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

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from documentary, Promises

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Joint Appeal for Peace

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Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

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Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘shin-bet’

Eilat Terror Fashlah

Thursday, September 1st, 2011

In idiomatic Hebrew, fashlah (which I presume derives from Arabic as so many of the most colorful phrases in Hebrew do) means a major screw-up.  It appears that there was a fashlah of catastrophic proportions regarding the Eilat terror attack.  I’ve written here before about the internecine battle that broke out after the attack between the Shabak and the IDF over who deserved blame for it.  Shabak claimed that it had offered a highly specific threat warning to the IDF about the date, time, location, and personnel involved in the assault.  The agency even claimed the IDF refused to believe them when they said the attack would happen in daylight.

The IDF in turn downplayed the quality and urgency of the intelligence information it was provided by agency, saying it wasn’t specific enough to allow it to take direct action and prevent the attack.

Ben Caspit of Maariv reopens these wounds (Hebrew) with a report from a senior source claiming that Shabak chief Yoram Cohen was furious when he heard Barak’s excuses after the attack.  It even used the term “exploded” to denote how angry Cohen became.  He had no interest in allowing Barak to make someone else his whipping boy.

Since the role of this blog seems to be to ask questions that Israeli journalists either haven’t thought of, or have thought of but refuse to ask, here’s one offered to me by one of my Israeli correspondents: why didn’t the security forces offer a public warning about a terror attack?  This is a fairly common phenomenon in Israel by which they announce a terror threat, where they expect the threat to originate and what the target might be, if they know.  The fact that there was no threat indicates a huge fashla.  If they had done so those eight Israelis might still be alive.

Why won’t you hear this question asked by Israeli journalists?  Because it would open a huge can of worms that they rather not approach. Because the Israeli public doesn’t like reproaching the security forces after such incidents.  Especially since the IDF, with its killing of some of the terrorists and its revenge attacks against Gaza, appears to have proven to the public that it addressed the problem satisfactorily. Israelis can only stomach so much outrage at their security forces and they usually reserve it for major catastrophes like wars (Lebanon, Gaza, etc).  When ‘only’ eight Israelis ‘and enough of the bad guys were killed, then its easier to sweep it under the rug.

But they haven’t.  Apologies for being a broken record, but no one except two Israeli bloggers and I have asked the $64,000 Question: where are the terrorists Israel killed?  Who are they?  Where were they from?  What documents or other identifying materials did they carry with them?  As I’ve written here before, this information is always released by Israel immediately after such an attack because it allows Israel to pin blame squarely on the Palestinians for tragedies.  The fact that none of this has happened tells me that it’s unlikely any Gazans were among the attackers, and makes it more likely that the perpetrators and authors of the crime were Sinai militants of Egyptian origin.

Avi Issacharoff tried to rake me over the coals in a recent Haaretz article about this subject calling my reporting “off the wall.”  In the process, he managed to distort or misread the two claims he made about what I wrote (eg., I never called the Gaza attack “a diversion” and never declared it a war crime).  He was probably sore at me because I’d earlier called his reporting on the attack “stenography.”  At any rate, I wrote to the reporter and asked him when he was going to ask the IDF where the bodies were, and why the press was offered no access to any information about them.

BBC Exposes Abusisi Kidnapping Story

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

Gabriel Gatehouse, a BBC foreign correspondent, has delved deeply into the Abubisi story for a major documentary report (download podcast) on his kidnapping by Israel and trial for alleged security offenses.  I’m proud to say that Gatehouse came upon the story through my own reporting on this.  Though I’m disappointed he wasn’t able to credit my work, or the fact that I secured Abusisi’s Shabak interrogation transcript for him, in the documentary.  Story of my life.

But the important thing is that Gatehouse has gone to all the places that are critical to this story and interviewed almost all the key players in Ukraine, Gaza, and Israel.  This is the sort of hard reportorial work that an Israeli journalist should’ve done long ago.  So credit to the BBC and Gatehouse for doing their jobs as journalists to uncover shady, nasty dealings by the Ukrainian and Israeli security services.

