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UK soldier held for passing secrets to Iran
LONDON—The British interpreter for NATO’s commander in Afghanistan has
appeared in court accused of passing secrets to Iran, a police source
said on Thursday. The charge comes as NATO troops are fighting a
resurgent Taliban in southern Afghanistan. The United States accuses
Iran of being the world’s top sponsor of terrorism and aiding the
remnants of the Taliban in Afghanistan.
Daniel James, an interpreter for NATO commander in Afghanistan General
David Richards, had communicated with a “foreign power” believed to be
Iran, the police source said. James has an Iranian mother and speaks
fluent Pashtun, the main language of southern Afghanistan, newspapers
said.
As an interpreter for the British general who commands some 30,000 NATO
troops in Afghanistan, James would be privy to highly sensitive military
and political information. The charges are likely to embarrass
Richards, the first British general to command a large force of U.S.
troops since World War Two. Richards has been commander of NATO troops
in Afghanistan since July 31 this year when the alliance assumed
responsibility for peacekeeping across the whole of the country.
Since then, fighting between the Taliban and NATO forces has flared-up.
More than 4,000 people, a quarter of them civilians, have died in
violence in Afghanistan this year. About 160 foreign troops have also
been killed.
Officially Shi’ite Muslim Iran long supported the opposition mujahideen
against the Taliban until the radical Sunni government was overthrown by
U.S.-led forces in late 2001. But some analysts have suggested that
Tehran may now be partially backing the Taliban to embarrass Western
forces and ensure they are bogged down in Afghanistan.
The London court on Wednesday charged that on November 2, James “for a
purpose prejudicial to the safety or the interest of the state,
communicated to another person information calculated to be, or that
might be, or is intended to be directly or indirectly useful to the
enemy.”
The Crown Prosecution Service would only confirm James’ name and the
charge, but declined to confirm he was a soldier.
He is the first person to be charged with spying under Britain’s
Official Secrets Act since an MI5 officer was jailed for 23 years in
1984 for passing secrets to the Soviet Union.
The Defense Ministry was unable to comment, a spokesman said. Iranian
officials had no immediate comment.
Reporters were told to leave the magistrates court for most of the
hearing due to the sensitive nature of the charges, the CPS spokesman
said. James was remanded in custody until December 27.—Agencies |