by Ari Yashar
US intel officials reveal how Iran is getting advanced technology for long range nuclear missile during talks, Obama hiding it from UN.
US intelligence officials revealed that during the ongoing Iran nuclear negotiations, North Korea has provided several shipments of advanced missile components to the Islamic regime in violation of UN sanctions - and the US hid the violations from the UN.
The officials, who spoke to the Washington Free Beacon on Wednesday on condition of anonymity, said more than two shipments of missile parts since last September have been monitored by the US going from North Korea to Iran.
One official detailed that the components included large diameter engines, which could be used to build a long-range missile system, potentially capable of bearing a nuclear warhead.
The information is particularly damaging given that Admiral Bill Gortney, Commander of North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) and US Northern Command (USNORTHCOM), admitted this month that the Pentagon fears that North Korea and possibly Iran can target the US with a nuclear EMP strike.
Critics have pointed out that the nuclear framework deal reached with Iran earlier this month completely avoids this question of Iran's intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) program, which would allow it to conduct nuclear strikes.
US President Barack Obama was given details of the shipments in his daily intelligence briefings, but the officials say the information was hidden from the UN by the White House so that it would not take action on the sanctions violations.
Back in 2010, the UN Security Council put sanctions on Iran's illegal uranium enrichment program. Those sanctions prohibit Iran from buying ballistic missile parts, and any "technology related to ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons."
The US officials said the recent transfers fall within the scope of the sanctions.
In confirmation, a spokesperson for Spain's mission to the UN, now in charge of the UN's sanctions committee, said the committee has not been told about the incidents by the US since Spain took over in January.
White House and State Department spokespersons contacted by the paper refused to comment on the report.
Hiding transfers from the UN - "typical" Obama
A wave of experts came out with criticism against Obama's administration for hiding the missile part transfer from the UN.
Former UN Ambassador John Bolton said the shipments violate UN sanctions on Iran, as well as those imposed on North Korea back in 2009.
"If the violation was suppressed within the U.S. government, it would be only too typical of decades of practice,” Bolton said. “Sadly, it would also foreshadow how hard it would be to get honest reports made public once Iran starts violating any deal.”
Former CIA analyst Fred Fleitz shared his assessment, saying "while it may seem outrageous that the Obama administration would look the other way on missile shipments from North Korea to Iran during the Iran nuclear talks, it doesn’t surprise me at all."
"Iran’s ballistic missile program has been deliberately left out of the talks even though these missiles are being developed as nuclear weapon delivery systems," noted Fleitz. "Since the administration has overlooked this long list of belligerent and illegal Iranian behavior during the Iran talks, it’s no surprise it ignored missile shipments to Iran from North Korea."
The mounting criticism was added to by Thomas Moore, a former Senate Foreign Relations Committee arms control specialist, who told Washington Free Beacon that the transfer "certainly points out the glaring omission present in the Iran deal: the total lack of anything on its missile threat."
“If true, allowing
proliferation with no response other than to lead from behind or reward
it, let alone bury information about it, is to defeat the object and
purpose of the global nonproliferation regime - the only regime Obama
may end up changing in favor of those in Tehran, Havana and Pyongyang,”
Moore said.
And Henry Sokolski, head of
the Nonproliferation Policy Education Center, said the missile transfer
"more than suggests why the administration had to back away from
securing any ballistic missile limits in its negotiations” with Iran.
Exposing the Iran-North Korea missile partnership
The Washington Free Beacon went
into detail about the relationship between North Korea and Iran in
building the latter's advanced missile program, which is poised to
construct ICBMs capable of delivering a strike with a nuclear warhead at
astounding distances.
A classified State
Department cable from October 2009 that was exposed by Wikileaks details
that Iran is the leading missile customer of North Korean.
It stated how since the
1980s North Korea has been handing Scud missiles and technology for
developing Nodong missiles with a 620-mile range to Iran.
"Pyongyang’s assistance to
Iran’s [space launch vehicle] program suggests that North Korea and Iran
may also be cooperating on the development of long-range ballistic
missiles," read the cable.
Another cable from September
2009 posited that the steering engines in Iran's Safir rocket likely
come from North Korea, and are based on Soviet-era SS-N-6 submarine
launched ballistic missiles.
Importantly, that transfer
of technology let Iran develop a self-igniting missile propellant that
"could significantly enhance Tehran’s ability to develop a new
generation of more-advanced ballistic missiles."
“All of these technologies,
demonstrated in the Safir [space launch vehicle] are critical to the
development of long-range ballistic missiles and highlight the
possibility of Iran using the Safir as a platform to further its
ballistic missile development," read the cable.
The assessments of the
classified cables were confirmed by Joseph DeTrani, former director of
the US intelligence agency National Counterproliferation Center, who
said North Korea has kept "close and long term" relations with Iran in
transferring missiles and related technology.
“U.N. Security Council
resolutions prohibit this type of activity, and continued
missile-related transfers from North Korea to Iran would be in violation
of these Security Council resolutions,” added DeTrani, a former CIA
officer and special envoy to North Korea nuclear talks.
Ari Yashar
Source: http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/194088#.VS5lv5Ozd-8
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
No comments:
Post a Comment