Gatehouse does a good job of probing and dismantling the Israeli narrative involving Abusisi, doing so in that deliberate, careful way good British journalists have.  He also brings new insight to the Gaza portion of this story by noting that Hamas offered strange, halting support to Abusisi throughout his ordeal.  Through his interviews with Hamas representatives, Gatehouse advances a theory I first proposed here a week or so ago, that Hamas actually wanted to punish Abusisi for having the nerve to seek to abandon both Gaza and the group’s blandishments to join its resistance efforts.  This theory is borne out by Gatehouse’s interview with Hamas’ deputy foreign minister who studiously avoids denying (or confirming) that Abusisi was involved with Hamas.  You’d think that a movement that wished to protect one of its citizens would know whether Abusisi was involved with the group or not.  I smell something not quite right.

In my post last week, I suggested that Hamas recruited Abusisi and he refused the approaches or he refused to become more involved than he already might’ve been.  In the prison interrogation transcripts, Abusisi confirms as much and documents specific threats to physically harm himself and his family if he tries to leave Gaza.  Given that Hamas did so, it’s quite easy to believe that Abusisi’s defiance in leaving for the Ukraine would’ve enraged the group leading possibly to its betrayal of him to the Israelis.

It seems quite far-fetched to believe that the Shabak would’ve known much about Abusisi or cared unless they’d been tipped off that a big fish had just gotten away from Gaza.  Though he unfortunately did not include this key part of the theoretical puzzle in the documentary, Gatehouse likely believes, and I agree, that Hamas likely tipped off the Shabak (likely through some sort of intermediary source) that not only was Abusisi a big cheese rocket scientist, but that he knew the whereabouts of Gilad Shalit.

The only problem: Abusisi knows nothing about either.  Which would mean that if Hamas gave him up, they gave up nothing; and that the Shabak has been “had.”  The only problem: a hard-working civil engineer and father of six children stands to pay for this intrigue with several decades of his life in an Israeli prison.  This is an example of the cynicism of this game played by both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  It’s a “great game” except for the individuals caught up in it who are made to pay for the machinations of both sides against the other.

One other addendum to Gatehouse’s piece.  He interviewed Haaretz’s Yossi Melman about the Abusisi case.  Melman appeared to confirm implicitly that there was no legitimate reason for kidnapping Abusisi that corresponds to any publicly announced reason by Israel or any other party.  He does concede that kidnapping Abusisi might’ve been considered in order to use him as a “bargaining chip” to gain the release of Gilad Shalit.  But this presumes that Abusisi, who was trying to flee Gaza permanently, would be a desirable person for Hamas to retrieve.  I’ve seen no evidence of this at all.

Melman also makes one important historical error when he states that Israel has only kidnapped two people from foreign soil and brought them back to Israel for trial.  He is correct when he mentions Eichmann and Mordechai Vanunu as two of those figures.  But he leaves out Alexander Israel, an IDF officer who was kidnapped in Europe in the 1950s and returned to Israel when suspected of passing on secrets to the Egyptians.  The problem was the doctor who sedated Israel on the plane, gave him a sedative overdose and killed him.  This was the same doctor who performed the same function on Mossad’s behalf in the capture of Eichmann.  I’m surprised that Melman would’ve forgotten this story.

I’m proud to say that without reporting and research first published here, this BBC documentary either would never have aired or would’ve looked substantially different that it does.  I only hope it puts pressure on Israel to drop the charges against Abusisi and end this horrible charade.  Please consider supporting my work by clicking that Paypal button in the sidebar.

