Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

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

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘syria’

Syria: Talkin’ ‘Bout a Revolution This Time?

Sunday, April 24th, 2011
syrian protest map

NY Times map

News from Syria is grim, with over 100 people killed after Friday prayers in mass protests against the authoritarian rule of Bashar Assad and the forty-year dynasty his family has maintained in Syrian politics.  Another 11 people were killed on Saturday at funerals for those killed on Friday.  NPR news reported on outraged mourners toppling statues of Assad’s father and dynastic founder in various communities and ripping down pictures of the son in acts of defiance that would’ve been unthinkable only a month ago.  Activists were heard on air committing themselves to freedom or death.

Syria, like the earlier burgeoning protests of Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, and Yemen seems to be in a middle phase, in which they have become widespread and perhaps unstoppable, but not yet on such a scale that they can imminently threaten to topple the regime.  The people of Syria, despite the willingness of the security forces to shed blood on a mass scale, have passed the point of fear and self-preservation inhibiting their participation.  They are clearly willing to die for their freedom and in large numbers.  This probably indicates that they will eventually succeed.  The only question becomes how many more need to die before the ruler and his elites get the message that the holiday is over.  And how precisely will this scenario play out.

For Israel and Syria’s other neighbors an added question becomes, who will take over if Assad and his Alawite minority are swept from power?  Will it be a caretaker continuing roughly the same policies, but perhaps with a softer hand?  Or will it be a marked departure, perhaps a true movement toward democracy?  Can this even happen in a society which has known firm control at the hands of the intelligence and security services for decades?

If a democratic force of some kind assumes power in Syria, what will happen to its allegiances with Iran and Hezbollah?  And how will it impact relations with Israel?  Bibi Netnayahu has been crying in his beer about the big bad Arab revolutions on his border which have made his life such a living hell, not knowing whether the Arab leaders Israeli has bought off will stay bought; and what it will take to re-buy them if new Pharaohs assume the throne.  The Israeli PM doesn’t like this Arab democracy thing one bit.  Too messy.  Too out of control.  Too democratic.  Who knows what these Arabs might do if you give them democracy and freedom.  They might toss out the Sinai treaty in Egypt.  They might become even more implacable enemies of Israeli Occupation and supporters of Palestinian freedom.  What a terrible thought.  That may be why Bibi’s demanding from the U.S. ironclad security guarantees in the event of serious (is that an oxymoron?) peace negotiations, that Arab democracy won’t be allowed to spoil Israel’s party (or threaten its security).

It seems a terrible irony that Bibi Netanyahu and Ehud Olmert may yet live to rue the day that they looked coldly on Bashar Assad’s outstretched hand and spurned it.  Imagine that Olmert had the possibility of peace with Syria in his back pocket and instead chose to invade Gaza.  What a terrible waste!  Now, instead of peace Israel gets a big imponderable question mark.  Things could get worse, far worse under a successor.  And if they do, Israel will have only itself to blame for what might have been.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Ashkenazi Video Admits IDF Bombed Syrian Nuclear Reactor and Created Stuxnet

Monday, February 14th, 2011

ashkenazi: idf bombed syrian reactor and did stuxnet

Anshel Pfeffer's Haaretz report


Haaretz has just published a story that will certainly disappear due to gag order.  In it, Anshel Pfeffer writes that Gabi Ashkenazi prepared a video celebrating his achievements as chief of staff, which was screened at a party marking his final day on the job.  What is extraordinary about the video is that among the successes of his time in office it credits the bombing of the Syrian nuclear reactor and the Stuxnet virus attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities.  Israel has never publicly acknowledged responsibility for either.

So either Ashkenazi has a monumental need to amplify himself and his heroic accomplishments before he faces the glare of police klieg lights; or he’s violated elemental secrecy rules regarding these two events (or both).  It’s possible he got approval from the censor to include this material in his video, but it seems highly unlikely.  To me it seems like a monumental screw-up.  But maybe Israel has finally decided to ‘fess up.

