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Posts Tagged ‘jonathan-pollard’

Doctor Who Collaborated With Mossad Commits Suicide

Friday, June 17th, 2011

dr yonah elian

Dr. Yonah Elian, conscience-stricken for allowing Mossad to exploit his medical knowledge (Yediot Achronot)

Tonight I’m going to tell a sad story, but an instructive one.  It begins with the tragic news that an 88 year-old retired Israeli doctor, respected in his profession for many decades, committed suicide in his Ramat Aviv apartment.  The man’s son said his father had been very sick, so it is no surprise that the doctor took his life.  So far there is nothing unusual in this story.  Until you begin to unravel the man’s history.

He was Dr. Yonah Elian, for two decades the Mossad’s favorite doctor, the man they took along on delicate operations in which they required an anesthesiologist to sedate a victim who was to be kidnapped or otherwise incapacitated.  Elian worked especially closely with Rafi Eitan, one of Israel’s storied spymasters who captured Eichmann and less heroically, “ran” Jonathan Pollard.  The doctor was part of the team that kidnapped Eichman in Argentina and sedated him so that they could transport him back to Israel where he was later executed.

Elian also inadvertently killed one of the Mossad’s targets on one of these missions.  In 1954, the Mossad got word that an Israeli engineer, Capt. Alexander “Avner” Israel, was offering military secrets to the Egyptians in Europe.  Dubbing it Operation Bren (p. 4 ff.), they hastily dispatch a team to kidnap him and bring him back to Israel to stand trial for treason.  The team found their quarry quickly through the use of a “honeypot” female agent (shades of Mordechai Vanunu) who lured him to a romantic Paris rendezvous.  Then Elian sedated him and the victim was hustled off to an Israeli military transport plane.  Unfortunately, the plane had to make several refueling stops and each time he was sedated anew.  Apparently this anesthesiologist didn’t realize there were limits to how much sedation a human being could take and he gave the man an overdose and he died.

When the plane landed and they discovered they’d killed him they decided there should be no evidence left behind.  To accomplish the cover-up, they promptly took off once again and dumped the body in the Mediterranean Sea.  Isser Harel, then Mossad chief, never told the victim’s family a word about the man’s death.  No compensation was ever offered for the murder.  As Prof. Shlomo Spiro wrote in a paper on the subject of ethics[!] in the field of Israeli intelligence:

The Mossad then obliterated every reference to the man in Israeli official files, and the case kept secret for five decades.  Generations of Mossad officers heard rumors of this failed operation, many knew the details, but nothing was done to inform Alexander’s family or provide for their support.

In those days, Israeli intelligence could obliterate such a failure and so avoid scandal.  Not so today, though God knows it tries.

In his comments about Dr. Elian, Rafi Eitan lied when he said that the doctor never compromised his Hippocratic Oath. Of course he did.  Certainly when he killed the IDF officer, but arguably even when he helped capture Eichmann.  Yes, you may argue that Eichmann was one of the world’s great mass murderers and that anything that could be done to apprehend him should be done.  But a doctor lives by a different professional standard.  And a doctor may not use his medical expertise in a way that will lead to the death of a patient.

I wonder what Dr. Elian thought of these moral conundrums with which he lived when he died.  If he had any he rarely expressed them.  Even to his family.  But several years before his death, Dr. Elian did tell his son (Hebrew) that he was terribly conflicted about what he’d done to Eichmann because it violated his Hippocratic oath.  Every attempt by the family to remind him of the significance of bringing the great Nazi monster to justice fell on death ears, the son recounts.

When the Knesset attempted to give Dr. Elian a certificate of appreciation for his service to the country, he would only accept it anonymously and would not attend the ceremony himself.  He sent his son in his place.

The doctor’s son also tells the strange story of how he parted with his father before he left for the Eichmann operation.  Dr. Elian woke his twins and told them he would be away on business in Eilat for a few days.  Over a week later he returned with a gift–a toy pistol with an ivory handle.  The son remembers marveling at the gift and thinking what wonderful things they had in Eilat!

Despite this, one can tell that this was a man of depth, subtlety and nuance.  A man who realized the moral contradictions of the life he lived.  A man haunted by ghosts.  This is everything that today’s Israel is not.  Today’s Israel has no moral doubts.  It only has certainties.  As a result it can do much more damage than Dr. Elian.  At least he stopped his service to the Mossad when Rafi Eitan ceased his role as chief of operations for the Mossad.

