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Russian trace in US arms smuggling scandal?

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  • Russian trace in US arms smuggling scandal?

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    March 19 2005

    RUSSIAN TRACE IN U.S. ARMS SMUGGLING SCANDAL?


    NEW YORK, March 19 (RIA Novosti's Alexei Berezin) - An arms dealer
    arrested this week in the USA claimed that he could buy grenade
    launchers in Russia and then ship them over to the United States by
    sea, a source in the New York Attorney's Office told RIA Novosti on
    Friday.

    Last Tuesday, U.S. authorities arrested members of an international
    arms smuggling ring including nationals of Armenia, Georgia, Russia,
    Eastern European countries and South Africa. Most of the detainees
    resided in the USA, some of them illegally. Law enforcers named
    Armenian Artur Solomonyan, 26, as the ringleader.

    The authorities charged 18 individuals with conspiring to smuggle
    shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missile systems, grenade launchers,
    mortars and other weapons into the USA.

    "In the course of the talks Solomonyan told a potential buyer that
    the weapons would be shipped by sea and delivered to the ports of Los
    Angeles, New York and Miami. After the two sides have agreed on the
    price, quantity and models of weapons the latter were to be delivered
    within two months," the source from the New York Attorney's Office
    told RIA Novosti.

    According to him, when the FBI informer who had posed as an arms
    buyer said he was willing to purchase 10-15 shoulder-fired grenade
    launchers during his first meeting with Solomonyan, the latter
    answered that he and his partners were not interested in selling
    small shipments of arms but wanted to sell a batch of two thousand
    pieces in one go.

    The source said that after the first meeting which took place in a
    restaurant the two men met again later in a sauna where Solomonyan
    said that he was to obtain the grenade launchers from some former and
    acting military officers in Chechnya. In subsequent telephone
    conversations Solomonyan said that he could get the weapons from
    three different and unrelated sources.

    The FBI spokesman Andy Arena pointed out at a press conference on
    Tuesday that the detainees did not belong to any terrorist
    organization.

    Each of the suspects is facing charges carrying imminent prison terms
    of 5 to 30 years.
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