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Israel to kill in U.S., allied nations
By Richard Sale
Israel is embarking upon a more aggressive approach to the war on
terror that will include staging targeted killings in the United States
and other friendly countries, former Israeli intelligence officials told
United Press International. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has forbidden the practice until
now, these sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The Israeli statements were confirmed by more than a half dozen former
and currently serving U.S. foreign policy and intelligence officials in
interviews with United Press International. But an official at the Israeli Embassy in Washington told UPI: "That
is rubbish. It is completely untrue. Israel and the United States have
such a close and co-operative intelligence relationship, especially in
the field of counter-terrorism, that the assertion is ludicrous." With the appointment of Meir Dagan, the new director of Israel's
Mossad secret intelligence service, Sharon is preparing "a huge budget"
increase for the spy agency as part of "a tougher stance in fighting
global jihad (or holy war)," one Israeli official said. Since Sharon became Israeli prime minister, Tel Aviv has mainly
limited its practice of targeted killings to the West Bank and Gaza
because "no one wanted such operations on their territory," a former
Israeli intelligence official said. Another former Israeli government official said that under Sharon,
"diplomatic constraints have prevented the Mossad from carrying out
'preventive operations' (targeted killings) on the soil of friendly
countries until now." He said Sharon is "reversing that policy, even if it risks
complications to Israel's bilateral relations." A former Israeli military intelligence source agreed: "What Sharon
wants is a much more extensive and tough approach to global terrorism,
and this includes greater operational maneuverability." Does this mean assassinations on the soil of allies? "It does," he said. "Mossad is definitely being beefed up," a U.S. government official
said of the Israeli agency's budget increase. He declined to comment on
the Tel Aviv's geographic expansion of targeted killings. An FBI spokesman also declined to comment, saying: "This is a policy
matter. We only enforce federal laws." A congressional staff member with deep knowledge of intelligence
matters said, "I don't know on what basis we would be able to protest
Israel's actions." He referred to the recent killing of Qaed Salim Sinan
al Harethi, a top al Qaida leader, in Yemen by a remotely controlled CIA
drone. "That was done on the soil of a friendly ally," the staffer said. But the complications posed by Israel's new policy are real. "Israel does not have a good record at doing this sort of thing,"
said former CIA counter-terrorism official Larry Johnson. He cited the 1997 fiasco where two Mossad agents were captured after
they tried to assassinate Khaled Mashaal, a Hamas political leader, by
injecting him with poison. According to Johnson, the attempt, made in Amman, Jordan, caused a
political crisis in Israeli-Jordan relations. In addition, because the
Israeli agents carried Canadian passports, Canada withdrew its ambassador
in protest, he said. Jordan is one of two Arab nations to recognize Israel.
The other is Egypt. At the time, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said, "I have no
intention of stopping the activities of this government against terror,"
according to a CNN report. Former CIA officials say Israel was forced to free jailed Hamas founder
Sheikh Ahmad Yassin and 70 other Jordanian and Palestinian prisoner being
held in Israeli jails to secure the release of the two would-be Mossad
assassins. Phil Stoddard, former director of the Middle East Institute, cited a
botched plot to kill Ali Hassan Salemeh, the mastermind of the 1972 Munich
Olympics massacre. The 1974 attempt severely embarrassed Mossad when the
Israeli hit team mistakenly assassinated a Moroccan waiter in Lillehammer,
Norway. Salemeh, later a CIA asset, was killed in Beirut, Lebanon, in 1976 by a
car bomb placed by an Israeli assassination team, former U.S. intelligence
officials said. "Israel knew Salemeh was providing us with preventive intelligence on
the Palestinians and his being killed pissed off a lot of people," said a
former senior CIA official. But some Israeli operations have been successful. Gerald Bull, an Ontario-born U.S. citizen and designer of the Iraqi
supergun -- a massive artillery system capable of launching satellites into
orbit, and of delivering nuclear chemical or biological payloads from
Baghdad to Israel -- was killed in Belgium in March 1990. The killing is
still unsolved, but former CIA officials said a Mossad hit team is the most
likely suspect. Bull worked on the supergun design -- codenamed Project Babylon -- for
10 years, and helped the Iraqis develop many smaller artillery systems. He
was found with five bullets in his head outside his Brussels apartment. Israeli hit teams, which consist of units or squadrons of the Kidon, a
sub-unit for Mossad's highly secret Metsada department, would stage the
operations, former Israeli intelligence sources said. Kidon is a Hebrew
word meaning "bayonet," one former Israeli intelligence source said. This Israeli government source explained that in the past Israel has not
staged targeted killings in friendly countries because "no one wanted such
operations on their territory." This has become irrelevant, he said. Dagan, the new hard-driving director of Mossad, will implement the new
changes, former Israeli government officials said. Dagan, nicknamed "the gun," was Sharon's adviser on counter-terrorism
during the government of Netanyahu in 1996, former Israeli government
officials say. A former military man, Dagan has also undertaken extremely
sensitive diplomatic missions for several of Israel's prime ministers,
former Israeli government sources said. Former Israel Defense Forces Lt. Col. Gal Luft, who served under Dagan,
described him as an "extremely creative individual -- creative to the point
of recklessness." A former CIA official who knows Dagan said the new Mossad director knows
"his foreign affairs inside and out," and has a "real killer instinct." Dagan is also "an intelligence natural" who has "a superb analyst not
afraid to act on gut instinct," the former CIA official said. Dagan has already removed Mossad officials whom he regards as "being too
conservative or too cautious" and is building up "a constituency of senior
people of the same mentality," one former long-time Israeli operative said. Dagan is also urging that Mossad operatives rely less on secret sources
and rely more on open information that is so plentifully provided on the
Internet and newspapers. "It's a cultural thing," one former Israeli intelligence operative
explained. "Mossad in the past has put its emphasis on Humint (human
intelligence) and secret operations and has neglected the whole field of
open media, which has become extremely important." |