Maariv Reports Abusisi Plea Deal Imminent, Defense Flatly Denies It

Monday, August 15th, 2011

As part of the Kabuki-like posturing common to Israeli justice and politics, Maariv reports a supposed plea deal between Dirar Abusisi’s attorney and the Israeli state prosecutor under which the suspect would receive a 15-20 year sentence for his alleged crimes.  Tal Linoy, Abusisi’s attorney, confirmed to me that the entire story is a “flyer” by the state in its attempt to exert pressure on Abusisi.  What was most interesting was this statement by the prosecutor:

The case against Abusis could go on for years.  It involves tens of thousands of documents, many of them classified.  We would prefer to close the case with a plea deal that calls for a relatively severe sentence in order not to have to conduct the case.  The evidence we have [against him] is incriminating enough.

I read this statement quite differently from the way it would appear on its surface.  First, the man who Shabak has claimed to be the mastermind behind all of Hamas’ rocket technology and terror campaign against southern Israel has all of a sudden shrunk from the devil incarnate to a mere irritant in the eyes of Israeli intelligence.  Instead of throwing the book at him and putting him away for life as would be fitting for his alleged rap sheet, his sentence would be considerably less.  Second, the prosecution has admitted that it doesn’t want to try the case.  Frankly, I’ve never heard an Israeli prosecutor say in such a national security case that he would prefer not to try it.  To me, this indicates either a serious weakness or flaw which the prosecutor would prefer not to have to expose by going to trial.

So why would they prefer not to try it?  There is a hint in the acknowledgement by the prosecution that there are classified documents, which one may infer the prosecution would prefer not to have to reveal, even to a judge.  What might those documents be?  Perhaps contacts between Shabak and Hamas via an intermediary which led to the former’s kidnapping of Abusisi?  Perhaps those documents would reveal how mistaken Shabak was in its initial evaluation of the value of Abusisi as a terror operative.

Or perhaps the state’s lawyer is referring to the childish drawings rendered by Abusisi of Hamas’ alleged missile fleet.  Maybe the state would prefer not to offer these in evidence for fear that the judge would laugh them out of court.

On a serious note, Linoy has filed a motion with the Israeli Supreme Court demanding that the Shabak release all the classified interrogation materials.  This would include documents or transcripts which might support the claim he was tortured to extract the confession he made.  It might include any or all of the items I speculated about above.  If the State fears the High Court might actually agree with the defense and force public exposure of these materials, it would be in the interest of the prosecution to offer a deal.  Washing its hand of the case would avoid potential embarrassment should the Supreme Court hold in Abusisi’s favor.

It would also be important for Dirar’s family to understand that this is the way the game is played in Israel.  And it’s a complicated game in which the State gets to set the terms, gets to leak to the press whatever it wishes, in which the truth is almost always concealed.  What the State says via the media isn’t always the truth.  Sometimes not even close.  So don’t accept anything you read at face value.  Read between the lines.

It’s certainly no coincidence that Yisrael HaYom (aka Bibiton), published virtually the same story, which placed special emphasis on the supposedly top secret materials which might have to be revealed in order to secure a conviction of Abusisi.  Again, I don’t think I’ve ever recalled such a claim by the State of Israel in a national security case.  There is never any fear of revealing secrets because judge’s almost never force them to do so.  Which is why this entire line of argument is so hollow and unpersuasive.

At any rate, this story proves how important it is not to accept at face-value most Israeli newspaper stories involving national security cases.  The truth is either beneath the surface or perhaps even nowhere to be found on the printed page.  Often you have to dig deeper to find the truth yourself.

Those of you who read Hebrew will note that the right-wing Maariv didn’t even bother to ask Tal for a comment in this story.  I had to do that here.  It merely dutifully reported the story regurgitated by the state prosecutor for their consumption.  This isn’t journalism.  This isn’t justice.  This is stenography and kangaroo justice.