Attendees at the party included former Mossad chief, Meir Dagan who also appeared in the video congratulating Ashkenazi for doin’ a helluva job.  I wonder what Dagan thought of these revelations…

Rotter, one of Israel’s major online forums, where some of my work is posted and linked (and heckled) has allowed the image to the left to be published in their Scoops section, but removed two attempts to link to this post.  What are they afraid of?  I guess Rabbi Rotter is still a little sore at what I wrote about his son, Meir, who harrasses Sheikh Jarrah protesters regularly as a police officer in East Jerusalem.

UPDATE: Looks like I was wrong as Haaretz has posted the story online.  Which goes to show that when you’re the chief of staff, even a corrupt one, you can get away with a helluva lot more than when you’re Anat Kamm.

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.

IDF Censors Israeli Reporting on War Game Exercises Training for Iran Attack

Saturday, October 30th, 2010
iaf iran attack censored

Screenshot of censored Channel 2 article: 'IDF continues to train for Iran attack'

Until they were censored a few hours ago, Israeli news reported a series of critical war games conducted with the Greek air force (take that Turkey!) which simulated an attack on Iran and subsequent attacks on Lebanon and Syria to quell their responses to the Iranian bombardment.  Now, the Israeli reports talk about an “attack on a distant target” whereas the uncensored version specified Iran.  Foreign sources such as Maan use this uncensored headline (in Arabic): “Israel Air Force exercise simulates attacks against Iran.”  I’m displaying an Israeli TV Channel 2 which says “IDF continues to train for Iran attack.”  You won’t find this headline anymore.  The IDF has ordered it censored.

Channel 2′s military correspondent noted during the now-censored video segment that the coming year would be a “decisive one” concerning the Iran threat.  We’ve been hearing that exact phrasing for years now.  But this somehow doesn’t comfort me much.

The exercise included activation of missile defenses (e.g. Arrow, Patriot and Iron Dome) on the premise that Syrian and Hezbollah missiles from the north, and Hamas missiles from the south, would be fired on Israeli cities.

A separate story about a different military exercise, this one conducted by the Home Front civil defense forces describes a computer war game-simulated missile attack.  The story begins with this mock-jaunty opening:

You may not have been paying attention but Tel Aviv today went up in flames, at least virtually.  Conventional and chemical weapons were fired from Syria and Lebanon and landed throughout the city including in Bloomfield Stadium.  The city apparently will be target #1 for missiles and rockets.

The report continue by praising the sophistication of the computer simulator built for the IDF by Elbit, the Israeli weapons manufacturer saying it’s just like “the real thing,” using the latest intelligence projections offered by the IDF, which presumably means it somehow reproduces the thousands of dead bodies that might be littering the streets of the city after an Iranian, Syrian or Lebanese counterattack following an Israeli attack.

A Walla report notes that for a training exercise conducted last Wednesday throughout the Negev, all flights to Eilat were diverted to Jordanian airspace to clear the area.

It seems to me these reports serve two purposes: they condition Israelis for war, which in turn makes them more likely to expect and even support it when it happens; they are a form of Psyops against Iran, Syria and Lebanon, Israel’s ostensible enemies in the looming conflict.

Odds anyone?  Leave yours in the comment thread below.

IDF Military Exercise Prepares for Syrian Invasion, Chief of Staff Calls for Taking Battle to Enemy

Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

The next time any of my pro-Israelist readers seek to make the argument that Israel only wants peace and only engages in defensive military operations, they’ll have to deal with this important speech (Hebrew) delivered by Gaby Ashkenazi to a military audience:

idf exercise syrian invasion

IDF exercise prepares for Syrian invasion (IDF)

Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi spoke today (Tuesday) to participants in a series of combat exercises hosted by the Integrated Land Warfare forces. According to Ashkenazi, “the threats and challenges to the IDF on our borders require us to be ready to activate all our power. When we consider the enemy [Syria], you can’t help but be impressed that among our capabilities, we will have to bring to bear heavy firepower and also have to maneuver in enemy territory. He added that the next battle must be decisive “so that no one will ask who won and who lost.”  We must win it quickly, bringing to bear decisive superiority of forces and taking the battle to the enemy.”

Units participating in the exercise included infantry, armor, air force, artillery, combat engineering and intelligence. One of the objectives was conquering and occupying a Syrian village using all aspects of intelligence gathering, assault and transfer of forces which this [a Syrian invasion] entails.

