Iran says enemies used lizards to spy

Iran says enemies used lizards to spy

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Iran's Western enemies used lizards that "attract atomic waves" to spy on the country's nuclear program, the former chief-of-staff of Iran's military announced


Tuesday. Speaking to local reporters, Hassan Firuzabadi, a senior adviser to Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said that the West frequently spies on Iran using tourists and


environmentalists. "Several years ago, some individuals came to Iran to collect aid for Palestine.... We were suspicious of the route they chose," Firuzabadi told local media, AFP


reports. "In their possessions were a variety of reptile desert species like lizards, chameleons.... We found out that their skin attracts atomic waves and that they were nuclear spies


who wanted to find out where inside the Islamic Republic of Iran we have uranium mines and where we are engaged in atomic activities," Firuzabadi said. The accusations come in the wake


of reports that a Canadian-Iranian environmentalist and academic, Kavous Seyed Emami, allegedly committed suicide in an Iranian prison after being accused of spying on the country. Though


there is little evidence that Emami was a spy, the accusations of spy craft and lizards fit with a pattern of paranoia in Iran. "The evidence isn't there that he was a spy,"


Benjamin Radd, a Middle East expert at UCLA, told _Newsweek_. "But the trials and hearings are behind closed doors, the defense is limited in terms of what it can do or say." Radd


continued, "The extent of whether [the accusations are] true or not isn't the issue, due process isn't given and there is no transparency. Iran is hyperparanoid that there are


attempts to undermine it, so they are going to suspect as many as they can." Human rights groups have called for an independent investigation into Emami's death. "If they had


any evidence that he did something wrong or he exchanged any information, they would have made it public," Omid Memarian, a New York–based Iran expert, told _Newsweek_. "It's


just a bogus charge. They are cynical about dual nationals and academics that travel abroad and have influence in the society they work in." Meanwhile, scientists cast doubt on whether


lizards can be used to spy on nuclear facilities. "The claim that lizards 'attract atomic waves' is nothing that I have ever heard of, and it sounds totally bogus to


me," James Andrews, a scientist at the Vermont Amphibion Atlas, told _Newsweek_. In previous years, the U.S. has used electronic sensors installed in the ground in Iran to spy on the


country's nuclear program. The military has also floated the idea of using genetically modified plants for spy work in areas deemed unsuitable for traditional sensors. Both the U.S. and


Russia, among other countries, have used dolphins for military operations and espionage. In 2000, Ukraine also sold military dolphins to Iran, according to the BBC.