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Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Posts Tagged ‘Dubai’

Bergman’s Critique of al-Mabouh Hit in GQ

Sunday, January 9th, 2011

Ronen Bergman has expanded on his article for Yediot of a few weeks ago in a long essay for GQ, which is one of the most comprehensive profiles I’ve read of the Mossad hit on Mahmoud al-Mabouh.  Until now, I don’t believe anyone knew that the Mossad had actually made a prior failed attempt on al-Mabouh’s life also in Dubai.  Further, while many believed the assassination of a Syrian general and confidant of Bashar Assad was the work of the Mossad, Bergman confirms this and reveals that the victim ran the country’s nuclear program.  If true, this offers a hitherto unknown and potent motive for the Mossad to assassinate him.

One of the values of the article is that Bergman describes, in al-Mabouh’s words, one of the operations he carried out in which he and an accomplice killed an IDF soldier.  The Hamas operative describes in cold-blooded detail and with great pride how his partner shot the young boy in the back seat of the car they’d used to pick him up on the highway.  Until now, few people got a real sense of who al-Mabouh was, and he wasn’t a nice guy.  But, when you come right down to it, was al-Mabouh that much different than Dagan himself?  Weren’t they both warriors on behalf of their people?  And aren’t all such warriors fundamentally flawed?

Bergman retells the story of the famous photo hanging in his office, a story which has always troubled me:

Several Mossad operatives who have attended meetings in Dagan’s office describe a ritual that he goes through when preparing a team for a dangerous mission. During the meeting, Dagan points to a large photograph hanging on his office wall of a bearded Jew wrapped in a prayer shawl, kneeling on the ground with his arms in the air. The man’s fists are clenched, and his piercing eyes look straight ahead. Next to him stand two German SS officers, one holding a club and the other a pistol. “This man,” Dagan says, “was my grandfather, Dov Ehrlich.” He then explains that shortly after the photo was taken, on October 5, 1942, his grandfather was murdered by the Nazis along with his family and thousands of other Jews in the small Polish town of Lukow.

“Look at this photograph,” Dagan tells the Caesarea fighters. “This is what must guide us and lead us to act on behalf of the State of Israel. I look at the picture and vow that I will do everything I can to ensure that something like this will never happen again.”

First, I have wondered how the grandchild of a Holocaust victim could ever find a photo of his relative at the precise moment of his execution.  While it is possible, the odds of it happening seem almost infinitesimal.  Rather, the entire enterprise smacks of an actor’s prop, a coach’s pep talk before a big game in which he uses a particularly heart-wrenching story to evoke the emotional response his players will need to succeed in their hour of execution.

I was also troubled, even if the picture was genuine, that the child of a victim would display it in such a public way and exploit the memory of his grandfather in such a way.  If it were me, such trauma would be a deeply personal matter.  I would discuss it, perhaps even use it to motivate others.  But displaying one’s own grandfather the moment before he died?  There is something cold and brutal about it.  Yes, I understand that for Dagan there is nothing more sacred than the mission to safeguard his people; so that exploiting his grandfather’s memory would be the means justifying the end.  But still it’s too much for me to comprehend.  I’d prefer my sorrow to be private, and not ostentatiously displayed to an entire nation as Dagan’s has.

Much of the rest of the article’s content is pretty inside stuff and more interesting to those truly interested in cloak and dagger and how such covert operations are executed.

But towards the end of the piece is where Bergman steps back and analyzes the repercussions of the assassination for the Mossad and Israel.  In contrast to Israeli intelligence analysts when they speak to the domestic audience and sing Meir Dagan‘s praises as Haaretz’s Ari Shavit did on Mabat yesterday, calling him the “greatest James Bond in the world,” Bergman takes a much more measured approach.  And this is where he shines.  He describes the hubris of the Mossad in its planning and execution of the operation:

…The more fundamental errors committed by the team had less to do with cloak-and-dagger disguises than with a kind of arrogance that seems to have pervaded the planning and execution of the mission.

Despite the fact that Dubai is a hostile environment—a distant Arab state with ties to Iran—many details of the mission suggest the Mossad treated it as if they were operating inside a base [friendly] country.

…One of the most serious mistakes made by the planners of the operation—certainly the one that caused the greatest embarrassment to the Mossad and to Israel—involved the use of forged foreign identities…Whenever the Mossad is found out, as has happened from time to time, a major diplomatic scandal erupts.

