Iran Denies Buying Arms in Germany
Deutsche Welle:
Iran on Sunday dismissed a report that it bought equipment from Germany for its ballistic missile program, and complained that European restrictions were damaging trade with the Islamic republic. "This is an unfounded theory," foreign ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi told reporters. "It's not very clear how crane equipment can be used in Shahab 3 and 4 production."
The weekly Der Spiegel magazine said in a report that a company blacklisted by the German authorities bought a crane to help in the manufacture of Iran's Shahab missile program.READ MORE
Mizan Machine paid the Liebherr company based in southern Germany 600,000 euros ($785,000) last August for the crane, the magazine said, adding that customs authorities were not told about the deal until the freighter transporting the equipment had left Germany for the Middle East.
But Asefi said Germany was known as one of Iran's economic partners, and criticized the Europeans for "inflicting restrictive measures while claiming to believe in open trade."
According to the magazine, German customs tried to get the ship stopped. At the weekend it was reported to be at Port Said in Egypt at the entrance to the Suez Canal.
Iran has recently upgraded the Shahab-3 ballistic missile, believed to be based on a North Korean design, to have a range of at least 2,000 kilometers (about 1,200 miles).
Iran has, however, denied working on a Shahab-4 -- even though Asefi referred to one.
Tehran's steady progress on its ballistic missile program is a major cause for concern among the international community, particularly Israel, which is already alarmed over Iran's nuclear activities.
<< Home