Abusisi: Hamas’ Nuclear Bombmaker

Saturday, August 13th, 2011
Abusisi's Hamas WMD

Abusisi's Hamas atom bomb design and signed confession. Caption: 'Atom bomb (very dangerous, to kill Jews!). I confess that I designed this. March 8 2011'

Haaretz, Maariv and Yediot all agree that Dirar Abusisi is Hamas’ chief rocket designer and the mastermind behind every missile that lands inside Israel.  He’s also responsible for hiding Gilad Shalit and knows where he’s imprisoned.

But that’s not all.  And I’ve got the (till now) secret documents to prove it.  The drawing you see is so sensitive that the Israel court, which released Abusisi’s Shabak interrogation transcript, refused to allow its publication.  But I have my sources and zey hav zehr vays (as Werner von Braun might’ve once said).

Now I can report without any doubt that Abusisi is not just a rocket designer, but that from his extensive online nuclear research he has designed a Hamas nuclear bomb; or as Shimon Peres would say: “a flying Holocaust.”

This man is a veritable devil incarnate and Shabak caught him in the nick of time.  Had it not nabbed him asleep on that Ukrainian railroad train, there’s no telling how much damage he might’ve done, not just to Israel, but the entire western world.

You thought Richard Reid, the shoe bomber was bad.  Pshaw.  Child’s play compared to the boom-boom Abusisi had designed for his good friend in Hamas, Mohammed Deif.  And you know where he meant to detonate it, right?  No, not on the prime minister’s office.  That would’ve been too obvious for our genius engineer.  No, he was going to wait till Eric Cantor and Aipac brought one-quarter of the U.S. Congress to Israel for their annual haj and drop the big one killing a ton of birds with one ‘stone,’ so to speak.

I am also trying to confirm a rumor that he was the 19th hijacker on 9/11.  If my source is correct–move over Mohammed Atta, you don’t hold a candle to terror mastermind, Dirar Abusisi.

On a slightly more sober note, my Israeli friend, Ed Mad X has created a hilarious spoof of the Dirar Abusisi “confession” published in the major Israeli papers yesterday.  An Israeli court released the transcript of Abusisi’s Shabak interrogation in which he confessed practically to being Hamas’ Werner von Braun (as an Israeli aerospace researcher put it in the Fresh discussion forum).

What’s most remarkable is that he developed these proficiencies, if Shabak is to be believed, entirely through The Internets!!  And also with a PhD he earned online from the Internet School of Aerospace and Rocket Technology (http://www.dropthebigonenow.com).

Edo’s image puts the absolutely Bozoness of the Shabak transcript into perfect context.  Here’s the original drawing which the artist used for his spoof.

Abusisi to Shabak: I Left Gaza Because Hamas Threatened Me and My Children

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

Israeli journalists applied to the district court hearing the Dirar Abusisi case for release of his interrogation transcripts. The court did so today and the Israeli media have publisehd a largely stenographic and lurid account of Abusisi’s supposed rocket engineering prowess in expanding the range and accuracy of Hamas’ “world-class” rocket/missile technology. The material is a more explicit version of the indictment which also claimed he’d founded a Hamas version of West Point in order to improve the tactics and strategy of its terror mission.  But there is almost nothing (more on that later) that is new here and not found in the earlier indictment about which I blogged.

All of the interrogation material published, as far as I’m concerned, is garbage. As I’ve reported here, there is no record that Abusisi took any military engineering course in Ukraine and the professors Shabak claim he studied with either didn’t exist, were misidentified, or didn’t teach the courses necessary for him to learn this. He was a civil engineer, not a military engineer and there is almost no evidence that any of his expertise in running a medium-sized power plant could transfer to the realm of rocket technology.

abusisi alleged rocket drawing

Caption: 'Rocket, I never saw the details, this is a conclusion only.' Alleged drawing by Abusisi created for his interrogators about his rocket designs

Further, the Ynet version of the story (a truncated English version) features a drawing of a rocket supposedly penned by Abusisi with an Arabic caption translated into Hebrew (presumably by a Shabak Arabist).  The crude drawing which looks more like a children’s sword than a rocket says:

Missile: I never saw its details, so this is purely a conclusion.