There is certainly an element of bluff and bluster in this.  Both the exercise and speech are as much Psyops as expression of explicit intent.  So we must take it with a certain grain of salt.  But as I’ve said many times here, especially in the Mideast, be careful what you prepare for because it has a nasty habit of happening.  In other words, if you expect a war and prepare to invade your enemy, your enemy responds in kind and before you know it you are at war–no matter what your original intent may have been.

So no matter what the intent of this exercise and speech, in the powderkeg that is the Israeli-Arab conflict, any party who makes such bellicose statements has as much as done the deed.  If the chief of staff says “next time” we must invade Syria, then we must take him at his word that he is fully prepared to do so and might at any moment.  The lessons learned in the lead-up to both the 1967 and 1973 Wars tell us that threats have a way of coming true.

This means that Ashkenazi’s speech is the height of irresponsibility.  It means that we must see Israel as a direct threat to peace in the region.  It means that we must prepare as if Israel intends to invade Syria in order to accomplish whatever vague political goals it might have.  Of course, such a war would be not just foolish, but dunderheaded.  But that’s never stopped Israel before.

It’s tempting to regard this military exercise in the context of the military-police exercise reported last week which simulated massive civil strife after a so-called “peace agreement” in which Israel would forcibly expel much of its Palestinian citizens to the new Palestinian state.  In such an eventuality, it might be expected that Syria might feel it had a dog in the fight as well and might mobilize its own forces.  So one wonders whether there is a far more comprehensive strategic plan at work here and what precisely it might be.

Dungeons of Shabak–Version 2.0 (or 3.0?)

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

One of the most ‘sensational’ Shabak “spy” (you’ll see why I use quotation marks shortly)  dramas of the past few months has been the “middle of the night” arrest of Israeli Palestinian community activist Ameer Makhoul–with the accompanying arrest of naturopathic pharmacist Omar Said–for allegedly spying against Israel for Hezbollah.  This incident is part of a ritual repeated every few months by Shabak both to cow Israel’s Palestinian population into submission, showing them who’s boss, and also to condition Israel’s Jewish population to suspect the loyalty and trustworthiness of their fellow non-Jewish citizens.  And it works.  Everybody seems to play their part: the Shin Bet parades the suspects and takes credit for protecting the state from treachery; while Israeli Jews (most, anyway) learn the lesson that they should never see their fellow citizens as individuals worthy of respect and equal rights.

Israeli Palestinian security suspects

Israeli equivalent of the 'Commie Bastard' perp walk of the 1950s (Max Yelinson)

Those who follow such security cases will recall that before Makhoul, we had the case of Azmi Bishara, driven out of his homeland by a secret police ‘investigation’-vendetta which accused him of serious crimes without offering any evidence.  The Shabak allowed him to leave the country rather than prosecute him, all the while trumpeting what a villain he had been.  Those with longer memories will undoubtedly remember similar cases that preceded these.  In fact, most Palestinian Knesset members at one time or another have formal police investigations opened against them based on similar, though slightly less lurid accusations.  As I said, they’re about as regular as clockwork in Israel; something akin to the old FBI perp walks of ‘Commie bastards’ in the 1950s replete with short ‘shifty’ men desperately concealing their faces with their trenchcoats and their fedora.

rosenberg arrest

The search for the bogeyman U.S.-style: the Rosenbergs arrest

A few months ago, I reported here on a new case involving Fada Sha’ar, a 27 year-old from the Golan Druze village of Magdal Shams, accused along with another resident of contact with a Syrian “intelligence agent,” who happened to be the Syrian government official responsible for the welfare of former Syrian residents of the Golan.  The man’s father and mother were also arrested and accused of being his accomplices (more likely the secret police were attempting to exert leverage over him as the FBI did by arresting Ethel Rosenberg in the famous 1950s case).

This alleged intelligence agent had offered the boy help in finding a music school at which the boy could study the traditional Arabic oud.  The funding of his studies by Syria was deemed a treasonous act causing irreparable damage to the State.  On return from a break in his studies in France he was arrested for what in reality amounts to practicing a traditional Arab folk instrument.  Of course, they gussied up the case with reports of secret meetings, threats to kidnap an Israeli soldier, etc.

