January 1994, Page 10
Security and Intelligence
Will Clinton Yield to Pressure and Free American
Who Spied for Israel?
By Tim Kennedy
Five years ago, shortly before a federal judge handed
confessed spy Jonathan Jay Pollard a lifetime prison sentence for
selling classified intelligence documents to Israel, Pollard made
an impassioned plea for mercy. "I broke faith and took the
law into my own hands," he admitted. "I should have recognized
the infectious nature of an ideology, Zionism."
Pollard, who worked as a civilian intelligence analyst
for the Navy, admitted that he was recruited by Israel in 1984 and
passed along tens of thousands of pages of classified documents
until Nov. 18,1985, when he was arrested while attempting to seek
asylum at the Israeli Embassy in Washington. Israel paid Pollard
more than $45,000 in cash for the stolen documents, and promised
to deposit at least $300,000 more in a Swiss bank account.
"It is likely he will never see the light of
day again, " Pollard's prosecutor, U.S. Attorney Joseph DiGenova
said after Pollard's sentencing in March 1987. According to court
records, Pollard's spy activities compromised a record number of
classified documents, and provided his Israeli handlers with descriptions
of covert intelligence programs, the identities of undercover Mideast
agents, and technical assessments of radar and other military electronic
equipment used by Israel's Arab neighbors.
In a court affidavit, then-Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger said: ''[It is] difficult for me to conceive of a greater
harm to national security than that caused by Pollard in view of
the breadth, the critical importance to the U.S., and the high sensitivity
of the information he sold to Israel."
During a November visit to the White House, Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin—who became his country's defense
minister shortly after Pollard was recruited as a spy—asked
President Bill Clinton to commute Pollard's life term and release
him from prison.
When a White House reporter asked Clinton and Rabin
to comment on the Pollard release proposal, the president said:
"We discussed it and I explained that, under our procedures
here, I cannot make a decision on the Pollard case until the Justice
Department makes a recommendation to me." Clinton added, however,
that "Under the terms of the United States constitution, I
do not have to follow the recommendation of the Justice Department
. . . "
The U.S. Attorney's Office in Washington, which prosecuted
the original case, has already told the head of the Justice Department,
Attorney General Janet Reno, that it opposes early release for Pollard.
''We have stated our strong opposition to the possibility of Jonathan
Pollard having his sentence commuted," a source at the U.S.
Attorney's office, speaking on condition of anonymity, told the
Washington Report. "This is based on the strong damage
that Pollard's activities inflicted on the United States."
Law enforcement and intelligence community officials
worry that Pollard, once out of jail, will reveal additional U.S.
military secrets, the source said. There also is worry among the
officials in the American intelligence community that the secret
information collected by Israeli intelligence "has been severely
compromised by agents from the former Soviet republics and, possibly,
other foreign powers."
"When all these considerations are taken together,"
says the government source, "Pollard's release could cause
continued damage to American intelligence assets." Insiders
at various intelligence agencies predict, however, that Clinton
will ignore the advice of the country's top law enforcement officials,
and will commute Pollard's sentence.
''Pollard will be released before the end of the year,"
a Mideast expert at the Defense Intelligence Agency predicted flatly.
Asked why Clinton would make such a decision, the DIA official says,
"Because it's a new American administration, and it's a new
Israeli government.''
The DIA official said he was disappointed with the
situation, and added, ''The Likud government never officially asked
for [Pollard's] release. This one [the Rabin government] has."
George A. Carver, Jr., a former senior intelligence
officer who is now a fellow with the Washington-based Center for
Strategic and International Studies, does not conceal his anger
at the possibility of Pollard's release: "Pollard is precisely
where he deserves to be...in prison,'' Carver told the Washington
Report. "I can't see any reason to let him out. When a
person commits espionage for a foreign power, it's still espionage,
whether it's for Israel or anybody else."
A Zionist Hero
To many Israelis and Jewish Americans, Pollard is a Zionist hero
who has been sold short by Israeli politicians and his former intelligence
officers. Various pro-Israel groups in the U.S. and abroad have
lobbied for Pollard's release and routinely run full-page ads in
major U.S. newspapers. These groups have also raised millions of
dollars to cover Pollard's legal expenses. The fund-raising effort
is being led by the Israeli Public Committee for the Release of
Jonathan Pollard.
The Israeli government is banking Pollard's $5,000
monthly salary, according to CNN correspondent Wolf Blitzer. The
cash is to serve as a "little nest egg," should Pollard
ever be released from prison and move to Israel.