Certainly, I can’t argue that a man who lived out a long life was thinking of the ways he failed his professional oath as he took his life.  After all, if this was highest in his mind he might’ve done so earlier.  Likely, a terminal illness served as the motivating force for his last act.  But still…

This story takes on added significance in light of the knowledge that U.S. doctors have collaborated with the CIA and military intelligence in the interrogation and torture of Al Qaeda suspects, thus violating their Hippocratic Oath.  This has led to various professional organizations condemning exploitation of their profession for the sake of intelligence gathering.

In fact, the Israeli Medical Association has taken a similar stand here.  But there remain numerous reports (and here) of doctors who betray the ethics of their profession in service to the spymasters and torturers.  At least Dr. Elian had the good conscience to regret his collaboration.

Steve Rosen’s Double Life: Pimping for Israel, Trolling Craigslist for Gay Sex

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010
craig's list sex services

Steve Rosen's 'craving' for Craig's List sex listings

The transcripts of depositions (warning: this is a single pdf page containing hundreds of pages of transcripts with no easy way of navigating through it) in Steve Rosen’s $20 million defamation case against his former employer, Aipac, are just becoming public as both sides ratchet up pressure on the other and manuever for legal advantage.  I pride myself that almost nothing anyone can tell me about Aipac would shock.  But this material goes way beyond that.  It includes a little of everything: salacious sex, computer porn, clandestine meetings with Israeli agents (aka diplomats), angry confrontations with FBI agents threatening arrest, references to Jonathan Pollard and even Alfred Dreyfuss.

When I first got this material from a source I wrote back and said: can Steve Rosen really have used Craig’s List to procure anonymous gay sex from other married men?  But alas, it’s true and spoken in Rosen’s own words.

So where to start: Aipac’s lawyers made a summary judgment motion earlier this month asking the judge to dismiss the last remaining claim in the case.  As part of its motion, Aipac deliberately dumped all the previous deposition transcripts into the public domain.  Here are the primary findings for those keeping score at home:

1. Steve Rosen, a man married five times, arranged for anonymous sex trysts via Craig’s List (not that dissimilar from Sen. Larry Craig’s MO) and even conceded to Aipac’s deposing attorney he may’ve used the organization’s own computers to do so.  That’s OK, he argues because Howard Kohr and Kohr’s secretary viewed pornographic images in the workplace and pubicly regaled their fellow workers with them.

2. Steve Rosen spent much, if not most of his work time, recruiting federal employees, mostly at the Department of Defense, to reveal classified information that would be of interest to Israel.  When he recruited such an employee or secured such information he pretty much went directly to his “handlers” in the Israeli embassy to whom he passed the information or contact.  The very first person with whom he met after being the FBI confronted him and warned that he might be arrested was NOT his own attorney or anyone from Aipac, but the deputy director of the Israeli embassy.  Such warning, allowed Israel to roll up its espionage-intelligence operation and spirit Naor Gillon out of DC so he would not be arrested and thus embroil Israel directly in the controversy. As the Forward notes in its report, this fact may be a very important one since if Rosen was following the procedures and directives of Aipac in summoning the Israeli for the meeting and warning him about the investigation, then Aipac is in effect an accessory to Israeli intelligence operations in this country and not a fully independent American lobbying venture.

3. After Aipac fired Rosen (and his colleague Keith Weissman), Aipac’s wealthiest and most powerful donors lined up behind Rosen and raised nearly $1-million that was distributed to him over the four year period until the government dismissed its case against him.  Some gifts were even bundled by two major fundraising leaders, just as they might be in a political campaign.  The gifts were structured so that neither Rosen nor the donors would have to report them on their IRS tax forms, with checks made out to Rosen, his wife and three children to skirt minimum gift reporting levels.

Let’s be straight here, so to speak: if Steve Rosen wants to engage in furtive sex that’s his business.  It should only be a footnote to the overall weirdness of this story.  But what is important about this is that Steve Rosen, who wrote this memorable phrase in a memo to M.J. Rosenberg:

A lobby is like a midnight flower, it thrives in the dark and wilts in the light.