As I wrote above, it’s as if the Shin Bet case officers are fans of pulpy spy thrillers.  They take a real event like the capture of soldiers along the Lebanese border, dress it up with some updated facts and names, and attempt to pass it off as the latest example of Arab perfidy.  What’s laughably ironic is that if these secret policemen were thriller writers they’d be laughed out of the room by their fellow writers: kidnapping Israeli soldiers?  Been there, done that.  Is that the best you can come up with?  But the Shin Bet knows it doesn’t have to come up with anything truly convincing, it merely has to recycle old stories and a populace conditioned to react with suspicion and horror will, like Pavlov’s Dog, do the same when the conditioned response is properly stimulated.

Now, Ynetnews reports that Sha’ar and his colleague have been indicted and accused of being Syrian agents.  As I wrote in my earlier post, read closely the language (the first example below is my translation of the opening sentence in the much fuller Hebrew version; the second from the English version) used to describe the alleged acts of these individuals and tell me whether Israeli reporters are acting as stenographers for the secret police or whether they are acquitting themselves credibly as members of the Fourth Estate:

Yet another connection between residents of the Golan Heights and Syrian intelligence uncovered.

Madhat Salah [the alleged Syrian handler]…operated both the father and the son who were arrested

What was Sha’ar’s crime?  He is alleged to have conveyed $500 each to three Israeli Druze families who have members in Israeli prisons.  For this, the boy is alleged to have received an $800 payment.  Within Israel itself, there is no doubt that there are many settlers who would consider it an honor to support convicted murderer heroes like Yigal Amir or Asher Weissgan with such funds.  In fact, the Israeli group, Honenu does precisely this.  Only when you’re a Golani Druze does such financial aid become an act of treason.

The indictment further accuses Sha’ar of receiving an e mail message from the Syrian suggesting that he kidnap an Israeli soldier.  What did the boy do?  He refused.  And again, for this he stands to lose of major chunk of his life rotting in an Israeli prison system, in which he will become undoubtedly an even more embittered opponent of Israel than he is now.

The problem with Israeli coverage of such security stories is that it acts as a mere cipher for the security services.  Reporters dutifully report what the Shabak tells them.  While they may once in a while use terms like “alleged” or “reported” or concede the story is reported to them by the government, the clear preponderance of credibility is given TO the security apparatus.  Hardly any given to the accused.  You will struggle to find any quote from a source close to the victim.  Not a family member, not a lawyer, not even a Palestinian human rights NGO.  And if they do quote a lawyer he has not even been informed of the charges by the government so he can’t speak credibly on behalf of his client.

It’s all a sad charade of due judicial process.  Even worse, it’s a charade of professional journalism.  In most western media, an editor would not let such a story run without some semblance of balance including a statement from someone representing the victim.  Only in Israel or perhaps nations like Russia, North Korea, Iran or Saudi Arabia, does journalism similarly cozy up to government power.

Only a few hours after the authorities unveiled this indictment, the Shabak trotted out a new set of Arab “traitors.” (Hebrew)  The charges against these are perhaps even more ludicrous than those of our previous victims.  Two Israeli Palestinians, residents of Shifar’am and Umm al-Fahm, stand accused of being unable to locate a weapons cache that was prepared for them near a traffic intersection.  The Ynet report doesn’t even use the term “allege” in connection with this claim.  It says: “the investigation established that…”  It states that this is what happened with no qualifier.  They were supposedly to use these weapons for a terror attack inside Israel.  After being arrested they couldn’t even lead the investigators to the buried cache.  As an aside, do you even believe that a U.S. police force would be willing to appear so foolish as to arrest criminals for possessing such a weapons haul when neither the police or the bad guys can find it??  What do you accuse them of?  Where is the evidence?  Only in Israel can such charges be made to stick in such circumstances.

The accused are also said to have been asked to recruit others to join Hamas and undergo training abroad.  Where?  Well, what nation does Israel need to smear these days?  Turkey, of course.  And did the victims agree to do this?  Even the charge sheet against them concedes that they refused.  Since when do you arrest someone for refusing to commit a crime?  Only in the Land of Oz and Israel.

