly before the 1979 revolution. The Israeli papers,
in English, were published in paperback by the Iranians who seized
the American Embassy in November 1979 and who have published more
than 50 volumes of secret documents found there.
The
Israeli-Iranian project, code-named ''Flower,'' was one of six
oil-for-arms contracts signed in April 1977 in Teheran by Shah
Mohammed Riza Pahlevi and Shimon Peres, then the Israeli Defense
Minister. Two Nations Had Trade Missions
At
the time, Iran and Israel did not have diplomatic relations, but they
had trade missions. In addition, Iran was the only Middle Eastern
country that recognized Israel's right to exist.
The
two countries, according to transcripts of conversations in the
documents, intended to keep the proposed missile improvement secret
from the United States.
Although
American officials were aware that Israeli and Iranian military
leaders had exchanged secret visits, they did not know the nature of
the discussion, according to interviews with former officials of the
State Department, the Pentagon, the Central Intelligence Agency and
the National Security Council staff.
The
possession of surface-to-surface missiles was part of the Shah's plan
to turn Iran into the most formidable military power in the Middle
East. For the Israelis, the deal offered a guaranteed oil supply as
well as financing for advanced military research. Work Halts After
Revolution
According
to the documents, a missile was test-fired in Israel in the presence
of an Iranian general. The aim of the project was to extend the range
of an Israeli missile developed in the early 1970's and replace
American-supplied parts so that Israel could legally export it
without American approval.
Israel
was still perfecting the missile when Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
came to power in February 1979 and halted cooperation with Israel.
Two
Iranian officials involved, Gen. Hassan Toufanian, the arms procurer,
and Adm. Kamal Habibollahi, the navy commander, said in interviews
that the conversations recorded in the documents were genuine. The
two now live in the United States.
In
a third interview, Ezer Weizman, who took over as Israeli Defense
Minister in May 1977 and who is now a member of the Cabinet under
Prime Minister Peres, did not deny that the documents were authentic.
Weizman Confirms Contacts
''Obviously
we had relations with Iran and I knew General Toufanian personally,''
he said from Jerusalem in a telephone interview. ''I had many
conversations with him both in Tel Aviv and in Teheran. But I don't
think it is appropriate that I, as former Minister of Defense and as
a Minister in the Israeli Cabinet, should comment on affairs of state
backdated to 1977.''
Other
Israeli officials called the papers a forgery.
''These
rumors and falsified documents are usually spread by the present
regime in Teheran with the view to discredit the previous regime,''
Avi Pazner, a spokesman for Israel's Foreign Ministry, said.
A
spokesman for Mr. Peres, Uri Savir, said, ''I have nothing to add to
Mr. Pazner's statement.''
The
Flower project, according to the documents, involved the production
of missiles with warheads weighing 750 kilograms, or 1,650 pounds,
and with a range of up to 300 miles. They were to be shipped through
a Swiss company to central Iran for assembly and testing. Books
Available in Libraries
The
books with the documents are on sale in Teheran. They are available
in the libraries of Harvard University, the University of Chicago,
Columbia University and in the Library of Congress. The volume on the
missile project, published three years ago, was made available to The
New York Times through the Iranian Library of Encino, Calif.
Richard
Helms, former director of the C.I.A. and a former ambassador to Iran
who is now a consultant on the Middle East, said:
''I
am hardly surprised that these documents have not come to light until
now. The books attracted a great deal of attention when the first
volumes appeared, but ever since the hostage crisis, interest in Iran
has been drastically reduced. Even though new volumes still appear
with some regularity, they tend to be regarded in intelligence
circles as a kind of ancient history.'' A 1977 Visit to Israel
Some
of the papers date from July 1977, two months after Israel's Labor
Government fell and Menachem Begin was elected as Prime Minister. It
was then that the Shah, concerned about the viability of the military
deals he had signed with Mr. Peres, dispatched General Toufanian to
Israel.
General
Weizman tried to convince General Toufanian of Iran's need for an
advanced missile, according to a conversation recorded in the
documents.
''You
must have a ground-to-ground missile,'' General Weizman said. ''A
country like yours with F-14's, with so many F-4's, with the problems
surrounding you, with a good missile force, a clever and wise one.''
Then,
perhaps as a bargaining tactic, he almost called off the missile
project, telling the Iranian that ''the 'Flower' is not a top
priority for us.''
General
Toufanian hinted that such a project might cost more than Iran could
afford.
''No
country has enough money for defense, no country whatsoever,'' he
said. ''Neither Iran nor the U.S.'' 'It Was Beautiful'
Israel's
development of the missile was so far along that General Toufanian
was able to witness the firing of a missile during his visit.
