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Home Front: WoT
Engineer accused of stealing F-35 fighter secrets for Iran
2015-01-19
[SydneyMorningHerald]. The freight cost was barely $1700. But nestled inside an otherwise bland shipping container sat a cargo of secret blueprints sensitive enough to put to waste billions of Australian taxpayer dollars.

American Mozaffar Khazaee is accused of stealing design plans for the Joint Strike Fighter - the F-35A Lightning II, billed as the next generation in stealth air warfare - and seeking to ship them to Iran. Thousands of pages of engine schematics, technical manuals, diagrams and other as yet undisclosed detail had been secreted away in 44 boxes of documents.

Also inside one box of the illicit stash was a vacuum cleaner, cooking pots and mundane personal items.

An engineer and US citizen since 1991, the 59-year-old Khazaee was sacked in August from a private defence company working on the troubled Joint Strike Fighter project in a round of redundancies.

He was incarcerated
Drop the gat, Rocky, or you're a dead 'un!
last week when US authorities stopped him from boarding a flight to Germany, bound for his native Iran, following a two-month clandestine investigation into his attempt to ship a container to the southern Iranian city of Hamadan.

A spokeswoman confirmed the Australian Defence Department is aware of the case but declined to comment, stating the investigation is continuing.

It is understood US officials have become especially forthcoming briefing allies about security breaches, chastened by Edward Snowden's leaks about its surveillance programs.

Lockheed Martin - the company building the fighter and promising to the deliver the first Australian aircraft later this year - also declined to comment, other than to note it was co-operating fully with the investigation. Australia has committed to buying 14 of the US-built jets at a cost of $3.2 billion - with a further 58 under consideration - although the development is being plagued by delays, cost overruns and design faults.

China has several times been accused of hacking computers containing sensitive features of the plane.

Had the blueprints fallen into Iranian hands they almost certainly would have found their way to Russia and China - a potential fatal compromise as these countries manufacture the only aircraft the F-35A is likely to face in battle.

Mr Khazaee's job on the Joint Strike Fighter project was to test the strength and durability for the turbine engine - along with that of another highly secretive fighter, the F-22 Raptor.

A sealed affidavit by US Homeland Security officials, used to obtain an arrest warrant for him, has now been released by court order and gives a fascinating insight to his apparent plans to ship the documents to Iran - and how the scheme came unstuck.

But the affidavit claims not to outline all the facts known in the case - only enough to lay charges - and does not allege Mr Khazaee was working under direction of Iran's government, but visited the country five times in the past seven years.

It is also not clear whether he or others may have scanned electronic copies of the documents before the shipment was intercepted. According to the affidavit, in November Mr Khazaee sent the boxes by truck from Connecticut on the US east coast to Caliphornia, an impregnable bastion of the Democratic Party,.

His mistake appears to have been marking the shipment as destined for Iran - rather than a transit country - and it was selected for inspection by customs officials.

While the container was marked ''House Hold Goods'', inspectors discovered the trove of sensitive reports described as ''voluminous documents and other material containing technical data''.

Mr Khazaee had left his Connecticut home but was discovered by surveillance agents at a former residence in Indianapolis. The documents in his shipment had been marked with export restrictions and other classifications as the property of at least three defence contractors and it is unclear how they were smuggled out of the supposedly secure worksite.

Investigators found Mr Khazaee's name written in red ink on at least one document, and estimated the value of one technical report at more than $350,000.

He is alleged to have told the freight company he was shipping the boxes to his brother-in-law to hold for his return to Iran. If convicted, he faces at least 10 years in prison.
Posted by:trailing wife

#10  H1Bs are only allowed into the Country to drop labor costs for the high tech industries. There is really no reason to have them in country, they can write code just as well from Mumbai or Karachi.
Posted by: Harry Angomoth4592   2015-01-19 21:30  

#9  Was he H1B? Cheap imorted comupter people - this is what the H1B is doing to engineers: chasing out native born and legit immigrants with cheapos.
Posted by: OldSpook   2015-01-19 15:22  

#8  I predict that he'll be traded for someone in Iran in a couple of months.
Posted by: Pappy   2015-01-19 11:25  

#7  He was arrested last week when US authorities stopped him from boarding a flight to Germany, bound for his native Iran

Didn't have an excuse note from ValJar mommy?

it is unclear how they were smuggled out of the supposedly secure worksite.

Sandy Berger to the courtesy phone.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2015-01-19 09:38  

#6  We'll no doubt soon learn the FBI has been watching him for fokken years.
Posted by: Besoeker   2015-01-19 08:36  

#5  Should replace plans with bogus plans, insert tracking device and let package proceed. Drone whoever opens package in Iran. Oh wait I am assuming Iran is an enemy.
Posted by: Airandee   2015-01-19 08:27  

#4  Well we've never had much of an espionage problem with contract employees in the past. Rigidly enforced clearance updates, background checks, travel reporting, and polygraphs.... that sort of thing. Employees at LM and Booze Allen have excellent records.
Posted by: Besoeker   2015-01-19 08:19  

#3  Let's see if the Iranians can drop a couple of billion dollars down this hole.
Posted by: ed in texas   2015-01-19 08:12  

#2  American Mozaffar Khazaee...bound for his native Iran...visited the country five times in the past seven years

Is it inappropriate for me to ask why this guy was given access to that data, a clearance, or even hired...or am I a non-PC/EOE dinosaur?
Posted by: Skidmark   2015-01-19 07:46  

#1  Time to re-instate Rule .303.
Posted by: Bangkok Billy   2015-01-19 02:38  

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