…What the blown identities of the operatives illustrate more than anything is the now seemingly insurmountable problem posed by twenty-first-century counterespionage systems. False identities and cover stories are no longer any match for well-placed security cameras, effective passport control, and computer software that can almost instantly track communications and financial transactions.

Here is the money passage in the entire piece, which gets at the fundamental flaw underlying not only the Dubai “job,” as Bergman calls it, but the entire premise of the Mossad.  There is also a bombshell below which I don’t believe has been previously exposed:

Why did the Mossad permit things to go so wrong in Dubai? In a word, the answer is leadership. Because Dagan refashioned the Mossad in his own image, and because he drove out anyone who was willing to question his decisions, there was no one in the agency to tell him that the Dubai operation was badly conceived and badly planned. They simply did not believe that a minnow in the world of intelligence services such as Dubai would be any match for Israel’s Caesarea [the name of the top-secret unit from which the assassins emerged] fighters.

As one very senior German intelligence expert told me: “The Israelis’ problem has always been that they underestimate everyone—the Arabs, the Iranians, Hamas. They are always the smartest and think they can hoodwink everyone all the time. A little more respect for the other side—even if you think he is a dumb Arab or a German without imagination—and a little more modesty would have saved us all from this embarrassing entanglement.”

The Dubai fiasco caused a great deal of damage to Israel, to the Mossad, and to its relations with other Western intelligence organizations. It led to unprecedented revelations of Mossad personnel and methods, far more than any previous bungled operation. A number of states who believe that their passports were forged or otherwise misused by the agency have expelled Mossad representatives. The British response in particular was furious. And Israel’s long-standing security-and-intelligence cooperation with Germany has also been dealt a hugely damaging blow.

In early June, the head of the Caesarea unit in the Mossad—who had been considered the leading contender to eventually replace Dagan—offered his resignation. As for Dagan’s future, before Dubai he had hoped that the liquidation of Al-Mabhouh would ensure yet another extension of his tenure as director of the agency. But that has not come to pass…And so the Mossad “with a knife between its teeth” [the term Ariel Sharon used when appointing Dagan to his job] likely is entering another period of confusion and self-doubt.

“There is no doubt Dagan received an organization on the verge of coma and brought it back to its feet,” one Mossad veteran of many years told me…”The problem is that multiplying its volume of activity many times over came with the price of compromising on security protocols. And along with success came hubris. Together, they brought the Dubai debacle. And now, in some areas, his successor will find a Mossad even worse off than Dagan found in 2002.”

When Bergman published a Hebrew version of this story he did not include the information that the director the Caesarea unit had offered his resignation.  But this an important indication that, despite popular opinion within Israel, the operation was a failure as Bergman states.  While Israel was crowing over the success and its apologists around the world and here in the comment threads were trumpeting the fact that Israel had rid the world of a bad guy, within the political leadership another stock taking was occurring.  Someone seems to have heard the massive outcry from Israel’s outraged allies whose citizens were compromised and endangered.

Former Mossad Chief Implies Israeli Responsibility for al-Mabouh Assassination, Concedes It Was a “Failure”

Sunday, January 2nd, 2011
bibi dagan hug

Bibi hugs Dagan for years of sterling service 'on behalf of the Jewish people' (Reuters)

Former Mossad chief Shabtai Shavit, interviewed on Israeli TV, said that Israel’s assassination of senior Hamas operative Mahmoud al-Mabouh, was “a failure.”  Of course, he made this statement in the context of trying to justify Meir Dagan‘s overall record, saying the aftermath of the killing was a “lone failure” and something unusual in the long line of “successes” Dagan achieved.  According to Shavit, the failure came in the context of a sterling record of operations.  The former director noted that an intelligence agency “isn’t an insurance company” and that you have to take risks and that there will be some failures when you do so.

Despite his after the fact justification of the operation and Dagan’s failure, not only is this statement a bombshell, the fact that he spoke about the event in this fashion as much as concedes Israel was author of the crime.  Since I presume ex-Mossad directors don’t speak out of school and are loyal to the organization and its interests, one can only presume that such a statement was orchestrated by the incoming Mossad director, Tamir Pardo.  When Pardo was first named to his new position, there were reports that Pardo had opposed the assassination when it was first proposed.  So this may be of a piece with that news.  In effect, Pardo may be trying to make a clean breast of things.