''It
was beautiful, beautiful, a fully developed missile,'' he recalled in
the interview.
He
added that there were technical problems that would have to be
overcome before Israel could deliver it. Among its components were
American-made inertial navigation equipment and a guidance system
that Israel was forbidden to make available to other governments.
There
was also the more serious political problem of how the United States
would react when it learned that its two allies were secretly working
on a missile with a nuclear capability.
In
the documents, General Weizman said the missile could carry a nuclear
warhead.
''All
missiles can carry an atomic head, all missiles can carry a
conventional head,'' he said.
A
summary of a conversation on the same day between General Toufanian
and Moshe Dayan, then the Israeli Foreign Minister, said:
''General
Dayan raised the problem of the Americans' sensitivity to the
introduction of the kind of missiles envisaged in the joint project.
He added that the ground-to-ground missile that is part of the joint
project can be regarded also as a missile with a nuclear head,
because with a head of 750 kg., it can be a double-purpose one.
Question of Nuclear Ability
General
Dayan is described as saying that ''at some stage, the problem will
have to be raised with the Americans'' and that he would discuss it
with the Shah during their next meeting.
Although
the Israelis never explicitly said that they had a nuclear ability or
that they were willing to turn over such a capability to Iran, it was
implied in the discussions, General Toufanian said.
''When
you read these pages, there is no doubt about it,'' he said in the
interview. He said Iran was not interested in a nuclear weapon at
that time, but ''tat did not mean we would not be interested in
another decade.''
Iran
had signed the 1968 treaty barring the spread of nuclear weapons, but
Israel had not. Israeli leaders have never acknowledged that they
have nuclear weapons, but C.I.A. documents and American intelligence
officials have concluded that Israel produced nuclear weapons as
early as 1974.
American
officials said they were aware that Israel was developing a missile
that could carry a nuclear warhead. They also knew that Iran was
sending oil to Israel. What they did not know was that Iran was
involved in Israel's weapons development. 'I Was Surprised'
Gary
Sick, Iran specialist on the National Security Council staff under
President Jimmy Carter, said:
''I
was surprised by the documents, surprised to learn that two countries
closely allied with the United States were conducting joint military
operations without talking to us about them.''
Most
surprising was the joint missile project, the former officials said.
Harold
Saunders, former Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern
Affairs, said:
''Israel
built a lot of things for the Iranians that we did not know about.
But it surprises me that the Israelis would have brought the Iranians
into the development of a missile that may have been part of their
nuclear program. If that is the case, I am surprised we did not know
about it.'' A Down Payment in Oil
General
Toufanian said in the interview that Iran made a down payment for the
missile in 1978 by shipping $260 million worth of oil from Kharg
Island.
A
team of Iranian experts began work on the site of the missile
assembly plant near Sirjan, in central Iran, according to General
Toufanian. A testing range was to be located near Rafsanjan, from
where the missile could be fired 300 miles north into the desert and
south into the Gulf of Oman.
Operation
Flower was only one of several joint Israeli-Iranian military
projects, according to the documents.
The
summary of a conversation in July 1978 in Teheran between Admiral
Habibollahi and the Israeli navy commander, Adm. Michael Barkai,
outlined other possibilities. The document lists items that Israel
had ready to sell, from advanced radar systems to systems to convert
planes for maritime use, and mentions the possibility of ''enhancing
the 'Flower' project'' so that the missiles could be launched from
submarines.
''My
interest always was to have a submarine force,'' Admiral Habibollahi,
who now lives in the Washington area, said in an interview. ''And we
were considering tactical, nonnuclear missiles for our submarines.''
A
version of this article appears in print on April 1, 1986, on Page
A00017 of the National edition with the headline: DOCUMENTS DETAIL
ISRAELI MISSILE DEAL WITH THE SHAH. Order Reprints| Today's
Paper|Subscribe
https://www.nytimes.com/1986/04/01/world/documents-detail-israeli-missile-deal-with-the-shah.html
Israeli Arms Sales to Iran
WMEA,
November, 1986
In
September, when the Israeli government radio accused Iranian troops
of training Lebanese Shiite guerrillas for attacks on the
Israeli-backed South Lebanon Army, and said that Iranians themselves
might also have been among those who attacked Israeli positions in
Lebanon, the US media reported those charges in great detail. None
found the time or space, however, to note how ironic it was for
Israel to complain about Iranian military activities.
Iran
might have been hard put to continue its costly six-year-old war with
Iraq—not to mention simultaneously stirring up followers of the
Ayatollah Khomeini in Lebanon—if Israel had not been willing to
sell the Khomeini government great quantities of the weapons Iran
desperately needed to keep its army in the field. That is only one of
the anomalies of Israel's booming arms trade. US law and US policy
also come in for some stretching and twisting.
