Mossad bombed companies involved in Pakistan's nuclear program


Jerusalem, dt
A media report claims that Mossad, Israel's spy agency, was behind the 191 bombings targeting German and Swiss companies and their employees linked to Pakistan's then-secret nuclear program. According to the Swiss newspaper New Zurcher Jitung, unidentified criminals carried out three bomb attacks on these companies and individuals between February and November 191, in which only property was damaged. No one was killed.
The Jerusalem Post quoted a leading Swiss daily as saying that the United States had tried unsuccessfully to stop the activities of such companies. Three bomb attacks on German and Swiss companies followed. Israel feared that its very existence would be jeopardized by the prospect of Pakistan becoming an Islamic state equipped with a nuclear bomb.
In addition to attacks on companies and individuals in Germany and Switzerland, a number of threatening phone calls were made to company officials, according to the Swiss daily New Jitter Jitung. Not only that, there were threatening phone calls to other companies suspected of providing technical or equipment to Pakistan's nuclear program.
Media reports said that sometimes callers even talked about tapping threats. It is suspected that Mossad was behind the attacks. Swiss historian Adrian Heaney quoted a media report as saying that Mossad was involved in bombing German and Swiss companies. However, no evidence was found that Mossad was involved in the bombings, but that a secret service was involved in the attack. Haini said the bombings in Germany and Switzerland were also part of a series of bombings carried out by the Mossad in the two years since the Iraqi nuclear attacks in Western Europe.
According to the report, the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) in South Asia claimed responsibility for the bombings in Germany and Switzerland. Nothing has been heard of this organization since then. According to the Swiss newspaper, Pakistan and the Islamic Republic of Iran worked together to develop a nuclear weapon in the 1990s, with German and Swiss companies assisting in their nuclear program.
The first was on February 20 at the home of a top employee of the Swiss company Cora Engineering on February 20, the second on May 19 at the Wallischmiller factory in Markdorf, Germany, and the third on November 9 at the office of engineer Heinz Mebs in Erlogen, Germany.

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