Convicted for arms export

Published June 20, 2008

NEW YORK, June 19 (Reuters) A Pakistani man pleaded guilty on Thursday to illegally exporting parts for F-5 and F-14 military fighter jets to Malaysia which prosecutors said may have eventually ended up in Iran.

Jilani Humayun, 60, a Pakistani citizen and resident of Long Island, New York, pleaded guilty in US District Court in Manhattan to conspiring illegal export of arms and committing money lundering.

The charges carry a maximum prison term of 30 years and a one million-dollar fine. But the deal offers Humayun the possibility of a reduced sentence in exchange for full cooperation in future prosecutions related to the scheme. Humayun is due back in court on December 12.


“I knew what I was doing was illegal,” Humayun told US District Judge Laura Swain.

His lawyer said Humayun, who has been free on bail, is “in very poor health.”

Prosecutors said that in 2003, Humayun unsuccessfully sought a license to export military equipment to a Malaysian company. But he then set up a company called Vash International and between January 2004 and May 2006 exported to Malaysia F-5 and F-14 fighter-jet parts, as well as Chinook helicopter parts, in 11 unauthorised shipments, prosecutors said.

Humayun told investigators he never knew who the “end users” of the items were, prosecutors said.

Known as the Tomcat, the supersonic F-14 was used by the US Navy as a fighter plane but retired from service in 2006.

The United States exported F-14s to Iran in 1976 when Washington still had good relations with Tehran.

Iran is now the only country using the F-14 and is one of many countries which use the
F-5.

“As is well-documented in public reports, the sole customer of F-14 parts is the Iranian Air Force,” US Attorney Michael Garcia said in a statement at the time of his arrest.

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