Current Affairs Wikileaks cables: Iran sought Czech weapons-making machinery via Turkey
Diplomatic cables released by Wikileaks reportedly show that the Czech Republic was warned by the United States against selling machine tools they feared could find their way to use in the Iranian nuclear programme. Specifically, it claims that in the search for weapons-making machinery, Iranian companies have attempted to bypass Czech export controls by buying through a Turkish partner.
There is much to be expected from the US diplomatic cables regarding the
Czech Republic, particularly as far as the years-long episode of heated
debate over missile defence cooperation is concerned. But the first more
significant Wikileaks cable dealing with Czech-American diplomacy, and
reported on by the Norwegian paper Aftenposten, regards US concerns over a
Czech trading partner in Turkey, a business it says may connect with the
Iranian arms industry. Aftenposten, which claims to possess all of the
yet-unreleased diplomatic cables, writes that Iran in recent years has
tried to buy equipment and material for nuclear reactors and missiles from
more than 350 companies in more than 30 countries. One route suggested in
a
cable from the US embassy in Prague is by obtaining numerically controlled
machine tools produced by the Czech company Kovosvit MAS and sold
throughout the world. The US cable posits that in November of 2009 an
Iranian tyre mould manufacturer bypassed Czech export controls by
attempting to purchase high quality milling machines sold by Kovosvit MAS
and required for rocket manufacturing via the company’s Turkish
representative, Ak Makina - a business that also represents major
corporations such as Hyundai – Kia for a vast region from Ukraine to
Saudi Arabia that includes Iran. The cable warns that Ak Makina may be
hiding its resale of specialised machinery banned by arms agreements to
Iran from Kovosvit MAS, and notes that the Turkish company has in the past
cooperated with an Iranian company producing rocket fuel. Ak Makina told
the news website Novinky.cz that while it has previously dealt in export,
it does not do so now, and has not sold the machines in question in the
period since the date of the cable.
Illustrative photo
While Kovosvit itself sells other items
to Iran, it says the machinery in question, listed by the Nuclear
Suppliers
Group, is sold only to its Turkish partners, who they do not expect to
resell it. Asked to comment on the matter, the Czech Foreign Ministry set
a
precedent for how it will likely confront future Wikileaks cables, saying
only that it would say nothing at all regarding information from
unauthorised internal communication between the Czech Republic and the US
administration.