Over
the course of the Gulf war, Iran's quest for weapons has become
legendary, with many countries and hordes of private arms dealers
eager to conclude arms deals and reap the premium commissions Iran
offers. Israel, with standing access to the same models of US-made
arms upon which the Shah based Iran's arsenal, and with its desire to
build up an indigenous arms industry, has led the pack. The London
Observer estimated that Israel's arms sales to Iran total $500
million annually.
Before
1979, when Shah Muhammad Reza Pahlavi held power, Iran was the
world's biggest buyer of Israeli arms. The Islamic fundamentalist
government which succeeded the Shah militantly damned Zionism up and
down and hung a prominent Iranian Jew for "spying for Israel."
In 1980, however, when the Iraq-Iran war began, Iranian
representatives met in Paris with Israel's deputy defense minister
and worked out a "Jews for arms" deal. Iran permitted Jews
to emigrate and Israel sold Iran ammunition and spare parts for
Chieftain tanks and US-made F-4 Phantom aircraft. Channeled through a
private Israeli arms dealer, this particular agreement appropriately
ended in 1984, when Iran was slow in paying its bills.
Although
secrecy is the first principle in the netherworld of arms trading,
details of several subsequent major Israeli arms sales to Iran have
come to light. In 1981, Ya'acov Nimrodi, an intimate of leaders
across the Israeli political spectrum, sold the Iranian defense
ministry $135,842,000 worth of Hawk anti-aircraft missiles, 155 mm.
mortars, ammunition, and other weapons through his Tel Aviv-based
company, International Desalination Equipment, Ltd. From 1955 to 1979
Nimrodi had been Israel's military attache in Tehran.
On
July 24, 1984, Radio Luxembourg reported that Nimrodi had met in
Zurich with the deputy defense minister and the top intelligence
officer of Iran and with Rif'at al-Assad, the brother of Syrian
President Hafez al-Assad. Swiss government sources said that the
meeting resulted in a deal to ship 40 truckloads of weapons a day
from Israel to Iran, via Syria and Turkey.
On
September 15, 1985, a DC-8 cargo plane returning from Iran and
supposedly bound for Malaga, Spain, made an emergency landing in Tel
Aviv. Investigation revealed that the plane— recently acquired from
an obscure Miami firm by a shadowy Brussels-based "Nigerian"
company—had been flying Hawk missiles from the US to Iran via
Israel. A Boeing 707 registered to the company had been carrying
loads of 1,250 TOW missiles from Israel to Iran via Malaga.
At
about the same time the London Observer reported that a ship carrying
25,000 tons of Israeli material was making a rush delivery, sailing
directly to the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas rather than first going
to Zaire where the Iranian buyers would inspect the cargo.
In
May, 1986, West German authorities foiled an $81 million ammunition
deal and uncovered a tank deal in the process. Charged in the case
were an Israeli and a former Israeli citizen. The West German weekly
Stern said a telex from the state-owned Israeli Military Industries
dated April 1 indicated official Israeli involvement.
In
June of this year a Swedish businessman was reported to have acted as
intermediary for Israeli sales of explosives to Iran. The shipments
went from Israel to Iran via Argentina. In September, 1986, United
Press International reported that the Danish Sailor's Union had logs
and records to prove that since May a Danish freighter had taken four
900-ton shipments from the Israeli port of Eilat to Bandar Abbas in
Iran. The union was certain the arms were US-made.
Re-selling
without permission arms acquired from the US and the sale of US
weapons to Iran are both prohibited by US law. In separate incidents
involving sales negotiated within the US, federal authorities have
arrested two Israeli military reservists and a Yugoslav-American,
Paul Cutter. Cutter, who has connections to Israeli Minister of Trade
and Industry Ariel Sharon, and who also told co-workers he was
authorized to sell arms Israel captured in Lebanon in 1982, has been
convicted and jailed. The Israeli government disassociated itself
from these men.
Now,
however, a federal "sting" operation has cracked the
biggest arms deal yet. US Customs Service agents drew retired Israeli
army general Avraham Bar-Am and 12 co-conspirators (three of them
Israelis) into a carefully-laid trap last April, Tapes made by the
Customs Service reveal Israeli government involvement in a $2.6
billion conspiracy to sell US-made arms to Iran through third
countries.
On
recordings made available to the Chicago Tribune, Samuel Evans, a
London-based American lawyer who coordinated two separate
conspiracies to offer sophisticated aircraft, missiles, and ordnance
to Iran, is heard to say that he would be discussing the deal with
Israeli Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin and that the authority for the
transaction went "right through to (Prime Minister) Peres."
