US blame Iran in abduction, death of ex-FBI agent Levinson
The Trump administration for the first time on
Monday formally blamed Iran for the presumed death of retired FBI agent Robert
Levinson, publicly identifying two Iranian intelligence officers believed
responsible for his abduction.
Levinson disappeared in Iran under mysterious
circumstances more than a decade ago, and though U.S. diplomats and
investigators have long said they thought he was taken by Iranian government
agents, Monday’s announcement in the final weeks of the Trump administration was
the most definitive assignment of blame to date.
Besides blaming two high-ranking intelligence
officers by name, U.S. officials said the Iranian regime sanctioned the plot
that led to Levinson’s abduction and lied for years about its involvement in
his disappearance through disinformation campaigns aimed at covering up the
government’s role.
The announcement comes nine months after U.S.
officials revealed that they had concluded that Levinson “may have passed some
time ago” though they did not disclose at the time the information that led
them to that assessment.
Officials on Monday would not describe any
additional information that led them to believe Levinson had died in captivity,
except to say that all evidence they had pointed in that direction, or how they
came to identify the role of the two individual intelligence officers.
Officials said they were acting now, one month
before Trump leaves office, not for any political reasons but simply because
they had finally accumulated enough information to formally hold Iran
accountable. They also said that no agreement with Iran should be reached
without a deal to free the remaining handful of U.S. citizens imprisoned in
that country.
Levinson vanished on March 9, 2007, when he was
scheduled to meet a source on the Iranian island of Kish. For years, U.S.
officials would say only that Levinson was working independently on a private
investigation. But a 2013 Associated Press investigation revealed that Levinson
had been sent on a mission by CIA analysts who had no authority to run such an
operation.
The family received a video in late 2010 as well as
proof-of-life photographs in 2011 in which he appeared disheveled with a long
beard and wearing an orange prison jumpsuit like those given to detainees at
the Guantanamo Bay prison. Even then, his whereabouts and fate were not known,
and the Iran government has persistently denied having any information about
Levinson.
Earlier this year, a federal judge in Washington
held Iran liable for his disappearance, saying the country was “in no uncertain
terms” responsible for Levinson’s “hostage taking and torture.”
In November 2019, the Iranian government
unexpectedly responded to a United Nations query by saying that Levinson was
the subject of an “open case” in Iranian Revolutionary Court. Although the
development gave the family a burst of hope, Iran clarified that the “open
case” was simply an investigation into his disappearance.



