Iran General NewsGerman businessman admits selling rocket material to Iran

German businessman admits selling rocket material to Iran

-

ImageDeutsche Welle: A German businessman on trial for selling graphite to Iran to make rocket nozzles has admitted the offense.

Deutsche Welle

ImageA German businessman on trial for selling graphite to Iran to make rocket nozzles has admitted the offense.

At the opening of his trial on April 8, the 63-year-old businessman on trial for selling Iran 16 tons of graphite to make rocket nozzles initially rejected all 12 counts of the indictment.

However, in a statement read out by his lawyers, he has now admitted to the offense.

The man is accused of breaking laws preventing illicit arms exports by declaring the graphite exported from 2005 to 2007 to be low-grade. This would have avoided the need to apply for a government clearance which would almost certainly have been refused.

German intelligence suspects the graphite was bought for Iran's missile program. Tehran is suspected of secretly developing nuclear weapons which could be delivered as the payload of the missiles.

The accused is the former chief executive of Carbon-Industrie-Produkte GmbH, a firm that specialized in trading graphite.

In 2007, Germany imposed a ban on exports of any graphite, even the low-grade type, to Iran.

Plan involved transit through Turkey

Technical books say rocket nozzles are often made of graphite, which is a form of carbon.

According to the website of the German newspaper Rhein Zeitung, the businessman met an Iranian man in 2003 who suggested the idea of smuggling. In 2005, the defendant began shipping graphite, which he declared as low-grade, into Turkey via truck. From there, a contact person would bring the graphite into Iran.

He sold the graphite for four times the purchase price. The money was wired to an account in the Seychelles Islands.

The man, whose name has been withheld under German media privacy guidelines, has been in custody since last June. Company workers knew nothing of the scheme, he asserts.

Latest news

Iran’s Statistics Center reports 115% food inflation

A new report by the Statistical Center of Iran shows that food inflation in March and April this year...

The Rising Cost of Food in Iran; Hidden Pressure on Large Families

The state-run magazine Niniban published a report on April 29 regarding rising food prices. The report stated: “This is...

Four Decades of Bitter Narratives: May Day as a Day of Wrath, Not Celebration, for Iran’s Workers

Does International Workers’ Day represent a celebration of dignity and status for Iran’s labor force? Do they gather in...

Iran Intensifies Pressure on Families of PMOI Prisoners Amid Expanding Crackdown

Iranian authorities have intensified pressure on the families of political prisoners and executed dissidents in recent weeks, with multiple...

Iran: A Dangerous Country for Journalists

According to Reporters Without Borders (RSF), the state of press freedom worldwide has fallen to its lowest level in...

Iran’s Car Market Experiences Sharp Surge in Prices Afte War-Induced Stagnation

Media outlets in Iran report that the prices of many domestically produced cars have increased by 3 billion to...

Must read

Iran Admits Christianity Is Growing Despite Repression

By Pooya Stone The Iranian Intelligence Minister has publically...

Iran’s bid to buy banned magnets stokes fears about major expansion of nuclear capacity

Washington Post: Iran recently sought to acquire tens of...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you