http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/08/20/MNGK9KLVH41.D
TL
 
Israeli intelligence officials have complained to Britain and the United
States that sensitive night-vision equipment recovered from Hezbollah
fighters during the war in Lebanon had been exported by Britain to Iran.
British officials said the equipment had been intended for use in a U.N.
anti-narcotics campaign. 
Israeli officials say they believe the state-of-the-art equipment, found in
Hezbollah command-and-control headquarters in southern Lebanon during the
just-concluded war, was part of a British government-approved shipment of
250 pieces of night-vision equipment sent to Iran in 2003. 
Israeli military intelligence confirmed that one of the pieces of equipment
is a Thermo-vision 1000 LR tactical night-vision system, serial No. 155010,
part No. 193960, manufactured by Agema, a high-tech equipment company with
branches in Bedfordshire, England, and San Diego. A spokesman for Agema in
San Diego denied all knowledge of the system. 
The equipment, which needed special export-license approval from the British
government, was passed to the Iranians through a program run and
administered by the U.N. Drug Control Program. The equipment uses infrared
imaging to provide nighttime surveillance that allows the user to detect
people and vehicles moving in the dark at a range of several miles. 
Use of such equipment would have enabled Hezbollah to detect and record the
movements of Israeli forces inside Israel, as well as its military advance
into Lebanon. 
Britain and Italy both have provided specialized tracking and monitoring
equipment over the past decade as part of U.N.-sponsored attempts to stem
the flow of heroin and opium into Western Europe from Afghanistan and
Pakistan. Iran is a major route for shipment of narcotics to the West. 
A spokesman for the British Foreign Office in London said Saturday, "The
Israeli Defense Forces have confirmed to us they have found some
night-vision equipment in south Lebanon that is apparently made in Britain.
We're trying to get further details to see exactly what the equipment is,
who made it and who the original buyer is." 
The spokesman, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Britain
participates, through the U.N. drug-fighting agency, in Iran's interception
program, which is run by anti-narcotics forces along the country's eastern
border with Afghanistan and Pakistan, both major opium poppy-growing
countries. 
"We've been encouraging the Iranians as part of their anti-narcotics
program, and there was an export in 2003 ... as part of the heroin and opium
smuggling program. This is an area where we try not to let the nuclear issue
prevent cooperation on countering narcotics," he said, referring to Iran's
dispute with the United Nations over its nuclear enrichment program. 
The Foreign Office spokesman said officials at the British Embassy in Tel
Aviv have requested serial and parts numbers of the seized equipment to try
to determine how it ended up in the hands of Hezbollah guerrillas fighting
Israeli forces in Lebanon. 
The equipment was found by Israeli forces in the southern Lebanese village
of Mis-a-Jebel on Aug. 8, in a house belonging to a 60-year-old man whose
four sons were all known to be Hezbollah fighters. The discovery was
disclosed in a briefing by Lt. Col. Olivier Radowicz, an Israeli army
spokesman, and later confirmed in detail by Israeli military intelligence
officials, who also provided photographs of the equipment taken in the house
where it was discovered. 
"These are tactical night-vision systems ... given to Hezbollah by Iran. The
Iranians are the 100 percent provider of all the materiel, especially
intelligence materiel, to Hezbollah," Radowicz said. 
The discovery of the night-vision equipment, together with sophisticated
recording and monitoring devices and stashes of antitank missiles and
rockets, led the Israelis to believe the five-room house was the
command-and-control unit for Hezbollah in the local area, he said. 
In the early phases of the Israeli ground advance against Hezbollah
positions across the border region, commanders complained to their superiors
that nighttime operations had been hampered by the ability of Hezbollah
fighters to observe and counter the Israeli moves. In more than six days of
bitter fighting around the village of Mis-a-Jebel, the Israeli army lost six
soldiers, and more than 20 were injured. 
"The night-vision unit was used to observe the movement of troops. It's very
close to the border, so it can see Israeli troops. You can also record what
you are watching. Then it is connected to computers. You can obtain a
perfect intelligence picture in real time about the situation. It is then
connected to firing systems or to units that are going to act in accordance
with the intelligence they are receiving," Radowicz said during the
briefing. 
"It is a system that we can find in every serious army in the world. We
don't talk here about just a terrorist fantasy. We are talking here about a
very serious, high-quality system of a very professional army. We're talking
here about hundreds of millions of dollars given by Iran to Hezbollah in the
last six years," he said. 
"In every village which served as the regional command, you can find the
same unit -- intelligence, weapons systems, command and control and
connection -- with the units which are firing or using the mobile platforms
(for firing rockets) for targeting Israel," he said. 
Israeli intelligence officials said they had contacted the British and U.S.
embassies in Tel Aviv to pass on information of the discovery of the
night-vision equipment, requesting explanations of where the equipment had
come from and how it fell into the hands of Hezbollah fighters. 
Freelance journalist Bob Graham contributed to this report. 
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URL:
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/08/20/MNGK9KLVH41.DTL 
 


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