The
Iranian cameraman assigned to document President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s recent
trip to the UN has defected, and new reports claim that with his exit he has
handed the US a trove of never-before-seen footage of his homeland’s nuclear
facilities.
Hassan
Golkhanban, a journalist for the Iranian News Network, was among the 140-people
that accompanied President Ahmadinejad to the United Nations headquarters in
New York last week. Unlike the rest of the Iran head’s entourage, however, the
videographer vanished before returning home and has since asked the US State
Department to grant him political asylum.
Now
Israel’s Debka news agency reports that with his application for asylum,
Golkhanban has made good with America’s request for information on a rumored
nuclear warhead program being ramped up overseas.
According
to Debka, the trusted member of President Ahmadinejad’s crew took with him to
the States two suitcases full of “the most complete and updated footage” that
US intelligence has ever been offered of Iran’s top secret military facilities
and other related structures, something the site claims to include “exclusive
interior shots of the Natanz nuclear complex, the Fordo underground enrichment
plant, the Parchin military complex and the small Amir-Abad research reactor in
Tehran.”
On their
part, Iran has not yet commented on either Golkhanban’s defection or the
rumored footage reported to have since been delivered to American authorities,
but his lawyer confirms that the cameraman has indeed cut ties with
Ahmadinejad.
“He was
being threatened because of what he thought would happen when he went back,”
New York-based attorney Paul O’Dwyer tells Jewish News One in a sit-down
interview this week.
“There
were demands made on him by the presidential detail while he was here,” O’Dwyer
says, “to do things that he did not want to do, and he was obviously very, very
concerned about what the repercussions to him would be when he went back to
Iran for disobeying those orders.”
Commenting
on his client to CNN, O’Dwyer adds of Golkhanban, “He’s perceived as not being
a supporter, or being an opponent of the Iranian regime… somebody who has
betrayed the regime and who can no longer be trusted by them.”
The
United States has been eager to get to the bottom of Iran’s nuclear program, a
project that Ahmadinejad attests is for peaceful purposes. If Debka’s report
checks out, however, US intelligence may finally be able to hold Iran
accountable for proved attempts towards procuring a nuke.
According
to the source, “Some of the film depicts Revolutionary Guards and military
industry chiefs explaining in detail to the president or supreme leader the
working of secret equipment on view.”
During
his own recent address before the UN General Assembly, US President Barack
Obama called a nuclear-armed Iran “not a challenge that can be contained” that
has the potential to “threaten the elimination of Israel, the security of Gulf
nations, and the stability of the global economy.”
“That is
why a coalition of countries is holding the Iranian government accountable. And
that is why the United States will do what we must to prevent Iran from
obtaining a nuclear weapon,” President Obama told his audience.
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