Al Arabiya | Iran says scientist provided information on CIA

Middle East News | Iran says scientist provided information on CIA.

Iran TV to produce movie about Amiri’s case

Iran says scientist provided information on CIA

Shahram  Amiri holds his weeping son's hand as he flashes the victory sign upon  arrival in Tehran
Shahram Amiri holds his weeping son’s hand as he flashes the victory sign upon arrival in Tehran

TEHRAN (AP)

An Iranian nuclear scientist who returned home last week from the United States provided valuable information about the CIA, a semiofficial news agency reported Wednesday, adding that his spy’s tale would be made into a TV movie.

American authorities have claimed Shahram Amiri willingly defected to the U.S. but changed his mind and decided to return home without the $5 million he had been paid for what a U.S. official described as “significant” information about his country’s disputed nuclear program.

This was an intelligence battle between the CIA and us that was designed and managed by Iran
Unmade source from Iran\’s Revolutionary Guard

The Fars news agency, which is close to Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard, quoted an unidentified source as saying Iran’s intelligence agents were in touch with Amiri while he was in the United States and that they won an intelligence battle against the CIA.

Iran has portrayed the return of Amiri as a blow to American intelligence services that it says were desperate for inside information on Iran’s nuclear program. Iran has sought to make maximum propaganda gains from the affair, allowing journalists to cover Amiri’s return, sending a senior Foreign Ministry official to greet him and preparing to make a movie about the story.

“This was an intelligence battle between the CIA and us that was designed and managed by Iran,” the source was quoted as saying. “We had set various goals in this battle and, by the grace of God, we achieved all our objectives without our rival getting any real victory.”

Amiri claims he was kidnapped by American agents in May 2009 while on a pilgrimage to holy Muslim sites in Saudi Arabia.

Iran’s intelligence agencies now possess valuable details from inside the CIA, which is a great victory
Unmade source from Iran\’s Revolutionary Guard

The Fars report suggests Amiri had been planted to discover how much information the United States had gathered about Iran’s nuclear program, which Washington believes is aimed at weapons production. Iran says its nuclear work is only for energy production and other peaceful purposes.

“We sought to obtain good information from inside the CIA. While Amiri was still in the U.S., we managed to establish contact with him in early 2010 and obtained very valuable information accordingly. He was managed and guided (by us),” the source told Fars.

The source said Amiri provided more information after his return to Iran last week.

“Iran’s intelligence agencies now possess valuable details from inside the CIA, which is a great victory,” it said.

To support the claim, the source mentioned the license plate numbers of two cars used by the CIA in Virginia, claiming that some CIA locations, individuals and contacts have been identified.

A U.S. official briefed on the Amiri case dismissed Iranian claims of intelligence gains comparable with the information Washington says it gleaned from the scientist. “The United States got insights into Iran’s nuclear program. The Iranians claim to have gotten some license plate numbers,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the details of the case remain sensitive.

Movie about Amiri’s case

The Fars news agency also reported that an Iranian film company affiliated with Iran’s state television plans to produce a TV movie about Amiri’s case.

Amir Hossein Ashtianipour, director of Sima Film, was quoted by Fars as saying that a group of young graduates have been hired to write the script.

Meanwhile, Iran announced ambitious new aims for its nuclear work on Wednesday, saying it will conduct scientific studies for the construction of an experimental nuclear fusion reactor, an engineering challenge that no nation has yet overcome.

Iran is not known to have carried out anything but basic fusion research, and any advancement in the technology would be a significant achievement for Tehran’s atomic program.

The world’s physicists have been trying for half a century to create fusion, which produces no greenhouse gas emissions and only low levels of radioactive waste.

To meet the immense expense involved, the United States, the European Union, China, India, Russia, Japan and South Korea have teamed up to build an experimental fusion reactor in southern France.

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One Comment on “Al Arabiya | Iran says scientist provided information on CIA”


  1. This is nothing but a Carbon Copy, of what we sent around the whole Country in a Cyberspace program, to meet the Needs of a Negative Intelligence Political Program, called Negative Campaigning. The Iranians, inside the U.S. have only mentioned the details of what we’ve been chattering for a Whole Year or more, in a Hum-int Operation, in this post, to the whole world. The Myth Busting of the Iranian Intelligence, is probably only a Cover-up, of the False Front, they are now putting up, to Hide the Truth, that we may already know about the Iranian’s Intelligence program. They[Iran] are in a Hell of a Tight Spot and the Heat is cooking their Goose Fast. False Faces are a Dime a Dozen when They[Iran] are in Harms Way, for the Badly earned Right, to Exploit their Nuclear Arrogance.


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