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We’re right to stop giving our secrets to Iran – and it might avert WW3

MI5 director-general Ken McCallum has warned university chiefs they must stop sensitive joint research with hostile states

April 26, 2024 16:52
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An Iranian long-range Ghadr missile displaying "Down with Israel" in Hebrew is pictured at a defence exhibition in city of Isfahan, central Iran, on February 8, 2023. (Photo by MORTEZA SALEHI / TASNIM NEWS / AFP) (Photo by MORTEZA SALEHI/TASNIM NEWS/AFP via Getty Images)
2 min read

We can only hope that the suggestion made in January by Defence Secretary Grant Shapps, that we are now living in the period before the next world war, as opposed to the era since the last one, turns out to be too pessimistic. I haven’t known a time when the international climate seemed so threatening, or the links between hostile states – principally Russia, China, Iran and North Korea – so strong. But it is clear that our chances of averting a global conflict or, heaven forbid, surviving one it if it should break out, would be a lot stronger if we stopped giving our enemies access to valuable military secrets.

There isn’t much doubt that until now, we have done just that. A notorious example is China’s fearsome naval railgun, which uses electromagnetic pulses to fire up to 120 artillery rounds per minute with a muzzle velocity six times the speed of sound. Western intelligence and military technology experts believe its development was made possible by the theft of research pioneered in Britain and America. The same is true of recent Chinese advances in quantum sensors and computing, which has the potential to grant our adversaries incalculable advantages.

And then there are the numerous cases revealed last year by this newspaper of research collaborations on new military technologies between UK-based and Iranian academics, most of them working at universities covered by British sanctions because of their involvement in Iran’s nuclear weapons programme. Blue chip British universities were involved, including Cambridge, Cranfield, Glasgow and Imperial College, London, and the new and improved lethal technologies concerned included improvements to military attack drones and their guidance systems, as sold in large numbers by Iran to Russia and deployed to deadly effect in Ukraine – and, thankfully, with rather less impact against Israel earlier this month.

The Prime Minister announced an inquiry into the JC’s revelations in the House of Commons last June. It has involved five government departments, led by officials at Business and Trade, and for some time its results appeared to be uncertain. However, I was recently told that files on Iranian collaborations with eleven UK universities have now been sent to the Office of Sanctions Implementation at the Treasury and His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, which have powers to initiate legal proceedings for breaching sanctions. It is supposedly illegal to share any kind of military or “dual use” technology with Iran.