WASHINGTON, Feb 29 (IPS) - The George W. Bush administration has      long pushed the "laptop documents" -- 1,000 pages of technical      documents supposedly from a stolen Iranian laptop -- as hard      evidence of Iranian intentions to build a nuclear weapon. Now      charges based on those documents pose the only remaining      obstacles to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)      declaring that Iran has resolved all unanswered questions about      its nuclear programme.
    
    But those documents have long been regarded with great suspicion      by U.S. and foreign analysts. German officials have identified      the source of the laptop documents in November 2004 as the      Mujahideen e Khalq (MEK), which along with its political arm,      the National Council of Resistance in Iran (NCRI), is listed by      the U.S. State Department as a terrorist organisation.
    
    There are some indications, moreover, that the MEK obtained the      documents not from an Iranian source but from Israel's Mossad.     
    
    In its latest report on Iran, circulated Feb. 22, the IAEA,      under strong pressure from the Bush administration, included      descriptions of plans for a facility to produce "green salt",      technical specifications for high explosives testing and the      schematic layout of a missile reentry vehicle that appears      capable of holding a nuclear weapon. Iran has been asked to      provide full explanations for these alleged activities.
    
    Tehran has denounced the documents on which the charges are      based as fabrications provided by the MEK, and has demanded      copies of the documents to analyse, but the United States had      refused to do so.
    
    The Iranian assertion is supported by statements by German      officials. A few days after then Secretary of State Colin Powell      announced the laptop documents, Karsten Voight, the coordinator      for German-American relations in the German Foreign Ministry,      was reported by the Wall Street Journal Nov. 22, 2004 as saying      that the information had been provided by "an Iranian dissident      group".
    
    A German official familiar with the issue confirmed to this      writer that the NCRI had been the source of the laptop      documents. "I can assure you that the documents came from the      Iranian resistance organisation," the source said.
    
    The Germans have been deeply involved in intelligence collection      and analysis regarding the Iranian nuclear programme. According      to a story by Washington Post reporter Dafna Linzer soon after      the laptop documents were first mentioned publicly by Powell in      late 2004, U.S. officials said they had been stolen from an      Iranian whom German intelligence had been trying to recruit, and      had been given to intelligence officials of an unnamed country      in Turkey.
    
    The German account of the origins of the laptop documents      contradicts the insistence by unnamed U.S. intelligence      officials who insisted to journalists William J. Broad and David      Sanger in November 2005 that the laptop documents did not come      from any Iranian resistance groups.
    
    Despite the fact that it was listed as a terrorist organisation,      the MEK was a favourite of neoconservatives in the Pentagon, who      were proposing in 2003-2004 to use it as part of a policy to      destabilise Iran. The United States is known to have used      intelligence from the MEK on Iranian military questions for      years. It was considered a credible source of intelligence on      the Iranian nuclear programme after 2002, mainly because of its      identification of the facility in Natanz as a nuclear site.
    
    The German source said he did not know whether the documents      were authentic or not. However, CIA analysts, and European and      IAEA officials who were given access to the laptop documents in      2005 were very sceptical about their authenticity.
    
    The Guardian's Julian Borger last February quoted an IAEA      official as saying there is "doubt over the provenance of the      computer".
    
    A senior European diplomat who had examined the documents was      quoted by the New York Times in November 2005 as saying, "I can      fabricate that data. It looks beautiful, but is open to doubt."     
    
    Scott Ritter, the former U.S. military intelligence officer who      was chief United Nations weapons inspector in Iraq from 1991 to      1998, noted in an interview that the CIA has the capability test      the authenticity of laptop documents through forensic tests that      would reveal when different versions of different documents were      created.
    
    The fact that the agency could not rule out the possibility of      fabrication, according to Ritter, indicates that it had either      chosen not to do such tests or that the tests had revealed      fraud.
    
    Despite its having been credited with the Natanz intelligence      coup in 2002, the overall record of the MEK on the Iranian      nuclear programme has been very poor. The CIA continued to      submit intelligence from the Iranian group about alleged Iranian      nuclear weapons-related work to the IAEA over the next five      years, without identifying the source.
    
    But that intelligence turned out to be unreliable. A senior IAEA      official told the Los Angeles Times in February 2007 that, since      2002, "pretty much all the intelligence that has come to us has      proved to be wrong."
    
    Former State Department deputy intelligence director for the      Near East and South Asia Wayne White doubts that the MEK has      actually had the contacts within the Iranian bureaucracy and      scientific community necessary to come up with intelligence such      as Natanz and the laptop documents. "I find it very hard to      believe that supporters of the MEK haven't been thoroughly      rooted out of the Iranian bureaucracy," says White. "I think      they are without key sources in the Iranian government."
    
    In her February 2006 report on the laptop documents, the Post's      Linzer said CIA analysts had originally speculated that a "third      country, such as Israel, had fabricated the evidence". They      eventually "discounted that theory", she wrote, without      explaining why.
    
    Since 2002, new information has emerged indicating that the MEK      did not obtain the 2002 data on Natanz itself but received it      from the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad. Yossi Melman and      Meier Javadanfar, who co-authored a book on the Iranian nuclear      programme last year, write that they were told by "very senior      Israeli Intelligence officials" in late 2006 that Israeli      intelligence had known about Natanz for a full year before the      Iranian group's press conference. They explained that they had      chosen not to reveal it to the public "because of safety      concerns for the sources that provided the information".
    
    Shahriar Ahy, an adviser to monarchist leader Reza Pahlavi, told      journalist Connie Bruck that the detailed information on Natanz      had not come from MEK but from "a friendly government, and it      had come to more than one opposition group, not only the      mujahideen."
    
    Bruck wrote in the New Yorker on Mar, 16, 2006 that when he was      asked if the "friendly government" was Israel, Ahy smiled and      said, "The friendly government did not want to be the source of      it, publicly. If the friendly government gives it to the U.S.      publicly, then it would be received differently. Better to come      from an opposition group."
    
    Israel has maintained a relationship with the MEK since the late      1990s, according to Bruck, including assistance to the      organisation in beaming broadcasts by the NCRI from Paris into      Iran. An Israeli diplomat confirmed that Israel had found the      MEK "useful", Bruck reported, but the official declined to      elaborate.
    
    *Gareth Porter is an historian and national security policy      analyst. The paperback edition of his latest book, "Perils of      Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam",      was published in 2006. 
2008-11-12
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