Suspected Kidnapping
James Jones | 06.03.2007 17:00
CIA and Mossad," said Alon Ben-David, Israel analyst for Jane's Defense Weekly, referring to U.S. and Israeli foreign spy services. "He could be worth kidnapping, despite the risks."
The West says Iran's nuclear program is a covert attempt to make atomic bombs, a charge which Tehran denies.
A PRIZE?
A Turkish Foreign Ministry official, who declined to be named, said it was following the case at the request of Iran but did not consider it unusual.
"He is an ordinary Iranian missing person for us," the official said. "After they (the Interior Ministry) will come up with a solution we will pass the results to the Iranians through the same diplomatic procedures."
Turkish daily Hurriyet said last month two foreigners had gone to the reception of an Istanbul hotel on February 6 to make a room reservation for Asgari for three nights. They paid in cash. He checked into the hotel on February 7 and later disappeared.
Menashe Amir, an Israeli analyst of Iranian affairs, said he had information indicating that Asgari's family was with him.
"According to part of the information, his wife and children managed to leave Iran before his disappearance," Amir told Israel's Army Radio, without elaborating on his sources.
"It's very possible that he decided to defect," Amir said.
A major Mossad action involving Iranians would require the approval of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who has been at pains to reduce open tensions with Tehran that might distract from the U.S.-led diplomatic campaign against it.
But Ben-David said that Israel might consider Asgari a prize worth the price of potentially embarrassing Turkey, one of the few Muslim countries to maintain ties with the Jewish state.Britain's Daily Telegraph reported that Asgari had served as a military adviser in southern Lebanon, where an Israeli airman, Ron Arad, was captured by Iran-linked militiamen after bailing out of his crippled warplane in 1986. Arad later vanished.Israel accuses Iran of holding Arad. Iran denies it.
In what appeared to be a precaution against any reprisals by Iranian agents, Israel has ordered security at its embassies abroad to be beefed up, Israeli diplomatic sources said.
James Jones