defected Amiri says he escaped from CIA!!!

maziar95

Elite Member
Oct 20, 2002
2,285
63
39
Baltimore, MD
#3
This story has BS written all over it. If he is being held by the CIA how the hell can he post videos on YouTube? It's not possible to run away from the CIA while being held "captive". But this doesn't explain how he can upload videos saying he is free and was never captured by the CIA and then upload another video contradicting everything he said. There is something fishy about this guy and this story, maybe there is no missing scientist and this all a BS show?
 

Bache Tehroon

Elite Member
Oct 16, 2002
39,533
1,513
DarvAze DoolAb
www.iransportspress.com
#4
This story has BS written all over it. If he is being held by the CIA how the hell can he post videos on YouTube? It's not possible to run away from the CIA while being held "captive". But this doesn't explain how he can upload videos saying he is free and was never captured by the CIA and then upload another video contradicting everything he said. There is something fishy about this guy and this story, maybe there is no missing scientist and this all a BS show?
It's all a joke. Maybe it's our own member "Chief" who has gotten bored out of his mind since he got banned.

Koskhol hame ra be kishe khod pendarad.
 

Farzad-USA

Bench Warmer
Apr 4, 2007
2,329
0
rooyesh.blog.com
#5
US: Iran Threatens Family of Nuclear Defector Shahram Amiri

The Iranian government has threatened to harm the family of a nuclear scientist who defected to the U.S. and helped provide crucial details about Iran's burgeoning weapons program unless he returns home, according to people in the intelligence community briefed by the CIA.

The high-stakes spy saga is being played out online, where both the Iranian intelligence agency and the CIA have posted dueling videos of the scientist. In one video, he claims the U.S. kidnapped him, in the other he says he is happy to be in the U.S.

Behind the scenes, the situation has become so grave that American officials fear Amiri could re-defect, according to the people briefed on the situation. A full report on the case will be broadcast Monday on ABC's "World News with Diane Sawyer" and "Nightline."

At the center of the intrigue is Shahram Amiri, an Iranian nuclear scientist, who officials say operated within Iran as a key CIA spy for several years before his defection and provided evidence that Iran continued a program to produce nuclear weapons. According to a former U.S. official, Amiri's evidence helped to contradict a 2007 National Intelligence Estimate that concluded that Tehran had suspended its weaponization program in 2003.

CIA director Leon Panetta told ABC News yesterday on the This Week that the CIA no longer believes the conclusions of the 2007 NIE, saying that Tehran continues "to work on designs" for a nuclear weapon.

"I think they continue to develop their know-how," Panetta said. "They continue to develop their nuclear capability."

CIA officials pushed for Amiri to flee the country out of fear that his disclosures might expose him to Tehran as a spy.

Amiri vanished last year during a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia. The Iranian government claimed then that their scientist, a professor at Tehran's Malek Ashtar University, had been kidnapped by the CIA. In fact, say U.S. officials, the CIA, with the help of the Saudi government, whisked Amiri to the U.S., where he was to permanently resettle.

A few months after Amiri arrived, the Obama Administration announced that U.S. intelligence had discovered a second, hidden nuclear enrichment facility in the Iranian city of Qom.

Both the CIA and the White House have refused to comment on Amiri.
Complicating the defection is the fact that he left behind a wife and child. Since arriving in the U.S., and being secluded in Arizona, U.S. officials say Amiri has struggled with his decision to flee Iran.

Then came the alleged threats by Iranian intelligence, which set off the bizarre battle of dueling videos that were released earlier this month. The first, which was broadcast on Iranian state television, shows Amiri speaking to a computer camera and announcing that the U.S. had drugged and kidnapped him and forced him to Tucson, Arizona.

He appeared to be looking down at a script as he spoke.

According to the two current U.S. officials, Amiri called home earlier this year because he missed his family. On a second call, Iranian intelligence answered and threatened to harm his son, unless he taped an internet video saying he'd been kidnapped. Amiri, fearing for his family, agreed, according to a person briefed on the case.

"He missed his son," said the person. "And he couldn't help calling home to speak to him."

Within days, the CIA learned that Amiri had given the Iranians a video and moved quickly to produce a version of its own. The second video shows Amiri well-dressed and manicured with a globe - turned to North America - and chess set behind him as he appears to read from a teleprompter. He says, in Farsi, that he is happily living in the U.S. and going to school. He also denied having worked in the Iranian nuclear program and made a plea to his wife and son. "I want them to know that I never abandoned then, and that I will always love them."