Which means that Aipac itself and Rosen professionally led precisely the same types of lives that the latter did privately.  In other words, he lived a lie which he perpetrated on his wives and children.  He presented himself as something he wasn’t in order to cater to whatever personal or sexual demons might’ve been like hellhounds on his trail.  Aipac’s offices as described by Rosen in his deposition sound more like a bawdy house than a place where serious work was done.  He alludes to fellow employees and directors regaling each other with stories about prostitutes.  All of it gives the lie to Aipac as a high-toned serious organization.

Anyone who knew Steve Rosen personally or by reputation had to know he was one sleazy dude (though I have heard one former Aipac staffer speak fondly of him). The information above only confirms that he practiced such sleaziness both in his professional and personal life. There will be those among Aipac’s supporter who will attempt to dissociate themselves from Rosen: he was fired when the organization discovered he’d disgraced its principles, etc. But this is nonsense. I do agree with Rosen in at least one major respect: he was doing his job precisely as Aipac wanted him to. Howard Kohr knew every top secret document Rosen lifted from the defense department files and he knew what Rosen did with the information in those memos. He knew every reporter Rosen tempted with tidbits, he knew every Israeli embassy handler with whom Rosen met to further his and Israel’s intelligence harvesting agenda. In that sense, Rosen was Aipac and Aipac, Rosen. As Israel’s ass-lickingest Congress members like to say about the Israel-U.S. relationship: “there wasn’t any daylight between them” in this regard.

For those of you who wonder what the average day of an Aipac policy staffer might be like take a look at this calendar as laid out by the FBI in its investigation:
rosen deposition transcript

I’m not foolish enough to believe that the FBI’s portrayal of Steve Rosen’s work might not be the full story of what he did for a living. But knowing everything else I know about both Rosen, his reputation and Aipac’s I’ve got to say that this schedule probably isn’t that far wrong.

The man himself confirms some of our worst fears through his own words. When he sits down with Israel’s deputy chief of mission, Rafi Barak, to tell him that Larry Franklin and Naor Gillon’s cover have been blown, the first analogy that comes to mind to convey the gravity of the situation is saying this is a Pollard situation. In other words, when the shit hit the fan Rosen thought of the likening the case in which he was involved to the most damaging American Jewish spy to have fed secrets to the Israelis in the history of both our nations.

At another point when he is taking with the Washington Post’s Glenn Kessler about a possible story and feeding him some classified government information he thanks his lucky stars that there is no Official Secrets Act in the U.S. In other words, he is thankful that neither he nor Kessler can be prosecuted by the federal government for such leaks though in England they could be. In all of his work, Rosen speaks of himself in the language of espionage and spies. Whether what he did was legal or not, it is telling to view matters the way he did. It tells you a great deal about how he saw himself and how he saw Aipac’s role.

Aipac’s argument is always, we do what every other lobby inside the Beltway does, or wishes it had the skills or resources to do. And they have a point. They may not be quite the evil villains people like Grant Smith paint them to be. They after all are exercising their constitutional right to petition the government regarding public policy. That’s not my quarrel with Aipac. My quarrel is that they step right up the red lines of proper lobbyist behavior and then cross over. Then they dare anyone to call them on it. And that includes presidents, the Justice Department and the FBI.

Curiously, even though Aipac fired Rosen and Weissman apparently because they peddled a story based on classified intelligence to a Post reporter, the group had no specific policy at the time prohibiting such conduct.  Now it does.  Which is interesting, and makes me wonder how it will continue to handle its little escapades with government sources.  I’m guessing one way it might handle this, is to pass information directly from its sources to the Israelis bypassing the “middleman.”  Though this may possibly put the sources into greater legal jeopardy since I presume it would harder to prosecute them for leaking to Aipac than to the Israeli government.

In his own deposition, Howard Kohr claims he never knew nor approved of Aipac receiving classified government documents.  He also claims (and I don’t believe him) this was the case throughout his tenure.  Which is convenient because at least one of his predecessors notes that he did know of such Aipac activities during his tenure.  When you want history on these issues, best to go back to Larry Cohler Esses’ archives.  He wrote in Jewish Week in 2005:

Thomas Dine, a former executive director of AIPAC, confirmed this week that during his tenure Steven Rosen, the lobby’s foreign policy director until April, informed him of his success in gaining access to a highly classified document…Dine said federal agents investigating Rosen unearthed a memo from 1983, soon after Rosen’s arrival at AIPAC, in which Rosen boasted about his access to a comprehensive, classified review of U.S. policy in the Middle East.

