Iran is attempting to acquire weapons of mass destruction, according to a new German intelligence report.
The report says the Iranian regime is trying to expand its arsenal with heavier weapons amid flaring tensions with the United States.
Describing to the Islamic Republic as a "risk country," the May 2019 report reveals that Tehran is "making efforts to expand its conventional arsenal of weapons with weapons of mass destruction."
These weapons are defined as atomic bombs, biological and chemical weapons by the Bavarian Office for the Protection of the Constitution - Germany's equivalent of the CIA.
The Iranians said they would restrict their nuclear program in the 2015 Iran Deal.
President Trump's administration slammed the agreement, however, as it did not prevent weapons development.
US national security adviser John Bolton said on Wednesday there was "no reason"for Iran to back out of its nuclear deal other than to seek atomic weapons, a year after the U.S. president unilaterally withdrew America from the accord.
Iran has set a July 7 deadline for Europe to offer better terms to the unraveling nuclear deal, otherwise, it will resume enrichment closer to weapons level.
The US ambassador to Germany told Fox News: "We know the Iranian regime is on the hunt for money to fund their malign activities and so it is imperative that the U.S. and our European allies work together to deny this regime the capital they seek.
"They will use secretive schemes and dark money; we must be vigilant. They are strapped for cash."
The German Intelligence report states that Iran, along with North Korea and Pakistan, is attempting to obtain contracts from their technologically advanced factories.
It refers to German customs officers intercepting a beam welding machine which can be used for making missile launch vehicles.
The device had been ordered through a Malaysian company but was destined for Iran, the intelligence report said.
In recent weeks, tensions have soared as the U.S. beefed up its military presence in the Persian Gulf in response to a still-unexplained threat from Iran.
On Wednesday, Trump's adviser Bolton claimed the alleged sabotage of four oil tankers off the coast of the United Arab Emirates came from naval mines placed "almost certainly by Iran."
Speaking in Abu Dhabi, the Emirati capital, Bolton told journalists that there had been a previously unknown attempt to attack the Saudi oil port of Yanbu as well.
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