Maariv claims these guys received $120,000 (Yediot bafflingly claims $200,000) in return their services ten years ago.  That’s right, some or all of this happened an eternity ago.  And yet it’s being dredged up here by the Shin Bet for the first time.  Talk about old news!

To be clear, it is entirely possible that there are Israeli Palestinians who might engage in a real crime of espionage.  I am not claiming there are no such citizens who might endanger Israel’s security.  I AM claiming that these victims are not them.  Further, Israel’s security services are a joke perpetrated on the most powerless, most discriminated against.

Why?  It’s no secret that political tension is at a boiling point both within Israel and the Middle East concerning the peace talks and the so-called “Iranian threat.”  What better way to unite Israel’s population behind its government, military and secret police than stirring up fear of the Syrian menace?  Any general or Shin Bet chief wishing to derail any chance of Syrian-Israeli peace talks need only gin up a little of this sort of mischief to make the public wary.

The only thing missing in these stories is an Iranian bogeyman.  Couldn’t the Shin Bet have dredged up a suitable Iranian mullah offering wads of cash to Israeli Palestinians in return for spilling the secrets of Dimona?  Don’t worry, that may come if things get bad enough.

Israeli Attack on Syrian Reactor, Template for Iran Attack?

Monday, September 27th, 2010

When the Times’ John Markoff wrote about the Stuxnet worm and the impact that it was having on Iran, he sent me on a chase after an interesting article, The Hunt for the Kill-Switch, that described the method by which Israel may’ve “wormed” its way into Syria’s radar defense system, which allowed its aircraft to penetrate undetected and destroy the alleged reactor site.

This article in turn sent me to an even more interesting article, Israel Shows Electronic Prowess, a puff-piece for Israel’s electronic warfare industry, which described U.S. collaboration in the Israeli attack.  Further, it quotes John Bolton, not a reliable source by any means but one worth paying attention to because like a clock he’s right twice a day (if that), as saying that the Syria attack might serve as a template for an attack on Iran.  With the reports about Stuxnet and the damage it’s allegedly had on Iran’s nuclear reactors, this is an even more important subject than it was a week ago before much of the world knew about the worm.

kill switch

Did Israeli 'kill-switch' disable Syrian air defenses in 2007 attack and could the same happen in the event of an Iran attack?

The first article posits that Israel’s intelligence apparatus may’ve inserted an electronic “kill-switch” into a chip contained within the electronics of Syria’s radar defense system.  The altered chip, which could’ve been added either through a component supplied by an Israeli supplier or through a component to which Israeli intelligence had access, could’ve been activated as Israeli jets streaked toward Syria, thus turning off the radars so that they would have failed to detect the intrusion of Israeli jets into Syrian airspace:

Last September, Israeli jets bombed a suspected nuclear installation in northeastern Syria. Among the many mysteries still surrounding that strike was the failure of a Syrian radar–supposedly state-of-the-art–to warn the Syrian military of the incoming assault. It wasn’t long before military and technology bloggers concluded that this was an incident of electronic warfare–and not just any kind.

Post after post speculated that the commercial off-the-shelf microprocessors in the Syrian radar might have been purposely fabricated with a hidden ”backdoor” inside. By sending a preprogrammed code to those chips, an unknown antagonist had disrupted the chips’ function and temporarily blocked the radar.

The writer further describes precisely how the errant chip might find its way into a computer system and it’s derring-do worthy of a Hollywood spy thriller:

To create a controlled kill switch, you’d need to add extra logic to a microprocessor, which you could do either during manufacturing or during the chip’s design phase. A saboteur could substitute one of the masks used to imprint the pattern of wires and transistors onto the semiconductor wafer, Adler suggests, so that the pattern for just one microchip is different from the rest. ”You’re printing pictures from a negative,” he says. ”If you change the mask, you can add extra transistors.”

Or the extra circuits could be added to the design itself. Chip circuitry these days tends to be created in software modules, which can come from anywhere, notes Dean Collins, deputy director of DARPA’s Microsystems Technology Office and program manager for the Trust in IC initiative. Programmers ”browse many sources on the Internet for a component,” he says. ”They’ll find a good one made by somebody in Romania, and they’ll put that in their design.” Up to two dozen different software tools may be used to design the chip, and the origin of that software is not always clear, he adds. ”That creates two dozen entry points for malicious code.”