…AIPAC and federal prosecutors have depicted Rosen as a lone ranger. His superiors at AIPAC have said that until recently they were ignorant of his alleged pursuit of classified information.

The last major group to be deeply embarrassed by these revelations will be the fatcat leadership cadre which anted up hundreds of thousands to shut Rosen up or keep him happy. The donor list is a virtual Who’s Who of American Jewry’s wealthiest and most powerful: Larry Hochberg ($200K bundled), Lynn and Stacy Schusterman ($18K), Haim Saban ($100K), Walter Stern, Daniel Abraham ($75K), Ralph Goldman, Randall Levitt, Newton Becker (~$200K). It’s not clear what the motivation for the payments was: rewarding Rosen’s loyalty, keeping him quiet, expression of kindness to someone in need.

Again, turning to Cohler-Esses contemporaneous reporting in Jewish Week in 2005, these same donors appear to have approached Mort Klein of ZOA and asked if he’d hire Rosen with the donors picking up the tab.  Somewhat surprisingly, knowing Klein’s usual recklessness, he declined citing the near insanity of hiring someone about to be indicted by the feds.

Former Aipac officers told the Jewish Week reporter that the Aipac donors’ motivation may be to cover Aipac’s ass by covering Rosen’s:

“I’m sure there’s a concern Steve would reveal everything he knows about AIPAC” in a trial, said the former official. “The concern is not just violations of law but also from a political angle; they don’t want the inner workings of the lobby laid out.”

This ex-official said Rosen also might reveal information that could leave AIPAC with other, unrelated legal problems. These included potential violations of the Foreign Agents Registration Act and Federal Elections Commission regulations, he said.

Another former official opined, “Their biggest worry right now is if the case against Rosen and Weissman becomes a case against AIPAC. They’re terrified the feds will get Rosen to flip. If they’re putting up the money for his next job — well, Steve Rosen is not a wealthy guy.”

Whatever the motivation, the way in which the payments were structured were designed to conceal them from scrutiny by the public or IRS. Checks were given not just to Rosen, but to his wife and children in order to keep the threshhold below the minimum required for reporting for tax purposes. This also meant that Rosen himself didn’t have to report them as income to the IRS.

I find the fact that America’s wealthiest Jews were eager to reward a man for eliciting top secret information from the federal government and giving it to Israel is at the least unseemly. You can spin this any way you want and Hochberg et al undoubtedly will, but this was something more than helping a guy when he’s down and out. This was protecting their own organization when it looked like it too might get dragged into the mud by the government. It was save Rosen’s ass, save Aipac’s.

In deposition, Aipac questioned Rosen about these gifts seeking to argue disingenuously that they somehow accrued to Aipac’s credit. As if, contrary to Rosen’s claim that his firing destroyed his ability to earn a living (which it did), these gifts by these Aipac donors proved the group was still on his side and therefore couldn’t possibly be seeking to harm his reputation.

What did Steve Rosen get for his 23 years at Aipac? Nearly $5-million in lawyer’s fees paid out begrudgingly, $144,000 in severance, and six months COBRA coverage. That’s it. A measly $6,000 for every year of service after he fell on his sword for the group. Frankly, I can’t see how they’re going to get out of this lawsuit without paying him a few mill. It seems the least these jackals can do for a fellow jackal.

A couple of stray oddities in all this that are worth mentioning. When Aipac’s attorney tells Rosen they found pornography on his computer he professes not to know how it got there. Did he surf porn websites? Sure, doesn’t everybody? But he never did anything that would’ve caused anything to have been downloaded on his work computer. It’s like Bill Clinton saying he didn’t inhale. How does he think the files got there? Did they worm their way into his PC unbidden? Rosen even volunteers that he didn’t watch videos (God forbid), only looked at pictures. As if that somehow sounds better. But of course he viewed videos. How else do files get on a computer? They’re downloaded. And when you watch a video it’s downloaded to your PC. The other way a file is downloaded is if you manually copy an image to your hard drive and it’s very possible Steve did that though he claims he was a choir boy in that regard: he looked but he didn’t download. He also, to show you what a smart dude he is, points to a Nielsen survey that found that 27% of Americans view porn at work. I swear, where did they get this guy from? Central Casting for jackasses and hypocrites??!

