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Americans illicitly help hostile nations get hi-tech weapons

by Lara Jakes Jordan, Associated Press      Oct. 11, 2007

Missile technology, fighter jet parts, night vision goggles and other US wartime equipment increasingly are being illegally smuggled into hostile nations, including China and Iran, the federal government said Thursday.

Last week, two Utah men were arrested for allegedly trying to sell parts over the Internet for F-4 and F-14 fighter jets -- which are only flown by Iran. The week before, two engineers were indicted in San Jose, Calif., on charges of stealing computer chip designs intended for the Chinese military.

Government lawyers and investigators Thursday described a growing number of unauthorized exports that could be dangerous if the
 
Commentary by JR Mooneyham:

If you pour money into making ever better killing machines -- then scare everyone else into thinking they better improve their killing machines too -- people are going to buy the best killing tools they can, wherever they can.

And where they can't buy them, they'll steal them.

To the innocents eventually killed by this stuff, it doesn't matter if their killers got the weapons legally or illegally. All that
matters is that the weapons exist.

We could save countless millions of innocents worldwide (and maybe even our-
 
selves too, in regards to terrorists getting hold of such stuff!) by simply stopping our production of such awful junk.

parts and supplies end up in the hands of terrorists or hostile nations.

"The concept of terrorists, criminals or rogue nations obtaining weapons and other restricted technology is chilling," said Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Julie Myers, who oversees illegal export investigations as head of the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Assistant Attorney General Ken Wainstein called new government efforts to crack down on illegal exports the Justice Department's top counterintelligence priority.

A Pentagon report noted a 43 percent increase in 2005 in what it described as suspicious foreign contacts with US-based defense companies. Another report last year by US intelligence officials found that a record 108 nations were trying to buy or otherwise obtain US technology that is restricted for sale. It did not list which nations or specify whether some of them were US allies.

Night vision goggles, body armor and equipment used in improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, have been in particular demand since the 2001 terror attacks that prompted the US-led invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, officials said. But some prosecutors have been reluctant to pursue the smugglers because illegal export cases can be very complicated and time-consuming to chase.

"These are incredibly complicated cases," Wainstein said, adding that training and assistance will be given to prosecutors and investigators working on a new task force under the departments of State, Justice, Homeland Security, Defense, Commerce and the FBI. The task force largely will focus on US-based exporters who sell or ship equipment overseas without proper authorization.

Other recent smuggling cases of concern to national security officials include:

   •    An Indonesian man was indicted in Madison, Wis., Thursday on charges of conspiring to export rifle scopes to Indonesia.

   •    Pittsburgh company SparesGlobal, Inc., was sentenced last week for lying about exporting equipment used in nuclear reactors and ballistic missiles in 2003 that ended up in Pakistan.

   •    A man in California pleaded guilty in August to trying to smuggle 100,000 Uzi submachine guns and night vision goggles to Iranian government officials.

   •    Two men pleaded guilty in California on the same day, Aug. 1, to exporting military-use technology to China, including, in one case, computer code to help train fighter pilots.

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