Iran Claims Arrest of Nuclear Spies
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Tuesday, Aug. 31, 2004
TEHRAN, Iran Iran said Tuesday it had arrested a group of
spies, including several who passed the country's nuclear secrets
to the country's foes, the official Islamic Republic News Agency
reported.
Intelligence Minister Ali Yunesi did not name any of the
arrested but said members of Mujahedeen Khalq, an armed
opposition group, were the main players in the spy operation.
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"The Intelligence Ministry has arrested several spies who were
transferring Iran's nuclear secrets out of the country," IRNA
quoted Yunesi as saying. He provided no other details.
"The hypocrites had the leading role in passing
information and have already said
they were proud of spying against Iran," Yunesi was quoted as
saying.
Mujahedeen Khalq claims it was the first to break a story
in August 2003 that Iran was secretly developing a uranium
enrichment plant in Natanz, central Iran.
But Tehran says it had informed the International Atomic Energy
Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency, about the Natanz facility
months earlier. The IAEA has confirmed Tehran's version.
In Paris, Shahin Gobadi, a press spokesman of National
Council of Resistance of Iran, said the individuals arrested
had nothing to do with any disclosures made by the Iranian
resistance.
"By resorting to such a hollow show of force, the mullahs are
trying, on the one hand, to cover up their drive to acquire nuclear
weapons and their violation of international treaties and, on the
other hand, to compensate for the blows they have received from the
resistance," said Gobadi, whose group calls itself an umbrella for
the Iranian resistance movement but is believed to be the political
arm of Mujahedeen Khalq.
Mujahedeen Khalq, which seeks to topple Iran's ruling
Islamic establishment by force, remains on the U.S. State
Department's list of terrorist organizations.
However, fighters from the armed group are under U.S. military
guard in neighboring Iraq and have been granted protection as
noncombatants.
Iran has repeatedly said it would not give up its nuclear
program, including the right to develop the full nuclear fuel cycle, from extracting uranium ore to enriching it to be used in nuclear
reactors, but was ready to provide "guarantees" it won't build
atomic weapons.
Washington claims the Iranian nuclear program is aimed at
building atomic weapons, but Tehran says it is directed at generating
electricity.
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