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Jun. 3, 2007 20:24 | Updated Jun. 3, 2007 22:54


Israeli who aided Iran may be released
By JPOST.COM STAFF


Nahum Manbar, convicted in 1998 of abetting an enemy in wartime after he 
provided military aid to Iran, will likely be released from prison in the 
upcoming days, having completed 9 years of his 16-year term, Channel 2 reported 
Sunday. Manbar's term will be shortened by a third due to good behavior. 

Despite the severity of Manbar's actions, the defense establishment is not 
protesting the early release. Channel 2 quoted a source in the defense milieu 
as saying "We are not vindictive." The source also claimed that Manbar had paid 
his debt to society, had indeed earned his early release with his good behavior 
and would no longer pursue illegal activities. 

In 1998, Tel Aviv District Court Judge Amnon Strashnov found Manbar guilty of 
selling poison-gas material and chemical-weapons equipment to Iran from 
1990-1995 and sentenced him to 16 years in jail. 

According to the charges, Manbar, an expatriate Israeli businessman, made 
contact with the head of the Iranian chemical weapons program, Majed Abasbur, 
in 1990. Abasbur asked Manbar to supply him with material and know- how to 
produce chemical weapons and equipment to establish a chemical-weapons plant. 

The two also signed a contract in which Manbar promised to supply Iran with 
material for producing mustard and nerve gas. Manbar supplied 150 million tons 
of chemicals over four years and allegedly earned $16m. 

Manbar claimed that he had conducted all of his business with the knowledge and 
blessings of the General Security Service, which used him to gain information 
about Iran's chemical-weapons program. He also claimed that the GSS had 
promised him immunity from prosecution for his activities. 

Dan Izenberg contributed to this article


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