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A man identifying himself as Shahram Amiri, an Iranian nuclear scientist, appears on a homemade video on YouTube in June. In the video, he tells his family in Iran that he plans to return soon. Amiri vanished in June 2009 and turned up Tuesday in Washington, D.C.
A man identifying himself as Shahram Amiri, an Iranian nuclear scientist, appears on a homemade video on YouTube in June. In the video, he tells his family in Iran that he plans to return soon. Amiri vanished in June 2009 and turned up Tuesday in Washington, D.C.
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WASHINGTON — An Iranian nuclear scientist who had been missing for more than a year amid Iranian claims that the CIA had abducted him turned up at the Pakistani Embassy in Washington on Tuesday and was preparing to return home, after providing what a U.S. official said was “useful information” about Iran’s nuclear program.

Shahram Amiri disappeared in June last year while on a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia.

His mysterious case became still odder Tuesday morning with the news that he was at the Iranian interests section of the Pakistani Embassy in Washington. Amiri had been “dropped off” there at 6:30 p.m. Monday, Abdul Basit, the spokesman for Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Islamabad, told McClatchy Newspapers.

That same evening, a senior U.S. official, Assistant Secretary for Near Eastern Affairs Jeffrey Feltman, sent the word to Iran via Swiss diplomats that Amiri had been in the U.S. of his own free will and was free to go, the State Department said.

Because Iran and the U.S. don’t have diplomatic relations, Pakistan handles Iranian interests in the U.S., while Switzerland represents U.S. interests in Iran.

Iran has accused the U.S. government of abducting and mistreating Amiri, a charge that the scientist himself made in one of several contradictory homemade videos that were broadcast last month on state-run Iranian television.

Obama administration officials had denied kidnapping an Iranian scientist but refused to comment on Amiri specifically until Tuesday.

“Mr. Amiri has been in the United States of his own free will and he is free to go,” Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told reporters. “In fact, he was scheduled to travel to Iran yesterday but was unable to make all of the necessary arrangements to reach Iran through transit countries.”

In contrast, Clinton noted, Iran still holds three young American hikers who were detained last year along the Iran-Iraq border and hasn’t responded to U.S. requests for information about former FBI official Robert Levinson, missing in Iran since 2007.

White House and State Department spokesmen, however, said there were no plans for a prisoner swap along the lines of last week’s spy exchange between the U.S. and Russia. Amiri was thought to be heading to Iran via the United Kingdom, U.S. officials said.

One U.S. official said that Amiri “had provided useful information” about Iran’s nuclear program, which the U.S. charges is a covert effort to develop nuclear weapons. The U.S. official declined to elaborate.

Much about Amiri’s odyssey remains unconfirmed — including how he ended up in the U.S. and why he decided to return to his native Iran.

A second U.S. official suggested that Amiri had offered to provide the U.S. with information in return for asylum and had voluntarily left his family behind in Iran. After his family came under pressure from Iranian authorities, he apparently had second thoughts about the deal and made the videos in hopes of convincing Iranian authorities that he had been abducted and taken to the U.S. against his will.

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