According to one U.S. official, the CIA intended to produce the video and launch it on the internet before the Iranians had a chance to air their version.

Instead, the video languished at CIA headquarters for weeks, according to a senior intelligence official. Then, earlier this month, Iranian state television aired the Amiri video. Within a day, the CIA posted their Amiri video on YouTube, with a user identification of "shahramamiri2010."

The Iranian government has since formally requested the U.S. government to return Amiri, accusing the Americans of holding him against his will. A spokesperson for the State department has acknowledged that the U.S. government has received the request, but has had no further comment.


"The United States doesn't force people to defect—that's a decision they make themselves," said a U.S. official. "Mr. Amiri wasn't kidnapped, and he certainly wasn't tortured. That's absurd. The guy has internet access and the ability to make and transmit videos. Let's get real. If you look at defectors as a group, without commenting on any particular individual, some adjust better than others, and some deal better than others with tugs and pressures from back home. But, ultimately, they make their own choices."


One Iranian defector warned that Amiri has some tough decisions ahead. Reza Kahlili, who still uses a pseudonym to protect his relatives whom he left behind in Iran, told ABC News that Amiri is likely making life or death decisions.

Defecting, Khalili said, "becomes very emotional, and at times you question your sanity and the decisions that you've made."

"If he went back…he would be tortured." Khalili said. "And then he would certainly be executed."
 

The_Referee

National Team Player
Mar 26, 2005
5,534
0
Jabolqa Opposite Jabolsa
#6
It's all a joke. Maybe it's our own member "Chief" who has gotten bored out of his mind since he got banned.

Koskhol hame ra be kishe khod pendarad.
Or perhaps he was sent by IRI to mis-inform the US. Now he wants to help IRI with his return and all these made up stories. We might call all of that BS but for IRI this is pure GOLD. They are and will be using it on IRIB over and over again. The mindset of Iranians mistrust CIA and do believe in all those conspiracy stories etc. about CIA and US. I am sure even some outside will be fooled into believing some of them outside Iran.
 
May 9, 2004
15,167
179
#7
رژیم همه را گذاشته سر کار
تو سایت ها ادم می فرسته و شلوغ کاری میکند و این را هم به دروغ گفتند امریکا دزدیده که بعد بیاورندش
پشت تلویزون و بگوید که من را دزدیده بودند و فرار کردم
اصلا این توی خود ایران است هیچ جا هم نرفته
همه اش یک نقشه بود
به قول سرکار استوار پلوتیک بود
وقتی که امریکا گفت ایران سه نفر از شهروندان امریکایی را دزدیده رژیم هم این برنامه اختفای امیری را درست کرد
که بگوید بله امریکا هم یک هموطن ما را دزدیده
و بعد بیاید و بگوید بله امریکا من را دزدید و الان فرار کردم
بالاتر از خطر دندندندندندندندندند


بله جانم
 
Aug 21, 2005
3,367
42
39
next door
#8
LOOOL what a clown show by IRI, as if it is this easy to escape CIA and be able to post videos left and right without being caught.
it is so lame that no body pays attention to it, so they keep posting new videos for attention and no one is buying.
 

The_Referee

National Team Player
Mar 26, 2005
5,534
0
Jabolqa Opposite Jabolsa
#9
رژیم همه را گذاشته سر کار
تو سایت ها ادم می فرسته و شلوغ کاری میکند و این را هم به دروغ گفتند امریکا دزدیده که بعد بیاورندش
پشت تلویزون و بگوید که من را دزدیده بودند و فرار کردم
اصلا این توی خود ایران است هیچ جا هم نرفته
همه اش یک نقشه بود
به قول سرکار استوار پلوتیک بود
وقتی که امریکا گفت ایران سه نفر از شهروندان امریکایی را دزدیده رژیم هم این برنامه اختفای امیری را درست کرد
که بگوید بله امریکا هم یک هموطن ما را دزدیده
و بعد بیاید و بگوید بله امریکا من را دزدید و الان فرار کردم
بالاتر از خطر دندندندندندندندندند


بله جانم

به به - اپوزیشن رژیم به این میگن. همه اش به به اصطلاح زرنگ بازیهای رژیم احسنت میگه و به وجد میاد از اینهمه زرنگی رژیم و تو سر جنبش سبز و سرخ و سفید میزنه و به قول خودش واقعیت ها رو میگه. هرگی هم بهش چیزی بگه با هوش ایکیوسانش بهش پتک محکم میزنه.