The Aviation Week article is a more straightforward portrayal of the Israeli attack on the Syrian reactor, also serving as a bit of puffery for the entire Israeli electronic warfare industry.  It begins with the rather startling claim that U.S. military intelligence cooperated with the Israelis:

The U.S. was monitoring the electronic emissions coming from Syria during Israel’s September attack; and—although there was no direct American help in destroying a nuclear reactor—there was some advice provided beforehand, military and aerospace industry officials tell Aviation Week & Space Technology.

…There was “no U.S. active engagement other than consulting on potential target vulnerabilities,” says a U.S. electronic warfare specialist.

Which is “military speak” for: “We didn’t send our jets or pilots but we did just about everything else we could to help.”

It describes the attack on Syria’s air defense system in quite comprehensive fashion:

The main attack was preceded by an engagement with a single Syrian radar site at Tall al-Abuad near the Turkish border. It was assaulted with what appears to be a combination of electronic attack and precision bombs to enable the Israeli force to enter and exit Syrian airspace. Almost immediately, the entire Syrian radar system went off the air for a period of time that included the raid, say U.S. intelligence analysts.

…U.S. analysts contend that network penetration involved both remote air-to-ground electronic attack and penetration through computer-to-computer links.

…So far, the most sophisticated example of nonkinetic warfare is the penetration of Syrian air defenses by Israeli aircraft on Sept. 6 to bomb a site—analyzed as a nascent nuclear facility—without being engaged or even detected.

…That ability of nonstealthy Israeli aircraft to penetrate without interference rests in part on technology, carried on board modified aircraft, that allowed specialists to hack into Syria’s networked air defense system, said U.S. military and industry officials in the attack’s aftermath. Network raiders can conduct their invasion from an aircraft into a network and then jump from network to network until they are into the target’s communications loop.

To a certain extent, I think we can discount some of this flattering picture as the product of a promotional article in an international aviation trade journal.  But nevertheless, it has to give the Iranians pause in light of the possible damage that may’ve been caused to Iran through Stuxnet.  Not to mention the rather lax cyber-security there which allowed such an infection to penetrate in the first place.  One has to wonder whether Iran’s air defenses could be as easily sabotaged as Syria’s were in 2007.

That this article is a bit of puffery is confirmed by the following passage:

…Secrecy is causing Israel problems. Compartmentalization means that those who know about the new capabilities aren’t allowed to tout their usefulness. Yet at least low-key publicity is needed to ensure government funding for additional development and acceptance of their operational use.

“Now I have to find a way to explain these capabilities to other people so that they understand,” Buchris says.

I think the flacks who wrote this article just did that for you.

This article, written all the way back in 2007, provides an early glimpse of the neocon anti-Iran meme claiming that Iran financed the Syrian reactor, a claim by the way which Israelis in this article deny:

Israeli officials reject any suggestion that the Syrian and Iranian nuclear programs were or are linked in any way.

“I don’t think Iran knew anything about what Syria was doing,” says a long-serving member of the Israeli parliament with insight into military affairs. “I don’t think they would have told the Iranians. They didn’t need Iranian assistance because they had help from the North Koreans.”

However, John Bolton, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, disagrees. “I’d be very surprised if the Syrians were to engage at least without Iranian acquiescence,” he says. And, “it may be beyond that,” he tells Aviation Week. Since Syria alone lacks both the funding and expertise for a nuclear weapons program, it would logically turn to Pyongyang for technology and oil-rich Tehran for funding, he says.

Notice how Bolton inserts his own opinion and converts it into a ‘logical’ certainty, which has then been picked up by anti-Iran hawks.

But here’s the money quote as far as relevance to Iran:

Bolton says the use of network attack is a clever move by the Israelis. He contends that it will serve as a deterrent for Iran. Or, at the very least, it sends a message that even the advanced, Russian-built air defense systems won’t protect Iran’s nuclear activities.

“I think it is very telling, obviously, in its potential impact on Iran since they’ve been supplied by the Russians with air defense equipment as well,” Bolton says.

