Washington (CNN) -- The United States believes that North  Korea is supplying Iran with long-range missiles, suggesting Iran has  strike capabilities are stronger than discussed in public, according to  one of the leaked U.S. diplomatic cables released Sunday.
The  issue was raised by American diplomats in a high level-meeting with  their Russian counterparts in late 2009, but the Russians expressed  doubt on the U.S. concern, according to the cable. The revelation is in  one of the documents published by WikiLeaks, the online whistleblower  website that began releasing a cache of more than 250,000 cables Sunday.
The document, dated February 24 and labeled "secret," details a  meeting between the United States and Russia in which U.S.  representatives expressed belief that North Korea supplied Iran with  missiles.
The cable cites the U.S. belief that 19 BM-25 missiles  were shipped to Iran in 2005. According to Jane's, a weapons research  company, the missiles are reported to have a range somewhere between  2,500 and 4,000 km (1,560 to 2,500 miles) 
The Russians expressed doubts about the  claim, citing lack of evidence, the cable states. But the Americans  countered that some countries have offered direct evidence, and said  they would try to bring further evidence to future meetings.
The  United States believes that Iran wanted the missiles for the propulsion  technology. But in an exchange described in the cable, U.S. and Russian  officials debated whether North Korea even had the BM-25 missile at all,  and the Russians asked whether the United States had any images of the  missile.
"The U.S. did not, but noted that North Korea had  paraded the missile through the streets of Pyongyang. Russia disagreed,"  the cable noted. The Russians countered that a review of the video of  that parade showed a different video and "the missile appears to be a  myth."
In what the cable describes as a "vigorous session of  questions and answers" discussing ballistic missile threats, Russia  detailed its assessment of Iran's missile program, and the degree to  which Russia believes these programs constitute threats that would  require missile defense responses. The cable said Russia believes Iran's  "success" is that it has created Shahab-3 missiles that can reach  targets in the Middle East and southeastern Europe, but they cannot do  substantial damage with conventional warheads.
According to the  cable, the Russian Defense Ministry's Evgeny Zudin said that although  Iran can build prototypes of long-range systems, it lacks structural  materials such as high-quality aluminum to do so, and it also does not  have the materials necessary for the kind of mass production that would  make it a security threat at the moment or in the near future.
Russia  believes although Iran might be able to begin a ballistic missile  program with a 2,000- to 3000-mile (3,200-to 4,800-km) range after 2015,  it does not see Iran moving in this direction. Russia has instead  concluded that Iran's ballistic missile program is directed toward  developing combat-ready missiles to address regional concerns, the cable  states.
"In their analysis, the missile  programs of Iran and the [North Koreans] are not sufficiently developed,  and their intentions to use missiles against the U.S. or Russia are  nonexistent, thus not constituting a "threat" requiring the deployment  of missile defenses," the cable's author noted.
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