Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune -- Four Singaporeans and one Iranian were indicted, along with four of their companies, as part of a conspiracy that allegedly involved illegal shipment of about 6,000 radio-frequency modules from the United States to Iran. At least 16 of the modules were later found in unexploded improvised explosive devices (IEDs) in Iraq, according to the indictment. A Minnesota manufacturer was allegedly duped into supplying radio devices to Singapore that later turned up in roadside bombs in Iraq, according to an indictment unsealed Tuesday in Washington, D.C. >>>
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Wow this is bad news for IRI,
by amirparvizforsecularmonarchy on Wed Oct 26, 2011 05:59 PM PDTthey have proof of the parts ending up in iraq, via singapore then via iran, though no proof who in iran and where in iran they were sent to, so while the IRI can deny it was them directly, it's still not great news for as a transit point for bombs to kill americans.