Israel's Mossad spy agency estimates Iran will
develop a nuclear weapon within three years and continue to
provide rockets to regional armed groups, a newspaper reported
on Tuesday.
Mossad director Meir Dagan, in an intelligence
assessment presented to Israel's powerful foreign affairs and
defence committee on Monday, said the Jewish state would face
increased threats on all fronts, Maariv daily said.
Dagan's estimate of Iran's nuclear ambitions differs sharply
from an assessment by the US intelligence community late last
year that said Iran had mothballed its nuclear weapons programme
in 2003.
That report compiled by 16 US intelligence agencies said the
Islamic republic would not be able to attain a nuclear weapon
until 2015.
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Israel has questioned those findings, claiming that although
Iran may have temporarily halted its nuclear drive five years
ago it has since relaunched it while pressing ahead with a public
uranium enrichment programme.
Tehran has always insisted its nuclear programme is for peaceful
purposes.
In Monday's report, Dagan also predicted that Tehran would
continue to supply more and better rockets and training to Palestinian
militant groups in the Gaza Strip.
Dagan added that Iran's allies Syria and the Lebanese Shiite
militia Hezbollah were also working to develop an increased
rocket ability.
"Syria is improving its surface-to-surface missile system
and today the quantity of missiles and rockets is twice as large
as two years ago," Dagan said, according to Maariv.
Israel has long perceived Iran as its greatest threat, especially
after Iran's President Mahmud Ahmadinejad relaunched its nuclear
enrichment programme and repeatedly predicted the demise of
the Jewish state.