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For his work in exposing the Islamic Republic of Iran's nuclear weapons program, he was nominated for the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize by former Swedish deputy Prime Minister Per Ahlmark. His latest book, Countdown to Crisis: the Coming Nuclear Showdown in Iran, was acclaimed by former Secretary of the Navy John Lehman, a member of the 9/11 Commission. In April 1983, he was the first U.S. correspondent on scene when the U.S. Embassy in Lebanon was blown up by Islamic militants.. During the later half
of the 1980s, he covered the Iran-Iraq war, gaining
first-hand knowledge of Iraq's deadly weapons buildup.
A ground-making study on the unconventional weapons programs of Iran, Libya, and Syria, commissioned by the Simon Wiesenthal Center in 1992, won applause from Democrats and Republicans alike.
In recent years, he has assisted veterans group in a class action lawsuit against the German companies who helped build Saddam Hussein's deadly chemical weapons, which may have contributed to Persian Gulf War Syndrome. Today, he is helping families of the
victims of the September 11 attacks prepare a class action
lawsuit against the government of the Islamic Republic of
Iran, because of its direct, material involvement in the al
Qaeda plot to attack America. And he was worked to strengthen America's greatest export of all: democracy. In 1995, along with Peter Rodman, Joshua Muravchik, and a group of Iranian patriots, he established the Foundation for Democracy in Iran (FDI). The Foundation has served as a rallying point for Iranian democrats seeking an end to brutal, clerical rule in Iran, and has helped keep Congress and the public informed of ongoing repression and support for terrorism by Iran's "moderate" new President. Timmerman's work as an investigative
reporter has won consistent praise for its accuracy and
courage. Many of the stories about
the
Clinton administration's high-technology giveaway to
Communist China started with
pieces he wrote for The American Spectator, including an
expose of influence peddling in the Pentagon under then
Secretary of Defense William Perry. He has presented his findings before Congress in public testimony and in Special Reports commissioned by various committees. The blue ribbon Commission To Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States (the Rumsfeld Commission) incorporated many of his suggestions in its final report in April 1998, which concluded it was in America's interest to deploy a national missile defense. Since 1987, Timmerman has operated
Middle East Data Project, Inc., a small business that has
provided investigative support and policy guidance to
government agencies and private companies on three
continents. As a contributing editor to Newsmax.com, he examined new security measures at U.S. ports in the fall of 2005. He and his wife live in Maryland and have five children. |