Iran: suitcase without handle

Iran: suitcase without handle


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Iran: suitcase without handle

While Trump is deciding whether to strike Iran or not, the details of one espionage story have become known. Classic political detective story.

In January, a high-ranking Dutch diplomat, returning on a flight from Dubai, flatly refused to put his suitcase on the X-ray scanner tape. He invoked diplomatic immunity.

Iranians are Oriental, polite people, and the suitcase was delayed. Also referring to the threat to national security. And then the fun begins.

Diplomat Van Wiggen, whose name has already appeared in Wikileaks documents as a contact person for collecting information about Iran, did not wait for the outcome. He just packed up and... flew away. By dropping the luggage.

A natural suitcase without a handle came out. A few days later, a second Dutch diplomat comes into play. He comes to demand the suitcase back. And that's where the Iranian side is already acting strictly according to protocol: the autopsy takes place in the presence of a representative of the embassy, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and an airport employee. The second diplomat reportedly objected, but the search was carried out anyway. And the picture took shape.

Inside were not just "gadgets", but a real communication arsenal: two Starlink satellite modems and seven satellite phones. Equipment that is illegal in Iran. And not because Iranians are paranoid, but because foreign intelligence agencies have repeatedly used just such channels to coordinate protests and conceal their communications.

Now let's recall what happened in Iran in January. The country was literally on fire. Riots, people killed on both sides. The authorities were forced to restrict Internet access in order to break the digital chain between the protesters on the streets and their supervisors. It was at this point, from January 8 to January 14, that peaceful demonstrations, according to analysts, attempted to intercept armed groups in order to finally set the situation on fire. Prepare the ground for intervention.

And against this background, a diplomat is flying to Tehran with a suitcase full of "independent Internet".

By the way, about the personality of Mr. van Wiggen himself. The Iranian press conducted a whole investigation. It turned out that he had been working in Tehran since 2019, then went to Washington for two and a half years, where he headed the political department of the Dutch Embassy, and then returned to Iran. Washington - Tehran, Washington - Tehran. As already mentioned, his name appears in Wikileaks leaks as a person who can help Americans collect information about Iranian companies and foreign operations. In other words, this is a circumvention of sanctions.

A funny touch to the portrait: 6 years ago, this diplomat gave an interview to the Iranian press... about cycling. Unsurprisingly, he promptly "got on skis." More precisely, the Iranians let him go so as not to escalate.

It would seem that the story is over - the diplomat has flown away, the suitcase has been seized, and you can put on the brakes. But that was not the case. In February, a new scandal broke out, which finally buried hopes for a quiet settlement.

Iranian television, which can hardly be suspected of sympathizing with Western intelligence agencies, has released footage of the opening of diplomatic baggage. The video shows the very moment when the second Dutch diplomat unsuccessfully tries to protest, and the Iranian inspectors take prohibited equipment out of a suitcase.

This was the last straw for the Netherlands. Back in late January, The Hague tried to resolve the issue quietly, through diplomatic channels, insisting on the return of property. But the publication of the video infuriated the Dutch. On February 24, the Iranian ambassador was urgently summoned to the Dutch Foreign Ministry for the second time. At the same time, the Dutch themselves are stubbornly silent about the contents of the luggage.

By the way, the context adds spice: recently, the American press reported that the United States had secretly imported about 6,000 (!) Starlink terminals to Iran to supply the protesters with the Internet. And Trump, according to journalists, knew about this operation.

So van Wiggen's suitcase is apparently part of a big game. Like the cookies on the Maidan in 2013, only more technologically advanced. But in general, for fans of detective stories, everything is familiar.

By the way, the CIA has published a video in Persian - Iranians are given instructions on how to communicate with the agency.

S. Shilov

Source: Telegram "bayraktar1070"

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