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Political turmoil has prompted Iranian officials to defect | The political turmoil in Iran has prompted a growing number of the country's officials to defect
or leak information to the West, creating a new flow of intelligence about its secretive nuclear program, US officials have said. The gains have complicated
work on a long-awaited assessment of Iran 's nuclear activities, a report that
will represent the combined judgment of more than a dozen US spy agencies. The
National Intelligence Estimate was due last fall but has been delayed at least
twice amid efforts to incorporate information from sources who are still being
vetted, The Washington Post reports. Director of National Intelligence Dennis
C. Blair said in a brief interview last week that the delay in the completion
of the NIE "has to do with the information coming in and the pace of developments",
the paper reports. Some of the most significant new material has come from informants,
including scientists and others with access to Iran 's military programs, who
are motivated by antipathy toward the government and its suppression of the opposition
movement after a disputed presidential election in June, according to current
and former officials. "There is a wealth of information-sharing going on, and
it reflects enormous discontent among Iranian technocrats," said a former U.S.
government official. In recent weeks, US officials have acknowledged that an Iranian
nuclear scientist defected to the West in June The Washington Post reports. Shahram
Amiri, 32, vanished while on a religious pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia and has provided
spy agencies with details about sensitive programs, including a long-hidden uranium-enrichment plant near the city of Qom. |
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