One of the more chutzpahdik terms of appreciation given to Dagan by Bibi Netanayhu at the cabinet meeting that marked the conclusion of his service, was Bibi’s offer of thanks with an upraised finger, as if to emphasize the drama of it all, on behalf of “the entire Jewish people.” I don’t know about you (if you’re Jewish), but I don’t need any Mossad directors acting on my behalf as a member of the Jewish people. I’d far prefer that he stuck to serving his own nation and not all the rest of us in the world. The very fact that Bibi would make such a sweeping statement is noxious. Not only that, but when the Mossad acts as it did in the al-Mabouh killing, the rest of the world will then find it totally justified in blaming the entire Jewish people for the acts of this sort by Mossad killers.

The Mossad neither acts nor speaks in my name as a member of the Jewish people. It acts, and should only act, in the name of Israel. It must be this way. The way of Bibi leads to disaster for the Jewish people.  It leads to disaster for the Israeli nation as well.  But that’s a different story.

H/t to reader Shmuel.

Wikileaks: State Department Lied, Denying Dubai Asked for Assistance in Tracking Mossad Assassins

Sunday, December 26th, 2010
dubai mossad credit card dataList submitted by Dubai to State Dept. of credit cards used by Mossad killers

On February 25, 2010, State Department spokesperson Philip Crowley lied when he told a press conference that he wasn’t aware of any request from Dubai for assistance in tracking the Mossad killers of Mahmoud al-Mabouh.  To those who say that Wikileaks hasn’t told us anything we didn’t already know–think again.

Wikileaks has just released a February 24, 2010 cable in which the embassy relays the specific credit card numbers used by 14 of the 27 known Mossad suspects to State with a request for assistance from authorities investigating the killing, and confirms that the UAE foreign minister made the exact same request directly to Secretary Clinton on February 23rd:

On the margins of a meeting with visiting Secretary [of Energy] Chu, on Feb 24 MFA Minister of State Gargash made a formal request to the Ambassador for assistance in providing cardholder details and related information or credit cards reportedly issued by a U.S. bank to several suspects in last month’s killing of Hamas leader Mahmoud Al-Mabhouh in Dubai.   According to a letter Gargash gave the Ambassador (which transmitted details of the request from Dubai Security authorities to the UAE Central Bank), the credit cards were issued by MetaBank, in Iowa.

Comment: Ambassador requests expeditious handling of and reply to the UAEG request, which was also raised by UAE Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed in a February 23 meeting with Secretary Clinton in Washington.

Twelve of the cards were provided by MetaBank and Payoneer, the latter a payment processing service with close ties to Israeli intelligence services.

At the time, I expressed strong doubts about the interest on the part of the U.S. in playing any constructive role in rooting out these killers.  Which of course is tremendously ironic considering that we’re the ones wagging our fingers at Muslim states for not doing enough to root out terror from their midst.  Here we have a case of Israeli intelligence committing cold-blooded murder, using the financial services of U.S. companies to do so, and we take a pass on investigating or cooperating.  How do you spell h-y-p-o-c-r-i-s-y?

Yesterday, I reported that incoming Mossad director Tamir Pardo was prepared to concede Israeli responsibility for the Dubai hit.  To any who might view this as an Israeli official seeking to take responsibility for Israeli misdeeds or some such…Wikileaks is rumored to be about to publish cables in which the lid is blown on Mossad involvement.  So it’s no skin off Pardo’s back if he admits to a crime which was about to be exposed anyway by others.

Wanted: Future Mossad Agents Practiced in the Art of Black Ops

Monday, December 13th, 2010

kidon filmSeeking to get out of a personal rut or a change in life-style?  Perhaps a new career or profession?  The Mossad may have a lot to offer.

Israeli media are reporting that new Mossad director Tamir Pardo is seeking a new wave of agency recruits.  They must be willing to make frequent, short trips abroad (to places like Dubai, Istanbul and Teheran?).  Creativity and willingness to give one’s all as an emissary of the nation is a definite plus.  Oh, and you have to be willing to learn everything there is about the black arts of assassination and kidnapping, as you’ll be serving in the secret ops unit known as Kidon (“Bayonet”).  Apparently, Mossad is receiving tremendous kudos for its stellar service in murdering al-Mabouh, Iranian scientists and kidnapping Iranian generals, all on foreign soil.  So it seeks to do more of the same.