The
case is particularly serious because federal authorities presented
evidence in their indictment that the deal included phony re-export
certificates attesting that Israel was re-selling surplus arms to
Turkey, which is legal, rather than to Iran, which is not.
General
Bar-Am claimed from his jail cell that he had an Israeli government
license to sell arms. Denying any involvement, Israeli officials
insisted that the license was only to prospect for sales, one of a
thousand distributed to former military officers. The Israelis have
worked hard to bolster this contention. In late September Defense
Minister Rabin called a press conference to say the permit process
would be changed to avoid the appearance of government approval. But
an earlier statement by Ya'acov Nimrodi that such sales are
government-authorized and that permits come from a special department
in the Israeli Defense Ministry and are difficult to get contradicts
Rabin—as have many reports over the years that it is common Israeli
practice to sell arms through fronts and agents.
The
US government has avoided dealing head-on in public with the Israeli
government over this issue. When the Bermuda conspirators were
arrested it was reported that the Israeli ambassador was called in
for a stern warning. It is unlikely, however, that prosecutors will
focus on the Israeli government's role when the Bermuda conspirators
stand trial in New York this November.
Over
the last six years Washington has several times expressed its
disapproval of arms sales to Iran. During the 1979-1981 hostage
crisis, Israel was specifically asked to stop deliveries while Iran
was holding US hostages and it is possible that Israel complied. At
an October I luncheon he hosted, Secretary of State George Shultz
assured diplomats from the Arab states of the Gulf that Israel had
told US officials it had stopped selling arms to Iran in 1983.
Shultz, in fact, accused the Soviet Union of not clamping down on
sales by its allies to Iran!
During
the Reagan administration US policy has swung through various levels
of support for Iraq. Israel's often-stated policy on the Gulf war is
to keep it going as long as possible because the dreadful carnage
ties up the combatants and prevents either from attacking Israel.
In
1983, then-Defense Minister Ariel Sharon blurted out duringa US
speaking engagement that Israel sold arms to Iran because it regarded
Iraq as the greater enemy, and that the sales had been thoroughly
discussed with US officials. US officials acknowledged such
discussions but denied that Israel had US permission."
Last
spring what turned out to be an Israeli disinformation campaign
propounded the notion that the US had asked Israel to sell arms to
Iran. The tapes in the Bar-Am case are said to suggest that the US
was considering shifting its support to Iran while the
conspiracy-sting was being hatched.
This
kind of last-ditch Israeli government defense, probably supported by
pro-Israel political obscurantists in Washington, has almost
certainly been used before. When it was revealed that Israel was
shipping arms to the Soviet-supported government of Ethiopia to fight
Western-assisted resistance movements, and arms to the Argentine
junta during the Malvinas-Falklands war, Israeli disinformationists
in Washington sought to argue that Israeli actions which directly
contravened stated US government objectives were really part of a
"double game" somehow coordinated with Washington. This
time, arrests by the US government of Israeli "players"
have left no doubt that the US interest is to halt, not abet, Israeli
arms sales to America's enemies.
Jane
Hunter is the editor and publisher of Israeli Foreign Affairs, P.O.
Box 19580, Sacramento, CA 95819.
Here is the interview with the Shah cited by Rick Wiles
Shah
of Iran on 60 Minutes
Here is the entire video from TruNews
Here is an item from al-Jazeera on Israel's nuclear capacity
ReplyDeleteRick Wiles: Plant-Based Meat Alternatives Are a Satanic Plot to ‘Create a Race of Soulless Creatures’
Kyle MantylaBy Kyle Mantyla | June 13, 2019 10:49 am
End Times broadcaster Rick Wiles warned on his “TruNews” program last night that the rise of companies like Impossible Foods, which is developing plant-based alternatives to meat and dairy products, is part of a satanic plot to alter human DNA so that people can no longer worship God.
“When you go to your favorite fast food restaurant, you are going to be eating a fake hamburger,” Wiles said. “You’re going to go to the grocery store and buy a pound of fake hamburger or a fake steak, and you won’t know that it was grown in some big corporation’s laboratory. This is the nightmare world that they are taking us into. They’re changing God’s creation. Why? Because they want to be God.”
“God is an environmentalist,” Wiles continued. “He takes this very seriously. He created this planet, he created the universe and he’s watching these Luciferians destroy this planet, destroy the animal kingdom, destroy the plant kingdom, change human DNA. Why? They want to change human DNA so that you can’t be born again. That’s where they’re going with this, to change the DNA of humans so it will be impossible for a human to be born again. They want to create a race of soulless creatures on this planet.”
http://www.rightwingwatch.org/post/rick-wiles-plant-based-meat-alternatives-are-a-satanic-plot-to-create-a-race-of-soulless-creatures/
fucking retard. jump off a bridge you loser