Rosen seems to draw a moral line in the sand concerning pornography. Images of adults are OK, but images of children are not. And Steve wants you to know that he never was into children. OK, now that we know that I somehow feel a whole lot better.

There is a long exchange between Rosen and Aipac’s attorney in which they flail as they attempt to explain to each other the difference between “browse” and “view.” It’s amusing because they fall all over each other at first asking a question, then seeing whether the other guy can answer it himself so as not to embarrass the questioner too much. Guys, you “browse” the web. You don’t browse images (unless you’re on the Google Images site–& hey, maybe that’s where Steve was). You “view” an image.

The Forward’s own report on these depositions quotes Rosen warning Aipac: “You ain’t seen nuthin’ yet.” He claims that his own filings later this month will put to shame the dirt Aipac exposed about him and his personal life. I can hardly wait. But I warn readers to put on a shower cap when you read this stuff so it doesn’t get dumped on your head on the way down.

Bibi: Pollard for Settlement Freeze

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

Whatever you might want to say about Bibi Netanyahu, the guy has a sense of humor.  Normally, we think of spy exchanges as happening between two countries who are rivals with conflicting interests.  But when have you ever heard of a spy exchange between Israel and the U.S.?  Bibi has.

Apparently, for 10 years he’s harbored a rightist dream to free Jonathan Pollard from an American prison, where he’s serving a life sentence as the single most damaging American spy in U.S. history.  But to free Pollard, Bibi has to give the U.S. something in exchange. What does the current president want?  A U.S. spy in return?  No.  Not too many U.S. spies in Israeli prisons.  Instead, he’s proposing to give Obama a settlement freeze.  But there’s a kicker, it’s not a permanent freeze or even a year long one like the first one.  It’s an “extension.”  For maybe 12 weeks.

So Israel gets the worst spy in U.S. history and all we get is this friggin’ T-shirt and a settlement freeze extension.  There is something wrong with this picture.  Do you think the U.S. will bite?  When hell freezes over.

Here’s what I say: Obama make a counter offer.  Pollard for ’67 borders.  If they want the big fish let them give us their big fish, the settlements.  If not, they can fuggedaboudit.

I could see an Israeli settler outfit making this proposal.  I could even see a settler foreign minister like Avigdor Lieberman making it, but the prime minister (well, OK the Times quotes “Israeli officials” as making the proposal, but then notes that Bibi himself floated it to Clinton in 1999)?  Shouldn’t this be a little beneath his dignity?  To pant after the worst American spy in our history?  It leaves a very bad taste in the mouth.

Of course, if Pollard is ever freed he becomes an immediate celebrity for the Israeli right.  Bibi meets him at Ben Gurion to a hero’s welcome.  The former spy will be a leading Knesset candidate for the Likud or a farther-right party (just as his former Mossad handler, Rafi Eitan formed his own party and became a minister in the last government).  If Pollard is smart enough he could become the American Jewish version of Natan Sharansky.  Is this something Obama wants?

Who Will Be the Next Steve Rosen?

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Now that Steve Rosen and Keith Weissman have been let off the hook by the government, which dropped the espionage charge against them, it’s appropriate to take stock.  Were they innocent?  I do not believe so.  The government surveilled them for several years and there were multiple acts of betrayal in which documents were transferred.  They were guilty as hell.  While doubters reading this will wonder at the source of my conviction, suffice it to say that it is not based solely on my own resources or research, but rather on deeper knowledge.

So what happened?  It became obvious to the Justice Department that through disadvantageous rulings by the judge, that the government would have to reveal much of the means by which it caught the accused spies.  Intelligence sources and secrets would be brought into open court.  Plans, methodologies and technical means would be compromised.

While Steve Rosen wasn’t a small fish, the government is aware that Israeli espionage is a huge undertaking in this country and that there will be more Rosens in the future.  Israel’s clandestine activity here needed to be monitored in case a larger fry than Rosen was still out there.

Think of Jonathan Pollard, one of the most prolific spies in U.S. history.  Think of Stephen Bryen, a Senate aide who passed to Israeli intelligence photos of a Saudi airbase.  His prosecution was stopped by a deputy attorney general just as Rosen’s was (though for political, rather than intelligence reasons).

There are Rosens, Pollards and Bryens out there now and will be in future.  Of that you can be sure.  Just as rust never sleeps (to quote Neil Young), neither does the Mossad.