Here are some of the requirements for the job: you have to like major projects which demand “creativity” and readiness to think outside the box, master foreign languages, and have an ability to “create one’s own reality and play a central role in it.”  Valerie Plame or Tzipi Livni, anyone?  But at least they didn’t kill anyone (as far as we know).

Mossad Chief’s ‘Targeted Killing’ of Investigation into Al-Mabouh Assassination

Monday, October 18th, 2010
news1 dagan investigation

News1 report on Dagan's 'targeted killing' of Knesset investigation of al-Mabouh hit

Reports are beginning to find their way into Israel’s media about what News1 ironically calls Meir Dagan’s “targeted killing” of an external investigation into a Mossad “incident” that occurred this year.  The fact that the article uses the specific term targeted killing and notes that the incident was a “sensitive case” cries out for association with the Mossad’s most significant such assassination this past year, Mahmoud al-Mabouh.

The report further states that Dagan intervened to kill the investigation of which he was to be the star witness.  It also notes that the case is connected to the decision to relieve Dagan of his duties. This would indicate to me that P.M. Netanyahu may’ve used the threat of investigation to secure Dagan’s resignation.

Maariv’s version of this story concludes with this strange non sequitur which appears to have nothing to do with the rest of the report:

According to foreign publications, the Mossad was responsible for the assassination of senior Hamas operative, Mahmoud al-Mabouh in Dubai.

A nod is as good as wink when you read such mysterious passages in Israeli security-related stories.  Or as they say in Hebrew: ha-mayvin yavin (roughly translated: “he who knows knows”).

A confidential Israeli source confirms that the investigation was to be led by the Knesset foreign affairs and defense committee and that the subject was to be the al-Mabouh assassination.  I have to say that in my many years of following Israeli politics I’ve never heard of a Knesset investigation of such a Mossad hit.  Unless I’m mistaken, this would’ve been unprecedented, as even if it were conducted in private it would threaten to expose  lots of potentially dirty laundry–one of the dirtiest secrets spilled would be confirming that Israel did the hit.  Which is why part of me believes it might’ve been a way of pressuring Dagan to step down without having to fire him and all the messiness that might’ve ensued.

UPDATE: There was one such previous investigation–of the Khaled Meshal failed hit.  What the two incidents have in common is that in both cases a Mossad assassination caused huge furor in the world community and jeopardized relations with key allies.

Mossad Threatens Life of Dubai Police Chief Investigating al-Mabouh Assassination, New Suspect Arrested

Thursday, September 30th, 2010
jimmy durante

Dubai to Mossad: 'You ain't seen nuthin' yet!'

Israel’s Mossad, not one to be toyed with when it comes to foreigners pursuing its agents or stepping on its toes, twice threatened the life of Dubai’s police chief, who is investigating the Mahmoud al-Mabouh assassination likely carried out by Israel’s foreign intelligence service last January.  France24, quoting al-Ittihad, reports the first threat was made shortly after the police chief revealed that it had photographs of virtually every agent involved in the hit and would pursue them through Interpol and every means at its disposal.  According to the report, the threat said:

“Protect your back if you were capable of leaving your tongue loose.”

The chief says that United Arab Emirates traced the threat to its source in the Mossad.  The second threat was conveyed by a western Dubai resident with dual passports to the police chief’s close relative and former Emirati official:

The second threat, the paper said, was a telephone call to one of Khalfan’s relatives, a retired top Emirati official, from a “Westerner with a dual passport” whom, he said, had asked “my relative to advise me to remain silent.”

It was later proved that the caller was a retired Mossad agent, he added.

To paraphrase Neil Young: “Rust, and the Mossad, never sleep.”  But luckily it appears that Dubai’s intelligence service doesn’t either as an unnamed western country has arrested another of the Mossad agents behind the al-Mabouh killing.  Watch this blog space for future reports on who was arrested and by whom as the story develops.

Poland arrested another of the agents who adopted the fraudulent identity of a real Israeli named Brodzkey and extradited him to Germany, which promptly freed him, upon which he disappeared.  He’s probably sitting on his Tel Aviv verandah sipping nice strong Turkish coffee.

And as Jimmy Durante (I’m dating myself) used to say with a sparkle in his eye and a wag of his head and that massive proboscis: “You ain’t seen nothin’ yet!”