Think about what this means: Hamas’ supposed rocket engineer, who commanded the entire technological planning for this element of Hamas’ military strategy against Israel never saw the actual “details,” by which I presume he means the rocket itself.  So he draws what the rocket he supposedly designed would look like, if he had actually seen those details in physical form.  Is it at all credible that a rocket engineer never sees the rocket he’s designed?  He merely sits at a computer downloading supposed calculations and equations and presents the results of his web research to someone in Hamas who then goes out and builds the actual rocket without the designer being involved?  Sorry, I just don’t buy it.

If this interrogation protocol is to be believed the major source of information and research for his rocket-building was the internet.  If that is so, then one can understand why Hamas’ rocket technology is so abysmal.  Where are the supposed terror masterminds from Syria, Hezbollah and Iran pumping tens of millions into upgrading Hamas’ weapons technology?  Why aren’t they providing the on-site training to Abusisi, rather than having the poor soul troll the internet looking for a rocket payload?

In fact, on the Fresh discussion forum, Tal Inbar, who describes himself as an expert on military aerospace technology and senior researcher at the Fisher Institute, responds to the Ynet account of Abusisi’s internet forays into rocket design with the following scornful comment:

These passages underscore how unfortunate it was for Israel to tear this Palestinian Werner von Braun away from his research for his Hamas brethren.

In other words, if this is the extent of Hamas rocket program then better to have continued to let the blind lead the blind.

Many may ask why Abusisi offered these details to Shabak.  Well, when you’re sitting there you have to tell ‘em something.  We know that Shabak employs torture against terror suspects, especially high value ones like Abusisi (more on why he was such a high value target later).  In fact, the accused’s lawyer, Tal Linoy explicitly said (Hebrew) that this information was extracted by Israeli intelligence goons under torture.  Further, Abusisi’s family says that Dirar himself told Shabak a deliberately false story in order to satisfy their needs to justify their own claims that they captured a major Hamas terror leader.

There is one extremely important new development in this story which no one (except Abusisi and Shabak) knew previously.  That is, that Abusisi allegedly told his interrogators that he sought to stop working for Hamas and that he received a explicit threat against his own life and that of his children.  And that when he wrote a letter to Mohammed Dief, Hamas’ chief military operative, asking to be relieved of his responsibilities helping design weapons, he received no answer.

This is what motivated Abusisi to leave Gaza.  Not the previous explanation he and his family offered claiming conditions there after Operation Cast Lead were so bad that he needed to leave for the sake of his family.  In truth, he did need to leave for the sake of his family, but for an entirely different reason.  He had crossed Hamas.  Imagine someone’s a loyal lieutenant in Tony Soprano’s “crew” and decides he’s had enough and wants a real life.  The consigliere is not going to look terribly kindly on such a person.  In fact, he might plot to do such a turncoat real harm.

The only question is what the nature of Abusisi’s involvement with Hamas’ military wing actually was.  There are two possibilities: either he had no involvement and when approached wanted nothing to do with it; or he had already engaged in some way with Hamas and performed weapons-related work for them and then rejected further involvement.  There is no way on God’s earth that Abusisi was as key a figure as Shabak is trying to make him out to be.  It may be possible that he had done the equivalent of running a few license plates through the police computer (in TV crime shows, that’s always how the Mafia begins to recruit a future corrupt cop) for Hamas.  But I highly doubt his involvement was much deeper than that.

Now, how would this Hamas consigliere react once he found out that the engineer on whom he had pinned such high hopes had turned and run from Gaza escaping through a tunnel to Egypt and later flying on to Jordan and Ukraine?  You might want revenge.  And how would you get it?  You might put out word to Shabak that a high-value Hamas weapons engineer had fled Gaza and was on his way to Ukraine.  You might convey to your informant that Abusisi was Hamas’ chief rocket engineer, that he was responsible for all technological developments, innovation and improvement in rocket design.