What concerns me though is that aside from Pollard, many spies for Israel, if caught, are either not prosecuted or the charges are dropped.  A good part of the reason is that the Israeli government and pro-Israel forces exert massive influence both in public and behind the scenes to free their spies.  This is precisely what Jane Harman agreed to do (though she claims she welched and didn’t do what she promised) on Rosen’s behalf.  Malcolm Hoenlein was another communal leader who went on the warpath on Rosen’s behalf, labeling the FBI as riddled with anti-Semites eager to burn Jews via the dual loyalty canard.

Pro-Israel forces even managed to gain the support of a leading expert on government secrecy like Steve Aftergood, who criticized the prosecution.  In attacking the case, Aftergood seemed more concerned with protecting whistleblowers than prosecuting spies.

My concern is that the U.S. intelligence community and prosecutors bringing such cases do not have support in the Jewish community, especially the pro-peace community.  Without such support, it is that much easier for a judge to find sympathy for the alleged “victim.”  It becomes that much easier to throw up an impossibly high hurdle for prosecution.

No one is saying that those accused of spying for Israel do not deserve a fair trial.  But neither am I saying that they deserve a cakewalk.  If the Israel lobby is going to mount a campaign on behalf of ‘their’ spooks, those who believe that Israel’s interests are not necessarily the same as our own should be capable of mounting a similar campaign to see that justice is done not just for the individual, but for our country as well.  I wish that the next time such a prosecution happens that the government would do a better job of communicating its case not just to the judge, but to those who might support it in our community.

Barghouti-Pollard Prisoner Swap? Say What??

Thursday, April 20th, 2006
BarghoutiMarwan Barghouti in Israeli chains, unbeaten and unbowed (credit: AP/Eitan Hess-Ashkenazi)

The Forward details yet another harebrained scheme suggesting the Olmert government has proposed to the U.S. that it release Jonathan Pollard in exchange for Israel releasing Marwan Barghouti. Here is Haaretz‘s slightly different take on the matter. There are many reasons why this seems utter foolishness: first, the rumor possibly arose from the circle of Pollard’s supporters making it automatically suspect. Second, prisoner exchanges always involve two enemies who swap prisoners that each mutual side wishes freed. But in this case, Israel gets Pollard but what does the U.S. get? Nothing. So where is the motivation for the U.S. to agree? More cloud cuckoo land stuff.

But the Forward raises some interesting issues regarding what might be Barghouti’s political role in Palestinian politics should Hamas fall:

…Sources said that while a swap is implausible, Israeli officials are considering the possibility of releasing Barghouti under certain circumstances. Barghouti, considered the most popular and charismatic figure in the younger generation of Fatah leadership, was sentenced in 2004 to five consecutive life terms for leading the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades and for ordering the murder of Israelis. While in prison, he led Fatah’s parliamentary slate in the Palestinian legislative elections this past January. He is widely seen as the only figure that could regroup Fatah and provide legitimacy to future negotiations with Israel if and when the Hamas government falls.

“Most senior officials in the political system and in the security apparatus realize that at some point, this man will have to be released because he’s probably the only one with whom we could sign an agreement,” said Shlomo Brom, a former top intelligence analyst now serving as a scholar at the congressionally funded United States Institute of Peace. “If the imperative is to bring about the collapse of the Hamas government as soon as possible, then it is also imperative to prepare for the day after.”

I can’t say that I’ve ever felt that Israel had enough foresight or acuity to look on Palestinian politics in such a rigorous or focused way. The idea that someone in Israeli intelligence is actually thinking that freeing Marwan Barghouti might lead to a way out of the current impasse between the Palestinian and Israeli governments seems overdoing it. To my mind, Israel’s calculations are usually much more short-term and therefore short-sighted.

To me this is yet another improbable means for Israel to dream of an alternative to Hamas. Instead of figuring out a way to create a modus vivendi with the new Palestinian government, some spooks in the Shin Bet are betting that Barghouti is the answer to their prayers. Let ‘im loose, sic him on Hamas and let Barghouti clean up the Palestinian mess for Israel. Wouldn’t it be nice if it could be so neat and tidy??

I’d bet that if Israel DID free Barghouti and he did take over the next Palestinian government he would be no pushover for the Israelis. He’d be just as tough a nut for Israel to crack as Hamas only different.

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