The $5,000 monthly stipend, Blitzer wrote in his book,
Territory of Lies, is twice what the former counter-intelligence
analyst was paid each month by the U.S. Navy. Blitzer says there
is a "tradition in the Israeli intelligence community"
that captured espionage agents have their former salaries doubled
and set aside for them.
Soon after it was established, the Israeli Public
Committee began urging Israel to formally demand Pollard's release.
In 1991, the committee's spokesman, Amnon Dror, learned that Israel
reportedly holds several U.S.-backed spies. Dror has since aggressively
urged the Israeli government to "swap" Pollard for one
of these imprisoned agents.
Officially, the U.S. government denies that Israel
is holding any American spies. However, Yitzhak Rabin told Israeli
journalist Yossi Melman in early 1986 that "Israel had discovered
five American spies in the late 1970s and early 1980s in sensitive
nuclear and industrial facilities.''
Thomas Powers, a reporter for the Los Angeles Times,
writes that the CIA's "working relationship with Israeli
intelligence [the Mossad] is one of the agency's oldest and closest,
rivaled only by its ties to the British Secret Intelligence Service."
What made the relationship between the CIA and Mossad unique, say
intelligence service insiders, was the tacit mutual understanding
that the two countries would not spy on each other.
According to CIA lore, of which there is plenty on
this subject, the Agency's fabled counterespionage chief, James
Jesus Angleton, considered Israel part of his "secret fiefdom,"
and reportedly had close friendships with many Israeli leaders,
including former Israeli intelligence agent and longtime Jerusalem
mayor Teddy Kollek.
The CIA's cozy relationship with Israel turned sour
in 1982, sources say, shortly after Israel's invasion of Lebanon.
According to a speech delivered in early 1987 by former Senate Intelligence
Committee Chairman David F. Durenberger (R-MN), the CIA's then-director,
William J. Casey, "changed the rules of the game" by authorizing
the recruitment of an Israeli military officer, who, unhappy with
the invasion, offered the CIA classified information about the U.S.
government.
Israeli spying activities in the United States were
said to have been ongoing for "years" when John Davitt,
former head of the U.S. Justice Department's internal security division,
was interviewed by The Washington Post.
Retired since 1980, Davitt was responsible for reviewing
all espionage cases pending at the Justice Department. He said Israeli
intelligence services were "more active than anyone but the
KGB [former Soviet intelligence service] . . . They were targeted
on the United States about half the time, and on Arab countries
about half the time. "
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Seymour M. Hersh writes
in The Samson Option that Pollard gave Israel top-secret
U.S. intelligence on the Soviet Union, and former Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Shamir approved passing on some of the most important
of that information to the Soviets.
Hersh's book, a well-documented account of the development
of Israel's nuclear weapons program, insists Pollard was recruited
by Mossad in 1981three years earlier than the U.S. espionage
charges against him alleged. Hersh claims Israel has a portion of
its nuclear arsenal targeted on the former Soviet Union, and that
Pollard was recruited by the Mossad to gain sensitive targeting
data for these Israeli nuclear weapons.
"The nuclear targeting data supplied by Pollard
included top-secret intelligence on the location of Soviet military
targets," Hersh writes. "Some of the most important Pollard
documents were retyped and sanitized by Israeli intelligence officials
and then made available to the Soviet Union as a gesture of goodwill,
at the specific instructions of Yitzhak Shamir."
According to George Carver's assessment of the documents
stolen by Pollard, "sanitization" would be difficult.
"[The documents were in] such detail," said Carver in
1985, "that a professional analyst could discern what U.S.
collection systems must have been used to acquire these data, the
capabilities and limitations of those systems, and even, in some
cases, likely identities of human agents."
Confirmation of the concerns expressed by Hersh and
U.S. law enforcement officials regarding infiltration of Israeli
intelligence by foreign powers can be found by a careful reading
of the Israeli press. Over the past six months, four spy scandals
have occurred in Israel involving secret "moles" who infiltrated
the Israeli government to supply the ex-Soviet Union with "political
and military intelligence." Reuters reports that "two
more spy cases would be revealed shortly."
The most highly placed of these espionage agents is
Shimon Levinson, the former head of security in the prime minister's
office. Levinson, who was once a colonel in the Israeli intelligence
service, has been sentenced to prison for 12 years for spying on
behalf of the KGB.
Tim Kennedy, an analyst based in Washington, DC,
writes about defense technology and foreign affairs. |