MOBILE, Ala. -- An Iranian man pleaded guilty in federal court today  toattempting to illegally export fighter jet or military aircraft  fromthe United States to Iran, prosecutors said.
Omid Khalili  facesup to 10 years in prison and up to a $1 million fine after he  arrangeda deal for aircraft parts with an undercover agent, according to  theU.S. Attorneys Office for the Southern District of Alabama.
	 Khaliliand another man, known only as Masun, had worked with the  Iraniangovernment to procure military supplies, prosecutors said. The  paircontacted the undercover agent in November.
Khalili was  arrested in March after arriving in Miami, prosecutors said, and Masun  has not been found by authorities.
Themen were looking for  replacement parts for a military aircraft that wassold to Iran by the  U.S. before the Iranian revolution in 1979,according to a news release  from the U.S. Attorney's Office.
Tommy Loftis, a spokesman for  the U.S. Attorney's Office, declined to say what type of aircraft was  being discussed.
"Today'splea underscores the continuing threat  posed by Iranian procurementnetworks," said David Kris, assistant  attorney general for nationalsecurity, in a news release.
Khalili  first sent an e-mail to the undercover agent and asked for prices on a  list of aircraft parts, prosecutors said.
Theagent replied with  the prices, and the defendants told the agent thatthe items would have  to be shipped through another country to get toIran, prosecutors said.
More  than $70,000 in cash payments weresent from a bank in the United Arab  Emirates to a bank in Alabama as adown payment, prosecutors said.
The  aircraft parts are listed onthe U.S. Munitions List and can't be  exported from the country withouta license from the State Department,  according to the U.S. Attorney'sOffice.
Also, the items can't be  exported to Iran without aTreasury Department license because of the  U.S. trade embargo on Iran,according to prosecutors. The men hadnt  obtained any of the requiredlicenses.
Khalili and Masun were  named in a nine-countindictment in January that included charges of  conspiracy, moneylaundering, smuggling, and violations of the Arms  Export Control Actand the International Emergency Economic Powers Act,  according toprosecutors.
The case against Khalili comes after the  Mobile-based indictment, arrest and later guilty plea of international  arms dealer Jacques Monsieur.
Monsieur pleaded  guilty Nov. 23 in Mobile to trying to smuggle engines for  fighter jets to Iran, a plot that included extensive contacts with an  Alabama-based undercover agent.
Striking a deal with prosecutors,  Monsieur admitted that he attempted ship J85-21 engines and other parts  to Iran for use in aging F-5 fighter jets that the U.S. sold to Iran  before its 1979 revolution. 
A 6-count indictment accuses  Monsieur and co-defendant Dara Fotouhi -- an Iranian currently living in  France -- with conspiracy, money laundering, smuggling and violations  of the Arms Export Control Act and the International Emergency Economic  Powers Act.
According to the indictment, Monsieur was seeking  engines for F-5 fighter jets and C-130 military transport planes on  behalf of Iran.
The charges stem from an eight-month  investigation led by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents based in  Mobile and included face-to-face meetings with one undercover agent in  London and Paris to hash out the plan to smuggle the banned aircraft  parts to Iran through Colombia, according to the indictment.