A US citizen convicted of conspiring to provide material support to the Taliban and acquire anti-aircraft missiles was sentenced to 25 years in prison.
Alwar Pouryan received the mandatory minimum sentence yesterday for the anti-aircraft missile count and was spared a life sentence by US District Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald in Manhattan.
The defence had asked for the minimum.
More From This Section
US Attorney Preet Bharara said in a statement that Pouryan was "an American who was all too willing to do business with the Taliban." He called the sentence "just and appropriate for an individual who so callously sold out his country."
The men were arrested in Bucharest, Romania, last February by Romanian authorities. A two-year investigation by the Drug Enforcement Administration caught the men agreeing to provide military-grade weapons, including heat-seeking surface-to-air missiles, to an individual they believed represented the Taliban, authorities said.
Prosecutors said Pouryan and Orbach agreed during meetings in Ghana, Ukraine and Romania to arrange the sale of weapons to a confidential source for the Taliban's use against US military forces in Afghanistan. Pouryan and Orbach were told that the surface-to-air missiles were needed to protect Taliban heroin laboratories against attacks by US helicopters, prosecutors said.
They said the men agreed to provide more than USD 25 million in weapons, ammunition and training and were planning to earn more than USD 800,000 in commissions.
In court papers, Pouryan's lawyers wrote that Pouryan sought political asylum in the US in 1996, after it became too dangerous for Kurds in Iraq. He entered the US in September 1997 but had no family in the country. For a time, he was a linguist for the US Army as a contractor, the court papers said. He eventually was able to own a home and a grocery store.