All that would be a pretty nice brew to present to Israel and would certainly piqué the interest of its intelligence services.  But what would be the icing on the cake?  What would Hamas have that Israel wants more than anything in the world?  I’m half tempted not to answer my own question and offer readers guesses in the comment thread below.  But I can’t do that.  So here goes: Gilad Shalit.  You’ll recall that several Israeli military-intelligence reporters claimed after he was first kidnapped that Abusisi was nabbed because he would be the key to liberating Shalit.

So if Hamas really wanted to ‘do the dirty’ on Abusisi, they’d tell Shabak that the man knew Shalit’s whereabouts.  That is the only thing that would make Israel move heaven and earth to kidnap him on a train in Ukraine and forcibly transfer him to an Israeli prison.  Extraordinary rendition is a rare tactic for Israeli intelligence.  They usually prefer to kill, rather than kidnap.  Such a kidnapping is terribly messy and the repercussions from it are felt for years to come in lawsuits, complaints to international human rights bodies, etc.  But if Israel felt Abusisi could lead them to Shalit then it all would be worth it to them.

Of course, everything Hamas passed on to Israel would be lies, or almost all of it.  Yes, perhaps Abusisi did perform some tasks for Hamas.  That part would be true.  But all the rest would be lies.  And the purpose of this extraordinary hoax would be to teach all current and future collaborators with Hamas that if they ever think they can abandon the organization and flee, this will be their reward: a couple of decades in a ratty Israeli prison compliments of the boys in the Izzeldin Brigades.

Of secondary pleasure to Hamas would be faking out Israeli intelligence and getting them to buy this tissue of lies.  Dief and his comrades would read the headlines blaring in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem about Abusisi being the key to finding Shalit and the mastermind of Hamas’ rocket program and they would laugh themselves silly.

As for the Shabak, they’ve been had.  But what can they do?  Can they descend from the tree limb onto which they perched themselves so precariously?  No.  One thing Israeli intelligence will NEVER do is admit a mistake.  They won’t even admit a mistake when they kill one of their own as they did in Operation Bren, let alone when they kidnap a Palestinian in error.  And after all, how much is a Palestinian’s life worth to Shabak, anyway?  It’s a paltry price to pay to maintain face and honor; to put Abusisi away for a few decades in order to maintain the charade that his kidnapping was an important achievement in the war against Hamas terror.  When what it really was was a bollixed intelligence operation in which they’d been duped by Hamas, which was seeking pure revenge against someone it viewed as a traitor for abandoning the armed struggle.

Regarding my claim that the Israeli reporting on this story is largely stenography–in all the stories I’ve read (Haaretz and Ynet) there is a 100% acceptance of Abusisi’s alleged statements as a confession of guilt.  There is no investigative research attempting to determine whether the claims made about Abusisi’s involvement are credible.  There is no statement from Abusisi or his attorney rebutting the charges (except in Maariv).  It’s really a set up, vanity reporting on behalf of Israeli intelligence services.  This is, I’m afraid, the level of quality one learns to expect of Israeli journalism when it comes to stories on this subject.  When it comes to debunking Shabak, very few have the guts to do it.  Far safer to merely regurgitate what is offered like a dutiful momma bird offering worms to her babies.

The coming weeks will bring a major foreign news documentary about Abusisi’s case.  More on that as the broadcast date approaches.

Netanyahu’s Security Agents Disrobe Female Foreign Journalists

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

You know, here in the U.S. they often talk about how much certain presidents detested the press and how the press office had a confrontational or hostile relationship with journalists.  They’ve got nothing on Israel, where Prime Minister Netanyahu’s Shabak-appointed security detail routinely disrobes female journalists for doing little more than their jobs in covering his press events.  In fact, I wrote a post about this months ago and apparently nothing’s changed.

