The Moscow Summit
This overview is excerpted
from the
NIS Nuclear Profiles
Database. The material presented here was compiled by Dr. Fred
Wehling and Dr. Scott Parrish, CNS Senior Research Associates.
RUSSIAN MISSILE EXPORTS TO IRAN
The Russian government insists there has
been no significant transfer of missile technology to Tehran, although
it admits that Iran has actively tried to acquire Russian technology and
that some individual Russian specialists may have worked in the Iranian
missile program. Russian officials have repeatedly insisted that
Russia is fulfilling its obligations under the Missile Technology Control
Regime (MTCR)[1,2] and President Yeltsin has "categorically denied" US
allegations of supplying Iran with missile components and technologies.[3]
Nevertheless, reports continue to surface in both Russian and Western media
(with many Western reports based largely on leaked Israeli and US intelligence
assessments) suggesting the Russian government has either turned a blind
eye to the activities of Russian defense firms in this area, or has actually
assisted their efforts. Available information does not resolve whether
transferring missile technology to Iran is an official policy, or merely
an activity carried out by individual companies, possibly in collusion
with corrupt officials. However, together with recent revelations
about a 1995 sale of Russian missile guidance components to Iraq and the
deleterious effects of Russia's continuing economic crisis in the defense
sector, reports of the transfer of missile technology raise concerns over
the possibility of Russian government involvement at some level as well
as lax enforcement of export controls.
It should be noted that many reports of
Russian transfers of missile technology or materials often quote unnamed
US or Israeli intelligence sources. While this should not lead one to discount
the reports automatically, the possibility that reports relying on such
sources may be politically motivated should be kept in mind. In any event,
no legal exports of missile components or related equipment from Russia
to Iran have been officially acknowledged. The more serious allegations
of unlicensed exports involve guidance and engine components, high-strength
steel and special alloys, and manufacturing and test equipment. Additionally,
two Russian defense firms are known to have sent specialists to Iran, and
reports indicate Iranian students have received training in missile technology
at Russian technical institutes. In July 1998, the Russian Government Commission
on Export Control launched an investigation
of nine companies and institutions suspected of violating Russian export
control laws. Under pressure from the US Congress to take action, the
Clinton administration penailzed seven of these companies with trade
sanctions.[4] However, the list of enterprises investigated by the Russian
government does not include several large and influential organizations--including
the Russian Space Agency; Rosvooruzheniye, the state-owned arms export
company; and the Federal Security Service--that Western and Israeli sources
have charged with complicity in covert transfers of Russian missile technology
to Iran.[5,6]
Reports and commentary in the Israeli press
charged that Russian technology was incorporated into the Shahab-3 missile
that Iran tested in July 1998.[7,8] Iranian officials, however, denied
that Russia cooperated with Iran in production of the missile.[9] Iran's
defense minister further claimed that the Shahab-3 was developed "without
help from any foreign country,"[10] but this claim is fallacious; most
experts agree that the Shahab-3 is essentially a North Korean Nodong medium-range
ballistic missile with few, if any, modifications.[11,12,13] Nevertheless,
the possibility that Russian technology or know-how may have been used
to enhance the performance of the Shahab-3, or to enable Iran to manufacture
some components domestically, reinforces the need for Russia to maintain
and fully implement its commitment to control the proliferation of ballistic
missile technology.
Sources:
[1] Mikhail Kirillin, Rossiyskaya
gazeta, 20 May 1998, p. 7; in "Dual-Purpose Exports to Iran Denied,"
FBIS-TAC-98-140.
[2] "Utverzhdeniya o peredache
Rossiyei Iranu raket i raketnykh tekhnologiy ne imeyut dostatochnykh osnovaniy,"
Voprosy bezopasnosti, no. 14, 30 September 1997.
[3] Interfax, 26 September
1997; in "Yeltsin Rejects US Nuclear, Missile Iran Transfer Charge," FBIS-SOV-97-269.
[4] White House, Office
of the Press Secretary, "Statement by the President Expanding the President's
Executive Order on Weapons of Mass Destruction," 28 July 1998.
[5] Bill Gertz, "Russia,
China Aid Iran's Missile Program," Washington Times, 10 September
1997, p. A1.
[6] Steve Rodan, "Secret
Israeli Data Reveals Iran Can Make Missile in Year, Defense News,
6-12 October 1997, p. 4.
[7] Ze'ev Schiff, "After
the Iranian Test," Ha'aretz, 29 July 1998, p. B1.
[8] Arieh O'Sullivan and
Liat Collins, "Iran Expected to Complete Shahab-3 Prototype Next Year,"
Jerusalem Post, 29 July 1998, http://www.jpost.co.il/com/Archive/29.Jul.1998/News/Article-2.html.
[9] IRNA (Tehran), 4 August
1998; in "IRGC Commander Reveals Shahab-3 Missile's Size, Capability,"
FBIS-TAC-98-218.
[10] "Iran Confirms Test-Firing
of Missile," Washington Post, 26 July 1988, p. A27.
[10] U.S. Department of
State Daily Press Briefing, 23 July 1998, US State Department website,
http://secretary.state.gov/www/briefings/index.html.
[11] Tim Weiner, Iran Said
to Test Missile Able to Hit Israel and Saudis, New York Times,
23 July 1998.
[12] Steven Erlanger, Washington
Casts Wary Eye at Missile Test, New York Times, 24 July 1998.
{entered 8/17/98 FW}
SUMMARY TABLE
| Category |
Status |
Exports |
Manufacturer |
Exporter |
Recipient |
| Components |
intercepted |
21 tons of maraging steel |
unknown, possibly Inor Production
Association |
MOSO; Yevropalas 2000 |
unknown |
| |
intercepted |
composite material used
for ballistic missile warheads |
NII Grafit |
unknown |
unknown |
| |
cancelled |
turbopumps for RD-214 (SS-4)
liquid fuel rocket engine |
Samara State Scientific
and Production Enterprise-NK Engines |
Samara State Scientific
and Production Enterprise-NK Engines |
unknown |
| |
alleged |
components of RD-214 (SS-4)
liquid fuel rocket engine |
NPO Trud, NPO Energomash |
unknown |
unknown |
| |
alleged |
unpecified missile guidance
components |
Polyus Scientific Research
Institute |
unknown |
unknown |
| |
alleged |
620kg of special alloys
and foils |
Inor Production Association |
Rosvooruzheniye |
unknown |
| Manufacturing and testing |
alleged |
wind tunnel and related
facilities |
Russian Central Aerohydrodynamic
Institute (TsAGI) |
Rosvooruzheniye |
unknown |
| |
alleged |
unspecified msissile manufacturing
equipment |
Inor Production Association |
Rosvooruzheniye |
unknown |
| |
alleged |
measurement equipment used
in rocket engine tests |
NPO Trud |
unknown |
unknown |
| Training and know-how |
suspended |
training of Iranian students
in missile design |
n/a |
Baltic State Technical University,
Moscow Aviation Institute |
Sanam Industries Group |
| |
suspended |
missile specialists traveled
to Iran under false documents |
n/a |
Komintern Plant, Tikhomirov
Institute |
unknown |
| |
unknown |
training of Iranian students
in missile design |
n/a |
Bauman Moscow State Technical
University |
unknown |
| |
unknown |
suspected transfer of dual-use
technology |
n/a |
Glavkosmos |
unknown |
| |
alleged |
recruitment of Russian experts
to work on Iranian missile projects |
n/a |
Federal Security Service
(FSB) |
unknown |
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