Netanyahu to Oust Mossad Chief

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

For the past two months there have been widespread reports that Mossad chief Meir Dagan is a dead spook walking after the Dubai assassination disaster.  Now, Yisrael HaYom reports that Bibi Netanyahu has offered the job to Gen. Amos Yadlin, currently the head of military intelligence.  The newspaper lists the reasons Bibi is ousting Dagan:

In the past year, two incidents mired in controversy stained Dagan’s formerly sterling reputation, as reported by overseas media: the assassination of Mahmoud al-Mabouh in Dubai, in whose wake Mossad station chiefs were thrown out of several countries; the second was the lack of accurate intelligence about the Turkish ship, Mavi Marmara.

While it may be doubtful that Yadlin would’ve acted any differently than Dagan in approving the al-Mabouh hit, at least the Israeli leadership has sense enough to recognize that the operation was an utter disaster.  And the fallout isn’t over yet.  It’s the hit that keeps on giving.  I hear they’re also warming a chair for Dagan in the Hague.  Defending him might be a job for Alan Dershowitz if he doesn’t agree to become Israel’s UN ambassador first.

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Dagan Dumped, Mossad Fixer Captured in Poland, Did Israelis Mean to Capture–Rather Than Kill–Al-Mabouh?

Sunday, June 27th, 2010
meir dagan

Bibi dumps Dagan, top international spook (Nir Keidar)

Newsweek has a fascinating article about the ongoing developments in the case of the Al-Mabouh assassination.  Poland recently arrested an accused Mossad fixer when he attempted to enter the country.  His arrest was requested by Germany because of the agent’s participation in a scheme to secure a passport for one of the Mossad agents who murdered Al-Mabouh.

Israel has protested the arrest and asked Poland to return him to Israel and Germany to quash its extradition request.  It will be a test of international resolve to see whether Germany and Poland have the courage of their convictions and go forward with this process.  If they wish to honor the concept of accountability and national sovereignty which was violated by the Israeli “hit,” then they must not accede to Israeli pressure.  We’ll see if they do.

Frankly, I’m a bit surprised that the Mossad would allow agents implicated in the Dubai assassination to return to their normal hunting grounds.  Wouldn’t you think they’d keep those individuals under wraps for a time until the dust settled?  To me, this is yet another mark of the Israeli intelligence apparatus’ disconnect from reality–at least reality outside Israel.

The world doesn’t appreciate what the Mossad did in Dubai.  England expelled the agency’s station chief.  Ireland and Australia did as well.  Yet Israel somehow thinks it got a wink and a nod and that the whole thing will blow over.  I don’t think that’s the case.

I wonder whether the arrest of the agent in Poland may have something to do with Bibi Netanyahu’s decision, announced yesterday, that Meir Dagan, the Mossad’s director, will not be reappointed to his job.  I was amused by the fact that one of the candidates being bruited about is none other than Yuval Diskin, the current Shin Bet director.  It appears that beating up Israeli Palestinian citizens and criminalizing the legal political activity of Israeli Palestinian leaders stands one in good stead to become Israel’s top international spook.

The passage from this article that really pricked my ears was this:

Official and unofficial spy aficionados are still puzzled over why Israel would ruin its previously friendly relationship with authorities in a key Gulf emirate, and blow the identities of so many undercover operatives, just to eliminate an obscure Hamas operative. One theory gaining support among intelligence experts is that Mossad’s intent was to drug and kidnap Mabhouh, and then try to use him in a trade for Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier held hostage in Gaza by Hamas. But the Israelis, according to this theory, may have overdosed their target on knockout drops.

While a theory gaining support among anonymous intelligence experts doesn’t carry much journalistic weight, it is a suggestive one.  It does seem especially stupid for Israel to expose half its covert ops personnel and render them unusable in future in their former capacity.  Not to mention the international opprobrium that has attached to Israel for the murder, the loss of all those stations chiefs, and harm done to its relations with all the countries whose passports and citizens were abused.  Not to mention the exposure of how the agency handles financing of its international ops.

While Israel has a long and honored tradition of knocking off Hamas operatives, it also has a long tradition of kidnapping Palestinians and Lebanese to use as poker chips in negotiations for the release of Israeli prisoners.  So it’s hard to say which motivation was more likely at play in Dubai.

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