The Foreign Press Association…sent a sharp letter to the Prime Minister’s Office…complaining of multiple humiliating incidents, which the organization claims both impedes foreign reporters’ work, as well as erodes their professional standing.

The FPA denounced what it called “the continued harassment” of foreign reporters…adding that unless policies change, they may stop covering the PMO altogether…

“In the past two days, three female reporters in separate incidents were forced to undress, remove their bras and have them placed through an X-ray machine in front of a group of colleagues. In addition, pocketbooks were emptied in public, with personal items also put on display and X-rayed for everyone to see.

“This type of treatment is unnecessary, humiliating and counterproductive. After repeated appeals and promises by security officials it appears that the Prime Minister’s Office does not have the desire to stop this happening and so the FPA will begin consulting its members over whether the foreign media should no longer cover events at the PM’s Office, as this is the only occasion where this type of incident occurs,” the letter concluded.

What’s laughable is the prime minister’s press flack’s consternation: how could this sort of thing possibly happen?  We must stop this right now.  You have my word we will.  Either he’s playing that old kid’s trick of crossing his fingers behind his back as he promises, or he’s a very poor liar:

Government Press Office Director Oren Helman said that the incidents described in the letter were “disturbing and damaging to Israel’s image,” adding that “this was an embarrassing mishap, which we will try our best never to have happen again. We apologize for any anguish caused to the reporters. This is most certainly not our policy.”

Since taking office in September, Helman added, “The GPO has been taking a series of steps meant to improve the position of the foreign press in Israel. We are trying to implement that to the issue of security checks as well.”

Of course it’s YOUR policy.  Who’s policy is it, if not yours?  Unless you want to claim that the Shabak agents are acting independently of you.  But then again, if that’s so, then who’s the Shabak’s boss?  In my naiveté I thought Bibi was the boss and could command the security detail to perform according to his standards.  But I guess maybe the Shabak is Bibi’s boss in this matter at least, if not others.

This is yet another indication that Israel does not honor either the press or freedom of the press.  Journalists, especially the foreign press who are clearly up to no good and always trying to point out Israel faults (especially the Arab press), are a burden to be suffered.  That’s the only way Bibi’s goons could get away with this.  And the average Israeli could care less since they rarely read the foreign press except as refracted through an Israeli media source.

I’ve got one suggestion that could nip this problem in the bud.  Force the Shabak agents to shed their clothing and empty their pockets before they enter the event itself.  Out into the sunlight would come the girlie magazines, condoms, mash notes to their girl friends.  That would stop this nonsense cold.

Palestinian Report Alleges Abusisi Tortured, Suffering from Serious Illness

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

Hamas sources have published an account of Dirar Abusisi’s condition (Arabic) which alleges that he has been tortured by the Shabak in Eshel Prison and that he suffers from untreated kidney stones.  Among the claims made in the online article, which was published after visits to him in prison by Hamas’ minister for prisoner affairs, are that his interrogators threatened to kill his wife and six children if he did not offer the information they wanted.  He was also subject to sleep deprivation.  The prisoner told his visitors that he was suffering from several diseases and his health is deteriorating.  He suffers from “heart and gall bladder, and kidney problems, along with pain in cartilage in his back and stomach problems.  He also suffers from pain in his left eye,” and says that the prison administration does not give him painkillers.  Doctors Without Borders visited him too in prison and found him to be suffering from kidney stones with the prison administration refusing to treat his condition properly.  He is currently kept in solitary confinement.  All of these, if true, are grave violations of international law and constitute torture under such statutes.

Notably, the Izzeldin military wing has included a short English language summary of the article on its website.  All of which could mean a number of things.  For those most conspiracy minded, it could mean that Abusisi is affiliated with Hamas as his indictment claims (though not necessarily that he was a rocket engineer as claimed).  Or it could mean that Hamas, which is rumored to be close to a deal for the freedom of Gilad Shalit, is notifying the Israelis that it plans to demand the release of Abusisi as part of the overall deal.  Or it could mean that Hamas is publicizing the prisoner’s plight as a humanitarian gesture to his family.