If what’s been written about Stuxnet is accurate, then Israel, or whoever created the worm, seems to have done an excellent job of infiltrating Russian computers systems in order to plant the infection with the Russian contractor building Bushehr.  One wonders whether Israel could have devised ways of penetrating these Russian built air defense systems as well.

Of course, an attack on Iran will be far different from one on a single unfinished Syrian nuclear reactor.  Iran has hardened sites which might withstand Israeli attack even if its air defenses are knocked out.  Further, Iran has capabilities of carrying the attack back against the Israelis which Syria does not have, or at least wasn’t willing to exercise.  This will not be a cakewalk if it happens.

In a sidebar, one of Aviation Week’s Israeli government informants reveals a typically racist attitude toward that country’s Palestinian citizens.  He notes the vulnerabilities of Israel’s own telecommunication systems which were penetrated during the 2006 Lebanon war by Hezbollah, possibly with Syrian aid:

…The government official says. “There’s also the issue that in the north of Israel you have very large Arab communities. Most wouldn’t be involved, but you’re talking about a half-million people up on the border. That means there are people with the ability to watch and pass on information.”

Ah yes, the old calumny about Israel’s Palestinian citizens being a Fifth Column supporting Hezbollah.  When this jackass should know that the only Israeli governmental body ever to attempt to assert this claim, the Shabak, can’t even make it stick when the secret police accuses Israeli Palestinian leaders of espionage (cf. Makhoul, Said, etc.).  If it reminds you of the 1950s Red Scare here in the U.S. it should.  The motives of instilling fear, driving a wedge between (in Israel’s case) Jews and Arabs, and seeking scapegoats is alive and well in 2010 Israel.

N.Y. Times: IDF Unit 8200 Cyberattack Disabled Syrian Anti-Aircraft Defense

Monday, September 27th, 2010

The N.Y. Times published a report about the Stuxnet virus which takes an interesting and slightly contrarian view of the power and lethality of the virus.  But the most interesting part of the article was a list of other previous cyberattacks that were initiated by governments.  Among them, John Markoff notes that Israel’s attack on the alleged Syrian nuclear reactor involved disabling that nation’s radar/anti-aircraft defenses.  According to the reporter, the IDF’s Unit 8200 devised an ingenious method of shutting the radar off:

Accounts of the event initially indicated that sophisticated jamming technology had been used to blind the radar so Israeli aircraft went unnoticed. Last December, however, a report in an American technical publication, IEEE Spectrum, cited a European industry source as raising the possibility that the Israelis had used a built-in kill switch to shut down the radar.

A former member of the United States intelligence community said that the attack had been the work of Israel’s equivalent of America’s National Security Agency, known as Unit 8200.

If I understood Markoff, what would’ve happened is that Israel would’ve infected the computer system operating the Syrian radar with a worm and that worm would’ve turned off the system.  We can surely expect the same tactics if/when Israel attacks Iran.  One wonders how or whether the Iranians have prepared themselves to face this.

Inside Israel, Unit 8200 is famous for its know-how and derring-do.  But almost nothing is known or spoken about its operations.  This is a very closely held military secret.  Which is why Markoff’s report is so interesting.

Moving to a different issue raised by Markoff, he notes an aspect of the Stuxnet infection which others have not addressed: that the worm was designed rather haphazardly in terms of its target.  You might expect an intelligence agency attempting to sabotage a nation’s industrial system to be more particular about directing the infection only to affect computers within that country.  The high level of infection outside Iran indicates the perpetrators of Stuxnet didn’t much care where it went as long as it got to Iran.  To me, this indicates a rather high level of moral negligence at the toll it would take outside that country.  Further, it indicates a sense of hubris that whatever effect it might have on the world such damage could not be inflicted on the computer system of the country which devised it.

Though I’m not a cyber security expert it would seem that Iran’s nuclear program had rather haphazard security standards if an infected USB stick could be the cause of the original infection there.  Though many of us have been warning about the fight Israel would have on its hands if it attacked Iran, it makes one wonder whether the high tech aspects of Iran’s defenses might be less than imagined, especially if they share any of the vulnerabilities of the Syrian system.  This certainly should be giving Iran’s generals pause as they prepare for precisely such an onslaught.