If Hamas is now demanding Abusisi’s release as part of the Shalit deal it might mean, as I wrote, he’s affiliated with Hamas, or it might mean that Abusisi is such a high level Palestinian detainee and that circumstances of his kidnapping were so egregious for Palestinians, that his freedom is a high priority for them.

If the claims that he may be included in a prisoner exchange are true, it’s possible that one of the reasons he was kidnapped was to use his as a bargaining chip in the Shalit negotiations.  Though it seems exceedingly odd to me, it’s possible the Mossad figured that if it kidnapped and detained a major figure maintaining Gaza’s infrastructure and held him “for ransom” as it were, that it would motivate Hamas more to do a deal for Shalit.  One thing I’ve learned in reporting on Israeli intelligence matters is that even the most outlandish assumptions about their thinking can be true.

 

Uzi Arad, Former National Security Advisor, Fired for Leaking Secret Report

Tuesday, May 17th, 2011
uzi arad leak

Yediot reports: 'Uzi Arad leaked to the U.S. government the controller's report on the second Lebanon war--so Wikileaks reveals'

Several months ago, Uzi Arad, former senior Mossad officer and then national security advisor to prime minister Netanyahu rather abruptly announced he was quitting his post.  At the time, rumors and speculation were rife about the reasons.  But no one dreamed they would be as provocative as this.  Turns out that Arad leaked the Controller’s secret report on the second Lebanon war to a U.S. diplomat in Israel.  After a long Shin Bet investigation, Arad was identified as the source and Bibi fired him.

uzi arad

Uzi Arad (Yanai Yehiel)

The Israeli media is claiming that the attorney general declined to prosecute Arad because he resigned immediately and because the leak was inadvertent.  But I don’t understand how leaking a report can be “inadvertent.”  Besides, skilled Mossad operatives don’t leak material by accident.  It just doesn’t happen.

Arad made lots of enemies inside even Bibi’s staff with his abrasive style.  Not to mention the role in played in “running” Larry Franklin and the Rosen Aipac spy scandal.  So as far as I’m concerned he got his just desserts.  In fact, he probably deserves to be prosecuted.

If anyone can tell me what’s the difference between Uzi Arad’s leak and Anat Kamm’s and why he deserves a get out of jail card and she deserves nine years in prison, I’ll buy you an ice cream cone at my favorite gelateria.  In fact, Arad’s crime is worse since he leaked a secret government report about a serious Israeli military misadventure to a foreign government, while Kamm leaked her materials to an Israeli reporter.  Oh, that’s right, Anat was just a girl file clerk in a general’s office while Arad is a former senior Mossad officer and fixture of the security establishment.  That’s the difference.  No hypocrisy here.  H/t to Jerry Haber for that notion and also to Dena Shunra for finding the headline pictured above.

I’d be grateful to any reader who can locate the original Wikileaks cable if it’s been published anywhere or online.

I just discovered a Jerusalem Post story which makes the ridiculous claim that Arad’s sin was to discuss “electric and energy” issues with a reporter and inadvertently leak something he shouldn’t have.  But an Israeli friend had the clever idea of doing a Google search on the terms “Uzi Arad” and “atomic energy,” which reveals that the Jerusalem Post article was actually censored.  In it’s original form it said that he discussed “atomic energy” with the reporter.  It is possible that someone who discusses anything related to Israel’s nuclear program would be fired for such a leak, though I doubt this would happen if they were discussing purely civilian uses of nuclear power.

And a final note to the Rotterniks who may be apoplectic about yet another scoop they read here which offends them.  I don’t scare easily and death threats, even ones which indicate what caliber bullet you plan to put in my brain, don’t scare me.

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